Brothers and Sisters of the Senate, be seated.
(Allow our choir twenty seconds to get in position)
We gather once more, consecrating these halls through hallowed thought.
Ours, dear fellows, is a season of rain. One left unblessed, unanointed by the ease of sunlight-- left dark without the guiding day of truth. Could we recognize it, the shining truth? Or much less blink past its brilliance, were it to descend into our midst? Alas fellows, I fear we could not. Alas for much more.
A grand opportunity, the like of which our times shall never see again, has slipped through the fingers of our nation. One left unrealized, whose unbirth shall bear more conflict and years without variation, and years of pain.
This lost opportunity, born too late and of empty means, must be remembered as the hinging moment of what could have been. Do not forget, dear fellows-- the predicates for mercy were contained in us, and together our collective malice favored the appetites of vengeance.
Before sharing the laments of what can no longer be, ponder this story of folk legend. When my father was a child he lived in a small factory town, prosperous mills made textiles and shoes along the shore of the Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg. Local legend once claimed the natives of centuries before waged war over its waters. The conflict was long, bitter and bloody-- it seemed without end. A day finally came, and the chiefs of each tribe met at the lake's center. Their claims irreconcilable, their people fervent in war-lust-- they made the only treaty possible. Wearily parting, the chiefs christened the lake's waters Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg-- following the terms of their agreement, "You fish on your side, We fish on our side, and no one fishes in the middle."
Peace requires, it would seem, sacrifice. Passions may settle back within their river banks, but the rocky barbs of loss and remembered hatred never leave the flood plain. As a Confederate private once said to a Union officer who extended him bread, "You're charity is received, but ask for no thanks. For sir, I hate you."
Sitting in the midst of these rains, the tragedy cuts me. We bask in the vanity of our advancements in technology, in open sourced knowledge, in the grand schemes of sating the thirsts of our world's poor. All these steps are noble in themselves, the context of their birth however is unforgivable. Whilst TED lecturers congratulate themselves in California: Fallujah sinks in the rubble of depleted uranium, Afghanistan and Iraq bomb themselves as their police and military kill and imprison their own people, a Task Force of nations bombards African cities-- our nations chose with astute politic, those cries for liberty they deem amenable to answer. These ingenious ideas for peace are thought in the parlor rooms of war. What humanitarian answers the human cry for relief with bombs?
Until we build in peace we have built nothing, until we act from peace we have achieved nothing.
Among the tin of drums sounding endless war, to this tune our finest opportunity has passed us. As God before, we followed and committed his same unending mistake-- casting out our Lucifer.
Nowhere shall my call find ear, nor will you have heard its like-- for no one speaks these words, their echo will swiftly dull. I speak them anyway, as a man who aspires for more than this mere world.
If my prayer is heard, let the announcement of last week be re-lived:
"My fellow Americans. I, President Barrack Obama, do sincerely and completely pardon the man Osama Bin Laden of his crimes against humanity. I do this not for his sake, but for that of us all. It is upon deep reflection and council that I must extend to him, my enemy, a shared and common humanity. Many shall never forgive and that is their due, but as your leader-- as any leader, I must forgive his supremely human crimes and so too must our government. Neither god nor creed might have weighed my decision, for ours is a human affair and it must be dealt as such. In vengeance we become our foe, so through mercy let us elevate ourselves and our society.
Until we reconcile the ugliness of our fellow man unto its beauty, war shall reign. Violence and ignorance will burn this earth, selfishness and callousness shall suffocate the air, vanity and delusion will bleed man's veins of its every drop until the soil itself rises, bloated. Let him live, that so too may we.
This chance to enact a momentous mercy, let it begin the long confrontation with all the violence and hatreds we clutch unto throughout our brief lives. Mr. Bin Laden shall be returned unto his own people: let them, their government and his god do with him as they please. The United States of America will no longer cower beneath a blanket of fear, in an unending maze of violence. Tonight, we have drawn the line against our enemies and challenged them: are they as innocent and righteous as they claim? Through this act, we are."
My dear fellows, I beg you to take silence on these rainy days and reflect:
Are we so innocent? Are we so righteous?
If not, how so blinded can we presume to teach others further lessons in blindness?
If not mercy, what breaks this repetitive, tragic and mundane violence of our world?
More violence, through Assassination or Genocide?
Sit in silence, or listen to these boys of our choir-- sit in misery before a god composed of all our wretchedness.
