Rahman
in Retrospect
by
Becky Akers
by Becky Akers
Perhaps the
only aspect of Abdul Rahman's case more horrific than his possible
execution was the fact that we paid for it. And that America's self-proclaimed
"Christian" administration put the thugs itching to murder him in
power.
Mr. Rahman
is the Christian convicted of converting from Islam in Afghanistan.
This "crime" hurts the state rather than his fellow man and therefore
carries the death penalty. However, thanks to international pressure,
Mr. Rahman will likely escape execution, though he
has courageously confessed both his creed and his crime throughout
his ordeal: "I believe in the [H]oly [S]pirit. I believe in Christ.
And I am a Christian." Given that joyous proclamation and the lessons
in democracy America has been teaching, the Islamic Leviathan assumes
it has every right to kill him: after all, as the prosecutor
persecuting him explained, "He is known as a microbe in society,
and he should be cut off and removed from the rest of Muslim society
and should be killed." "The people," democratic theory's highest
authority, agree. One of the guards at the jail where Mr. Rahman
was imprisoned wants to "cut him into little pieces."
But then there's
the money. Lots of American money. Leviathan calls it "foreign aid."
Figures on
welfare to other governments are about as scarce and slippery as
greased pigs in Kabul: neither Our Rulers nor theirs want us knowing
precisely how much they're stealing from us. Anyone hoping to penetrate
the murk must cope with contradictory estimates, mismatched fiscal
years, and exchange rates that would stump a physics professor.
But it seems Americans
gave Afghanistan $931 million in FY2006 (these figures exclude
"food, refugee, and disaster assistance. Totals...are likely to
be significantly higher with the addition of emergency disaster
relief aid"). Next year, administrations both here and there dream
of even greater larceny and largesse: Hamid Karzai and his cronies
will loot American taxpayers of $1.124 billion. Curiously, this
exceeds the
country's operating budget for 2004-2005, which seems to have
reached only $608.5 million in US dollars.
However unreliable
these numbers may be, we can safely assume that we pay most, if
not all, of Afghanistan’s bills. And that makes the Feds doubly
culpable for the evil wreaked: not only did they install these dictators
in the first place, they shovel the money at them that keeps them
in power.
Afghan bureaucrats
are a proud set, however. Despite their feeding frenzy at the US
trough, they'll run their own charade, thank you very much. Amin
Farhang, Afghanistan's minister for what little economics the country
has, sniffed that threats to staunch the flow of Western money into
his country in an effort to save Mr. Rahman's life "were
nothing short of blackmail."
Remarkably,
the Bush Administration agreed. And so we had the hypocritical spectacle
of a White House with an insatiable desire to run other countries'
business, one which hasn't let the Constitution stop it yet, suddenly
shy about sparing a Christian from martyrdom. The State Department’s
Sean McCormack reportedly kept a straight face as he
said, "This is clearly an Afghan decision to take. They
are a sovereign government. It's a sovereign country...." Tell
that to Bush, who often brags about destroying Afghan sovereignty.
For example, on April 2, 2002, at a fundraiser for gubernatorial
candidate Mike Fisher in Philadelphia, Bush crowed: "...as a result
of our military action in Afghanistan....for the first time, many
young girls got to go to school. I'm so proud of the compassion
of America" — "compassion" being defined as "American troops compelling
sovereign Afghanis to do things Bush's way."
Afghanistan
is not the only dictatorship we fund. Our supposedly Christian nation
subsidizes governments worldwide as they abuse Christians. We send
over $700 million per year to Pakistan
($754 million for FY2005 and an estimated $738 million for FY2006),
a country whose population is about 2% Christian. Nor is this tiny
minority left in peace. As I write, Amjad
Masih has spent the last 2610 days in prison on trumped-up charges
of burning the Quran. Also imprisoned is Parvez
Masih, the headmaster of a Christian school. Like the other
Mr. Masih, he is charged with breaking Law 295C, which prohibits
blaspheming Mohammed. Both men can consider themselves fortunate:
violating Law 295C usually earns the "criminal" an execution.
Only the details
and not the themes change in Egypt.
The regime there got $1.822 billion of American taxes in FY2005
and an estimated $1.78 billion in FY2006. Next year that will climb
to $1.758 billion. And how does a government so lavishly supported
by a Christian nation treat its Christians? Voice
of the Martyrs reports on Hani Samir Tawfik, a 28-year-old believer
who has "been jailed without charges since March 2003. He has been
tortured with electric shocks and beaten. Now he is emotionally
disturbed and has lost vision in one eye as a result of his treatment....Tawfik
was released from prison after two years of torture and hopelessness....
Pray [that] doctors will be able to repair his eye that was damaged
while in prison."
These nations,
as well as Leviathan's other franchises, will no doubt practice
their barbarities with or without our aid. But Bush's Great Giveaway
strengthens and emboldens these tyrannies. It also violates the
Constitution, which nowhere authorizes the Feds to steal from us
and give to them.
Bush famously
disdains the Constitution, however, so we'll turn to a Text he claims
to revere. The Bible
says, "But let none of you suffer as a murderer, a thief, an
evildoer, or as a busybody in other people's matters."
Hmmm. Seems
that pretty much prohibits Leviathan's favorite activities. For
good measure, Bush can meditate on Galatians 6:10: "Let us do good
unto all men, especially unto them who are of the household of faith."
I'd say that
precludes allowing the puppets on your payroll to torture and kill
your fellow believers. Bush's hypocrisy stinks to high Heaven as
the martyrs’ faith shines.
March
29, 2006
Becky
Akers [send her mail]
writes primarily about the American Revolution.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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