Right now, on this very night while I take in the quiet warmth and comforting seclusion with my family this holiday season, somewhere out there is a man far from his loved ones. He wears a hood and his hands are bound behind his back. He lies bruised and naked in a dark, cold makeshift prison cell. The echoes of his screams still ring in his ears as immeasurable fear overtakes his very soul.
We dont know who he is anymore than his family knows where he is. No one knows if hes guilty of anything nor does anyone know if hes just one of those errors in policy that Secretary of State Condi Rice referred so deprecatingly to during her recent trip to
Now Im not so disillusioned to think that the history of this country is not tainted by actions and policies that would shock the average person. As lofty as the ideals of the founding fathers might have been, we cannot escape the fact that the genocide of the native people of this land centuries ago was perceived by some to be crucial to attaining those ideals. And thats just the beginning. Our countrys history is rife with cruelty coupled with a sense of entitlement as we marched towards that American Dream.
We have plotted assassinations of leaders we disliked, weve dropped an uncountable tonnage of bombs, weve helped to overthrow governments and we have supported dictators, all in the name of democracy or preserving American values. And, yes, weve tortured people. From the Stress and Duress practices during the Kennedy administration to the teachings of the School of the
Even the
Torture is now an indiscriminate industry under Bush. Rather than the secretive policy practiced by leaders of the past and administered as a last result upon people who were known to have certain intelligence, we have now adopted practices prone to gross error upon innocent individuals in a kind of deplorable reenactment of Soylent Green. In other words, we have the bulldozers out scooping up people all over the world based upon the fact that they might have intelligence that could be useful. The prudence of the use of extraordinary rendition is now a thing of the past Bush has made it a reckless and blanket policy. Had people been paying attention years ago, they might have seen it coming.
Back in the spring of 2002, I remember a small text box in the NY Times reporting that Bush had withdrawn
Okay, okay I was just kidding. I knew damn well what was up. It was a case of CYA (Cover Your A ..) because this administration knew damn well what policies they were going to implement. To his credit, Bush came right out in the days after 9/11 to the Rose Garden and told everyone that were not going to tell you everything and that is exactly the way theyve proceeded even after they get caught.
American leaders are now debating and defending torture during this season of Peace on Earth, Good Will towards Men I mean its all so ghastly. And the most ironic aspect in all of this argument is that those who defend this abusive policy the loudest are the very same who are fired up over the alleged war on Christmas.
There is a photo that was published early on in the invasion. It showed a bound and hooded Iraqi sitting in the desert with his six year old son sitting on his lap. That image still haunts me to this day because, as the father of a six year old boy myself, the thought of what that man and that little boy must have been feeling at that time is simply too painful to think about. I want to know, what ever happened to them?
I want to know if that same dad became that naked and beaten figure in that cold wet cell somewhere far away from that little boy. I want to know how many more families have been affected by this not so secret and widespread cruelty that our leaders tell us is for our own good as well as our safety. I want to know how we as a country have become so paranoid and so lost that we would actually defend such behavior.
And while I cannot seem to get the image of that photo out of my mind, I also cannot seem to get the image of the boy president furiously ripping off the wrapping paper of his new X-Box 360 on Christmas morning.
God rest ye merry torturers.
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