The Demise of Conscience
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
As libertarians
have long pointed out, both the welfare state and the warfare state
have brought immeasurable damage to our country.
With its various
programs of confiscatory taxation of income and capital to accomplish
its coercive redistribution of wealth, the welfare state has brought
standards of living lower than otherwise would have been the case.
This is especially true for those at the bottom of the economic
ladder, who oftentimes spend large portions of their lives as dependent
wards of the state rather than as productive, self-reliant people
in society.
The damage
from the warfare state has been even greater: terrorist blowback,
torture, rendition, suspension of habeas corpus and civil liberties,
disregard of constitutional constraints on power, wars of aggression
and foreign occupations, governmental secrecy, assaults on privacy,
and, of course, an ever-growing military-industrial complex.
Together, the
welfare state and the warfare state have produced out-of-control
federal spending, which has resulted in an endless cycle of financial,
monetary, and economic crises, most recently demonstrated by the
home-mortgage crisis and the 50 percent drop in the value of the
dollar during the past five years alone.
Another adverse
consequence perhaps the most important has been the
demise of individual conscience among the American people, which
has accompanied the rise of the welfare-warfare state.
To understand
how the welfare state has contributed to this phenomenon, it is
necessary to understand how the welfare state operates. Under the
welfare state, the government takes money from some people, generally
the wealthy and middle class, in order to distribute it to others.
The recipients are generally supposed to be people in economic need
the poor but massive amounts of tax money
also find their way into the pockets of corporations and wealthy
and middle-class individuals and families as well as local, state,
and foreign governments.
Most Americans
have come to accept the legitimacy and inevitability of the welfare
state as part of their everyday lives. One of the main reasons for
this is undoubtedly that they have been born and raised under a
welfare state and cannot imagine life without it.
More important,
except for libertarians most Americans give nary a thought to the
fundamental immorality of the welfare state itself. Its almost
as if people have elevated the federal government to the level of
a deity, one whose welfare-state operations are moral per se and
immune to challenge.
Suppose I were
to rob a bank of $100,000. Suppose also that the money was taken
only from the accounts of millionaires. I dont use the money
for myself but instead distribute it in various proportions to impoverished
inner-city youth, struggling schools, a poor person needing a heart
transplant, homeless people, and penniless couples in their 80s.
Im a
good person, right? Selfless, saintly, caring, and compassionate,
right? After all, I didnt spend one dime of the money on myself.
I gave it all to the poor and the needy.
Most people
can easily see the flaw in that reasoning. It wasnt
your money that you were distributing, they would exclaim.
Its money that you stole from others.
Suppose I responded,
So what? The money came from millionaires, who didnt
need it as badly as the people to whom I gave it. And I didnt
use any of it for myself.
Again, most
people would recognize the fundamental immorality in what I had
done. They would say, You are nothing but a thief. Your actions
deserve condemnation and even punishment, not praise or commendation.
That money belonged to those millionaires, not to you and not to
the people to whom you gave it. You could have asked the millionaires
to donate their money to the poor but you had no moral or legal
right to steal it from them, despite what you did with the money.
Yet as soon
as the process is elevated to the ranks of the federal government,
the moral compass of most Americans (libertarians being an exception)
is thrown entirely out of kilter. The standard mindset is: If the
federal government is doing it, then it must be morally right.
Suppose the
majority of elected representatives in Congress vote to impose a
tax on all millionaires. The IRS collects the money, on pain of
fine, imprisonment, and levies and liens for anyone who refuses
to pay. Federal welfare agencies distribute the money (or actually
whats left of it after paying governmental expenses associated
with collecting and distributing it) to the poor, the needy, the
disadvantaged, and the elderly.
Whats
the response of the average American? What a caring and compassionate
person I am. How fortunate that I belong to a society where my government
taxes the rich and gives to the poor. We are all good people
politicians, bureaucrats, and citizens alike.