Sit and save thy self.
Amen.
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I am sorry senator I bite with a Diogenes snap.
ReplyDelete>Senator< Mr. Bin Laden shall be returned unto his own people: let them, their government and his god do with him as they please.
Translation: we've sent him to Saudi Arabia 'cos they're our buddies and those guys don't mess around when it comes to executions. Shit's gonna be medieval!
Remember: Revenge converts a little right into a great wrong.
~ German Proverb
Chaos linguistic good senator.
But because language, by chaotic self-referential understanding, becomes "new every day", one should not be stunned or stultified by the arbitrariness and relativity of language, by its failure, but be refreshed and revivified by its freedom.
If you want to be revenged, hold your tongue.
~ Spanish Proverb
In the freedom of silence.
In 2021 a small group of rouge Americans hijack an airplane and fly it into the Burj Al-Arab, in Dubai. The United Arab Emirates spend the next five years invading Canada and torturing citizens, eventually leaving over 80,000 dead.
The dogmatism of honoring Osama's death and the skepticism of celebrating revenge are both, in a sense, absolute philosophies; one is certain of knowing, the other of not knowing. What we should dissipate is certainty, whether of knowledge or ignorance.
ReplyDeleteI hear thee brother.
ReplyDeleteIn saying, "Mr. Bin Laden shall be returned unto his own people: let them, their government and his god do with him as they please"--
I had specific intent, one that is perhaps naive.
Pragmatically, events would likely play out as you mentioned-- a passing of the ax to a different executioner.
Nevertheless, our nation has the ability to exonerate only those crimes and wrongs we recognize and have power to pardon. Should others hold a man in contempt for their own reasons, that is their own matter.
Were this dead man returned alive to his people, the decision would be a final staying of our own sword. Whether he's greeted as a hero or mass-criminal by his people, we would have already washed our hands.
Pragmatically:
Through an act of human mercy, the fog of past motivations and dubious intentions would be significantly lifted. America would have achieved the position of 'moral' superiority. Because of its benevolence.
Whatever actions or recourse this nation sought to take in response to future terrorist crimes, the context of that momentous mercy would change forever how we would interpret American motivations.
But, mine is a naive prayer for what cannot be.
Surely unrealized after thoughts can be of no threat to our conviction in 'how things must be'?
Mercy, in this case, is the ultimate expression of uncertainty. We cannot know-- biased and piecemeal in our knowledge, biased and piecemeal in our ignorance- either absolute indeed fails: but we shall we remain slave to our delusions? Absolutes have chained both our hands, victim and terrorist alike.
An admission of this common factor-- is the only road forward. Mercy is that recognition of a mutual human uncertainty-- and the refusal to be mired in its repetitions.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteFirstly:
ReplyDeleteIt has been some time since thine old and weary eyes rested upon the words of Senate, and what a privilege it is to read such a beautiful, surprisingly coherent attempt at insight. The wonderful wishes of a hippie Senator heart for a world that shall never be. It makes one wonder why pieces such as this aren't seem in the main stream media, although not much of value is, nor would such blatant dissent from such a common goal being accomplished. It also makes on wonder where the inspiration comes from for these words, if only out of a post modern curiosity.
It goes without saying that these are the words of an idealistic mentality -- one that politically, socially, culturally and thus pragmatically could never be realized. The public outcry alone would vastly overwhelm and drown out the whisper of the word "pardon" were it to be spoken from our nations leader.
Are the sounds of celebration that rung out in the streets from the mountains to the seas, (of this land that was made for you and me), the night such news was brought to us the sounds of a violence minded, war-hungry nation? Perhaps. But perhaps they are also the sounds of closure. A giant wave of relief and solace flooded over us, that, in a time of harsh separation between its people, allowed the nation to unite in a common feeling for the first time possibly since we ourselves were so violently attacked. This time, however, the people were united in a moment of reconciliation instead of fear and anger. Even if it was only for a short time.
The line between revenge and justice is one that my life experience does not yet give me the presence of mind to judge with accuracy. And it is a skewed one for most. It is not hard to see that too much has been justified in the name of vengeance. But, the "moral superiority" afforded to the nation by returning the body would be only in our own minds eye. Whatever actions taken hereto forth by our aggressors would not have been changed by such an act.
It is a cynical and fearful post modern world in which we live, and we need the prayers of the Senate to keep us sane, our minds at ease and move us forward through the rapture.
