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War & Pacifism: America vs. Iraq by
Flame RavenHawk ©February
2003
Wicca does not dictate matters of
conscience as it relates to war. Like
vegetarianism, we span the spectrum of taste.
Personally, I am a devout
pacifist. I believe that war is never a
good option, and it is the last resort of the weak and foolish. Human conflict is always avoidable, but
narrow-minded self-interest usually traps individuals and nations on courses of
self-destruction. War is a bloody,
destructive, useless way to resolve a conflict.
The end of active hostility does not equal peace. Waging peace through
compromise and compassion is far harder, but more sustainable.
It's hard to be a true pacifist in
this current climate. People tend to
think I'm the one who doesn't fully understand the situation. They delight in testing my resolve by giving
me horrific examples of a "bad person harming my children" as a way
to rouse me (with the natural consequence that if I still refuse to play the
"what-if" scenario, I must be a bad mother.) And my favorite... "If you don't believe
in war, what about Hitler?" (My
answer: what about all those years we knew he was killing his own people, and
did nothing to stop it... until Japan bombed us and jabbed us right in our
"self-interest"?)
I think that causing the unwilling
death of another person is wrong. Thou
Shalt Not Kill is found in nearly every major religious tradition. It's one of the few moral absolutes that we
all agree on. Being an
"absolute" means that it's not conditional. Wrong is wrong, and making it sound pretty
doesn't make it any less wrong. Personal
self-defense is the only situation that would allow it, if your own life were
in immediate danger. (Even then, I personally would have a hard time killing,
but I would grant another's right to self-defense.)
Saddam Hussein and the government of
Iraq is in no way personally endangering anyone in the USA. To take offensive action and attack Iraq in
this way is completely unjustifiable, morally reprehensible, and would cause
unforgivable death to non-involved civilians.
(Because of 12 years of sanctions, Iraq's population is one food
shipment short of starvation and disease.
Even a brief war would cause an incredible death toll to the civilian
population, without ever seeing a single bullet.)
I think President Bush has a whole
hatful of ulterior motives. He's the son
of a politically powerful family with numerous business connections world-wide,
he's got personal friends at the head of many major industries (and let’s not
forget that he's an Oil man, through and through), and he's got a domestic
economy that is falling apart around his ears.
Bush has got nothing to lose, but plenty to gain if he's successful in
getting his war with Iraq. This war,
sadly, has nothing to do with
morals. Frankly, those who are beating the drum for war need to reexamine what
"morals" means.
Then there's the whole political
analysis of the situation. Nearly every
major European nation, except our cousins in the British government, is turning
their back on America. They consider us
to be global bullies who are only interested in controlling global markets to
expand our own considerable dominance of the global economy. This goal of global
economic dominance is clearly defined by the Bush administration as one of
their driving goals in world politics.
It's not even a shameful secret!
Our government really is trying to take over world markets! Every single European country knows this, has
read our government’s international policy statement, and is appalled. We Americans haven't really seen that policy statement,
because the media glossed over it when it was released. This ignorance of our stated foreign policy
is compounded by the superficial belief that we should dominate world
economics. It's no wonder that Europe is
shunning us like a bad case of crabs.
It's no wonder that they all think we're picking a fight with Iraq
because of Oil. Every other nation in
the region believes it too, and they should bloody-well know. They actually live there, their economies
revolve around that one product, and they truly understand the situation better
than the typical American.
Imagine for a moment that America
was the only place that coffee beans grew.
Imagine we had a global corner on the coffee market, and the whole world
is addicted. We control the price and
availability of the beans, and we decide who to sell to and when. Now let's imagine that Italy, lovers of
Latte and Espresso, decide suddenly that they don't like how
America is treating black minorities in America. They cite the long history of slavery and the
continuing atmosphere of discrimination, and point to the current prison
population having a disproportionate number of black people. Italy
becomes "outraged" at our repressive government, and how it's killing
it's minority populations on Death Row.
Italy decides that they will need to act as world police and overthrow
the current American government. They
will kindly provide an "interim government" to help stabilize the
situation, and by the way, they'll use the profits of the coffee market to
"offset the costs" of this “reorganization”.
Now, wouldn't we all step up and
say, "Wait a second... you're only doing this because you want a share of
our coffee
market. You're not really interested in the status of our
minorities..."? Taking the moral
high ground, Italy would say it’s not about the coffee. Well, it might be hard to prove, wouldn't
it? Especially since we really are guilty of treating our
minority populations so poorly?
Remind me, Mr. Bush... Iraq is a
threat to me how? Saddam Hussein might
be a nasty dictator who treats his own people badly. Fine.
If those people ask, I'd be pleased to help them in whatever ways they
ask so that they may determine their own future. "Sovereignty" means that every
single nation has the right to decide for themselves how they shall be ruled.
Americans do not have the right to determine or tamper with another nation's
sovereignty. Ever. No nation has the authority to decide such
matters for another, and the fact that Bush seems to think he can, and should,
is frankly ominous. Those are the
attitudes held by dictators, not democracies.
The only way Bush can get Americans
to support his war effort is to bypass logic, reason, and morality, and appeal
directly to emotional gut reactions. If
he makes it sound like Hussein is the embodiment of evil, that America
will suffer personal, immediate harm, and that we're the saviors of the world,
we might go for it. And just in case
we're starting to question things a bit too closely, he'll grab hold of 9-11
and yank our emotional chain some more.
(By the way, Saddam Hussein and Osama Bin Laden are mortal enemies...
they each consider the other to be "infidels" and "enemy of the
faith"... they're highly unlikely to be secretly working together. Even
our own CIA has told us that there is no connection between Iraq and Al Queda.)
So... we're going to war why?
Wage peace. It's harder than waging
war, but the results last longer.
~Flame RavenHawk
January 27, 2003
Flame RavenHawk is a writer who has been
teaching Shamanic Wicca for over a decade.
Professionally, she teaches reading in a public High School, and her
hobbies include Yoga, Drumming (Middle Eastern Doumbek), Poetry, Gardening, and
Cultural Anthropology. A collection of
her articles and writings can now be found at her website, Flame’s
Firepit, http://www.flamesfirepit.org/
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