What about
all the moral principles that applied to me, the person who did
the same thing that the federal government did? In the mind of the
average American, all that disappears as soon as the welfare state
enters the picture. The exercise of conscience doesnt even
enter the picture because of the supreme deference given to the
federal government and its welfare state.
Conscience
and choice
Consider also
the effect that the welfare state has on an individual persons
exercise of conscience that is, in deciding what to do with
his income and savings. Suppose we live in a society in which there
is no income tax (i.e., the kind of society our American ancestors
lived in). Lets say that after paying off all your expenses,
you have $10,000 left over. You have a range of choices for disposing
of that money. Should you donate it to your church or to some fund-raising
drive for the poor? Should you use it to help out your ailing parents?
How about a new motorcycle? Vacation? Save it for a rainy day?
Thats
where the exercise of conscience comes in. That mental process of
deciding whether to do this or that is what causes the conscience
to strengthen. Conversely, when government suppresses such choices,
the exercise of conscience diminishes. A wide range of choices in
society with respect to what people do with their own money inevitably
nudges morality to higher levels.
But suppose
that the federal government doesnt feel that people can be
trusted to do the right thing with their money. It imposes a $10,000
tax on you and others to help fund the poor and needy. That leaves
you without that $10,000 that prompted you to make choices. You
just write out a $10,000 check to the IRS and you are thereby relieved
of any further struggle over what to do with that money. No more
anguishing over whether to give the money to your church, your parents,
or the poor or whether to spend it on yourself. Now you can just
automatically consider yourself a good, caring, compassionate person
because Caesar the organized means of coercion and compulsion
in society has confiscated your money and given it to the
poor and needy (and others, such as foreign regimes) on your behalf.
Free will
and the welfare state
Perhaps the
best example of the demise of conscience among the American people
is how they think about Social Security. This welfare-state program
is one of the best manifestations of how people have effectively
raised the federal government to the level of a deity, one that
they think is working in partnership with God in such areas as helping
the poor and honoring ones mother and father.
There is a
fundamental problem with that way of thinking, especially for Christians,
however. Gods system relies on freedom and free will while
Caesars system depends on the use of force.
Contrary to
popular misconceptions, Social Security is a direct and mandatory
transfer program. There is no fund in which people have placed their
money. Instead, the state uses its monopoly of force to take money
from one group of people (the young and productive) in order to
give it to another group of people (the elderly).
The difference
between a persons voluntarily helping out his parents or other
elderly people with his own money and the states forcible
taking of money from one person and giving it to another person
is the difference between day and night, especially from a religious
or moral standpoint.
After all,
can an immoral act be converted into a moral act simply by having
the government do it? If stealing is wrong on a private basis, even
when the money is used to help others, how is that same act converted
into a moral deed when the state is doing it?
Moreover, from
the Christian perspective the second-greatest gift that God has
given to mankind (the first being the birth and death of Jesus Christ)
is free will. What that means is that God will not impose his will
on anyone. He leaves it to each person to make his own choices as
he progresses from birth to death, including choices dealing with
what a person should do with money that comes into his possession.
For example,
when the young rich man approached Jesus and asked him what he needed
to do to be saved, Jesus told him to keep Gods commandants.
Then he suggested that the young man sell everything he had and
give it to the poor. The young man, being wedded to his wealth,
could not answer that call and walked away dejected.
Whether one
believes that Jesus was simply causing the young man to confront
an impediment to his following God or whether he really meant for
the young man to do what he suggested, one thing is clear: when
the young man rejected the suggestion, Jesus did not call on any
of his disciples to take the young mans money in order to
give it to the poor. By the same token, Jesus did not call on Roman
officials to tax the man so that the money could be distributed
to the poor. Instead, understanding that free will entails the right
to say No, Jesus respected the mans choice by
not forcibly interfering with it.
Compare Jesus
response to that of the federal government and its Social Security
scheme. The idea is that its the moral duty of children to
take care of their parents, but Americans cannot be trusted to voluntarily
fulfill this particular commandment. Therefore, they must be forced
to do so through the tax mandates of the welfare state. Every person
is required to send a portion of his income to the Social Security
Administration, which then distributes the money to the elderly.
