A quality life in chaotic times: Personnal Grow, Financial Resilience, Quality Environment.
A quality life in chaotic times: Personnal Grow, Financial Resilience, Quality Environment.
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Published to Paragraph 231113
In every life, there are moments of memory that stand out sharp and clear. For me, one such moment is December 7, 1941. It was a bright, cold, clear morning in Oregon. One of those winter days when an interior high-pressure cell pushes strong, creating a dry, cold wind down the Columbia River Gorge and into the Willamette Valley.
I was sitting in our 39 Mercury sedan listening to the radio while my folks attended church. Suddenly, the Glen Miller Band was interrupted by an announcement, "Pearl Harbor is under attack by the Japanese." I went into the church.
During a break in the service, I told my folks that Pearl Harbor had been bombed. I didn’t understand their grim reaction. I was only eleven.
In the spring of 1941, President Roosevelt defined the values of this country. He spoke of four freedoms. They became the freedoms I was raised to believe in:
Freedom of every person to worship in their own way.
Freedom from want
Freedom from fear
Freedom of Speach
For a long time, I believed these were the values our country would work to achieve both at home and around the world. For me, the four freedoms symbolized what humanity fought so hard to secure during World War II.
I remember when I went back to school after Christmas vacation. My Japanese friend was not there. I asked my mom, " What happened to him?" She said that he had been evacuated to a camp where he could be protected from retaliation. It made sense, but I didn't like it. And of course, I later learned that she was mistaken.
During the war, we knew that American prisoners were not treated well by either the Japanese or Germans. However, I was proud that Americans treated their prisoners well. The Geneva Convention meant something important. We stood for a higher standard than the enemy.
I also remember that when America dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima my reaction was, “Good, now my cousins can come home alive.” When Japan did not surrender, I couldn't wait for us to drop another bomb.
It wasn't until the fall of 1945 that Wade, my Japanese friend, was again able to sit behind me in homeroom class. I said, “Hi, welcome back.” He stayed one of my best friends through high school. He remained so till the day he died.
A few years ago, I visited him in Washington, DC. He told me then how much my friendship had meant to him as a scared kid returning from five years in an internment camp.
The end of World War II was an exciting time. We competed with Russia, spreading our values around the world. President Kennedy asked us to consider what we could do for our country. He set up the Peace Corps.
President Johnson initiated the War on Poverty. America was actively working, through the United Nations and in other ways, to improve the lives of folks at home and around the world.
Of course, at the same time, the CIA was overthrowing fledgling democracies around the world and setting up dictatorships that opposed communism. For years, I didn't believe the rumors, but those rumors have turned out to be facts.
Today, near the tail end of my life, my country seems to have lost its way. In the name of the “War on Terror,” we have surrendered many of our freedoms. People use the term “War on Terror” to skew the checks and balances inherent in our constitution in favor of the Executive Branch.
We don't need an overly empowered and secretive executive branch to protect our freedoms. What we need is an extremely informed, coordinated, and well-funded intelligence service coupled with an extremely informed, coordinated, and well-funded police service.
I can accept that the war in Afghanistan was justified. After all, Afghanistan supported Al-Qaeda, a force that declared war on America long before September Eleven. However, our overthrow of the Iraq regime had nothing to do with terrorism. Based upon internal reports released to the public after the invasion, it seems pretty clear that Osama Bin Laden and Sudam Hussain were well-known enemies.
Mr. Bush said we must fight "them" over there, or they will follow us home.
Remember, it took less than two dozen individuals to destroy the World Trade Center. When we understand that it takes only a couple of dozen people to create a great tragedy, we may begin to understand the true dimensions of what we are fighting.
A terrorist cell can strike anywhere, whenever they choose to do so. Most of the time, only good police work can stop them Terrorism is a worldwide phenomenon. We must fight it in the same way we fight the war on drugs. In fact, drugs often finance terrorism. Only effective police work, coordinated worldwide, will help us minimize terrorist activities.
We have to recognize that the war on terror will continue as long as there are fanatics willing to kill and die. Moreover, if we give away any of our freedoms based upon a war that may never end, the terrorists inevitably win.
My country no longer follows the Geneva Conventions with regard to certain prisoners. They claim that we do not torture these prisoners because they have a new definition of torture. According to them, torture is something that causes death or the loss of a limb.
Despite what they claim, America is currently authorizing the same torture techniques used by the Spanish Inquisition. Waterboarding was torture in the fifteen hundreds, and it is torture now.
If anyone had told me when I was young that the Vice President of the United States would be lobbying Congress for a bill that authorizes torture, I would have said he was crazy; but that is exactly what Vice President Cheney did.
Remember that what we allow our government to do to one person, it may eventually do to us. When a foreign citizen can be declared an enemy combatant and be shipped to a foreign country for torture, what does that say about our country? When torture is acceptable in a black prison of the CIA, how long will it be before it's acceptable in police interrogations anywhere in this country?
It seems that anyone who disagrees with the policies of the administration is branded a traitor. However, disagreement is at the heart of our First Amendment. Disagreement is fundamental to our basic freedoms.
Americans are told that everyone is innocent until proven guilty, but under this administration, a person can be branded a traitor, imprisoned, held incommunicado, denied access to attorneys, refused judicial review, and be subject to torture without any explanation from our Executive Branch.
I think of my eleven-year-old friend, Wade, who was interned for years because he lived in a country surrounded by fear. If they can throw away his freedom for years, who else can they do it to? If they can brand a man a traitor without proof of law, what does America stand for?
I originally wrote this during the George W Bush Administration. We have since seen a power-hungry, corrupt autocrat push this country to the brink of a fascist dictatorship.
