| Letters From Readers
 
 Name That State Gentle Readers: I am thinking of a country  one familiar to 
                            most of us. In this country, a state of open-ended 
                            war exists. It is a war against a nebulous and hard-to-define 
                            enemy, but an evil enemy to be sure. It is not a traditional 
                            war, but a battle against ideologies that threaten 
                            this country's way of life. It is a fight for all 
                            that is good, against a powerful and wicked foe. In 
                            this war, the enemy could be a country, but it could 
                            also be your neighbor, a fellow student, or the person 
                            sitting with you in a stadium, or next to you on the 
                            plane.
 For the prosecution of this war, 
                            the government has expanded its powers to clandestinely 
                            surveil the populace. Cameras observe the public unseen, 
                            and modern technology has created a virtual panopticon. 
                            Libraries and bookstores are required to report the 
                            reading habits of suspected enemies of the state, 
                            and secret courts may even rule and sentence without 
                            official charge or public trial. Detainees may be 
                            held without the protection ofinternational conventions, and without their identities 
                            released to a free press. These measures have been 
                            deemed necessary to protect national security.
 In this war-torn country, a mass 
                            media campaign extols the virtues of patriotism and 
                            support for the government. Television screens throughout 
                            the land hammer home the leadership's message of the 
                            need for paternalistic protection and oversight. Those 
                            who protest against the government's stern measures 
                            have their very patriotism questioned by the executive 
                            authorities, and can be investigated without serving 
                            a warrant to justify the search of their homes or 
                            their financial records. National security demands 
                            these exigencies as well.  The economy of this country depends 
                            largely on a military-industrial complex that profits 
                            from the campaign against the enemy, but is nonetheless 
                            the only hope for victory. The army is funded beyond 
                            other priorities, and soldiers are sent to give their 
                            lives for the nation in far-off lands. Only through 
                            the prosecution of this war can true peace be realized 
                            in the end. The workers of this country are 
                            at the mercy of government and corporate interests 
                            which operate in a realm so far removed from the common 
                            person that everyday people can barely even fathom 
                            the workings of the system itself, much less the motivations 
                            of those who control it. Livelihoods depend on decisions 
                            made by arich, powerful few, cloistered and guarded from pedestrian 
                            society. Most people live day-to-day, trying to pay 
                            rent and keep food on the table, and trying not to 
                            make waves  avoiding "radical" opinions 
                            that might attract attention. The public is encouraged 
                            to report any "suspicious behavior" to the 
                            police, and the police have substantial powers to 
                            investigate and arrest these "suspicious characters."
 The executive leaders of this country 
                            came to power by, at best, dubious means  and 
                            it is clear that it was not by the majority vote in 
                            a democratic process. It is probably fair to say that 
                            they attained their office with the aid of a small 
                            group of elite powerbrokers who maintain a system 
                            of nepotism and corruption to ensure their status. 
                            They are not leaders elected by the fully-counted 
                            will of the people. In this country, the leadership 
                            speaks in simplistic phrases, designed to evoke a 
                            polar emotional response, rather than inspire reasoned 
                            criticism. Soundbites aired on screens nationwide 
                            exhort the populace to fear and hatred of the evil 
                            enemy, and praise the virtue of loyalty to the government, 
                            despite the erosion of civil liberty in the face of 
                            war. Nationalism is upheld at the expense of any semblance 
                            of global cooperation. Have you guessed the name of this 
                            country? Do you recognize the state of affairs I have 
                            described? I have described, in some detail, a fictional 
                            nation known as Oceania, from that most important 
                            of novels, 1984, by George Orwell. If, even for a 
                            moment, from any perspective, you thought that my 
                            description might apply to the United States of America 
                            in 2002, I hope it gives you pause. Perhaps I am an alarmist. Perhaps 
                            I am a radical. Perhaps I am a troublemaker. I, however, 
                            prefer to think of myself as a patriot, exercising 
                            the eternal vigilance that is the price of liberty. 
