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Eulogy for America11/08/2004 16:49

The epitaph reads:

THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Born July 4, 1776 - Died November 2, 2004

 

Ladies and gentlemen, we gather here today to mourn the passing of the United

States of America, a nation that once stood as a beacon light of hope for the

world.

 

America was betrayed and murdered on November 2, 2004. Also killed during this

time of madness were the following virtues: truth, justice, integrity, freedom,

compassion, brotherhood, tolerance, faith, hope, charity, peace, and respect for

other cultures and nations. These virtues are survived by their

antitheses--deceit, injustice, hypocrisy, fascism, selfishness, hatred, fear,

hopelessness, greed, perpetual warfare and arrogant hegemony.

 

Also murdered were seven platitudes, which parents once used to convince their

children that America was a rational and honorable nation:

 

1. HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY died during the coup of 2000, when Americans

nonchalantly stood by while an election was stolen. This death provided the

Bush dictatorship with the incentive to test the accuracy of Alexander

Hamilton " s belief that, " Those who stand for nothing will fall for anything. "

That accuracy was authenticated when both the American media and the American

public unquestioningly embraced the lies that led the nation into the war

against Iraq.

 

2. VERACITY IS THE HEART OF MORALITY (by Thomas Huxley) has been replaced by

these words from Robert Burns: " Morality, thou deadly bane, thy tens o "

thousands thou has slain. "

 

Ironically this platitude was zealously enforced when Bill Clinton was

President, after he was caught lying about his affair with a White House intern.

During the debate leading up to his impeachment trial, right-wing pundits

incessantly chanted, " It " s not about the sexual activity. It " s about the

immorality of lying. "

 

Yet commensurate concerns over the immorality of lying about the existence of

" weapons of mass destruction " in Iraq have been conspicuously absent. And while

Clinton " s lies wrought neither death nor destruction, the lies of George W. Bush

have, to date, resulted in the deaths of over one thousand Americans, and the

slaughter of over one hundred thousand Iraqis, many of them innocent men, women

and children. Yet, under the bizarre morality that recently caused the death of

America, Clinton " s dishonesty is viewed with more disdain than Bush " s.

Ironically, if this " new morality " does not prevent a lying mass murderer from

holding political office, then convicted killer Charles Manson has the

credentials to become president.

 

It was allegedly this " new morality, " that swayed the recent election. But what

does it truly entail? Besides the egregious belief that lying about a sexual

relationship is more immoral than lying about the motives for war, this " new

morality " also claims to defend the rights of the unborn, yet is blissfully

unconcerned about those already here. Millions of children throughout the

nation suffer needless pain because their parents lack health insurance and

cannot afford to take them to the doctor. Millions of the elderly suffer

similar pain because they cannot afford the prescription medication they rely

upon to survive. Yet while universal health care is derided as a " socialist "

concept by politicians bought and paid for by the insurance and health care

industries, all Iraqi citizens are being provided with universal health

coverage.

 

This " new morality " vociferously rebels if taxes are raised even a single dollar

to supply impoverished school systems with computers or up-to-date textbooks, or

to feed and clothe the homeless and destitute. Yet the expenditure of billions

of dollars on a war based on nothing but lies does not even create a whimper.

 

Under this " new morality " a block of granite is more important than a human

life. The indiscriminate bombing of civilians and the torture and

" disappearances " that occurred (and are still occurring) in United States

controlled detention camps throughout the world did not inspire outrage, but the

removal of a Ten Commandments monument from government property does, even

though this monument can be openly displayed on private property.

 

While so-called " Christians " exploit this " new morality " to pontificate about

" family values, " and to condemn the " intolerance " shown by other faiths, they

furtively seek, in the wake of America " s death, to establish a dogmatic Social

Darwinistic theocracy themselves, building their so-called " faith " on the

pillars of hatred, egomania, greed, lust for mortal power, and the selfish

desire to force their beliefs upon others, many of the very evils that Jesus,

the founder of Christianity, cond! emned.

