Thursday, March 20, 2008

Wright is right

Recently, the U.S. public conscience has been shaken up by Pastor Jeremiah Wright’s controversial statements regarding the U.S. approach towards foreign policy and racial issues. As a result of this controversy, Barack Obama has distanced himself from Wright, whom he once considered as his mentor.


Following this controversy made me once more realize how different my political views are from the mainstream American perspective. While I considered some of Wright’s statements as pure speculations, I couldn’t agree more with the rest, especially as some of these statements go beyond the ideology and represent factual events.

“We bombed Hiroshima, we bombed Nagasaki, and we nuked far more than the thousands in New York and the Pentagon, and we never batted an eye.”

“We have supported state terrorism against the Palestinians and black South Africans, and now we are indignant because the stuff we have done overseas is now brought right back to our own front yards. America’s chickens are coming home to roost.”

“The Israelis have illegally occupied Palestinian territories for over 40 years now. Divestment has now hit the table again as a strategy to wake the business community and wake up Americans concerning the injustice and the racism under which the Palestinians have lived because of Zionism.”


In the past week, I kept asking myself: what’s the big deal? What is really going on? The American society is acting, like any other society, in a self-absorbed and narcissistic way. It should strongly repress and condemn any form of criticism, for it would otherwise lose its self-value.

At an epistemological level, controversy and radicalism do not necessary imply falseness. The norms of the majority cannot be used as criteria for the truth. The case of Nazi Germany shows us how inhuman and destructive the societal norms can be. An ideal society should be open to and stimulate all forms of self-criticism. We all have a long way to go.

8 comments:

Naj said...

Yes Wright "is" right! And teh fact that people EXPECT Obama to apologize for Wright's statement of America's ugly truth is a proof of the hypocrisy this nation wallows in.

(happy new year!)

Arsh said...

Hey Hydra, thanks for visiting me again. It's awesome to see you're still blogging too :D

Keep up the good work, cheers.

Dr O2 said...

well amercians dream!! No nightmares allowed ;-) do they listen to themselves when they talk abt international issues those men in black in houses of the opposite color?

jarvenpa said...

Ah, Hydra--this is just what my partner and I were saying when the storm broke here, listening to Rev. Wright's sermon. We thought it was great to hear some truth, which is often sorely lacking in my country.
I took a little comfort in the fact that Sen. Obama didn't renounce his long years of friendship with the reverend. But it was sad to hear all the spin.

Hydra said...

I agree with all of you. I found Obama's speech very interesting as well. I'm always sceptical about political leaders, but I think he has shown to be a good crisis manager. Handling these kind of situations is far more indicative of one's leadership capacities than fantasy stories about who would pick the phone up at 3 am.

Naj said...

Yes, I agree that Obama's response had no hypocrisy in it; and he has to be commanded for this RARE quality.

However, if I was one of those pundits who still call this a big BLOW; I would be very ashamed of myself!

But, American's have kissed shame goodbye since they exterminated the natives; slaved Africans, murdered Asians and etc etc etc ...

Anonymous said...

Your suffering will be ten-fold, brought about by your own leaders. The sleeping giant is awake and 25000 warheads are retargeted unto you.

Hydra said...

"Our" leaders are OUR problem. I suggest you mind your own leaders who send people like you to die in battle fields, and make a mess of your entire economy.