Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
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the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
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One Little, Two Little, Three Little Eichmanns Mickey Z. (with Rosemarie Jackowski) No,
this is not a rehash of the Ward Churchill/Little Eichmann witch-hunt.
But I have been contemplating the sentiment behind Churchills original
essay.
In Eichmann in
Jerusalem, Hannah Arendt wrote, The trouble with Eichmann was
precisely that so many were like him, and that the many were neither
perverted nor sadistic, that they were, and still are, terribly and
terrifyingly normal.
She
wrote of a new type of criminal, who commits his crimes under
circumstances that make it well-nigh impossible for him to know or to
feel that he is doing wrong. Raise your hand if this sounds
frighteningly familiar.
The time is long overdue for all of us to be actively and relentlessly reminding the criminals that they are criminals. Until we do, they have the freedom to live in denial.
I sent the above paragraph to Rosemarie Jackowski (RMJ) to start a conversation.
RMJ:
All over the United States people are working at jobs that result in
the deaths of innocent people. There are military contracts and
sub-contracts in small towns and villages, big cities, etc. Any job
that supports the war machine is a real problem. I understand why
people take jobs like that, but it would be a much better world if
everyone just made the decision to do no harm.
MZ: You know what that line will provoke...the inevitable "so what can we do?" question.
RMJ:
I am not sure what we can do. Sometimes I feel that it is hopeless. A
big part of the problem is 'the system'. Ever since the Black Budget
was created by Congress in the 40s, we have had a secret government
operating. Individual citizens can try to do as little harm as
possible. As I say often, even buying a pair of socks does some harm
because it supports the war economy. Think of it as a moral continuum.
The shopper who buys the socks is doing a slight harm. The voter who
votes for a member of Congress who votes to finance the war, well that
voter might be closer to the maximum on the scale of evil. The military
sharpshooter who kills a civilian and the guard who tortures a prisoner
are enabled by irresponsible, uninformed voters. Are we becoming a
culture that is totally devoid of compassion and empathy?
MZ:
Becoming? Our culture views compassion and empathy as nothing more than
masks, disguises to hide the harm we're all guilty of.
RMJ: Yes,
it would be a big help if the average US citizen had an accurate
understanding of history. Teachers could play an important role. Too
many teach that the pursuit of war is an honorable career option. All
students should see the Fisk War photos before they graduate from high
school. The sanitized view of history that is taught leads to a culture
of entitlement - 'it is our oil under their sand.' The perfect formula
for creating a killer is to teach him that the US never does anything
wrong, expose him to a lot of violence in the media, video games, etc.,
and then apply peer pressure. After that, it only takes a few weeks of
basic training.
MZ: So we agree: Little Eichmanns do exist.
But I'll bet if Ward Churchill had used a different term, he would have
remained as obscure as ever. The way I usually phrase it in articles or
talks is that with few exceptions, there are no innocent bystanders in
America. Any closing thoughts?
RMj: Well, I disagree that Ward
Churchill was obscure before, but the "E-word" did bring a lot of
additional attention. I knew about him because he is a fellow member of
Veterans for Peace. Churchill's use of the "E-word" and the controversy
that resulted was a valuable national learning opportunity that was
missed. The media attention was misdirected from the facts of history
and what Churchill really said. Instead the media focus was directed
toward ad hominem attacks on Churchill. It just happened again when
Rev. Jeremiah Wright made his comments about US history. Instead of
having a national discussion on the merits or flaws in what Wright
said, the media was consumed with ad hominem attacks on him. Basically
it boils down to this - in the US if you speak the truth you will pay a
high price. Mickey, you make an important point. There are no innocent
bystanders in the US. We are all complicit - every one of us.
MZ: And that goes double for anyone who has fallen for the Obama hype.
Mickey Z. can be found on the Web at http://www.mickeyz.net.
Rosemarie Jackowski can be reached at: dissent@sover.net