 

3. CRIME DOESN " T PAY holds true only when the crime opposes or offends the

power structure. It does not apply when stealing elections or waging illegal

wars.

 

In fact, as the Bush precedent has demonstrated, all an incumbent president has

to do to maintain office is dupe the people and the Congress into supporting an

illegal war, mismanage this war until election time, then tell the people they

should not change the " commander-in-chief " during wartime.

 

4. ALWAYS LEAD BY EXAMPLE has been replaced by, " Always be willing to shed

anyone " s blood, except your own. " When the opportunity arose for Bush, and his

partner-in-crime Dick Cheney, to personally participate in combat during the

Vietnamese war, Bush instead used his family influence to perform some still

nebulous National Guard Service, while Cheney obtained five deferments to avoid

being drafted. Yet today they stand on the decks of aircraft carriers and

behind podiums in some of the most fortified buildings in the world, telling

Iraqi insurgents to " bring it on. "

 

5. PATRIOTISM IS THE LAST REFUGE OF A SCOUNDREL (by Samuel Johnson) has been

replaced by the verity that patriotism is the FIRST refuge of a scoundrel. The

build-up to the Iraqi war illustrated how easily the Bush regime, through the

repetition of words like " freedom and democracy, " could distract people from the

reality that the greatest loss of freedom Americans suffered in recent years was

not because of some overseas enemy, but through the passage by lawmakers of the

deceptively named " Patriot Act. " Now that America is dead, the " new morality "

is determined to destroy what little remains of the Bill of Rights.

 

The irony is that patriotism is only expected of the poor and middle-classes,

who make up the bulk of America " s military personnel. Multi-national

corporations, who outsourced jobs and threw employees out of work, and who

retained ornate office buildings in the late United States while profiting from

virtual slave labor in other nations, were never asked to be " patriotic, " nor

were they chastised for disloyalty when their practices harmed the national

economy. Instead they were rewarded with tax breaks and the financial windfalls

that Bush " s warmongering spawned.

 

6. WORK HARD AND YOU WILL BE REWARDED must now read, " It is not what you know,

but who you know that matters. " Although Bush and his supporters have

stridently condemned as " preferential treatment " affirmative action policies

designed to help minorities who have been historically victimized by

discrimination, no one condemns the fact that Bush has profited from

preferential treatment his entire life, as have countless other politicians,

pundits and celebrities. Affirmative action is not being attacked because it

provides " preferential treatment. " It is being attacked because it intrudes

upon the nepotism, cronyism and sense of entitlement exploited by those born

into wealth and power.

 

7. ALL LIFE IS SACRED was a common platitude in the late United States. But

the massacre of November 2, 2004 has replaced this myth with a paraphrase from

George Orwell " s classic book ANIMAL FARM: " All lives are sacred, but some are

more sacred than others. "

 

In truth the lives of the expendable and exploited were never as valued as the

lives of the expenders and exploiters. And while the Iraqi war is a constant

reminder of the absurdity of this platitude, the ordeals of Dr. Jack Kevorkian

and Maurice Carter have graphically underscored its hypocrisy.

 

Dr. Kevorkian is currently imprisoned in the State of Michigan for helping the

terminally ill end their lives, allegedly because his actions violated " the

sanctity of life. " Yet, just over three months ago, an African-American man

named Maurice Carter was also in a Michigan prison, serving a sentence for a

crime that many believe he did not commit. At some point during his

twenty-eight years of incarceration, Carter contracted a liver disease that

became progressively worse because of the inadequate medical treatment he

received in prison. When Carter supporters filed a petition to gain him a new

trial, the judge hearing the case condescendingly joked about the severity of

Carter " s illness.

 

Although Maurice Carter was ultimately released after being granted a medical

commutation by Michigan " s governor, it was too late. He enjoyed only three

months of freedom before he died. Yet few have condemned the hypocrisy of a

government that makes it a crime to end the suffering of the terminally ill, yet

causes terminal illnesses itself through inadequate medical care.