Everyone in the nation, especially the politicians, bureaucrats,
and taxpayers, is then considered a good, caring, and compassionate
person for living in a country where the welfare state provides
for the elderly. The fact that the money being distributed and received
is stolen, morally speaking, from others fails to rise to the conscious
level of most people, including the Christians.
Where is free
will in this particular process? Its gone. Everyone is required
to send his money to the Social Security Administration. If he refuses
to do so, the government imprisons and fines him. A person cannot
simply say, It is my right under principles of free will to
walk away from my parents. I choose to say No.
The Social Security Administration makes sure that everyone fulfills
Gods commandment, especially those who would choose to not
give any money to their elderly parents.
Once again,
the wider the range of choices with which people are faced with
respect to the use of their money, the more their conscience will
be exercised. Should I honor my mother and father or not?
Should I provide for them or not? With Social Security,
those questions seldom have to be asked. The welfare state, and
specifically the Social Security scheme, oftentimes relieves people
of the responsibility (or opportunity) of dealing with such issues.
Why do Americans
continue to embrace the welfare state despite its manifest immorality,
damage, and destructiveness? My hunch is that they have lost faith
in themselves, a loss that they have replaced with faith in government.
They want to be relieved as much as possible of the difficult choices
and decisions that life presents them. By delegating the responsibility
of making peaceful choices about what they do with their money to
the welfare state, they have rendered unto Caesar the things that
belong to God, including the exercise of free will. The result has
been a demise of conscience.
The demise
of conscience among the American people is even more pronounced
in the context of the warfare state than it is in that of the welfare
state. The best example of this phenomenon can be seen in the invasion
and occupation of Iraq. By examining Iraq, we can see how embracing
the warfare state has stultified the conscience of the American
people.
An examination
of conscience with respect to Iraq requires an analysis of two things:
first, the various rationales for the invasion and occupation and,
second, a focus on the Iraqi people who have been killed or maimed
during the entire operation.
Fundamental
to any moral philosophy is that it is wrong to take the life of
another person. An exception to that rule, however, at least for
those who are not complete pacifists, involves the concept of self-defense.
If Person A threatens Person B with deadly force, Person B has the
right to defend himself by using deadly force against Person A.
Most nations
codify the injunction against murder (and the concept of self-defense)
in their criminal laws, making it illegal to wrongfully kill another
person. But whether they do or do not is irrelevant from a moral
standpoint. Even if the state fails to criminalize murder, the act
continues to be immoral and continues to violate Gods commandment
against killing.
These moral
and legal principles apply to war as well. The people of one nation,
operating through their government, have no moral or legal right
to attack and kill the people of another nation. But if Nation A
attacks Nation B, the citizens of Nation B have the moral and legal
right to defend themselves from the attack. Moreover, the defense
that the citizens of Nation B put up to Nation As invasion
cannot serve as an ex post facto moral or legal justification for
killing on the part of troops belonging to Nation A.
These principles
were applied at the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal following
World War II. The Allied Powers charged German officials with the
war crime of waging a war of aggression. What the charge
meant was that Germany had initiated war against other countries,
including militarily weak ones, killing inhabitants of those countries
in the process. The inference drawn from Nuremburg was that while
the countries that had been attacked could kill German soldiers
in self-defense, German soldiers, as part of the aggressor force,
had no right to kill people in the countries that Germany had invaded.
Conscience
and aggressive war
Everyone agrees
that neither the Iraqi government nor the Iraqi people ever attacked
the United States. Everyone agrees that no Iraqi participated in
the 9/11 attacks. There is no question but that in the Iraq War,
the United States is the aggressor nation and Iraq is the defending
nation.
In the run-up
to the invasion, I recall reading an article in which U.S. soldiers
were asking military chaplains whether God would forgive them for
killing Iraqis. It was obvious that their consciences were bothering
them. I suspect that they were wondering whether it was consistent
with Gods law to kill people whose government had not attacked
their country.
