Nailing the Illogic of These Crazymaking Times

On this unthinkable day, it felt good reading this.  In the face of how crazymaking the world is, Freundlich's radio commentary, in nailing the illogic of these times, helps me cling to sanity.

Commentary: Illogical Reasoning of a War Against Iraq

NPR's All Things Considered: March 13, 2003

PETER FREUNDLICH:

All right, let me see if I understand the logic of this correctly. We are going to ignore the United Nations in order to make clear to Saddam Hussein that the United Nations cannot be ignored. We're going to wage war to preserve the UN's ability to avert war. The paramount principle is that the UN's word must be taken seriously, and if we have to subvert its word to guarantee that it is, then by gum, we will. Peace is too important not to take up arms to defend. Am I getting this right?

Further, if the o­nly way to bring democracy to Iraq is to vitiate the democracy of the Security Council, then we are honor-bound to do that too, because democracy, as we define it, is too important to be stopped by a little thing like democracy as they define it.

Also, in dealing with a man who brooks no dissension at home, we cannot afford dissension among ourselves. We must speak with o­ne voice against Saddam Hussein's failure to allow opposing voices to be heard. We are sending our gathered might to the Persian Gulf to make the point that might does not make right, as Saddam Hussein seems to think it does. And we are twisting the arms of the opposition until it agrees to let us oust a regime that twists the arms of the opposition. We cannot leave in power a dictator who ignores his own people. And if our people, and people elsewhere in the world, fail to understand that, then we have no choice but to ignore them.

Listen. Don't misunderstand. I think it is a good thing that the members of the Bush administration seem to have been reading Lewis Carroll. I o­nly wish someone had pointed out that “Alice in Wonderland” and “Through the Looking Glass” are meditations o­n paradox and puzzle and illogic and o­n the strangeness of things, not templates for foreign policy. It is amusing for the Mad Hatter to say something like, `We must make war o­n him because he is a threat to peace,' but not amusing for someone who actually commands an army to say that.

As a collector of laughable arguments, I'd be enjoying all this were it not for the fact that I know–we all know–that lives are going to be lost in what amounts to a freak, circular reasoning accident.

 



From: Newman Love [expansioncoach@attbi.com]

I'm so glad someone finally said it so succinctly. We could add, “…using weapons of mass destruction to insure someone else doesn't use weapons of mass destruction and killing innocent people to insure that innocent people don't die.”

From: William Fairchild [William.Fairchild@ca.com]

More and more, EVERYTHING our “government” does has the look and feel of Alice in Wonderland.