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bin Laden has been killed

// May 3rd, 2011

http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/05/02/remarks-president-osama-bin-laden

President Barack Obama, in his speech regarding the killing (murder?  assassination?) of Osama bin Laden, said:

“And so shortly after taking office, I directed Leon Panetta, the director of the CIA, to make the killing or capture of bin Laden the top priority of our war against al Qaeda, even as we continued our broader efforts to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat his network.”

There are many ways to parse that, but I can’t help but pause and acknowledge that, straight-up, ending someone’s life was a cornerstone of one of our national policies.  I know there are many a hawk out there who don’t even flinch hearing this and that, given the context in which this name entered into the consciousnesses of most people, most people are hawkish when it comes to bin Laden.  Don’t get me wrong – I think he was a murderer whose freedoms should most certainly have been curtailed.  I’m not a fan of death, and as a result don’t support the death penalty, or wars.  I realize that my ideological viewpoint can only be taken so far before, pragmatically, it becomes pretty indefensible.  In this instance, I can’t imagine I’d be able to convince many people that bin Laden should have been captured and taken to trial – though it is worth noting that bin Laden *wanted* to be killed in combat, and captured him and making him stand trial and serve multiple life sentences would have been far greater a consequence.

But that said, hearing Obama express that killing a human being was an important part of his plan caught me off guard.  If Martin Luther King had explained that killing the head of the KKK was the most important part of his plan, how many would have followed?

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My response to Bu Minda’s comment…

// December 7th, 2010

In a conversation about Native Americans, my friend Ibu Minda made the following statement, which I just couldn’t help arguing with:

I did and do learn a lot, Jonthon. Come on. No worry about the history Jonthon. LAst week I went to Holocaust Museum, it even worse than that. Hwvr, like what I always emphasize in literature classes, bad guys will always be punished at the end. That’s what we learn from religion too, be kind now and you’llbe happy the days after.

With all due respect, Minda, I simply must argue with your statement that the holocaust was worse than the extermination of the Native Americans.  I also reject your statement that “bad guys will always be punished in the end.”
First, it would be impossible to compare the holocaust and the extermination of Native American Indians because there are just so many metrics.  If we were to talk about the numbers killed as a percentage of population, certainly many more Native Americans were killed.  Observing the relative positions of these two groups in the world also proves telling: Jewish culture has survived, and this is a testament to the intelligence and savvy of its people.  They have taken up positions of prominence in American and other societies, most notably in the banking and legal sectors.  American Indians have, at least stereotypically, been relegated to running casinos.  While Native Americans have much to be proud of, the level of misunderstanding about their cultural plight is by and large still omitted from history books; most Americans still adhere to dreamy notions of pilgrims and Indians working, eating and living together, as opposed to the reality of frontiersman killing buffalo to starve them out, giving them blankets infected with smallpox, and using bogus legal maneuvers to usurp their land.  (I could write another whole paragraph about land, but feel it unnecessary.) Compare this to a pretty well-understood and commonly-held spite for the Nazis and their ways, and your suggestion that the holocaust was worse becomes very difficult to defend.
The idea that evil always losing is the theme of fairy tales, but not the reality we live in.  Let’s analyze this statement just in the context of the two horrible wrongs mentioned before: Did the bad guy immigrants that came to America and stole land and cultural treasures meet with a terrible fate?  No – their children would proceed to populate the vast expanses of America.  Righting this wrong would now mean ceding control of the land and moving away, and that’s just not even a possibility.  In the context of the holocaust, the Nazi party did indeed fall, but corporations like BMW that pushed it forward exist and are incredible profitable to this day.  In fact, the activities of corporations in our globalized society are one of the most sterling examples of the fallacy of the premise.  Multinational corporations, being attendant to profit alone, now trump nations and, being unable to monetize human rights, just trample them whenever and wherever profits are to be made doing so.  Are they punished?  No.  In fact, our entire world economic system is set up specifically to enable this; organizations like the IMF and World Bank frequently fund projects that lead to the displacement of peoples and destruction of culture in the name of “development,” where development means the creation of business opportunities that benefit MNCs and a select few foreign nationals that currently serve as heads of state.  Suharto’s dealings with these organizations serve as sterling examples of my point; I would also reference the work of PT Freeport and the Canadian mining group’s human rights abuses in Papua, recently documented and reported by reputable journalistic institutions like Amnesty International.  Far from being punished, instead Indonesia’s police forces have allied with them to displace more people and simply block journalistic access to the area.  If these bad guys are ever going to “lose,” it will only be because Papua runs out of mine-able ores.  The concept that bad guys pay in the end is well-established in religious texts, but then, a lot of the people that are involved in these actions are quite religious and give money readily to religious organizations.  The Vatican faces huge fissures in Catholicism around the world due to this; Islamic organizations often split on issues of homosexuality, the use of facebook, and the availability of controlled substances where “bad guy-ism” is contestable and evil is difficult to assign.
In closing, I think most literature has a happy ending because people like happy endings – not because it is an accurate representation of what transpires outside dogeared pages of classics.  I would note that books like 1984 and The Fugitive (~Pramoedya Ananta Toer) have managed to gather much critical acclaim without bowing down to the feel-good, instant-gratification culture that presides in much of the world today.

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Mosque gets all the press, but area near Ground Zero full of bars, porn, liquor stores, salons

// August 18th, 2010

Mosque gets all the press, but area near Ground Zero full of bars, porn, liquor stores, salons

Seems like anyone who’s ever been downtown would already know this, and anyone who hasn’t should just mind their own business!

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Hussein

// April 1st, 2010

Hussein is the middle name of our President.  But before he was our President, he was attacked by radicals (not the good lefty ones) for being Muslim, and thus a terrorist (he is, in full disclosure, neither (as best we know))(aren’t parentheticals phun?!).  Radicals (the good lefty ones) started declaring “Hussein” as their middle name to show of solidarity.  I just never changed mine back.
My middle name is actually Vincent.

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U.S. tax money spent on exclusive clubs

// February 1st, 2010

World Vision is an organization that has fought poverty and famine. Critics fault the organization for refusing to hire non-Christians to staff its $250 million in annual programs funded by U.S. taxpayers.

via World Vision | Employment Discrimination | Foreign Aid.

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Obama to visit Indonesia next year

// October 10th, 2009

Sweet – Obama is going to Indo next year.  I may have to as well, then…

Also…

The childhood connection and his knowledge of a few words of the Indonesian language have made him hugely popular in the country of 234 million people, 90 percent of whom are Muslim.

**of a few words** – thanks, AFP, for noting that.

via AFP: Obama to visit Indonesia next year: embassy.

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Rights groups decry Gaza ‘honor killing’

// August 1st, 2009

Rights groups decry Gaza ‘honor killing’ – CNN.com.

wow, I’d hate to be one of the women in this picture, who have nothing to do with this story past “looking muslim.”

So, so sad. Ayo progressive Islam!

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