 

So rest in peace America. As St. Paul said, " You fought the good fight. " But

the majority of your people did not keep the faith. Your dream of " checking and

balancing " the corrupting influence of power to prevent the rise of evil was a

noble endeavor. But history has shown that evil can never be checked, that

tolerance often sows the seeds of intolerance, and that the majority of people

will always be susceptible to the machinations of madmen.

 

You have been ravaged by hatred disguised as " morality. " You have endured those

who argued that the enslavement of Africans was " moral, " who agreed that

counting these slaves as three/fifths of a human being for census purposes was

" moral, " that stealing the lands of Native-Americans, either through bloodshed

or fraudulent treaties, was " moral, " that destroying Native-American traditions

and cultures was " moral, " and that placing women into insane asylums for

demanding the right to vote was " moral. " Now the hatred of the " new morality "

is directed towards gays and lesbians, towards those who work for peace, and

towards those who don " t simply blather about freedom, but exercise it through

dissent.

 

I know there will be some, perhaps many, basking in the afterglow of their

pyrrhic victory, who will dismiss this eulogy as " sour grapes, " or the

sentiments of a sore loser. But let it be said America that we who truly loved

you did not strip away one freedom; we did not endorse one modicum of religious

bigotry or intolerance; we did not place your fate into the hands of liars,

thieves and war criminals; we did not brazenly abuse the resources of the

American military to " play cowboy " or to appease our father; we do not have the

blood of one American soldier or one Iraqi civilian on our hands. Because of

this we did not gain the world, but we also did not lose our souls.

 

To those in other nations who read this eulogy, who are still mystified by how

swiftly a once great nation was transformed into a neo-fascist nightmare, and

how easily a man as hateful, hypocritical, venal, bloodthirsty, warmongering,

sadistic and deceitful as George W. Bush was converted into a paradigm for

" moral values, " all I can say is that millions in the late United States are

pondering these same questions. Perhaps the answer resides in three disturbing,

yet immutable, laws of human nature.

 

The first law is that human beings are obsessed with bringing about their own

destruction. Ever since the first caveman picked up the first stone and bashed

in the skull of his first enemy, humankind has been devising more sophisticated

ways to kill. Even though the atavistic instincts of the cave dwellers are

currently masked by the veneer of neon lights and skyscrapers, the grim reality

is that human knowledge has always outpaced human wisdom, and it is rare indeed

when new technological advancements or discoveries are not explored for their

potential use as weapons. As long as this obsession continues, it is inevitable

that warmongers will always prevail over peacemakers in the realm of political

power.

 

The second law is that evil is the primary motivating force in human affairs.

Although George W. Bush and his minions personify all that is loathsome about

human nature, they are merely the reflections of a self-loathing people repulsed

by the responsibilities of living in a free country. Edmund Burke once said,

" All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good people do nothing. "

But the madness that murdered America on November 2, 2004 proves that evil will

always triumph, regardless of what good people do.

 

The third law is that humans are exceedingly receptive to appeals to their

basest instincts, which often compels them to act in ways harmful to their

personal interests. Karl Marx believed that economic self-interest inspired

people " s actions and reactions in capitalist societies. But this is only

partially correct. Although economic self-interests consistently influence the

rich and powerful, they frequently fail to influence the poor and middle

classes, particularly when other interests are given priority.

 

In the antebellum American South, for example, many white residents earned their

incomes working as skilled laborers--such as blacksmiths, silversmiths, cobblers

and carpenters. But the wealthy owners of large plantations normally possessed

slaves who were equally proficient in these skills. Consequently there was no

incentive to pay for work that slaves were required to perform for free. Yet,

when the Civil War erupted, many of these same white laborers lost their lives

fighting to uphold the very institution that was impoverishing them.

