Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Boehner's Invitation to Bibi: Another Low Point in Republican Politics

“Prime Minister Netanyahu is a great friend of our country, and this invitation carries with it our unwavering commitment to the security and well-being of his people,” John Boehner.  His people?  What about ours?  What about America’s interests and not Israel’s?  Americans need to realize in the 21st century that Israel and America will not always share the same interests. 
Bibi and his Boner.

America under George Bush invaded a sovereign country under false pretenses.  The cost to America was thousands of soldiers' lives.  The chaos the invasion created is being felt now as parts of Iraq are controlled by ISIS.  When will America realize that invading countries for so-called ideological reasons borders on criminal?  And yet, Netanyahu would like nothing better than for the U.S. to start a war with Iraq.  Then he would get what he wants, and Americans not Israelis would lose their lives.  

Diplomacy has and will continue to be the most productive means for America to safeguard its own interests in the international community.  It is the White House and not the House of Representatives that is responsible for conducting our foreign policy.  President Obama was elected by the American people and entrusted with doing what the executive branch does--setting out a foreign policy.  President Obama received 65,915,796 votes to secure this position.  John Boehner represents the 8th Congressional District of Ohio and received 126, 539 votes.  To gain this seat he spent $17.1 million to $5000 spent by his Democratic challenger.  Since John Boehner will never win an election outside of his minuscule Ohioan precinct, however, he will never be entrusted with the authority to shape U.S. foreign policy.  Because of his inability to accept his inconsequential position in the federal government, his only recourse has been and will be to try to derail the work of others. Thus, the invitation to Netanyahu.  

“How dare a foreign leader come into our country and tell us how to shape our foreign policy?” is the question we should be asking ourselves.    

Perhaps the answer lies in all the money Israelis and their PACs contribute to U.S. elected officials and all the influence this money gains.  Israeli racketeer Sheldon Adelson contributed $92.8 million to get Romney elected in 2012.  But there are many more groups.  Connie Bruck's New Yorker article  (http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/09/01/friends-israel) on the extraordinary influence that the American Israel Public Affairs Committee has on American foreign policy is well worth reading.  

The bottom line is that America is not any other country.  And no other country should feel entitled to dictate American policy as Israel has.  And when the U.S. is engaged in diplomatic talks with a nation Israel dislikes, we should not believe the over-played rhetoric that we are abandoning Israel or that our President is another Neville Chamberlain.  An agreement with Iran over nuclear weaponry is a step in the right direction in American foreign policy.  And the last thing ISIS wants is to see is any amiable contact between Iran and the U.S.  In that regard, ISIS and Netanyahu agree.   

Sunday, January 18, 2015

January 18, 2015

Some of us, the less wicked ones, feel pride
In the election of a black man
Perhaps we sigh as if from climbing 
a mountain
We did not climb
We claim, "We won the war!" 
As if noncombatants count as colonels
Some of us invested in the icing of history
Say, "The Egyptians had slaves."
And leave it at that
And others more bluntly at dinner parties add
"They sold their own people!"
As if buying humans were mandatory
Some of us who knew better before we
Moved to the suburbs 
Squawk about our own discomforts as though 
these were unjust
“My kid didn’t get in because of the quota..." 
As if the playing fields were level 
The referees impartial
Ignoring or scorning the scales of history
On which our own ascension hangs high
On the burdens weighing down the other
The years of cotton, Jim Crow, lynchings,
Judicial equivocations like separate but equal,
and young men like 
Amadou 
Michael  
Eric
Ousmane
Sean 
Steven
Tamir
And too many more
As if history cleans itself
As if our own absence from the past makes
History not happen
Some of us who think that we are the
Only law-abiding ones
Rally willy-nilly behind law enforcement 
As if the guys with guns are sacrosanct
Proceeding only on proud principles
As if none equate the black man 
With recklessness, with defiance, with an idea
That he could walk around the universe, our universe
With confidence
While with guns drawn they fire with the confidence
That we see them as the last
Line of defense between disorder
And a good night, good white sleep
Some of us really wonder why they
Won’t accept what white D.A.’s and 
White grand juries 
Decree
We complaisantly conclude 
"That’s what thugs do!"
As if we were forced to swallow the bitter pill
We prescribe to others and say
“My son must be killed for stealing a cigar, for smoking weed,
For running, for playing, for driving, for being white..."
Not worried that when we say goodbye to our sons
We did not give them lists of the 
DO’s and DON’Ts
When stopped by the cops
Some of us claim that they play the race card
Forgetting that we have always dealt 
From a stacked deck
Some of us 
Annoyed that the N word is off limits
Have made the first black president a scapegoat
Insulting him, defaming him, ridiculing him, 
His wife, and children
In a way no white man would allow
Cowering under cover of free speech
Only at our local pubs we swap hate and race
"What do they want?"
"When will they be satisfied?"
"Who do they think they are?"
"Why is this our problem?"
As if we ever did anything to right 
The wrongs 
The sins for which 
In our unholy 
Self-assurance we 
See no good reason to atone 
Is not one of us ashamed?