Democracy is fragile. We need to stand up for the values of this country. The four freedoms are a good place to start.
Published to Paragraph 231113
In every life, there are moments of memory that stand out sharp and clear. For me, one such moment is December 7, 1941. It was a bright, cold, clear morning in Oregon. One of those winter days when an interior high-pressure cell pushes strong, creating a dry, cold wind down the Columbia River Gorge and into the Willamette Valley.
I was sitting in our 39 Mercury sedan listening to the radio while my folks attended church. Suddenly, the Glen Miller Band was interrupted by an announcement, "Pearl Harbor is under attack by the Japanese." I went into the church.
During a break in the service, I told my folks that Pearl Harbor had been bombed. I didn’t understand their grim reaction. I was only eleven.
In the spring of 1941, President Roosevelt defined the values of this country. He spoke of four freedoms. They became the freedoms I was raised to believe in:
Freedom of every person to worship in their own way.
Freedom from want
Freedom from fear
Freedom of Speach
For a long time, I believed these were the values our country would work to achieve both at home and around the world. For me, the four freedoms symbolized what humanity fought so hard to secure during World War II.
I remember when I went back to school after Christmas vacation. My Japanese friend was not there. I asked my mom, " What happened to him?" She said that he had been evacuated to a camp where he could be protected from retaliation. It made sense, but I didn't like it. And of course, I later learned that she was mistaken.
During the war, we knew that American prisoners were not treated well by either the Japanese or Germans. However, I was proud that Americans treated their prisoners well. The Geneva Convention meant something important. We stood for a higher standard than the enemy.
I also remember that when America dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima my reaction was, “Good, now my cousins can come home alive.” When Japan did not surrender, I couldn't wait for us to drop another bomb.
It wasn't until the fall of 1945 that Wade, my Japanese friend, was again able to sit behind me in homeroom class. I said, “Hi, welcome back.” He stayed one of my best friends through high school. He remained so till the day he died.
A few years ago, I visited him in Washington, DC. He told me then how much my friendship had meant to him as a scared kid returning from five years in an internment camp.
The end of World War II was an exciting time. We competed with Russia, spreading our values around the world. President Kennedy asked us to consider what we could do for our country. He set up the Peace Corps.
President Johnson initiated the War on Poverty. America was actively working, through the United Nations and in other ways, to improve the lives of folks at home and around the world.
Of course, at the same time, the CIA was overthrowing fledgling democracies around the world and setting up dictatorships that opposed communism. For years, I didn't believe the rumors, but those rumors have turned out to be facts.
Today, near the tail end of my life, my country seems to have lost its way. In the name of the “War on Terror,” we have surrendered many of our freedoms. People use the term “War on Terror” to skew the checks and balances inherent in our constitution in favor of the Executive Branch.
We don't need an overly empowered and secretive executive branch to protect our freedoms. What we need is an extremely informed, coordinated, and well-funded intelligence service coupled with an extremely informed, coordinated, and well-funded police service.
I can accept that the war in Afghanistan was justified. After all, Afghanistan supported Al-Qaeda, a force that declared war on America long before September Eleven. However, our overthrow of the Iraq regime had nothing to do with terrorism. Based upon internal reports released to the public after the invasion, it seems pretty clear that Osama Bin Laden and Sudam Hussain were well-known enemies.
Mr. Bush said we must fight "them" over there, or they will follow us home.
Remember, it took less than two dozen individuals to destroy the World Trade Center. When we understand that it takes only a couple of dozen people to create a great tragedy, we may begin to understand the true dimensions of what we are fighting.
A terrorist cell can strike anywhere, whenever they choose to do so. Most of the time, only good police work can stop them Terrorism is a worldwide phenomenon. We must fight it in the same way we fight the war on drugs. In fact, drugs often finance terrorism. Only effective police work, coordinated worldwide, will help us minimize terrorist activities.
We have to recognize that the war on terror will continue as long as there are fanatics willing to kill and die. Moreover, if we give away any of our freedoms based upon a war that may never end, the terrorists inevitably win.
My country no longer follows the Geneva Conventions with regard to certain prisoners. They claim that we do not torture these prisoners because they have a new definition of torture. According to them, torture is something that causes death or the loss of a limb.
Despite what they claim, America is currently authorizing the same torture techniques used by the Spanish Inquisition. Waterboarding was torture in the fifteen hundreds, and it is torture now.
If anyone had told me when I was young that the Vice President of the United States would be lobbying Congress for a bill that authorizes torture, I would have said he was crazy; but that is exactly what Vice President Cheney did.
Remember that what we allow our government to do to one person, it may eventually do to us. When a foreign citizen can be declared an enemy combatant and be shipped to a foreign country for torture, what does that say about our country? When torture is acceptable in a black prison of the CIA, how long will it be before it's acceptable in police interrogations anywhere in this country?
It seems that anyone who disagrees with the policies of the administration is branded a traitor. However, disagreement is at the heart of our First Amendment. Disagreement is fundamental to our basic freedoms.
Americans are told that everyone is innocent until proven guilty, but under this administration, a person can be branded a traitor, imprisoned, held incommunicado, denied access to attorneys, refused judicial review, and be subject to torture without any explanation from our Executive Branch.
I think of my eleven-year-old friend, Wade, who was interned for years because he lived in a country surrounded by fear. If they can throw away his freedom for years, who else can they do it to? If they can brand a man a traitor without proof of law, what does America stand for?
I originally wrote this during the George W Bush Administration. We have since seen a power-hungry, corrupt autocrat push this country to the brink of a fascist dictatorship.
Democracy is fragile. We need to stand up for the values of this country. The four freedoms are a good place to start.
Bill808
Bill808
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