 

This practice lingered into the civil rights era of the 1960s, as evidenced by

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. " s conversation with his white jailers in Birmingham,

Alabama. When they informed King of their opposition to his efforts to

desegregate the city, King inquired as to how much these jailers were being

paid. He then remarked, " You are just as poorly paid as the average

[African-American] man. You should be out marching with us! "

 

In those few perceptive words King encapsulated how the rich, white

establishment had manipulated poorer whites into accepting the concept of " white

supremacy, " when in reality they were being just as exploited as their

African-American counterparts.

 

This practice continues today under George W. Bush, the modern-day Nero who

fiddled while America burned, and who now enriches his cronies with tax cuts,

oil profits and lucrative " rebuilding " contracts, while deceiving his supporters

in the poor and middle classes into believing their friends and relatives are

dying in Iraq for " freedom and democracy. "

 

It would be easy for those of us who loved America to be apathetic in the wake

of its death. Why should we care how many have died and will die in Iraq when a

majority of people are so willing to sacrifice their loved ones? Why should we

clamor for truth, when this majority is satisfied with illusion? Why should we

be disturbed about Halliburton profits, when this majority is gullible enough to

believe Bush " s lies about the war? Why should we protest the bloodlust,

butchery and bellicose braggadocio of a cabal of bullying cowards when such

behaviors do not offend the " new morality? " Why speak out at all when history

has proven that activism and compassion usually destine one for scorn,

blacklisting, false imprisonment, suicide or assassination?

 

But please resist this apathy. There were many who believed the new millennium

signaled the end of the world. But with the corrupt ascendancy of George W.

Bush, maybe what the new millennium heralds is the beginning of the end.

Perhaps all we can hope for is that the day after the apocalypse enough of the

earth will be salvageable, so the species that replaces humankind can understand

the price of folly and realize that even in humanity's darkest days there were

prophets and visionaries who recognized the face of evil and warned the world

against it, but whose words fell upon deadened souls and hardened hearts.

 

Since this is a eulogy, permit me to end on a religious note. I believe that

one of the most unjustly maligned figures in history is Judas Iscariot, the man

who betrayed Jesus for thirty pieces of silver. Judas, after all, acknowledged

that he had betrayed innocent blood, and returned the silver before killing

himself in remorse for his deed. Yet the betrayers and murderers of America

have not only kept the money, they have laughed at the suffering they've caused.

 

Christ advised his followers to ignore the specks in the eyes of others until

they have removed the timbers from their own. But, in today " s " new morality, "

far too many of those professing to be " Christians " deceitfully fabricate specks

in their neighbors' eyes, so the world will remain oblivious to the timbers in

their own.

 

So in our grief let us not forget that, just as America was finite, the

perpetrators of evil who infest the halls of power are finite as well. If there

is atonement in eternity, then those who do evil, and those who enable them,

will ultimately have to pay for their crimes. But dark days are ahead my

friends, and perhaps the best we can hope for as this maelstrom of evil engulfs

us is that we do not succumb to its allure, lest we become, like those who

murdered America on November 2, 2004, people without souls.

 

David R. Hoffman, Legal Editor PRAVDA.RU

 

 

 

" When I despair, I remember that all through history, the way of truth and

love have always won. There have been tyrants and murderers, and for a time

they can seem invincible, but in the end, they always fall... Think of it...

always. "

-- Mahatma Gandhi

 

 

 

 

http://pets.care2.com/

 

" The price of apathy towards public affairs is to be ruled by evil men. " --

Plato

" Providing health care to all Iraqis is sound policy. Providing

health care to all Americans is socialism. " -- anon

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Hi Mary,

 

pleased to 'meet' you.

 

That was really good.

 

But you know, you neednt worry too much.

5O% per cent of Americans, and probably 50% of the whole world, have

already woken up, that is an improvement, and something we should be

celebrating.

 

Love is the ultimately the strongest force in the universe.

 

It is all a part of the great plan, everything is still happening

just as it should be.

 

The fear mongerers will eventually fail.

