Letter to a Conservative Friend
by
Barry Loberfeld
by Barry Loberfeld
Allow
me first to apologize for taking so long to respond to your letter
of early April. Not a particularly long one, it read in its entirety:
Barry,
my friend,
Just know
this one thing please. It is far better to fight, kill and destroy
these godless jihadist bastards over there in Iraq, than over
here near the local mall. Their threat is very real. If you
do not know this one fact, then you are not living in my reality.
I'd much rather have militant Islamic [Oedipal expletive, plural]
fight our trained soldiers and Marines in Arab lands than in
your town, ya dig? I also disagree with many other aspects of
your Open
Letter to the National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee.
But apparently unlike you, I'd fight to the death to protect
your right to write what you feel. That is pretty damn pathetic,
huh?
My
immediate thought now is the same as when I first read this letter:
It's not every day you see the word reality modified by a
possessive pronoun. But it's the one statement I agree with completely.
I live in the reality where a commission report, only a few days
before your letter, exposed just how fraudulent the initial "intelligence"
claims for the war had been, including that of a significant link
between the Hussein regime the most secular one in the Arab world
and the "godless [?!] jihadist bastards" of al-Qaeda. From day
one, our soldiers in Iraq have been fighting overwhelmingly Ba'athists
and "insurgents" whose own fight is against only the American invasion,
not American liberty. These are not armed forces that were heading
for Suffolk County before the Marines cut 'em off at the pass, so
to speak. We were not attacked on September 11 by all Arabs, all
Muslims, or even all "Islamists." We certainly weren't attacked
or ever threatened by Saddam Hussein. So, was Osama bin Laden,
the real culprit, too much of a "lone nut" to wage a "war" against?
Did September 11, like November 22, require its own conspiracy theory?
Did September 11, like December 7, require its own "Japan"? If so,
then why Iraq instead of, say, Saudi Arabia?
I
know: "weapons of mass destruction." Actually, I'm going zip right
by the issue of whether there was ever a legitimate question on
the matter because I consider it irrelevant, and I'll tell you
why. N., I assume you of course remember how we met. You overheard
our FEE discussion group in the cafe
at BORDERS and came over and introduced yourself. You picked up
that we were libertarian, not conservative like yourself, but you
mentioned that you liked our opposition to gun control. Well, N.,
this libertarian believes what every conservative worthy of the
name knows: I am safer with a gun in my house than with the promise
of gun control to disarm any and every would-be intruder. Against
all potential threats, the best offense is a good defense. And what
is wisdom for the security of our homes is wisdom for the security
of our homeland. Hence the folly of preemptive war: Every resource
given to international offense is a resource taken from national
defense. Government must be, not the gun control that promises to
disarm all rogue nations and every would-be terrorist in the world,
but the gun inside our homeland that truly protects it.
The
Bush Doctrine is nothing but global gun control. He has turned
the U.S. military into Handgun Control, Int. and intends to use
it to disarm every rogue nation out there: first, Afghanistan; now,
Iraq; next, Iran, North Korea, and God knows where else. And what
about all the terrorist cells that don't provide us with an identifiable
"Japan" to target? How will any of this prevent a monster from walking
across our border and unstopping a jar of anthrax in a major city?
How can we pretend that the military can disarm every rogue in the
world any more than the police can disarm every rogue in the country?
You
will notice, N., that the finding of no weapons of mass destruction
hasn't been taken by the White House as a reason to bring our troops
home. On the contrary, it's seen as a need to invent a new reason
for their presence there: We must bring democracy, not merely to
Iraq, but to the entire Middle East! Well, that's good thing, right?
No, not at all. N., we pay taxes for our Suffolk County police to
fight crime here in Suffolk, not to go fight robbery in Cairo, rape
in New Delhi, and murder in Berlin. It is no less a dereliction
of duty for our national forces to do anything other than defend
American lives and liberties.
But
isn't establishing democracy in Iraq, which hopefully will then
spread to all the Arab and Islamic countries, a way to do just that?
Again, no. Not only was Germany surrounded by democracies, it was
a democracy the Weimar Republic. That didn't stop the rise of
such parties as the Communists and the National Socialists, who
joined to destroy German democracy. Does it take much imagination
to see how easily Iraqi democracy could vote itself into autocracy
or theocracy? And the argument that we eventually "got it right"
in Germany means what that we're already preparing for
a re-invasion of Iraq (and/or Afghanistan)? This is what in the
present age passes for a "strong national defense"?
N.,
there is really only one thing to say to our president: "Sir, mind
your beat!" He is this nation's policeman, not the world's. And
what do I have left to say to you? Only this: Please don't imagine
that my liberty means more to you than it does to me. Saddam Hussein
never threatened my "right to write" what I feel, and neither you
nor the soldiers actually over there are fighting to protect any
American's freedom. Now that's what I find "pretty damn pathetic."
In
Liberty and Security,
Barry
June
3, 2005
Barry
Loberfeld is a Long Island-based freelancer whose work has appeared
in Liberty, The Freeman, and FrontPageMag.com.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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