THOMAS SOWELL: Point Of No Return?
Point Of No Return?
It is hard to think of a time when a nation — and a whole civilization — has drifted more futilely toward a bigger catastrophe than that looming over the United States and western civilization today.
Nuclear weapons in the hands of Iran and North Korea mean that it is only a matter of time before there are nuclear weapons in the hands of international terrorist organizations. North Korea needs money and Iran has brazenly stated its aim as the destruction of Israel — and both its actions and its rhetoric suggest aims that extend even beyond a second Holocaust.
Send not to know for whom the bell tolls. It tolls for thee.
This is not just another in the long history of military threats. The Soviet Union, despite its massive nuclear arsenal, could be deterred by our own nuclear arsenal. But suicide bombers cannot be deterred.
Fanatics filled with hate cannot be either deterred or bought off, whether Hezbollah, Hamas or the government of Iran.
The endlessly futile efforts to bring peace to the Middle East with concessions fundamentally misconceive what forces are at work.
Hate and humiliation are key forces that cannot be bought off by "trading land for peace," by a "Palestinian homeland" or by other such concessions that might have worked in other times and places.
Humiliation and hate go together. Why humiliation? Because a once-proud, dynamic culture in the forefront of world civilizations, and still carrying a message of their own superiority to "infidels" today, is painfully visible to the whole world as a poverty-stricken and backward region, lagging far behind in virtually every field of human endeavor.
There is no way that they can catch up in a hundred years, even if the rest of the world stands still. And they are not going to wait a hundred years to vent their resentments and frustrations at the humiliating position in which they find themselves.
Israel's very existence as a modern, prosperous western nation in their midst is a daily slap across the face. Nothing is easier for demagogues than to blame Israel, the United States, or western civilization in general for their own lagging position.
Hitler was able to rouse similar resentments and fanaticism in Germany under conditions not nearly as dire as those in most Middle East countries today. The proof of similar demagogic success in the Middle East is all around.
What kind of people provide a market for videotaped beheadings of innocent hostages? What kind of people would throw an old man in a wheelchair off a cruise liner into the sea, simply because he was Jewish? What kind of people would fly planes into buildings to vent their hate at the cost of their own lives?
These are the kinds of people we are talking about getting nuclear weapons. And what of ourselves?
Do we understand that the world will never be the same after hate-filled fanatics gain the ability to wipe whole American cities off the face of the earth? Do we still imagine that they can be bought off, as Israel was urged to buy them off with "land for peace" — a peace that has proved to be wholly illusory?
Even ruthless conquerors of the past, from Genghis Khan to Adolf Hitler, wanted some tangible gains for themselves or their nations — land, wealth, dominion. What Middle East fanatics want is the destruction and humiliation of the west.
Their treatment of hostages, some of whom have been humanitarians serving the people of the Middle East, shows that what the terrorists want is to inflict the maximum pain and psychic anguish on their victims before killing them.
Once these fanatics have nuclear weapons, those victims can include you, your children and your children's children.
The terrorists need not start out by wiping our cities off the map. Chances are they would first want to force us to humiliate ourselves in whatever ways their sadistic imaginations could conceive, out of fear of their nuclear weapons.
After we, or our children and grandchildren, find ourselves living at the mercy of people with no mercy, what will future generations think of us, that we let this happen because we wanted to placate "world opinion" by not acting "unilaterally"? We are fast approaching the point of no return.
3 Comments:
We have tried so hard, over the years, to keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of irresponsible countries. I am sorry to see that we have been unsuccessful. The United States, of all people, knows the horror of horrors that The Bomb can inflict.
My own father fought in Korea; I am glad he is not here to see that North Korea is still a mess! He was a kind, sensitive man. It would have hurt his heart to see the world today.
I have only the greatest respect and admiration for Dr. Sowell. He is a very wise and insightful man who speals Truth, and if he is saying this, I don't feel that I am of track in my reading of the world!
I'm glad you posted this! Though the hope we have is not based in this world, PTL we have something better to save us!
Good morning, G*D bless and Maranatha!
tmw
catfleas, you're right.......I say the same about my dear Dad who couldn't go to WWII because he had had rheumatic fever and he felt SO embarassed to see people on the streets of Troy, NY who probably thought "What's a healthy, strapping guy doing not volunteering for the service?" He couldn't go because they turned him down, but he was so patriotic and wanted to fight and felt such humiliation knowing people must be wondering why Tom wasn't in the army, you know?
And he died 12 years ago, and the ONLY thing I'm happy about that for is how HORRIBLE he'd be feeling to see what's happening in this country today...the infighting, the incredible leftist infiltration into our schools, a lack of morality and decency in nearly everything we do.
Ya,....never thought I'd be glad I lost my fabulous father, but for this one reason, I'd rather he was gone.
As you say "it would hurt his heart to see the world today."
z
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