The Birth Pangs of Rosemary’s Baby
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice employed an interesting metaphor to describe
the death and mayhem in Lebanon. She said that the world was witnessing
the birth pangs of a new Middle East.
Why is that
an interesting metaphor? Well, shes obviously referring to
a pregnant womans labor pains and the pains of delivering
a baby.
Yet, as painful
as having a baby may be, most of the time the birth of a baby involves
the celebration of life. That is, except in the rare case when a
mother or baby dies during childbirth, other people are not dead
or maimed in the process of bringing a baby into the world. The
birth of a child is usually a matter of great happiness and joy.
What Rice is
obviously suggesting is that governments are much like parents in
the sense that governments are able to give birth to democratic
nations, just as human parents are able to give birth to human babies.
Of course,
the birthing process for democratic nations is somewhat different
from that employed by human beings. It employs bombs, missiles,
mortars, and bullets to bring the new democracy baby
into existence. Unlike the birth of a human baby, the birth of a
democracy baby involves chaos and the death, destruction, and maiming
of hundreds or even thousands of other people. And whereas most
human babies are born alive, democracy babies always seem to be
stillborn.
Are there many
people in the Middle East happily celebrating the birth of their
new democracy baby? Are all those tears being shed in that part
of the world actually tears of joy over the birth of a new democracy
baby? It would seem not.
Once a new
democracy baby is delivered, all the other deaths, including the
deaths of real human children during the birthing process,
are supposed to be considered worth it, to employ the
words of another U.S. official, Madeleine Albright (when she was
ambassador to the UN), who said that the deaths of hundreds of thousands
of Iraqi children from the brutal
sanctions that had been used to bring a new democratic Iraq
into existence had been worth
it.
Meanwhile,
the New York Times reported this week that U.S. forces in
Iraq had killed two Iraqi militants with either a bomb
or a missile fired from an airplane. The airstrike also killed a
child, which Lt. Col. Barry Johnson, a military spokesman, justified,
saying, We believe that countless more Iraqis would have been
at risk had we not taken immediate action. Johnson might also
have added that the death of the child was just part of the birth
pangs of a new, democratic Iraq that the Pentagon was still
giving birth to some four years after the birthing process was initiated
with the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Is it possible
to arrive at sicker metaphors and reasoning to justify the deaths,
maiming, mayhem, and chaos in the Middle East? How long will the
American people continue to tolerate their governments involvement
in all this moral perversity?
August
3, 2006
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2006 Future of Freedom Foundation
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