Rabu, 20 Oktober 2004

We Are the World


John Kerry's defense policy is the subject of a

Washington Post
article which may have been intended as hagiographic but
whose effect will probably vary with the eye of the beholder. It portrays the
candidate as a complex man; in that he sometimes agreed with Richard Nixon; in
that he believed in military persistence on occasion; in that he believed in
cutting military budgets at other times. But the one simple belief which Senator
Kerry consistently carried throughout the course of his long public life was the
conviction that America should never, if possible, go it alone.



NATO and the United Nations appear to be touchstones for the Democratic
nominee, not just the troublesome hurdles that they appear to be to President
Bush. In speeches over the years, Kerry repeatedly has denounced unilateral
action.


Kerry's belief in working with allies runs so deep that he has maintained
that the loss of American life can be better justified if it occurs in the
course of a mission with international support. In 1994, discussing the
possibility of U.S. troops being killed in Bosnia, he said, "If you mean
dying in the course of the United Nations effort, yes, it is worth that. If
you mean dying American troops unilaterally going in with some false
presumption that we can affect the outcome, the answer is unequivocally no."



This will be cause for joy among those who feel that on principle, America
should subsume its national interest to a wider set of imperatives. 'America
joins the world', 'No longer alone' is the ticket. The argument is based on a
rejection of American "exceptionalism", and indeed the exceptionalism of any
individual country or culture. If all cultures are equally valid then the US
Constitution is nothing special; simply one arrangement among many and in fact
perforce subordinate to a Universal Charter, in the way that a subset is
necessarily contained in the superset. Any distaste is written off as
sentimental attachment; a false ethnocentrism that will eventually join
anthrocentrism and geocentrism in the wastebasket of old ideas. To necessity is
added the force of inevitability. Iraq becomes a modern day Scopes Trial, the
last hurrah of an insupportable conceit.


Nor is there anything to be alarmed at, we are assured. 'One World' may be a
goal, but a distant goal, comfortably arrived at in stages. Nothing will be
missed. Nothing essential really. It will all happen so gradually as to
be imperceptible, except to bigots, who are always noticing something. The
process will consist of a slow expansion of international understandings and a
gradual diminution of individual action. Nations will habituate themselves to
deferring to a Higher Good until it becomes unthinkable to do otherwise. We can
take our time -- provided, and this is essential -- provided there are no
questions about the eventual destination. It is breathtaking as a concept, and
might be described as a second American Revolution; one we are witnessing now.



Imagine there's no countries,

It isn't hard to do,

Nothing to kill or die for,

No religion too,

Imagine all the people

living life in peace...


You may say I'm a dreamer,

but I'm not the only one,

I hope some day you'll join us,

And the world will live as one.

--

John Lennon


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