Wednesday, December 21, 2005

What will it take?

…War is an old habit of thought, an old frame of mind, an old political technique, that must now pass as human sacrifice and human slavery have passed. I have faith that the human spirit will prove equal to the long heavy task of ending war. Against the pessimistic mood of our time, I think that the human spirit - for all its dark side… - is in essence , heroic.

Herman Wouk


There are those who have seen the ravages of destruction. There are also those who have authored with all of their strength what that destruction might have entailed. We must also be remindful to the thought that there are those that have done neither… yet all have wearied in one respect or another for the same soil.

We are in a time in which we are re-writing history, a history that our future will look back upon and question just as we have done and will continue to do, what was it really for? And the question will in our future, just as it has in our past, be wont for an answer, an answer that is understanding of the queries of those who have suffered with all of their varying degrees of sacrifice, an answer that realizes that what we become effects civilization from Bangkok to Boston, and all points North to South, an answer that begs for the spirit of Human to transcend beyond the wages of the destruction that it is so apt to accommodate.

Despite all of the darkness that surrounds our thoughts and perceptions, what will we have become? Will we have made this orb a better place? The tides of time have ebbed and flowed through eons past, yet here we are - with all of our civil unrest and panderings for whatever a conscience can dictate - here we are.

It is said that every generation has its own curse. This notion dictates that whoever we are, whatever we become, we carry that curse with us. It should follow then, that every soul would seek a cleansing from whatever burden it carries. For this reason, do we try to become heroes? Or do we individually decide to make a collective attempt at merely being decent to one another. Or will it become nothing more than an implicit, “It’s your soul, you decide”?

I sit here with a maelstrom of thought, and an incompatible unrest for the reprehensible form of dialectic that is evolving around me, yet I have to believe with all of what is in me, that either despite the dialectic, or in spite of ourselves, each and every one of us should at least have the desire to become larger than the Conundrum, and cultivate an innate wont for the betterment of our souls at large.

We are a great nation, with great virtues, and limitless resourcefulness. We may have the desire to be the heroes of old become new, and we may have a notion that one hero may be better than someone else’s, but the juncture we are at demands that we realize that we are a great nation, and that it will take all of our virtue and every bit of our resourcefulness to maintain it.


Andrew G. Eppler
Right Decision ; Wrong Rules
http://www.truthout.org/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/37/9393
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=State_secrets_privilege
http://www.law.harvard.edu/publications/evidenceiii/rules/509_proposed.htm

2 comments:

Steve said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Steve said...

Andrew,

While I believe that it's possible to temporarily reform ourselves or even put off the march to armageddon, I also believe it is inevitable that we will destroy much of this planet despite the better angels of our nature. Unless we can change the nature of man entirely, and I hold that we can't, we will take what we want or need. This selfishness is the origin of war. It's impossible to permanently better the human race.

Steve