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ABDICATED
RESPONSIBILITY
by Frank Pitz
OpEdNews.Com
Just when was it that we abandoned our collective
– and individual – responsibility?
The Christian Bible tells us that when God asked Adam why he ate of
the apple, he blamed “the woman whom you gave to be with me.”
God asked Eve and she said, “the serpent deceived her.”
To come into the modern era most of us can remember the Flip Wilson
routine about “the devil made me do it.”
Segue into the “hooray for me and screw you” era of Ronald
Reagan and the eighties with its junk bond and savings and loan scandals
in which the miscreants most always mounted a defense in which blame
(guilt) invariably rested with someone – or something – else.
And culpability most often was conveniently shifted away from the
guilty party with a sustaining ‘wink and a nod’ from our national
leaders in
Washington
.
Ronald
Reagan regaled the nation with anecdotal tales of “welfare queens in
Cadillacs” and condoned, by way of many speeches on the subject of
welfare, a tacit approval of bias and even violence against blacks.
It was Ronald Reagan who succeeded in turning “welfare” into a
political code word for black. As
well, conservative Republicans regularly used such code words and
anecdotal stories to push the myth of the promiscuous black teenage mother
bringing forth children in order to secure more welfare dollars.
Very few – if any – politicians made mention of the fact that
African-Americans are not the majority of welfare recipients.
Reagan’s
tenure saw huge tax cuts for the rich, just as we now see coming from the
Bush administration. Regan’s
tenure saw depressed economic conditions, just as now.
And now, just as then, the political answer for this type of
national uneasiness is to create a scapegoat that can take the heat off
the corrupt political practices of the governmental whores and their
corporate pimps. Reagan had a
couple little wars that helped him out; Bush has a very large war that is
blowing up in his smirking cowboy face.
The war on
Iraq
and by association on Islam has become a disaster for George W. Bush and
those sycophants who surround him. And
that brings us now to torture, and responsibility.
The
Bush administration is trying desperately to contain the fast spreading
firestorm of the disclosure - with graphic evidence - of brutal human
rights abuses in
Iraq
and elsewhere. Most Americans
are horrified at what they are seeing in released photographs of these
abuses. But the Bush
administration is spinning, and spinning, while at the same time
disavowing any command responsibility for these barbarous events.
We are being told that “a few” lower echelon personnel took it
upon themselves to coldly, and calculatingly administer these abuses upon
other human beings. While it
may be true that a few enlisted people took delight – while recording
digital scrapbooks – in executing this defilement, the command structure
knew they could manipulate the entire scenario.
And that command structure goes all the way up to the cowboy
Commander-in-Chief.
We
are looking at kids here; youngsters raised in a climate of violence from
Reagan, Bush I, and Clinton’s “little wars,” through the WWF
“Smackdown” climate of “fuck you, I’m tough.”
Its all about “prosecuting with vigor,” “staying the
course,” “with us or agin us,” and big cojones strutting around in a
flight suit. Rush Limbaugh
says, “it’s just some kids letting off steam.”
Certain members of the House and Senate are in an uproar, not
because these events happened but rather because the media is “creating
an turmoil” by making the events public.
Wow, that’s the right attitude from our elected representatives,
isn’t it?
And,
what of our attitude you and I, as parents, teachers, religious leaders,
mentors and writers? What is
our collective culpability in all of this?
Perhaps by slipping into a more permissive home and school
environment rather than the structured family units of the past, we have
lost something valuable? In
our rush to “keep up with the Jones’s” have we sacrificed our young
on the altar of expediency? It
would take much more of a social scientist than I could ever be to answer
questions of this nature, but as an opinion writer I can – and will –
offer my view.
We
do in large part bear much responsibility for the events that are
transpiring, in
Iraq
as well as here at home. We
have relinquished – for the most part - our individual responsibility
both in the raising of our children as well as answerability for our
fellow human beings. We have
sold our souls on the marketplace in exchange for the Wal-Martization of
America
. Many liberals among us feel
they are doing their “fair share” by dint of email activism; all the
while the right wing nut cases run about attacking women, minorities,
immigrants and “them fucking rag-heads” as being responsible for their
social and economic distress. We
accept the status quo, we cede our responsibility to the thieves and
panderers in
Washington
by not voting for political and social change.
We disavow our responsibility towards our children when we allow
them to blossom and grow without a moral or spiritual roadmap.
As long as we accept, without question or in your face dissent, the
corrupt policies of corporations and their political bedfellows, we are
responsible, we are the enemy.
That
old cliché, “you are what you eat,” is so true.
We have supped at the table of complacency for so long now, that
acceptance of the mediocre is ingrained in our collective psyche.
We are responsible.
Peace
Frank
Frank Pitz fpitz(at)comcast.net is a 66
year old iconoclast, writer, poet, cynic - and on top of all that a
Buddhist as well. He lives year-round in Pompano Beach,
Florida, is an alumnus of the glorious "cut and paste"
newspaper days - Lancaster Independent Press, has also worked for a living
from bricklayer, to truckdriver to Housing and Urban Development
Professional. He's a grant writer, and has been known to run a
political campaign on occasion.
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