By Elaine L. Orr
Note: I started this post on the anniversary of Pearl Harbor, a life changing event for my family and the nation. If you want to read something jolly, go to prior posts on my blog. Or whatever I write after this one.
Humans tend to remember tragedies. At age twelve (and forever after), I could tell you where I was standing when we heard that President Kennedy was shot in 1963.
I remember exactly what I was doing when the 1986 Challenger disaster occurred. I worked for the Government Accountability Office and was giving a presentation to some international visitors in the one conference room that had a television set, possibly the only one in the building. People would walk by and wave or stick their head in for a second. I realized afterwards they wanted to turn on that TV.
I expect that everyone who was older than ten on September 11th 2001, remembers that a group of Saudi men flew two airplanes into the Twin Towers and another into the Pentagon. Thanks to the brave action of some passengers, the one that was headed towards Washington DC office buildings didn't make it. As an aside I was in between the White House and the Capitol and we had no idea where to go. We didn't want to go to the subway because it seemed like that might be easy for somebody to blow up.
My mother talked many times about where she was December 7th. She had moved to Washington DC a year or so previously from Kansas, to find a job. She worked at what is now called the Office of Personnel Management and moved around government agencies evaluating their personnel functions. On that day, she was sitting in the old Griffith Stadium watching the former Washington Redskins because someone from her office had given her a ticket.
She wondered why the game announcers started calling for different senior military officers. Eventually, there were enough interruptions that she sensed that something had to be wrong. Today, we would wonder why she had to sense it; she could look at her phone to know that the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor. We expect information immediately.
Mother did what everyone did during times of war; she volunteered. One of the things she did was go to what is now called Joint Base Andrews one night a week with a group of other women. They were assigned binoculars and stood on the roofs of buildings watching for enemy planes. They didn't go to bed those nights but they thought that was a simple sacrifice.The free world pulled together back then and the alliances the United States formed afterwards have seen us through the years. When people criticize NATO, they don't remember that the only time that NATO activated what is called Article 5 (joint military support) was when the United States wanted to Capture Osama bin Laden and destroy his network. Our friends stood with us.
I am as patriotic as my parents (my father was in the Army Air Corps in Africa and Europe) but I don't want to support the undeclared wars that we seem to insert ourselves into. As my dad said during Vietnam, you always support the troops but you don't have to support the president. (As proud as he was of his service in World War II and two nephews who served in Vietnam, he thought political leaders were sending tens of thousands of young people to their deaths for a war that was none of our business.)
When I see us bomb boats that are likely carrying drugs rather than trying to interdict them or I watch the federal government (in its internal war against immigrants) grab non-criminals off the streets without warrants, I cringe. The latter is especially difficult because Congress was so close to a workable immigration policy and Candidate Trump thwarted it so he could run on the issue. I half expected him to actually have a plan to develop immigration policy, but that was stupid of me.
I'm musing about all of this because it feels so bad that our country is becoming wrong about how it treats people on so many levels. And now there is what appears to be true consideration of attacking another country. We say it's because the war on drugs has become literal. But we've also stopped federal funding for many health services and research. It truly helps to provide treatment for those who've become addicted. You know, cut off demand as well as supply.
And now, because he thinks a convicted criminal was treated 'unfairly,' President Trump has pardoned one of the most heinous drug smugglers ever convicted. Forget the massive amounts of evidence the Department of Justice amassed against the former Honduran president and the fact that he was legitimately sentenced to 540 months in prison.
American Exceptionalism?
How do we get past this? When will we again become part of the world order that promotes peace? And I'm not talking about an absence of war. I'm talking about the United States working to build a better world.
In abolishing the U.S. Agency for International Development, we've made it clear that we don't want even constructive interactions with those who need assistance in other nations. Plus, our president calls many of these nations shithole countries and most politicians yawn, so our nation clearly doesn't care.
It seems that charity in the broadest sense is something that some people only want to provide to American citizens. Oh wait, we've taken away a lot of food and medical assistance for people who need it in our country.
I probably shouldn't be surprised. We talk about American exceptionalism, but people fought hard to maintain slavery when we were founded and then fought a war to keep it. Millions of Americans spent the next hundred years trying to make sure Black Americans didn't have equal rights to vote, get an education, work, secure decent health care...
We put Japanese American citizens in camps during World War II, though we did let some young men out to fight for the very country that was imprisoning their families. Funny, but we did not try to round up all people who had roots in Saudi Arabia after 9/11. Not that I would have wanted that, and I recognize it was not that country's government that attacked us, just a bunch of their citizens.
We started earlier than the things referenced above. When colonists landed in what is now the United States, there were 600 Native American tribes with huge settlements and trade routes throughout the US, Mexico, and Canada. Settlers and the government murdered most of them because 'we' wanted 'their' land and said we were trying to convert indigenous people to Christianity. And we had gunpowder, so we could.
There are millions of good people in the U.S, but Trump did win a second election after we fully knew his character, so I guess I should not have expected us to be better. I do what I can help us return to the values we used to cherish. Small donations, some volunteer work, and participation in a few protests marches. It's good to see millions of people turning out to defend our values. Maybe I'm writing this because I continue to hope for a path that will make people matter more than money.
Thank You, President Eisenhower
I also feel I should offer a belated thanks to former President Dwight D Eisenhower, who warned our nation against the military industrial complex This AI definition puts it all together.
The "military-industrial complex" refers to the powerful, intertwined relationship between a nation's military establishment, defense contractors, and political leadership, a term coined by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in his 1961 farewell address, warning of its potential to foster excessive spending, influence policy for profit, and threaten democratic values by diverting resources from societal needs. Eisenhower, a former five-star general, cautioned Americans to remain vigilant against this symbiotic alliance, formed during the Cold War, to ensure defense spending served true security, not just industry's interests, highlighting the need for balance between military strength and civic priorities.
For years it seemed like jargon to me, but I eventually understood that the United States private sector makes a lot of money by making bombs so people in other countries can kill each other. After the 'bomb factories' of World War II (essential to defeating Hitler and the Japanese emperor), industrialists didn't want to end that income stream. US arms revenue was $334 billion in 2024 and the US supplies 40% of global arms sales.
Imagine if, over time, that capital was redirected from defense to civilian sectors like transportation infrastructure, education, nutrition research, and energy diversification.
Can We Reboot?
The toughest part is we have to want to. Now, instead of melding ideas we live in silos of like-minded people, sometimes completely avoiding those who are not 'like us.' We ignore rights and resources taken away from those who are different. For the record, I don't listen to MSNBC or FOX News because both have a point of view. I don't believe echo chambers are part of the solution.
Many Americans may feel economic stresses but most still have a place to live and food to eat. True, millions aren't doing well. People will lose jobs over the next decade and be ill-prepared to take jobs in a changing economy. However, desire for change that comes from economic factors is largely self-serving. We can do better.
We need to come together to profess values of tolerance, mutual respect, and kindness so we can elect people who propagate policies to grow from those intrinsic beliefs. Those policies can enhance prosperity. If you think I'm naive, what do you suggest? Please, please don't say you don't care.
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