 

Love and *LIGHT*

Yvonne

 

, DitziSis

<marykaye@g...> wrote:

>

> Eulogy for America11/08/2004 16:49

> The epitaph reads:

> THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

> Born July 4, 1776 - Died November 2, 2004

>

> Ladies and gentlemen, we gather here today to mourn the passing of

the United States of America, a nation that once stood as a beacon

light of hope for the world.

>

> America was betrayed and murdered on November 2, 2004. Also killed

during this time of madness were the following virtues: truth,

justice, integrity, freedom, compassion, brotherhood, tolerance,

faith, hope, charity, peace, and respect for other cultures and

nations. These virtues are survived by their antitheses--deceit,

injustice, hypocrisy, fascism, selfishness, hatred, fear,

hopelessness, greed, perpetual warfare and arrogant hegemony.

>

> Also murdered were seven platitudes, which parents once used to

convince their children that America was a rational and honorable

nation:

>

> 1. HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY died during the coup of 2000, when

Americans nonchalantly stood by while an election was stolen. This

death provided the Bush dictatorship with the incentive to test the

accuracy of Alexander Hamilton " s belief that, " Those who stand for

nothing will fall for anything. " That accuracy was authenticated

when both the American media and the American public unquestioningly

embraced the lies that led the nation into the war against Iraq.

>

> 2. VERACITY IS THE HEART OF MORALITY (by Thomas Huxley) has been

replaced by these words from Robert Burns: " Morality, thou deadly

bane, thy tens o " thousands thou has slain. "

>

> Ironically this platitude was zealously enforced when Bill Clinton

was President, after he was caught lying about his affair with a

White House intern. During the debate leading up to his impeachment

trial, right-wing pundits incessantly chanted, " It " s not about the

sexual activity. It " s about the immorality of lying. "

>

> Yet commensurate concerns over the immorality of lying about the

existence of " weapons of mass destruction " in Iraq have been

conspicuously absent. And while Clinton " s lies wrought neither death

nor destruction, the lies of George W. Bush have, to date, resulted

in the deaths of over one thousand Americans, and the slaughter of

over one hundred thousand Iraqis, many of them innocent men, women

and children. Yet, under the bizarre morality that recently caused

the death of America, Clinton " s dishonesty is viewed with more

disdain than Bush " s. Ironically, if this " new morality " does not

prevent a lying mass murderer from holding political office, then

convicted killer Charles Manson has the credentials to become

president.

>

> It was allegedly this " new morality, " that swayed the recent

election. But what does it truly entail? Besides the egregious

belief that lying about a sexual relationship is more immoral than

lying about the motives for war, this " new morality " also claims to

defend the rights of the unborn, yet is blissfully unconcerned about

those already here. Millions of children throughout the nation

suffer needless pain because their parents lack health insurance and

cannot afford to take them to the doctor. Millions of the elderly

suffer similar pain because they cannot afford the prescription

medication they rely upon to survive. Yet while universal health

care is derided as a " socialist " concept by politicians bought and

paid for by the insurance and health care industries, all Iraqi

citizens are being provided with universal health coverage.

>

> This " new morality " vociferously rebels if taxes are raised even a

single dollar to supply impoverished school systems with computers or

up-to-date textbooks, or to feed and clothe the homeless and

destitute. Yet the expenditure of billions of dollars on a war based

on nothing but lies does not even create a whimper.

>

> Under this " new morality " a block of granite is more important than

a human life. The indiscriminate bombing of civilians and the

torture and " disappearances " that occurred (and are still occurring)

in United States controlled detention camps throughout the world did

not inspire outrage, but the removal of a Ten Commandments monument

from government property does, even though this monument can be

openly displayed on private property.