Ill never
forget reading what some of the chaplains told those soldiers. They
told them that they need not concern themselves with what lay ahead.
They said that they could place their trust in the judgment of their
commander in chief. In other words, they could go into Iraq and
kill people without having any crisis of conscience.
One cannot
help but wonder whether those chaplains, in reaching their judgment,
confronted the critical moral question: How could the killing of
any Iraqi be morally justified, given that the U.S. government was
going to be the aggressor in the conflict? How could killing people
while serving as part of an aggressor force be reconciled with Gods
laws? I cant help but wonder how many U.S. soldiers who were
struggling with their conscience before the invasion are bedeviled
by it today.
A reflection
of the demise of conscience that has accompanied the warfare state
is the fact that, as far as I know, only one U.S. soldier refused
to deploy to Iraq on the grounds that to do so would involve the
wrongful killing of people. He was an officer Lt. Ehren Watada.
Watada pointed out that not only was the war on Iraq illegal from
the standpoint of U.S. law (because the president had failed to
secure the constitutionally required congressional declaration of
war against Iraq), it would also constitute the war crime of waging
a war of aggression. Watadas conscience would not permit him
to kill people in such a conflict.
How was Watada
treated by U.S. officials? As a criminal. The U.S. military prosecuted
him for refusing to obey orders to deploy to Iraq. He was ridiculed
for following the dictates of conscience. The Pentagons mistreatment
of Watada was a powerful message to any other soldier who might
be struggling with his conscience that this is what happens
to people of conscience in the U.S. army.
While several
civil libertarians came to Watadas defense, it would be safe
to say that most Americans didnt know about or didnt
care about his case. Conscience, it is widely assumed, can play
no role once the nation is at war, at least not with respect to
whether ones own government is in the right or the wrong.
All that matters is victory. It was the same mindset that guided
most Germans in World War II.
The WMD
rationale
Prior to the
invasion of Iraq, President Bush and other U.S. officials tried
mightily to cast the war within the self-defense category,
no doubt so that both the American people and U.S. soldiers could
feel at ease with the killing that was about to occur. If they could
convince people that the United States was the defending nation
and Iraq the aggressor nation, then most people would have no qualms
about killing Iraqi attackers.
This attempt
was first manifested by trying to tie Saddam Hussein to the 9/11
attacks and, later, to the anthrax attacks. When those attempts
failed, Bush resorted to his now-famous WMD claim. What he and other
U.S. officials were suggesting was that, while Iraq had not yet
attacked the United States, there was no doubt that Iraq was preparing
to attack the United States with WMDs.
While Bush
never expressly said that an Iraqi attack was imminent, that was
clearly the implication. Thats what Condoleezza Rices
famous smoking-gun, mushroom-cloud assertion, along with Colin Powells
ominous WMD charts before the UN, was all about to scare
people into thinking that this was going to be an urgent war of
self-defense. That way, they could feel at ease about killing Iraqis.
One of the
most significant outcomes in the history of the Iraq invasion, especially
from the standpoint of individual conscience, was that the WMDs
failed to materialize. By the time that confirmation was made, there
had already been countless Iraqis killed. At that point, many Americans,
including U.S. soldiers, may well have said to themselves, Well,
President Bush thought that Saddam was about to attack the United
States with WMDs, and I put my faith in President Bush. Its
obvious that our president just made an honest mistake. Nobody is
morally responsible for all those deaths.
But there is
one big problem with that position, from a moral standpoint: the
circumstantial evidence leads inexorably in one direction
that Bushs WMD rationale for the invasion and occupation of
Iraq was fake and false. Yet, most Americans still dont want
to confront that horrible possibility because to do so would involve
confronting their own support for a conflict that has now taken
the lives of hundreds of thousands of people. After all, how many
people have called for congressional investigations into whether
President Bush intentionally misled the American people prior to
his war on Iraq?