Listen up Senators,
ReplyDeletecome hear my prayer.
I speak of our friends of nature,
trapped in the dirt like a jail.
Vegetables live in oppression,
served on our tables each night.
This killing of veggies is madness,
I say we take up the fight.
Salads are only for murderers,
coleslaw's a fascist regime.
Don't think that they don't have feelings,
just cause a radish can't scream.
Harvest day is coming and the carrots will be going through a HOLOCUST!
We thank You for providing eternal life for each vegetables who will accept His free gift of salvation.
The carrots lift up the light of his countenance upon you, and give you peace.
Forever and ever amen.
Now onto the issue at hand...
complete pardon Osama Bin Laden of his crimes against humanity. for ALL of us. Should we let Osama live, so thAt we may too?
-beastly, morally superior, holier than thou, self-righteous - [REVENGE] or self-conscious undecided, tranquil, humane - [MERCY]
The two possible outcomes:
(1) the U.S. 'government' in Pakistan gives Osama Bin Laden's remains to his people (high-minded but simple-minded)
This is analagous to the badgering but technically justified passenger on the air-plane that insist you turn off your laptop because it might cause interference with the aircraft.
or
(2) U.S. Navy SEALs raid a hideout in Pakistan and assassinate him in the face with a high powered automatic assault rifle (horrific but reasoned)
This is analgous to the triumphant Achilles dragging Hector's lifeless body in front of the Gates of Troy) Ancient Greek concern about carcass mutilations effect on the after-life mirrors the vanities of Osama's need for decadent western porn, high-strength marijuana plants yards from his one million dollar mansion.
The context of mercy or desire for justice is simply too 'obtuse' for Modern American society. We cannot change through collective human mercy context (especially American).
If you rejoice in the revenge of the death of Osama Bin Laden your refusing to think about how we got where we are now.
Real Underlying Clash of Virtues: Mercy vs. Justice
Civilized human beings with a conscience crave a system of 'deserved' cruelty and softness.
Dusting of Aristotle ...
Mercy lies at 'the Golden Mean' between the vices of cruelty and and uncaring, while justice lies at 'the Golden Mean' between the vices of cruelty and softness.
The problem with this Aristotelain conception of Justice and Mercy is that I keep swirling into the pit of subjectivism when dealing with Justice and Mercy and the un-pin-downable 'Golden Mean.'
Metaphysical debate aside:
MERCY is an act of condescension from one person who has a greater abundance of some good to another person lacking in some good. It is part of the social human life cycle. Mercy starts revolutions, returns life, and terminates painful existence.
REVENGE is a mallicious act taking retaliation for injuries or wrongs. It is part of the primal social strata of our cultural roots; who we are. Revenge is nature, every action has an equal but opposite reaction.
Revenge wins with our popular culture feeding its appetite for random violence and cruel killings. Revenge-taking, torture and hurting others for the sake of amusement are common themes in the entertainment world of video games, TV and movies. In our consumer culture no one is innocent or upright and the entertainment value of celebrating the revenge of the world's most wanted terrorists is just too good to turn down.
*Enter Long Denny's All Night Diner*
ReplyDelete{A heavyset gentlemen, in a puffy blue nylon vest that did not fit him, sits at the bar drinking vanila coke from a tall glass and munching on the last bits of his Grand Slam Special}
John - "Hello, sir."
Stranger - "wasup.."
John - "Do you think Osama Bin Laden's death should be handeled with the virtue of revenge or mercy?"
Stranger - "Com'Agin?"
John - "Do you think we should have showed mercy on Osama and not desire to make another person suffer, and it delights in their misery and pain?"
Stranger - "Bin Laden got what he so richly deserved, however, he died too easy for my satisfaction."
John - "You know ancient philosophers argues that mercy was a virtue between ..."
Stranger *grabs John by shirt collar* - "Now your gonna get it..." *SWING*
*John falls to the floor and gets up dusting himself off and fixing his hair*
Stranger - "Well it looks like we got ourselves and Buddhist here dont we, HAHAHA!"
John - "Why do you say that?"
Stranger - "You got what was comming to you. Justice."
John - "No isn't that just karma energy flowing."
Stranger - "HAHAHA! Yea you wish. Karma is just justice without the satisfaction."
Bravo Nero
ReplyDeleteThank you good Po-Mo! Cheers! Now I only hope to hear some words from Senator... maybe a defense of of his theoretical spite reflex? ;]
ReplyDelete