>

> While so-called " Christians " exploit this " new morality " to

pontificate about " family values, " and to condemn the " intolerance "

shown by other faiths, they furtively seek, in the wake of America " s

death, to establish a dogmatic Social Darwinistic theocracy

themselves, building their so-called " faith " on the pillars of

hatred, egomania, greed, lust for mortal power, and the selfish

desire to force their beliefs upon others, many of the very evils

that Jesus, the founder of Christianity, cond! emned.

>

> 3. CRIME DOESN " T PAY holds true only when the crime opposes or

offends the power structure. It does not apply when stealing

elections or waging illegal wars.

>

> In fact, as the Bush precedent has demonstrated, all an incumbent

president has to do to maintain office is dupe the people and the

Congress into supporting an illegal war, mismanage this war until

election time, then tell the people they should not change

the " commander-in-chief " during wartime.

>

> 4. ALWAYS LEAD BY EXAMPLE has been replaced by, " Always be

willing to shed anyone " s blood, except your own. " When the

opportunity arose for Bush, and his partner-in-crime Dick Cheney, to

personally participate in combat during the Vietnamese war, Bush

instead used his family influence to perform some still nebulous

National Guard Service, while Cheney obtained five deferments to

avoid being drafted. Yet today they stand on the decks of aircraft

carriers and behind podiums in some of the most fortified buildings

in the world, telling Iraqi insurgents to " bring it on. "

>

> 5. PATRIOTISM IS THE LAST REFUGE OF A SCOUNDREL (by Samuel

Johnson) has been replaced by the verity that patriotism is the FIRST

refuge of a scoundrel. The build-up to the Iraqi war illustrated how

easily the Bush regime, through the repetition of words like " freedom

and democracy, " could distract people from the reality that the

greatest loss of freedom Americans suffered in recent years was not

because of some overseas enemy, but through the passage by lawmakers

of the deceptively named " Patriot Act. " Now that America is dead,

the " new morality " is determined to destroy what little remains of

the Bill of Rights.

>

> The irony is that patriotism is only expected of the poor and

middle-classes, who make up the bulk of America " s military

personnel. Multi-national corporations, who outsourced jobs and

threw employees out of work, and who retained ornate office buildings

in the late United States while profiting from virtual slave labor in

other nations, were never asked to be " patriotic, " nor were they

chastised for disloyalty when their practices harmed the national

economy. Instead they were rewarded with tax breaks and the

financial windfalls that Bush " s warmongering spawned.

>

> 6. WORK HARD AND YOU WILL BE REWARDED must now read, " It is not

what you know, but who you know that matters. " Although Bush and

his supporters have stridently condemned as " preferential treatment "

affirmative action policies designed to help minorities who have been

historically victimized by discrimination, no one condemns the fact

that Bush has profited from preferential treatment his entire life,

as have countless other politicians, pundits and celebrities.

Affirmative action is not being attacked because it

provides " preferential treatment. " It is being attacked because it

intrudes upon the nepotism, cronyism and sense of entitlement

exploited by those born into wealth and power.

>

> 7. ALL LIFE IS SACRED was a common platitude in the late United

States. But the massacre of November 2, 2004 has replaced this myth

with a paraphrase from George Orwell " s classic book ANIMAL

FARM: " All lives are sacred, but some are more sacred than others. "

>

> In truth the lives of the expendable and exploited were never as

valued as the lives of the expenders and exploiters. And while the

Iraqi war is a constant reminder of the absurdity of this platitude,

the ordeals of Dr. Jack Kevorkian and Maurice Carter have graphically

underscored its hypocrisy.

>

> Dr. Kevorkian is currently imprisoned in the State of Michigan for

helping the terminally ill end their lives, allegedly because his

actions violated " the sanctity of life. " Yet, just over three months

ago, an African-American man named Maurice Carter was also in a

Michigan prison, serving a sentence for a crime that many believe he

did not commit. At some point during his twenty-eight years of

incarceration, Carter contracted a liver disease that became

progressively worse because of the inadequate medical treatment he

received in prison. When Carter supporters filed a petition to gain

him a new trial, the judge hearing the case condescendingly joked

about the severity of Carter " s illness.

