The ideologically decrepit anti-war crowd returned to Washington last
weekend for a reunion. The older among them abandoned hundreds of thousands,
perhaps millions of Vietnamese to imprisonment, torture, death and
re-education camps. Their demonstrations were encouraging to the communist
Vietnamese, sending the message that America lacked the will to win. These
aging hippies and their progeny now want to do the same to millions of
Iraqis, who have democratically elected their leaders.
This is the sunset of the "Age of Aquarius." Yesterday, when they were
young, they were the pampered generation that eschewed self-control for
self-indulgence. They were (and are) so vain; they probably thought the
world was about them. They were the redeeming generation that would save
their parents from their sins by ending war, curing racism and cleaning the
air and water. Their failure has long been obvious to all but them. To them,
intentions, not success, are paramount. Because they believe their
intentions are noble, they absolve themselves from the negative consequences
of their actions.
As with the Vietnam anti-war protests, several of the same Hollywood actors
spoke against the effort to make Iraq a stable and independent nation.
Hollywood is the land of make-believe where love means never having to say
you're sorry and acting means never having to take responsibility for your
words and behavior, which are written and directed by others. These stars
live behind gates with security alarms and guards who protect their
privileged lives.
Is there anyone else's freedom these celebrities would defend? Do any other
lives have value beyond their own? Since none of the older demonstrators
took responsibility for what occurred in the aftermath of the Vietnam War,
would any like to pledge now that if their protests help embolden the
insurgents and Taliban to fight on until Iraq is in their clutches they will
accept blame?
Why do these people always oppose America's efforts to defend itself and
others? Why did they not protest in Washington, or in Baghdad, when Saddam
Hussein was practicing genocide and his sons were raping and torturing their
fellow Iraqis? Will we ever see an anti-Taliban protest? How about a
demonstration against suicide bombers, or even those who produce and
detonate roadside bombs in Iraq? Why do these people think only their
country is evil?
This is the doctrine of the privileged and the pampered. It is salvation on
the cheap. It makes the protestors feel good, even righteous, but does
nothing to solve the problem, which isn't the United States, but a very real
enemy that intends to kill us. Unlike Vietnam, the Islamofascists won't
leave us alone if we leave Iraq before stability is established. They will
send more fanatics to our shores. Watch the TV drama "24" for what could be
our prophetic and imminent future with a nuclear device exploding in major
cities. Having concluded we don't have the stomach to fight them on their
turf, they might understandably deduce we are even less willing to fight
them on ours.
While President Bush may have chosen Iraq and Afghanistan to counterattack
in this war, the war would have come - and, indeed, had already come prior
to the attacks on these two countries - had he decided to do nothing.
"Peace is controversial," said Jesse Jackson last weekend. His comment has
about as much relevance in an age of terror as a declaration against lust.
Peace doesn't result when America does nothing to confront evil. Peace comes
through facing and defeating evil wherever and whenever we can. If freedom
is not on the march against tyranny, then tyranny will be on the march
against freedom. Neither is static. Peace doesn't "happen." To the extent
peace can be attained on earth, it arrives through strength and willpower.
Forty years ago, the protestors pledged to achieve:
Harmony and understanding
Sympathy and trust abounding
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