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Will Tears Ever Stop?
John Gerassi
I can't help crying. As soon as I see a person on TV telling
the heart-rending story of the tragic fate of their loved-one
in the World Trade Center disaster, I can't control my tears.
But then I wonder why didn't I cry when our troops wiped out
some 5,000 poor people in Panama's El Chorillo neighborhood
on the excuse of looking for Noriega. Our leaders knew he
was hiding elsewhere but we destroyed El Chorillo because
the folks living there were nationalists who wanted the U.S.
out of Panama completely.
Worse still, why didn't I cry when we killed two million
Vietnamese, mostly innocent peasants, in a war which its main
architect, Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, knew we could
not win? When I went to give blood the other day, I spotted
a Cambodian doing the same, three up in the line, and that
reminded me: Why didn't I cry when we helped Pol Pot butcher
another million by giving him arms and money, because he was
opposed to "our enemy" (who eventually stopped the
killing
fields)?
To stay up but not cry that evening, I decided to go to a
movie. I chose Lumumba, at the Film Forum, and again I realized
that I hadn't cried when our government arranged for the murder
of the Congo's only decent leader, to be replaced by General
Mobutu, a greedy, vicious, murdering dictator. Nor did I cry
when the CIA arranged for the overthrow of Indonesia's Sukarno,
who had fought the Japanese World War II invaders and established
a free independent country, and then replaced him by another
General, Suharto, who had collaborated with the Japanese and
who proceeded to execute at least half a million "Marxists"
.
I watched TV again last night and cried again at the picture
of that wonderful now-missing father playing with his two-month
old child. Yet when I remembered the slaughter of thousands
of Salvadorans, so graphically described in the Times by Ray
Bonner, or the rape and
murder of those American nuns and lay sisters there, all perpetrated
by CIA trained and paid agents, I never shed a tear. I even
cried when I heard how brave had been Barbara Olson, wife
of the Solicitor General, whose political views I detested.
But I didn't cry when the US invaded that wonderful tiny Caribbean
nation of Grenada and killed innocent citizens who hoped to
get a better life by building a tourist airfield, which my
government called proof of a Russian base, but then finished
building once the island was secure in the US camp again.
Why didn't I cry when Ariel Sharon, today Israel's prime
minister, planned, then ordered, the massacre of two thousand
poor Palestinians in the refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila,
the same Sharon who, with such other Irgun and Stern Gang
terrorists become prime ministers as Begin and Shamir, killed
the wives and children of British officers by blowing up the
King David hotel where they were billeted?
I guess one only cries only for one's own. But is that a
reason to demand vengeance on anyone who might disagree with
us? That's what Americans seem to want. Certainly our government
does, and so too most of our media. Do we really believe that
we have a right to exploit the poor folk of the world for
our benefit, because we claim we are free and they are not?
So now we're going to go to war. We are certainly entitled
to go after those who killed so many of our innocent brothers
and sisters. And we'll win, of course. Against Bin Laden.
Against Taliban. Against
Iraq. Against whoever and whatever. In the process we'll kill
a few innocent children again. Children who have no clothes
for the coming winter. No houses to shelter them. And no schools
to learn why they are guilty, at two or four or six years
old. Maybe Evangelists Falwell and Robertson will claim their
death is good because they weren't Christians, and maybe some
State Department spokesperson will tell the world that they
were so poor that they're now better off.
And then what? Will we now be able to run the world the way
we want to? With all the new legislation establishing massive
surveillance of you and me, our CEOs will certainly be pleased
that the folks
demonstrating against globalization will now be cowed for
ever. No more riots in Seattle, Quebec or Genoa. Peace at
last.
Until next time. Who will it be then? A child grown-up who
survived our massacre of his innocent parents in El Chorillo?
A Nicaraguan girl who learned that her doctor mother and father
were murdered by a bunch of gangsters we called democratic
contras who read in the CIA handbook that the best way to
destroy the only government which was trying to give thecountry's
poor a better lot was to kill its teachers, health personnel,
and government farm workers? Or maybe it will be a bitter
Chilean who is convinced that his whole family was wiped out
on order of Nixon's Secretary of State Henry Kissinger who
could never tell the difference between a communist and a
democratic socialist or even a nationalist.
When will we Americans learn that as long as we keep trying
to run the world for the sake of the bottom line, we will
suffer someone's revenge? No war will ever stop terrorism
as long as we use terror to have our way. So I stopped crying
because I stopped watching TV. I went for a walk. Just four
houses from mine. There, a crowd had congregated to lay flowers
and lit candles in front of our local firehouse. It was closed.
It had been closed since Tuesday because the firemen, a wonderful
bunch of friendly guys who always greeted neighborhood folks
with smiles and good cheer, had rushed so fast to save the
victims of the first tower that they perished with them when
it collapsed. And I cried again.
So I said to myself when I wrote this, don't send it; some
of your students, colleagues, neighbors will hate you, maybe
even harm you. But then I put on the TV again, and there was
Secretary of State
Powell telling me that it will be okay to go to war against
these children, these poor folks, these US-haters, because
we are civilized and they are not. So I decided to risk it.
Maybe, reading this, one
more person will ask: Why are so many people in the world
ready to die to give us a taste of what we give them?
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