Of humanity, inhumanity, dogs and Iraqis
By Ben Tanosborn
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 29, 2008, 00:10
A luncheon engagement this last week turned out to be more
than a midday feeding of the body or a pleasant get-together with a friend; it
presented an opportunity to look into the mirror of my soul. You know . . . that
two-sided mirror of our conscience which is both concave and convex, a mirror
where images shrink or enlarge in accordance with how we see things, as well as
how we see ourselves. But isn�t that the way we always see things: distorted,
not necessarily as they are, particularly as our own government, our spiritual
leaders, and often the media, brainwash us?
Arriving 20 minutes early, I chose to wait for my friend
outside the restaurant in an old and colorful part of Portland (Oregon) where
half of the residents are mostly low-end blue collar, and the other half
undocumented Mexican nationals . . . with a sprinkling of Central Americans. A
neighborhood with an obvious ethnic changing of the guard, although you
couldn�t tell that from the people walking the streets during that noon hour,
making one conclude that Hispanic folks must be either working -- many at
whatever jobs they had been offered that morning -- or, perhaps, hiding from
the front line of the imaginary Lou Dobbs� Vigilante Corps, feared more than
the Migra (authorities).
A couple doors west of the restaurant was this veterinary
clinic and during my wait, I saw two, maybe three people walk their pet dogs
in, while a woman, probably in her late fifties, caught my attention as she
exited from the clinic with what seemed to me as a large black Labrador, or a
Lab mixed with an even larger breed, weighing in excess of 90 pounds.
The lady walked the Labby to a car parked at the curb just
30 or 40 feet from the clinic�s entrance, unlocking the car and pulling out a
long wooded board with nailed stoppers which provided a perfectly fitted ramp
to the backseats holding a makeshift dog bed.
Wow! I was in heartfelt awe of this woman-dog relationship,
her tenderness towards the poor canine, probably blind, in what seemed as the
last few months of his life. There, in front of me, was a touch of humanity at
its best: kindness, compassion, consideration . . . just love by any name. It
took me back to my own relationship with a dog I had years ago, so I understood
her well.
Then the car pulled out, its patriotic d�cor evidenced by me
for the first time: Old Glory attached to the antenna of an old Jeep Cherokee,
together with a �support the troops� sign adorning the rear window. But that
wasn�t all. Just before the car sped away, I was able to read one of two
stickers glued to the bumper. A sticker . . . with pale white and blue stripes
as background stating in two lines of red letters: �Keep Americans Working,
Make Sure Torture Stays Employed.� I can only venture to guess the other sign
being equally provocative.
I don�t know whether the Jeep belonged to the woman driving
it or not, but the fitted ramp led me to believe that it was her vehicle. And
my state of surprise, no, disbelief, as to what I had just seen quickly turned
into anger as I kept asking myself the very same question: how can a lady who
treats her dog so lovingly, humanely, show such inhumanity, have so much rancor
towards other human beings . . . people she does not even know, from foreign,
faraway lands to be sure; lands whose peoples never invited Americans as
guests, our presence there simply as that of unwelcome occupiers.
But wait . . . that wasn�t all! Attached to the rear door
there was this chrome silhouette of a fish, the identity card that proudly
broadcasts to others: �I am a Christian . . . a true Christian; unlike �the
others.�� Was this charitable lady a veritable Christian Jihadist?
Now the linking of angry thoughts in my mind brought me to a
conversation I�d had two years before with a good friend and devout evangelical
Christian. In a half-sardonic way, something uncalled for in my part . . . I
must admit, I asked him how many times during the pre-meal grace-prayer,
possibly among hundreds of meals after three years of American occupation of
Iraq, had such prayers invoked peace, or pity for both Iraqis and Americans
fighting an unjust and criminal war. After an initial blank stare, and
realizing that mine was not a rhetorical question but one which required an
answer, he calmly and unapologetically told me that Iraqis had never been
mentioned, not once; peace had possibly been uttered a few times; and that
praying for the safety of American soldiers had been done more often,
particularly when there were dinner guests who had relatives serving in the
military and stationed in Iraq or Afghanistan.
A friend, and progressive fellow-writer, told me some time
back in answer to an article I had written on Americans� lack of compassion, as
expressed by actions of both civilians and military dealing with Haditha, that
I was being too harsh with my fellow countrymen; that people all over the
world, according to him, tend to keep their warm feelings only for people in
their immediacy, seldom beyond national borders. He was right . . . and I knew
it. But it doesn�t mean I have to accept it. Humanity and inhumanity transcend
any and all national borders, and if man can find bond with other animal
species, there is absolutely no good reason for man to deny love to his fellow
man . . . not here, not in Iraq, nowhere on this earth.
Twenty-four hours after my pre-lunch observance of that lady
who provided a hybrid conscience as to her humanity, Thom Hartmann, a
progressive radio host on Air America was asking his audience to call in their
opinion as to whether George W. Bush should be facing an international tribunal
for war crimes, which include the dislocation of over 4 million Iraqis and over
a million war-related deaths. A legitimate question, no doubt, but the United
States of America is no Serbia even if Bush�s inhumanity is as great, or
greater, as that of Karadzic. Unfortunately, America stands by its actions, and
its leaders, whether right or wrong.
� 2008 Ben Tanosborn
Ben
Tanosborn, columnist, poet and writer, resides in Vancouver, Washington (USA),
where he is principal of a business consulting firm. Contact him at ben@tanosborn.com.
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