Blood
on Their Hands
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Every time
Bush stands up to speak about the war, how we have to stick it out,
how we have to stand up against evil, how our nation is being called
to do its historic duty, I have the same thought: and what are you
doing besides making this stupid speech? Presidents speak as if
they somehow embody the will of the nation, and so the courage shown
by the troops is their courage, the determination of the commanders
on the ground is their determination too, and the strong will of
the people to fork over to fund this ghastly war is their strong
will too. They might even believe it.
But this has
nothing to do with reality. The people who are ordering this war
to be fought are not actually doing the fighting. The politicians
are not dying by the dozens per day. Senators aren’t getting their
arms and legs blown off or their faces disfigured. Executive branch
bureaucrats are not fearing for their lives every minute, facing
extreme psychological stress, suffering from every manner of sleep
deprivation or physical malady. Nor do politicians live with the
ever-lasting guilt that comes with killing in cold blood people
who are merely trying to secure the independence of their country.
Indeed, politicians
try to stay as far away from the real action of war as possible.
When Bush encounters enlisted soldiers, it is only within carefully
scripted parameters. His handlers make sure that he hears cheers,
not hisses. All the politicians spend more time watching poll numbers
than body counts. For them, most of the death associated with this
war is an abstraction. If any of them were forced to witness first
hand the scene of a suicide bomb that kills 20 in an instant, sleep
in the bunkers with the troops and hear of their fears and struggles,
to personally deliver the news of a dead husband to a young wife
and children, matters would be different indeed.
But does that
make them any less guilty? Not according to the Bush administration’s
own moral theory of culpability. They claim that Osama bin Laden
bears the primary guilt for the crime of 9-11. He didn’t fly the
planes into buildings. They say that he sponsored the hijackers’
training, planted the idea, and gave the orders. That makes him
a war criminal and deserving of death. But then so too have Bush
and the political class sponsored the training of the soldiers who
are killing and being killed daily. They gave the commanders the
notion that it would be a good idea to demolish a country and a
people. Bush and those he hired have given the orders. And unlike
the case of Osama, there is no doubt about the paper trail that
leads directly to the White House.
All these years
later, after hundreds of thousands of dead, after unthinkable evil
perpetuated and unleashed on Iraq, we are starting to see a growth
in the opposition based on partisan concerns. The Democrats watch
polls, and they observe that the war is wildly unpopular and increasingly
so all the time. So there is a movement growing within the party
not to back down when faced with Bush’s preposterous rhetoric that
cutting the flow of funds would harm the troops and bring about
a victory for terrorism.
What’s sad
here, even disgusting, is that it has taken a strong movement in
the polls and the prospect of an election to finally light a fire
under the Democrats. Rivers of blood and the destruction of a country
– even massive evidence that the administration lied us into war
– haven’t prompted an effort to stop the war. But a change in the
polls seems to have made a difference.
What does this
tell us about political motivation? Across the country, politicians
are telling audiences: we care about you. We care about your real
problems such as health care and education. We seek the well-being
of you and your family, and we have a plan to assist you in every
respect. But one only needs to look at this war to see how much
these people truly care about human well-being. If they did, they
wouldn’t have to wait for poll shifts to stop the killing. They
would act even if the decision were unpopular.
To use the
old public-choice language concerning this war, the costs are diffuse
and spread thinly but the benefits are direct. The Democrats too
benefit from war booty. They have merchants of death in their districts
that get the cash. They benefit from the huge spike in "homeland
security" funds, and so have every incentive to keep the level
of war hysteria high and growing. They are part of the state apparatus,
and war is the health of the state. They too have much to lose from
ending the war and much to gain from keeping some form of the war
going.
So
do they really care about human well-being? It’s an abstraction
to them. So how to fix the problem? One solution is suggested by
a visit that Democratic leader Harry Reid made to the Walter Reed
Army Medical Center. He met with gravely wounded troops. He also
called survivors of the dead and spoke to them about their problems.
All evidence indicates that he was deeply touched. He is, after
all, a human being, and anyone who wouldn’t be touched by such contact
with human suffering would have to be morally blind or a demon possessed.
It was this experience that has prompted him to work for an end
to the war. Though one must note that no such trip was required
for Ron Paul to oppose this war from the beginning.
Is
there not some antiwar group that could arrange for the non-Ron
Paul political class to make similar phone calls and pay visits
to those who suffer? Such experiences could help create an intellectual
link between their political decisions and the suffering they bring
about. We need ever more such visits. Even better would be to sponsor
field trips by the political class to actually walk in the steps
of the troops in Iraq. That would be enough to dispel the impression
that ending the war amounts to a failure to support the troops.
July
9, 2007
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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