>

> Although Maurice Carter was ultimately released after being granted

a medical commutation by Michigan " s governor, it was too late. He

enjoyed only three months of freedom before he died. Yet few have

condemned the hypocrisy of a government that makes it a crime to end

the suffering of the terminally ill, yet causes terminal illnesses

itself through inadequate medical care.

>

> So rest in peace America. As St. Paul said, " You fought the good

fight. " But the majority of your people did not keep the faith.

Your dream of " checking and balancing " the corrupting influence of

power to prevent the rise of evil was a noble endeavor. But history

has shown that evil can never be checked, that tolerance often sows

the seeds of intolerance, and that the majority of people will always

be susceptible to the machinations of madmen.

>

> You have been ravaged by hatred disguised as " morality. " You have

endured those who argued that the enslavement of Africans

was " moral, " who agreed that counting these slaves as three/fifths of

a human being for census purposes was " moral, " that stealing the

lands of Native-Americans, either through bloodshed or fraudulent

treaties, was " moral, " that destroying Native-American traditions and

cultures was " moral, " and that placing women into insane asylums for

demanding the right to vote was " moral. " Now the hatred of the " new

morality " is directed towards gays and lesbians, towards those who

work for peace, and towards those who don " t simply blather about

freedom, but exercise it through dissent.

>

> I know there will be some, perhaps many, basking in the afterglow

of their pyrrhic victory, who will dismiss this eulogy as " sour

grapes, " or the sentiments of a sore loser. But let it be said

America that we who truly loved you did not strip away one freedom;

we did not endorse one modicum of religious bigotry or intolerance;

we did not place your fate into the hands of liars, thieves and war

criminals; we did not brazenly abuse the resources of the American

military to " play cowboy " or to appease our father; we do not have

the blood of one American soldier or one Iraqi civilian on our

hands. Because of this we did not gain the world, but we also did

not lose our souls.

>

> To those in other nations who read this eulogy, who are still

mystified by how swiftly a once great nation was transformed into a

neo-fascist nightmare, and how easily a man as hateful, hypocritical,

venal, bloodthirsty, warmongering, sadistic and deceitful as George

W. Bush was converted into a paradigm for " moral values, " all I can

say is that millions in the late United States are pondering these

same questions. Perhaps the answer resides in three disturbing, yet

immutable, laws of human nature.

>

> The first law is that human beings are obsessed with bringing about

their own destruction. Ever since the first caveman picked up the

first stone and bashed in the skull of his first enemy, humankind has

been devising more sophisticated ways to kill. Even though the

atavistic instincts of the cave dwellers are currently masked by the

veneer of neon lights and skyscrapers, the grim reality is that human

knowledge has always outpaced human wisdom, and it is rare indeed

when new technological advancements or discoveries are not explored

for their potential use as weapons. As long as this obsession

continues, it is inevitable that warmongers will always prevail over

peacemakers in the realm of political power.

>

> The second law is that evil is the primary motivating force in

human affairs. Although George W. Bush and his minions personify

all that is loathsome about human nature, they are merely the

reflections of a self-loathing people repulsed by the

responsibilities of living in a free country. Edmund Burke once

said, " All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good

people do nothing. " But the madness that murdered America on

November 2, 2004 proves that evil will always triumph, regardless of

what good people do.

>

> The third law is that humans are exceedingly receptive to appeals

to their basest instincts, which often compels them to act in ways

harmful to their personal interests. Karl Marx believed that

economic self-interest inspired people " s actions and reactions in

capitalist societies. But this is only partially correct. Although

economic self-interests consistently influence the rich and powerful,

they frequently fail to influence the poor and middle classes,

particularly when other interests are given priority.