Recall that
Bush spent several months unsuccessfully trying to secure a UN resolution
authorizing an invasion of Iraq. If a nation was really in the process
of preparing to attack the United States, would the president actually
spend any time at all going to the UN and asking for a resolution
to permit him to defend the country? Of course not.
Second, in
the run-up to the invasion Bush repeatedly claimed that he was authorized
to invade to enforce UN resolutions requiring Saddam to disarm.
But Bush knew that legally only the UN, not the United States, could
enforce its own resolutions. Moreover, if Iraq actually was about
to attack the United States, would the president really be looking
for UN resolutions on which to base his defense of the country?
Third, throughout
the 1990s the U.S. government had imposed on Iraq and enforced what
were arguably the most brutal set of economic sanctions against
a nation in history. Contributing to the deaths of hundreds of thousands
of Iraqi children, the sanctions had even resulted in the resignation
of two high UN officials Hans von Sponeck and Dennis Halliday,
who, out of conscience, could not participate in the genocide
produced by the sanctions.
What was the
purpose of the sanctions? To encourage the Iraqi people, including
their government officials, to oust Saddam Hussein from power and
replace him with someone more acceptable to U.S. officials.
Thus, the circumstantial
evidence led strongly to one conclusion: The real purpose of the
invasion of Iraq was not to protect the United States from a WMD
attack or to enforce UN resolutions but rather to simply achieve
what the sanctions had failed to achieve throughout the 1990s
a change in the regime governing Iraq.
So what would
be wrong with that? Whats wrong with it is that its
morally wrong and a violation of Gods laws to kill the people
of another nation simply to achieve a change of administrations
within their government. The government that is seeking the regime
change through an invasion is the aggressor nation. In fact, an
invasion for the purpose of regime change is also illegal under
the UN Charter, to which the United States is a signatory.
Americans who
have supported the invasion and occupation of Iraq, including U.S.
soldiers who have killed people in Iraq, might say, Look,
I thought there were going to be WMDs, just like the president did.
We all just made an honest mistake.
There are major
problems, however, with that position, at least from the standpoint
of conscience. For one, there has been no attempt on the part of
many Americans, especially through their elected representatives
in Congress, to investigate whether the president and his associates
knowingly and intentionally lied about the real reasons for invading
Iraq. Instead, it is obvious that people just dont want to
know whether their federal officials lied or not. Wouldnt
a person struck by a crisis of conscience want to know the truth
in order to deal with what he has wrought?
Recall what
happened on that fateful day when it was confirmed that there were
no WMDs. One option would have been for the president to announce,
My fellow Americans. I have made a grave and grievous error.
I secured your support for the invasion of Iraq on the basis of
my claim that Saddam was threatening our nation with WMDs. It turns
out that Saddam was telling the truth that he really had
destroyed his WMDs. I hereby apologize to you and the Iraqi people
who have already lost loved ones in this invasion. I am hereby ordering
the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Iraq. I am very sorry for
my mistake.
But thats
not what the president did. Instead, he shifted to what had been
a secondary, alternative rationale for invading Iraq to bring
democracy to the Iraqi people. He continued the invasion, which
everyone knew would entail the killing and maiming of countless
more Iraqis in the process.
Now, think
about that for a moment. On the one hand, the president has the
American people view Iraq as an enemy nation one that is
threatening the very survival of America one that we must
defend against. On the other hand, the president is telling the
American people that another reason hes invading Iraq is to
help out the Iraqi people by giving them a democratic system.
Thats
a strange confluence of two completely different lines of thinking.
Imagine, for example, that after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
President Roosevelt had said to the American people, We are
fighting for our national survival against a brutal foe that is
trying to conquer us and, alternatively, we are fighting to help
our foe achieve democracy.
