If Only George Bush Had Been Amish
By Doug Soderstrom,
10/14/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- The Amish response to the brutal slaying of
five of their own offspring in an old fashioned, one-roomed
school house was a blueprint for how President George Walker
Bush should have responded to the slaughter of nearly 3,000 of
our own citizens in the tragedy of September 11, 2001. The
merciful decision to forgive a deranged man who, for whatever
reason, chose to project a self-inflicted sense of hate upon a
classroom of nothing but innocent children was exactly as God
would have had it, exactly how he would have responded if it had
been one of his own children who had been slain. Something like
that of “the cross” when his son, Jesus, spoke the immortal
words, “Father forgive them for they know not what they do!” A
message for the ages, one for all of mankind to hear, even to
understand. A reminder that hate might well rule the day, but,
in the end, only love has the genuine capacity to heal a world
caught up in the agonizing grip of pain and suffering.
However, such was not to be the case for our president as he
chose not to travel the path of peace, but rather a way
traversed by men determined to mete out justice according to an
eye-for-an-eye, clenched-fist law of lex talionis, one that led
a world of onlookers to condemn what turned out to be a shameful
display of “shock and awe,” a merciless attack (by the greatest
military power the world has ever seen) upon a country of folks
preveniently bombed into a near stone-age existence, proving our
country to be that of a true bully, one motivated by national
glory and corporate greed, all in order to prove to the world
who the boss really is, who it is that shall have “the last
say.” However, as it turns out, having “the last say” depends
not so much upon who is able to throw the final punch, but
rather who it is that is most wise, who is able to impel folks
to be a friend of he who happens to be crowned as victor.
Almost as if the world had been caught short in some sort of
sleeping (counting its peace dividend) slumber, 9/11 pounced
upon the body-politik as if slapped in the face. Everyone,
except for those of Al-Qaeda (and a complement of heedlessly,
inattentive Bush administration officials), was shocked,
stricken to the core of their being, put on notice that the
world had been irrevocably changed, modified to such an extent
that nothing would ever be the same, that a new world order
would from this point on be required. If only the Bush
administration had done its homework. If only they had been
prepared. If only George Walker Bush had been, as he had so
routinely claimed to be, that of a true Christian, a resolute,
born-again believing follower of the Lord Jesus Christ, the
world may have been spared the unfathomable travesty of a
“nation of believers” driven insane by an uncontrollable urge to
kill in the name of an all-loving (yet, no doubt, rather
ill-tempered) God.
If only George Walker Bush had taken the time to read the same
Bible as that of the Amish, a simple pastoral community wanting
to carry out the merciful requests of a loving God, a people who
took to heart the words of one who so clearly taught that the
wisdom of the world is no more than mere foolishness to God,
that the urge to take revenge upon those who might choose to
hurt another is nothing short of folly, that the decision to
strike back is like pouring kerosene on a lighted fire, a
catalyst that transforms enmity to into a certain desire to
kill.
If only our president would have had the capacity to comprehend
that having been attacked, the world, for the first time since
the days of Pearl Harbor, seemed to feel sorry for us, were more
than ready to help us. We had the world in the very palm of our
hand, and all that was required was to simply place the
so-called terrorist problem in that of their own lap, and, out
of an empathic concern for us as a people, they would have
immediately come to our rescue. The United Nations had placed
inspectors in Iraq, no weapons of mass destruction had been
found, and, for the cost of merely one week of war in Iraq, we
could have financed the work of a phalanx of inspectors for
decades to come. And with the balance of money having been spent
on a war lasting longer than that of our involvement in World
War II (an amount nearing one half trillion dollars!) we could
have paved “the roads of the world” with the glittering gold of
gracious and benevolent concern for others by constructing
medical clinics for the sick, schools for those without
education, water wells for those living in parched lands, and by
feeding the tens of millions of staving children around the
world…… random acts of kindness that would have generated enough
good will to last until the end of time.
And all of such while having pretended to be a noble,
Christ-centered, nation, aided and abetted by a sanctimonious
undercurrent of jack-booted, xenophobic apologists having
marched their way into the bloodstained jaws of empire, we will
one day be taken to task, forced, by all of humanity, to take
responsibility for having allowed ourselves to have become a
venerable “den of thieves,” a nation condemned for having led
the world into an apocalypse of horrors, an astonishingly brutal
abolition of the world..... as we now know it.
Doug Soderstrom, Ph.D. Psychologist - gdsoderstrom @ yahoo.com
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