ten lessons from saddam hussein's capture:, page-2

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    1. America is the greatest force for good on the planet. America, with the support of Britain and some other countries, and against the rest of "world opinion," liberated Iraq from evil. If it were up to the U.N. or the EU, or the editorial boards of most major American newspapers, Saddam would still be happily making palaces for himself and torture dungeons for his people.

    Saddam committed most of his crimes during his alliance with the US

    2. The positive effect on humanity of good vanquishing evil cannot be overstated. When evil people get away with what they have done, it has a dispiriting effect. Even those of us who believe that a just God dispenses justice after this life ache to see justice done here and now. In this regard, it is not only good that Saddam was captured; it is good that he lived in holes, and aware that his sadistic sons had been killed. It is nice to know that he has been suffering.

    Stooge presidents contriving to reward their backers are also evil, especially when young soldiers pay the price of being casualties or lifelong illness sufferers from the effects of dangerous weapons. The writer gets as much joy from Saddam's humiliation as I did from Nixon's impeachment and Bush Sr's ousting.

    3. No Muslim or Arab country lifted a finger to help the Iraqi people. This is because the Muslim and Arab worlds do not divide the world between good and evil, but between Muslim and non-Muslim and Arab and non-Arab. Since Saddam was a fellow Muslim and Arab, the fact that he tortured and murdered so many was as irrelevant to the Muslim and Arab worlds as the Islamic regime's genocide in Sudan and the subjugation of women in Taliban Afghanistan.

    On the contrary, the muslim world is in turmoil over Iraq.

    4. Not everyone is happy about Saddam's capture. Palestinians, for example, are weeping. Saddam was their hero. Iraqis were forced to march with his posters, but Palestinians did so voluntarily. Many on the Left are also not particularly happy. Saddam's capture is a victory for American force and for George W. Bush, and the Left hates both more than it hates Saddam.

    Saddam's capture has opened a can of worms for the Bush administration and the Left looks forward to the trial.

    5. The Left seeks power, but is incapable of leading because leadership and wanting to be loved are mutually exclusive. Leftists, including liberal politicians, want to be loved and want America to be loved. That was President Clinton's great desire, and that is why, with all his abundant talents, he could never lead. Much of the Left's criticism of Mr. Bush revolves around this issue: "Look at how popular we were right after 9/11 and how unpopular we are now."

    Wonder why Clinton presided over the most prosperous and peaceful 8 years in modern history then?

    6. Most of the Left does not hate evil; hatred of evil is primarily found on the Right. With exceptions such as Tony Blair and Joseph Lieberman, virtually the entire Left finds evil far less disturbing than global warming, smoking, economic inequality, and drug prices. And with the exceptions of "paleoconservatives" such as Pat Buchanan, most of the Right regards the use of American power to vanquish evil as the greatest good the U.S. can engage in.

    Hatred itself is primarily found on the Right actually. It goes with a simplistic and fundamentalist anti-intellectualism.

    7. In the Arab world, power is venerated. For years leading up to 9/11, Islamists were respected for their increasing power and America was losing respect as it suffered blows at the hands of Islamic terror. Now America is seen as the powerful one, and is earning the respect once accorded Saddam and Osama. The importance of this cannot be overstated.

    In the US world, power is venerated. Now America is tied up in Iraq for years to come and has to make concessions to the Chinese over Taiwan in case a second theatre of war opens up.

    8. There are many who respect goodness above all else. But humanity as a whole has far more respect for power, and takes powerful societies more seriously than good ones. That is why China is respected despite its being a dictatorship and its brutal crushing of Tibet. China is powerful. The stronger America is, the more people will take it and its values seriously. As an unprecedented combination of power and goodness, America could reshape the world.

    China is respected for its positive achievements, feared for its power. America has created a master class of citizen - US citizens. If you belong to the master class you have rights, otherwise you can be killed or treated as they like. That's the effect of power and nobody can do anything about it - no UN, no ally, nobody.

    9. The Marxist belief that forces, not individuals, shape history is wrong. George W. Bush is living proof.

    Hopefully this is true and the world including the US will repudiate the chimp in a suit in 2004, putting him and his cronies on trial for violating US laws and international laws.

    10. The reason the president is shaping history is that he has as strong a set of beliefs -- in America's moral mission and in Judeo-Christian religious values -- as those he is fighting. Those who hold bad beliefs can only be defeated by those have equally strong good beliefs.

    This is totally in contradiction of point 8. above. The Right may have power, but they don't have intelligence.
 
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