What bothers me so much, is not that we as a country are so happy he's dead. Surely, had I been of age, I would have celebrated the assassination of Adolf Hitler or Joseph Stalin. And I think it is justified to murder bin Laden, even according to Queensberry rules. But it's the words we use that bother me. He was our enemy, a man who felt we were collateral damage. The civilians of the United States were his Hiroshima and Nagisaki. All I am asking is that we recognize it as such. We can celebrate the winning of a battle as long as we understand the cost of the fight. It demeans our humanity...it demeans humanity...to think we are no less guilty of murder for killing one man, than we are for killing thousands or millions.
Martin Luther King said "Returning hate, multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that."
So the country is celebrating. People are out in the street shouting hurrays. College students who were babies in 2011 are cheering and partying in revelry over the killing of Osama bin Laden. Our president, who is hated by almost half the country because their names sound alike, is taking credit for, and making political hay out of the United States of America murdering one kidney-failing terrorist. I have yet to hear one journalist, including those from the far left, finding fault with this. It appears to be the only issue that brings our country together, and maybe that was its purpose, not only its unintended result.
But words matter. Let's face it. Might makes right and history is written by the victors. There is no text on the founding of America written by an Apache or a Navaho. There is no one in New Mexico who thinks they are living in occupied territory. And so if we want to preserve our way of life, we need to fight, and unfortunately slay our enemy. But we do not need to demean what that does to us as a country and as individuals. We pay a price for that murder, each and every one of us. It would be humane to acknowledge that. Words matter.
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