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Blind faith in bad leaders is not patriotism

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Some links that I’ve been reading, relating to the US Administration’s hypocrisy surrounding Iraq & North Korea.

Did the U.S. Provoke N. Korea? (emphasis mine):


The Bush administration says that this sequence of events was a coincidence. Whatever the truth, I found on a recent trip to Pyongyang that North Korean leaders view the financial sanctions as the cutting edge of a calculated effort by dominant elements in the administration to undercut the Sept. 19 accord, squeeze the Kim Jong Il regime and eventually force its collapse. My conversations made clear that North Korea’s missile tests in July and its threat last week to conduct a nuclear test explosion at an unspecified date “in the future” were directly provoked by the U.S. sanctions. In North Korean eyes, pressure must be met with pressure to maintain national honor and, hopefully, to jump-start new bilateral negotiations with Washington that could ease the financial squeeze. When I warned against a nuclear test, saying that it would only strengthen opponents of negotiations in Washington, several top officials replied that “soft” tactics had not worked and they had nothing to lose.

Isn’t it interesting to see that the government of North Korea also uses the same rhetoric as that used by the US. I wonder how much thinking the US administration does from North Korea’s point of view. Putting your faith in “hard” tactics is no way to overcome a problem when both sides are resolved to them (hard tactics that is). Conflicts all over the world show this on a daily basis. The logic behind this is clearly lacking.

Challenging the Culture of Obedience:

Let no one deny we are patriots. We love our country, we hold dear the values upon which our nation was founded, and we are distressed at what our President, his Administration, and our Congress are doing to, and in the name of, our great nation.

Blind faith in bad leaders is not patriotism.

A patriot does not tell people who are intensely concerned about their country to just sit down and be quiet; to refrain from speaking out in the name of politeness or for the sake of being a good host; to show slavish, blind obedience and deference to a dishonest, war-mongering, human-rights-violating President.

That is not a patriot. Rather, that person is a sycophant. That person is a member of a frightening culture of obedience–a culture where falling in line with authority is more important than choosing what is right, even if it is not easy, safe, or popular. And, I suspect, that person is afraid–afraid we are right, afraid of the truth (even to the point of denying it), afraid he or she has put in with an oppressive, inhumane regime that does not respect the laws and traditions of our country, and that history will rank as the worst presidency our nation has ever had to endure

This article is interesting. A friend of mine has spoken about this very thing from a personal viewpoint.

Written by Tom Adams

October 10th, 2006 at 10:36 pm

Posted in Politics, World

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