Killing
for welfare
In the days
prior to the confirmation that Iraq had no WMDs, Americans could
tell themselves that the killing of Iraqis was necessary to defend
America from a WMD attack. On the day after that confirmation, that
rationalization no longer held water. On that fateful day
the day it was confirmed that Saddam Hussein had in fact disarmed
the U.S. government chose to continue killing Iraqis, only
under a completely different justification helping the Iraqi
people achieve democracy.
Even though
this alternative justification was more in the nature of a welfare
function and as far away from a self-defense function as a justification
could be, many Americans didnt skip a beat. They quickly shifted
rationales in order to match their mind-sets to that of the president.
The fact that they were supporting the killing of people for the
sake of a welfare function (i.e., bringing democracy to the Iraqi
people) didnt bother them one iota.
In fact, the
entire Were from the U.S. government and were
here to help you secondary rationale for invading and occupying
Iraq is laughable because the actions of the U.S. government were
clearly inconsistent with that notion. For one thing, there was
absolutely no remorse or regret for having killed countless people
under a mistaken WMD rationale. For another, the manner in which
Iraqi people were tortured, sexually abused, and murdered at Abu
Ghraib prison is inconsistent with the idea that U.S. officials
were in Iraq out of love for Iraqis. So was the fact that U.S. officials
nonchalantly permitted Iraqi museums containing priceless antiquities
to be ransacked, an action that Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld described
as an untidy aspect of freedom.
Other rationales
for invading
Ultimately,
the rationale for invading and occupying Iraq and killing
hundreds of thousands of Iraqis in the process has morphed
from one of protecting America from a WMD attack, to spreading democracy,
to fighting the terrorists there so that we dont have to fight
them here in the United States. Some extreme right-wing pro-war
supporters have even suggested that the invasion was necessary to
oppose the threat that Muslims have posed to Christians for the
past several centuries.
The third rationale
is the so-called magnet rationale, which entailed using U.S. troops
in Iraq to serve as a magnet for terrorists who otherwise
would come to the United State and commit terrorist acts. The idea
is that its okay to kill Iraqis because theyre living
in the country that is serving as a magnet, which, in turn, helps
to keep America safe from the terrorists.
Notice the
moral bankruptcy in that reasoning, however. Where is the moral
justification for using Iraq or any other country as such a magnet?
What responsibility did the Iraqi people have for President Bushs
war on terrorism? What did they do to deserve the deadly
consequences of serving as a magnet?
Moreover, who
cares that hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have died? Isnt
that what war is all about, even though neither the Iraqi people
nor their government wanted war with the United States? And why
should conscience play any role in the killing of Iraqis, given
that U.S. officials have designated their country to be a magnet
war zone?
Finally, we
cannot ignore the fact that the invasion of Iraq, just like the
sanctions and other U.S. interventions, produced the very terrorist
threat that the U.S. government then uses to justify its continued
killing of Iraqis. Lets not forget, however, that under both
legal and moral principles, the people of an invaded country, regardless
of what label you put on them, have the right to use deadly force
in self-defense against an aggressor power.
The notion
adopted by extreme right-wing neocons that it was necessary to invade
Iraq to oppose some centuries-old plan by Muslims to conquer the
Christian world is perhaps the most ludicrous justification of all
for killing Iraqis. After all, isnt it odd that we never heard
about this threat during the entire Cold War, when communism,
not Islam, was the big bugaboo?
In fact, not
even the U.S. government buys this rationale. U.S. officials have
never had any reservations about entering into partnerships with
Muslims and Muslim regimes. For example, consider the U.S. partnerships
with Osama bin Laden (to end the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan),
Saddam Hussein (when the United States was furnishing WMDs to Saddam
to kill Iranians), and the shah of Iran, not to mention the untold
amounts of U.S. military aid furnished to Islamic regimes all over
the Middle East. Lets not forget that, thanks to the U.S.
invasion of Iraq, that country itself now has a radical Islamic
regime, one that has even aligned itself with the radical Islamic
regime in Iran.
Notice that
not one of the people who justify the killing of Iraqis on the basis
of the so-called Islamic threat against the West is calling for
bombing the Islamic regimes in Iraq, Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia,
or Kuwait.
