The first editorial I read today is also the best. What I love about this piece is that it makes explicit the paradox at the root of the current administration's appropriation of Cold War rhetoric: while they have succeeded (though not without difficulty) in reducing the situation to a gross dichotomy (good America vs. evil totalitarianism), they have suddenly abandoned our six-decade policy of deterrence and containment. Every time I hear Dubya speak, I'm reminded of those Congressmen who we point to in our recent history books and laugh at, those who called for a preemptive nuclear attack on the Soviet Union in order to "guarantee peace." Our containment policy has, of course, been fraught with problems ethical problems most of all but it seems odd to me that our new Cold War logic has made a bigger threat of Iraq than the Soviet Union ever was. I wish I could take some solace from thoughts of Dubya's inevitable place in future editions of those same history texts, but too many lives are at stake.
A quick note: The Artists Network has built several demonstrations around the slogan, "Our Grief is Not a Cry for War." I wish I could attend just for an opportunity to hear "REVEREND BILLY & The Stop Shopping Gospel Choir."
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