Hard When You Lose the Respect of Others
Harder Still, When You Lose Self-Respect
by
James Glaser
by James Glaser
Growing
up in America, I always knew that the rest of the world respected
us. The world could look at our Bill of Rights and Constitution
with envy and whenever anyone needed humanitarian help, they knew
that the Americans would be there for them.
All
of Europe was thankful for our help after WW II and even Japan became
our steadfast friend because of the way we treated them after the
war.
I
can still remember that huge white hospital ship, The USS Hope that
went around the world bringing modern medicine to third world countries.
In grade school we went around the neighborhood collecting used
eye glasses so we could send them to poor countries and even middle
size American cities had "Sister Cities" around the world
that they would help out.
As
a young man, I felt proud to be an American and I knew without a
doubt the rest of the world looked ‘up’ to us. It felt good to be
a citizen of this great nation.
Today
things have changed. Amnesty International, the international human
rights watchdog, who in cold war day would constantly get on the
Soviet Union for their dark ways is now talking about American human
rights failures.
These
last four years have been hard on many Americans who took pride
in what we were trying to do for mankind.
Now
Amnesty is saying the same things about us, as they said about Ronald
Reagan’s nemesis, the "Evil Empire," the Soviet Union.
In fact they even use the same terms. Paisley Dodds writes for the
Associated Press, "Amnesty International branded the US prison
camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, a human rights failure." Amnesty
Secretary General Irene Kahn said, "Guantanamo has become the
gulag of our time." When I hear the word "Gulag"
I immediately think of Joseph Stalin and the millions of Soviet
prisoners who died in his prison camps. There are reports that some
Americans, who were captured in the Korean War, spent their last
years in some of those camps.
What
has been so sad these last four years is that we have changed from
the champion of freedom and liberty, to a nation that tortures and
sexually abuses those we hold in custody. There is just no wiggle
room for us to deny what is going on, because the whole world has
seen the pictures and we are still enough a nation of law, that
some of our investigations into prisoner murders have been made
public.
The
Amnesty report states, "During the year, released detainees
alleged that they had been tortured or ill-treated while in US custody
in Afghanistan and Guantanamo." Before Bush’s War on Terror
we could have blown off these reports as disgruntled prisoners who
were trying to make us look bad, but the report goes on with, "Evidence
also emerged that others including Federal Bureau of Investigation
agents and the International Committee of the Red Cross, had found
that such abuses had been committed against detainees."
I
guess we can look at it as a positive note that the FBI is still
honest enough to speak out when they find the Pentagon running amok
and tarnishing our once good name.
On
top of the report’s criticism of the Unites States, it points out
that, "In Afghanistan, a downward spiral of lawlessness and
instability had shaken the country once again." I know the
rest of the world has lost a lot of respect for our nation because
of constant abuses condoned by the Bush White House and the lying
that got the United States into the war in Iraq in the first place.
Now they see this report and think about all the rhetoric George
has expounded about what a success Afghanistan has been.
Here
in the States many Americans are losing their respect for our country.
One blow after another for the last four years has taken its toll.
Citizens of our country liked looking at what Washington was doing
with the confidence that what ever we did, we could take a certain
pride in it. We knew Washington was doing the "right thing."
Today
we have to question what is going on in our names. Many Americans
cringe when they hear the latest faux pas by this administration
and wonder what will come next.
Americans
have thick skins and they can blow off critiques from foreign lands,
at least we could at one time, but now there is a growing concern
by the American people that what we are doing is just wrong. We
have all seen the photos, we have heard the lies, we have read the
reports and we find it hard to respect what our country is becoming.
May
27, 2005
Jim
Glaser [send him mail],
a Marine Corps Vietnam War veteran and Commander of VFW Post 3869,
works to educate the American public on the consequences of war.
His personal website is James-Glaser.com.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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