No remorse
for the Iraqi dead
On top of all
these shifting and morphing rationales for killing Iraqis was the
official policy of the Pentagon, announced early on, that U.S. forces
would not keep count of the Iraqi dead. Isnt that a rather
unusual policy for a government that is supposedly doing all this
for the benefit of the Iraqi people?
Through it
all, most Americans have had absolutely no remorse for the Iraqi
dead and maimed. Having stultified consciences, those Americans
just dont care that Iraqis have been killed. In fact, the
only reason that many Americans are having second thoughts about
Iraq is that American soldiers are being killed there, not because
peoples consciences are bothering them because of all the
Iraqi people killed. They simply take the attitude that since its
war, people are going to die, or they compare it to other wars and
blithely conclude, Oh well, at least the number of people
killed isnt as high as it has been in other wars.
Conscience
and Iraqi deaths
In fact, some
Americans have reduced the Iraq War to a mathematical equation,
one which holds that any number of Iraqi deaths is worth it if it
helps to achieve democracy. Conscience has disappeared
in that equation.
All too many
Americans have convinced themselves that any war in which the U.S.
government is involved, including a war of aggression against a
country that never attacked the United States, is automatically
a just war. Such a conclusion, they feel, relieves them of any exercise
of conscience with respect to the consequences of such a war.
But only defensive
wars are morally justifiable and consistent with Gods commandment
against killing. Does God permit killing people under a fake and
false WMD rationale? Does God permit killing a person for the sake
of democracy-spreading? Does God permit killing people as part of
a magnet defense? Does God permit killing people as
part of some conjured-up Islamic plan to conquer the Christian West?
Many Americans,
including some priests and ministers, dont dare to ask those
questions because to do so might require the exercise of conscience,
which is not an easy process to undergo.
The demise
of conscience has produced a society of people who go to church
on Sunday, where they regularly pray for the troops in Iraq, without
permitting their consciences to consider the fact that the U.S.
government has no right to be in Iraq and that the troops have no
right to be killing Iraqi people.
How many Iraqis
have been killed in the invasion and occupation of Iraq? We dont
know the exact number because, again, the Pentagon has steadfastly
said that it has absolutely no intention of keeping track of how
many Iraqis it kills. But the best estimates indicate that approximately
a million Iraqis have been killed as a consequence of the U.S. invasion
and occupation of Iraq.
Now, reflect
on that for a few minutes. One million people, dead. Not a thousand.
Not a hundred thousand. Not half a million. One million dead people.
That is not a small number of dead people.
Now, add that
million to the estimated hundreds of thousands of Iraqi people who
died as a result of the brutal sanctions against Iraq during the
1990s.
The standard
attitude among all too many Americans is that its all been
worth it because Saddam Hussein was a bad man
who needed to be replaced by a U.S. stooge. It was the same attitude
of UN Ambassador Madeleine Albright, who told Sixty Minutes that
the deaths of half a million Iraqi children from the sanctions had
been worth it i.e., worth the attempt to oust
Saddam from power and replace him with a ruler acceptable to U.S.
officials.
But no American,
including U.S. soldiers, had the moral right to kill even one Iraqi,
much less a million, simply because Saddam Hussein was a bad
man whom U.S. officials were trying to oust from power. God
does not permit the killing of any person for the sake of democracy-spreading,
making them magnets, or imaginary threats. The commandment
is clear: Thou shalt not kill.
Meanwhile,
Americans blithely go about their business at home, indifferent
to or even enthusiastic about the number of Iraqi people killed
at the hands of the U.S. war machine in a war of aggression against
people who never attacked the United States and who did not want
war with the United States.
Conscience
the ferreting out of right and wrong and the pursuing of
right has been subordinated to the almighty judgments and
decisions of the federal government. In the words of Thomas Jefferson,
Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is
just, that his justice cannot sleep forever.
August
22, 2008
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2008 Future of Freedom Foundation
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Hornberger Archives
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