I was listening to Morning Edition on December 30, and up came one of those end-of-the-year heart-warmers that's supposed to make you feel there's hope for this old world yet. It seems that a 9-year-old Iraqi boy, Saleh Khalaf, came across a cluster bomb and "because it was round and smooth" he picked it up and it blew off all of one hand and most of another, opened up his abdomen, took out his left eye and horribly scarred his face. His 16-year-old brother was killed. Fortunately, and this is the point of the story, he was treated "against protocol" in a US Army hospital and flown with his father for further treatment in Oakland, where he was showered with help by a generous local couple and is now learning English and American expressions like "hold your horses." Recently his mother and sisters were permitted to join him in California. "I'm happy now," says Saleh.
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Who's Afraid of Judy Maccabee?
Katha Pollitt: Women increasingly are taking leadership roles in Jewish life--and that's a problem?
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Feminists for McCain? Not So Much
Katha Pollitt: NARAL and Planned Parenthood give him a big fat zero. What else do you need to know?
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Iron My Skirt
Katha Pollitt: Once the bitterness of the present moment has faded, people will recognize they owe Hillary Clinton a standing ovation, even if they can't stand her.
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Déjà Vu in South Dakota
Katha Pollitt: It's going to take a concerted national effort to defeat the state's latest anti-choice ballot initiative.
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Backlash Spectacular
Katha Pollitt: From campus to courtroom, longstanding gains for women are being eroded everywhere you look.
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Men of the Cloth
Katha Pollitt: When it comes to keeping women pregnant and in their place, polygamous Mormons and the Pope have a lot in common.
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Sweatin' to the Koran
Katha Pollitt: What do burqas, Osama and fascism have to do with six hours of man-free exercise time at Harvard?
So this is what we've come to: We celebrate the rescue of one child and gloss over the inconvenient fact that it was our weapons that maimed him for life. The boy who lives cancels out the brother who died, the moral heroism of his befrienders cancels out the moral turpitude of our government, excuses ourselves, and lets us bask in poignant uplift. Over at NPR, it's a driveway moment.
Sometimes I think America is becoming another place, unrecognizable. David Harvey, the great geographer, tells the story of a friend who returned to the United States last spring after seven years away and could not believe the transformation. "It was as if everyone had been sprinkled with idiot dust!" Some kind of mysterious national dumb-down would explain the ease with which the Republicans have managed to get so many people agitated about the nonexistent Social Security crisis--at 82 percent ranked way above poverty and homelessness (71 percent) and racial justice (47 percent) in a list of urgent issues in a recent poll--or about gay marriage, whose threat to heterosexual unions nobody so far has been able to articulate. Mass mental deterioration would explain, too, how so many Americans still believe the discredited premises of the Iraq War--Saddam Hussein had WMD, was Osama's best friend, was behind 9/11. But even as a joke it doesn't explain the way we have come to accept as normal, or at least plausible, things that would have shocked us to our core only a little while ago. Michelle Malkin, a far-right absurdity, writes a book defending the internment of the Japanese in World War II, and before you know it Daniel Pipes, Middle East scholar and frequent op-ed commentator, is citing Malkin to support his proposals for racial profiling of Muslims. And he's got lots of company--in a recent poll almost half of respondents agreed that the civil liberties of Muslims should be curtailed. Pipes's proposals in turn seem mild compared with the plans being floated by the Pentagon and the CIA for lifetime detention of terrorist suspects--without charges, without lawyers, in a network of secret prisons around the globe. Kafkaesque doesn't begin to describe it--at least Joseph K. had an attorney and the prisoner of "In the Penal Colony" got a sentence.
As I write, the Senate is preparing to take up the nomination of Alberto Gonzales to replace John Ashcroft as Attorney General. Despicable as Ashcroft proved to be, and much as the Senate should have foreseen that and rejected him, he had not at the time of his nomination been responsible for memos justifying torture. He hadn't argued that the President stood above the law and could pretty much do whatever he wanted. He had not been in the center of months and months of revelations about the horrific doings at Abu Ghraib, in detention centers in Afghanistan, or, even as you are reading this, Guantánamo. How can it be that the smart money is on Gonzales being confirmed? That Charles Schumer, a popular blue-state Democrat with a war chest bigger than Alexander the Great's, is already talking sagely about the presumption that the President gets the Cabinet members he wants?
If only the problem was stupidity. But Chuck Schumer, Daniel Pipes, the people at Morning Edition, are all very smart. Even Michelle Malkin is probably not actually dumb. And anyway, you don't need a high IQ or a PhD to believe in law and human rights and the Golden Rule. The problem is fear. The media are afraid of looking too "liberal," intellectuals are afraid of being called "anti-American"--and they will be if they challenge too vigorously the crimes being committed in America's name--Democrats are afraid of having their remaining bits of turf plowed under and sown with salt by the Republicans, the left is afraid of looking too "secular" and not "supporting the troops," and ordinary people are afraid of being blown up by the terrorist next door.
Fear dust. That's what it is. Fear dust.
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If you would like to help victims of the tsunami, consider a donation to MADRE. This international women's human rights organization is helping with immediate relief and is partnered with INFORM, a Sri Lankan women's group, to work with victims for the long term, when the big money donors have moved on. Give at www.madre.org or mail a check (write INFORM on the memo line if you want your donation to be dedicated solely to tsunami relief) to 121 W. 27 Street, Room 301, New York, NY 10001.
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