By Burt Prelutsky
Friday, September 21, 2007Back in
the 1950s, a southern journalist named Harry Golden became famous by
turning out a series of best-selling books, the first of which he called
“Only in America.” The title was a reference to a popular expression
that reflected the feeling of most of his countrymen that America was
special, a unique place that offered millions of people unlimited
freedom to express themselves and to achieve dreams that were
unimaginable anywhere else on earth.
In the half century since Mr. Golden wrote his book, things have
undergone a sea change in this country. Partly the change has come about
because of Viet Nam and Watergate. But mainly because the Baby Boomers,
surely the most selfish and infantile generation in our history, have
achieved positions of power and influence; partly because the Fourth
Estate came to be infested with Fifth Columnists, reporters and
commentators who believe they are fulfilling their destinies only when
they are tearing down the country, its traditional values and symbols;
partly because Communism, which should have been left to die and be
buried in the Soviet Union, took root and flourished on America’s
college campuses; and partly because Jimmy Carter, a sanctimonious phony
who never met a despot he didn’t adore, and Bill Clinton, an amoral
opportunist who somehow went from being a punk in England bad-mouthing
America during a time of war, to being a military-hating
commander-in-chief, were elected to the highest office in the land.
The end result of all this is that we have wound up with a society,
not of useful idiots, but of useless ones. We have so badly confused
ourselves that the people who most despise America regard themselves as
our greatest patriots. They call America an imperialistic power even
though we haven’t claimed an acre of foreign turf in my lifetime. They
insist that we only go to war over oil, although we have made no move to
confiscate the oil fields in Kuwait or Iraq. While condemning anything
and everything that George W. Bush has done in the past six years,
accusing him of trampling on our civil rights without being able to
point to a single one, and equating him with Hitler, they sing the
praises of such dictators as Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez.
The one thing all of these blithering fatheads can agree about is
that war must be avoided at all costs. In order to promote this cockeyed
notion, they even pretend to be concerned about the safety of America’s
warriors, even though we know only too well that they despise America’s
military.
Bruce Bawer, author of “When Europe Slept,” recently wrote a terrific
article titled “All Aboard the Peace Racket,” in which he eviscerated
the peaceniks. He starts out by quoting the Roman general Flavius Vegetius Renatus, who observed in the fifth century that “If you want
peace, prepare for war.” These days, that bit of sage advice has been
turned on its head by the likes of Ohio’s Dennis Kucinich, who is
quietly campaigning to create a Cabinet-level Peace Department.
An honest peace, as Mr. Bawer points out, is a good thing. Pacifism,
however, is not. Instead, “it promotes a mentality that plays directly
into the hands of despots.” How could it not? The reason, after all,
that Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr., were able to be relatively
successful in their missions was because England and the United States
were civilized nations. Is there anybody who actually believes that
Stalin, Hitler, the Taliban or Saddam Hussein, would have been equally
reasonable?
According to Bawer, the founding father of the global peace movement
is a 77-year-old Norwegian professor named Johan Galtung, who, in 1959,
established the International Peace Research Institute. If that sounds
as much like the name of a Communist front group to you as it does to
me, it shouldn’t surprise you that Galtung calls America a “killer
country” that indulges in “neo-fascist state terrorism.” On the other
hand, he’s not always such a big grouch. Back in the 1970s, he wrote
glowingly about Mao Tse-tung’s China, and even as he approaches the age
of 80, he’s still shooting from the hip. Not too long ago, he called for
the creation of a Truth and Reconciliation Committee in Iraq, not to
address the atrocities of Saddam Hussein and his Baathist butchers, but,
predictably, those he attributes to the U.S.
Unfortunately, Prof. Galtung isn’t the only left-wing chowderhead in
the upper reaches of academia. The peace studies chairman at Brandeis
said, on behalf of suicide bombings, that they provide “ways of
inflicting revenge on an enemy that seems unable or unwilling to respond
to rational pleas for discussion and justice.”
Similar asinine remarks have been made by professors involved in the
peace movement at Purdue, Notre Dame and the University of Maine. What
is taught in so-called peace studies departments all over this country
is quite simply that America is the root cause of all evil. One of the
favorite lines bandied about by tenured leftists is George Santayana’s
oft-misquoted “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to
repeat it.” And yet that is exactly what they do, and with a
stubbornness that would leave even the dumbest of mules duly impressed.
Like the most fearful school child, they are only too happy to comply
with the bully’s demand for their lunch money. Compounding their
cowardly sin of appeasement, they then applaud themselves for their
maturity and cool judgment. Less than 70 years ago, Neville Chamberlain,
the umbrella-toting poster boy for pacifism, returned to England after
selling out Czechoslovakia to Hitler, and vowed there would be peace in
our time. What bears remembering is that he barely had time to unpack
from his misguided trip to Munich when Germany marched into Poland.
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