>

> In the antebellum American South, for example, many white residents

earned their incomes working as skilled laborers--such as

blacksmiths, silversmiths, cobblers and carpenters. But the wealthy

owners of large plantations normally possessed slaves who were

equally proficient in these skills. Consequently there was no

incentive to pay for work that slaves were required to perform for

free. Yet, when the Civil War erupted, many of these same white

laborers lost their lives fighting to uphold the very institution

that was impoverishing them.

>

> This practice lingered into the civil rights era of the 1960s, as

evidenced by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. " s conversation with his white

jailers in Birmingham, Alabama. When they informed King of their

opposition to his efforts to desegregate the city, King inquired as

to how much these jailers were being paid. He then remarked, " You

are just as poorly paid as the average [African-American] man. You

should be out marching with us! "

>

> In those few perceptive words King encapsulated how the rich, white

establishment had manipulated poorer whites into accepting the

concept of " white supremacy, " when in reality they were being just as

exploited as their African-American counterparts.

>

> This practice continues today under George W. Bush, the modern-day

Nero who fiddled while America burned, and who now enriches his

cronies with tax cuts, oil profits and lucrative " rebuilding "

contracts, while deceiving his supporters in the poor and middle

classes into believing their friends and relatives are dying in Iraq

for " freedom and democracy. "

>

> It would be easy for those of us who loved America to be apathetic

in the wake of its death. Why should we care how many have died and

will die in Iraq when a majority of people are so willing to

sacrifice their loved ones? Why should we clamor for truth, when

this majority is satisfied with illusion? Why should we be disturbed

about Halliburton profits, when this majority is gullible enough to

believe Bush " s lies about the war? Why should we protest the

bloodlust, butchery and bellicose braggadocio of a cabal of bullying

cowards when such behaviors do not offend the " new morality? " Why

speak out at all when history has proven that activism and compassion

usually destine one for scorn, blacklisting, false imprisonment,

suicide or assassination?

>

> But please resist this apathy. There were many who believed the

new millennium signaled the end of the world. But with the corrupt

ascendancy of George W. Bush, maybe what the new millennium heralds

is the beginning of the end. Perhaps all we can hope for is that the

day after the apocalypse enough of the earth will be salvageable, so

the species that replaces humankind can understand the price of folly

and realize that even in humanity's darkest days there were prophets

and visionaries who recognized the face of evil and warned the world

against it, but whose words fell upon deadened souls and hardened

hearts.

>

> Since this is a eulogy, permit me to end on a religious note. I

believe that one of the most unjustly maligned figures in history is

Judas Iscariot, the man who betrayed Jesus for thirty pieces of

silver. Judas, after all, acknowledged that he had betrayed

innocent blood, and returned the silver before killing himself in

remorse for his deed. Yet the betrayers and murderers of America

have not only kept the money, they have laughed at the suffering

they've caused.

>

> Christ advised his followers to ignore the specks in the eyes of

others until they have removed the timbers from their own. But, in

today " s " new morality, " far too many of those professing to

be " Christians " deceitfully fabricate specks in their neighbors'

eyes, so the world will remain oblivious to the timbers in their own.

>

> So in our grief let us not forget that, just as America was finite,

the perpetrators of evil who infest the halls of power are finite as

well. If there is atonement in eternity, then those who do evil, and

those who enable them, will ultimately have to pay for their crimes.

But dark days are ahead my friends, and perhaps the best we can hope

for as this maelstrom of evil engulfs us is that we do not succumb to

its allure, lest we become, like those who murdered America on

November 2, 2004, people without souls.

>

> David R. Hoffman, Legal Editor PRAVDA.RU

>

>

>

> " When I despair, I remember that all through history, the way of

truth and

> love have always won. There have been tyrants and murderers, and

for a time

> they can seem invincible, but in the end, they always fall...

Think of it...

> always. "

> -- Mahatma Gandhi

>

>

>

>

> http://pets.care2.com/

>

> " The price of apathy towards public affairs is to be ruled by evil

men. " -- Plato

> " Providing health care to all Iraqis is sound policy. Providing

> health care to all Americans is socialism. " -- anon

>

>

>

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