                            Despite the horrors visited upon us by extremists 
                            on September 11, 2001, let us not sacrifice the freedoms 
                            that make this country great. Let us rather accept 
                            the risks that are assumed by a free society, and 
                            not flinch from resisting those who  even with 
                            the best intentions  would drive us into the 
                            dark shadow of demagoguery and authoritarianism.  John Baldridge  
 Complacency is Complicity After the terrorist attack last 
                            September, I attended a Rockford Peace & Justice 
                            meeting along with many other political activists 
                            who felt some concern about how the United States 
                            would choose to respond. The local television stations 
                            were there to cover the event and somehow my image 
                            appeared on the news segment that night. As a result, 
                            students from the high school where I teach saw that 
                            I was there and proceeded to spread a rumor that I 
                            was "un-American." Another member of the 
                            faculty brought this to my attention during a passing 
                            period. He told me what a student had said and I started 
                            to get that familiar sinking feeling: that many people 
                            in this country never look beyond what their leaders 
                            tell them. Perhaps I should forgive the young woman 
                            who made the ridiculous accusation because she is 
                            uninformed, but I can't help but ponder the reality 
                            that she represents a larger group of people here 
                            the United States who haven't bothered to study their 
                            history, much less question the present.  With this experience in mind, I 
                            began to reflect on my political views and decided 
                            that I don't care 'who' calls me 'what' anymore. The 
                            time has come to challenge the authorities that lead 
                            us toward the brink of an uncertain future as they 
                            plot their schemes of destruction.  It seems like just yesterday that 
                            I was in high school and a President named Bush was 
                            waging war on a foreign country called Iraq. Now it's 
                            more than ten years later, I'm teaching high school 
                            and another President named Bush is going to wage 
                            war on the same foreign country, Iraq. The more life 
                            changes, the more it stays the same. What does this 
                            all mean? Saddam Hussein might be a ruthless dictator, 
                            but there are plenty of them around the world and 
                            we're not invading all of their countries, at least 
                            not yet. It's interesting how a lust for oil can make 
                            a nation act.  I have another uneasy feeling inside. 
                            As our leaders select enemies around the globe to 
                            target for military aggression, I can't help but think 
                            that our fear of terrorism has empowered them to do 
                            so. After all, what was that President's remark in 
                            his State of the Union Address about the "axis 
                            of evil?" Are we going to declare war on every 
                            country that doesn't subscribe to our blend of political 
                            and economic values?  What I find really disheartening 
                            is that the average person permits the government 
                            to make these decisions, as if all are made in our 
                            best interest. Perhaps that's the downfall of representative 
                            democracy - people assume too much, critically think 
                            very little, and openly speak out on a rare occasion 
                            in situations like this. Isn't it strange that you 
                            can be ostracized for merely voicing an alternative 
                            perspective? Am I alone in thinking that? Are people 
                            so foolish? Or are they just so preoccupied with 'getting 
                            paid' to even care, like a junkie in search of a fix? 
                            They believe that because George W. Bush says we need 
                            a missile defense shield, that we must develop one. 
                            They believe that broad definitions of terrorism, 
                            granting police agencies the power to invade their 
                            privacy, holding innocent people in detention, and 
                            proposing that citizens spy on one another must be 
                            the path to solving our problems and promoting security. 
                           Has anyone bothered to question 
                            what it is about our policy that provokes hostility 
                            toward our country in the first place? If you think 
                            the answer is that we're a freedom-loving nation, 
                            you are grossly oversimplifying the issue. Is it possible 
                            that the world is tired of being treated as a means 
                            to an end? That foreign people are angry because they 
                            are seen only as a supply of natural resources or 
                            cheap labor in our eyes? If you study our history, 
                            you find a 'privileged few' that ordered the decimation 
                            of indigenous populations, enslavement of black people, 
                            and exploitation of the working class. Interestingly 
                            enough, a majority of the population considered this 
                            acceptable for quite some time. In retrospect, this 
                            injustice is dismissed as a necessary action in our 
                            evolution. But for just a moment, consider 
                            all of the suffering that transpired. Most people 
                            are horrified at the thought because it's incomprehensible. 
                            Have we learned anything from the experience in the 
                            past? One might argue that we have not. For years 
                            now, the 'privileged few' have been scouring the Earth 
                            in search of other lands that can be taken advantage 
                            of. It's the only way for them to maintain their standard 
                            of living and the only way they know how to function. 
                            Welcome to the modern capitalist state. Trace the 
                            evolution yourself as the references change: colonialism, 
                            imperialism, and globalization. Perhaps there hasn't 
                            been a change at all because force is the enduring 
                            tool of the policies we enact. If you choose to openly 
                            disagree with or resist the United States' interests, 
                            you will eventually find yourself the victim of sanctions 
                            or bombs. Each of which kills far more innocent civilians 
                            than corrupt government officials.  I think that it's time we reevaluated 
                            how we treat people abroad while keeping in mind that 
                            individuals we call terrorists today were at one time 
                            our allies. Remember, problems exist whether or not 
                            you choose to address them, and that ignorance fuels 
                            anger to unimaginable levels. Does this mean I excuse 
                            acts of violence against the United States? No, I 
                            do not. However, if we are really serious about ending 
                            the political violence, we must examine our role in 
                            fostering it. For more information: http://www.beyondtheself.org John Duerk 
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