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Sun Mar 21 2010
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Columns
Norman Solomon
Let us now praise an infamous woman -- and our own possibilities
August 8, 2007
The problem with letting history judge is that so many officials get away with murder in the meantime -- while precious few choose to face protracted vilification for pursuing truth and peace.
A grand total of two people in the entire Congress were able to resist a blood-drenched blank check for the Vietnam War. Standing alone on Aug. 7, 1964, senators Ernest Gruening and Wayne Morse voted against the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution.
Forty-three years later, we don’t need to go back decades to find a lopsided instance of a lone voice on Capitol Hill standing against war hysteria and the expediency of violent fear. Days after 9/11, at the launch of the so-called “war on terrorism,” just one lawmaker -- out of 535 -- cast a vote against the gathering madness.
“However difficult this vote may be, some of us must urge the use of restraint,” she said on the floor of the House of Representatives. The date was Sept. 14, 2001.
She went on: “Our country is in a state of mourning. Some of us must say, Let’s step back for a moment, let’s just pause just for a minute, and think through the implications of our actions today so that this does not spiral out of control.”
And, she said: “As we act, let us not become the evil that we deplore.”
With all that has happened since then -- with all that has spun out of control, with all the ways that the U.S. government has mimicked the evil it deplores -- it’s stunning to watch and hear, for a single minute, what this brave Congresswoman had to say. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nf1N-y9Mbo4
After speaking those words, Rep. Barbara Lee voted no. And the fevered slanders began immediately. She was called a traitor. Pundits went crazy. Death threats came.
Barbara Lee kept on keeping on. And nearly six years later, she’s a key leader of antiwar forces inside and outside Congress. In her own way, she is a political descendent of Sen. Morse, whose denunciations of the Vietnam War are equally inspiring to watch today.
The pretexts for starting the wars on Vietnam and Iraq preceded the pretexts for continuing them. While antiwar activism took hold and public opinion shifted against the war effort, the Congress lagged way behind. Today, the need for a cutoff of war funding remains unfulfilled. To watch rarely seen footage of Wayne Morse and Barbara Lee is to see a standard of decency that few of our purported representatives in Congress are meeting.
There’s no point in waiting for members of Congress to be heroic. When we’re blessed with the living examples of a few genuine visionaries in office, they should inspire us to realize our own possibilities. Ultimately, our own actions -- and inaction -- are at issue.
“Incontestably, alas,” James Baldwin wrote a few years after the killing of Martin Luther King Jr., while the war in Vietnam still raged, “most people are not, in action, worth very much; and yet, every human being is an unprecedented miracle. One tries to treat them as the miracles they are, while trying to protect oneself against the disasters they’ve become. This is not very different from the act of faith demanded by all those marches and petitions while Martin was still alive. One could scarcely be deluded by Americans anymore, one scarcely dared expect anything from the great, vast, blank generality; and yet one was compelled to demand of Americans -- and for their sakes, after all -- a generosity, a clarity, and a nobility which they did not dream of demanding of themselves.... Perhaps, however, the moral of the story (and the hope of the world) lies in what one demands, not of others, but of oneself.”
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Archival footage of Barbara Lee and Wayne Morse appears in the new documentary film “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death,” based on Norman Solomon’s book of the same title. The full-length movie, narrated by Sean Penn and produced by the Media Education Foundation, is available on DVD.
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Click here to visit Harvey Wasserman's Solartopia.org.
 Don't forget to check out articles from 2008 and 2009 Norman Solomon
"Channeling Suze Orman" December 28, 2007
"Announcing the P.U.-litzer Prizes for 2007" December 23, 2007
"The mad corporate world of Glenn Beck" December 20, 2007
"The USA's human rights daze" December 14, 2007
"The media and class warfare" November 22, 2007
"Good news for Americans -- your wages are flat!" November 22, 2007
"The pro-war undertow of the Blackwater scandal" October 31, 2007
"The United States of Violence" October 19, 2007
"How Sputnik contributed to the marriage of science and weaponry" October 8, 2007
"Sputnik, 50 years later: the launch of techno-power" October 5, 2007
"Political "science" and truth of consequences" October 1, 2007
"Here’s the smell of the blood still" September 12, 2007
"Six years of 9/11 as a license to kill" September 11, 2007
" Thomas Friedman: Hooked on war" September 6, 2007
"Let’s face it: the warfare state is part of us" August 23, 2007
"Let us now praise an infamous woman -- and our own possibilities" August 8, 2007
"Media Corrections We’d Like to See" August 5, 2007
"Media blitz for war: the big guns of august" August 2, 2007
"Media spin on Iraq: we're leaving (sort of)" July 26, 2007
"From the grave, a Senator exposes bloody hands on Capitol Hill" July 21, 2007
"A bloody media mirror" July 5, 2007
"War at the remote" June 20, 2007
"Deadly illusions, rest in peace" May 27, 2007
"On the media horizon: "We invest, you decide"" May 6, 2007
"Bowing down to our own violence" April 22, 2007
"Awful truth about Hillary, Barack, John... and Whitewash" April 12, 2007
"The Martin Luther King you don't see on TV" April 4, 2007
"While McCain walks in McNamara’s footsteps" April 2, 2007
"The pragmatism of prolonged war" March 13, 2007
"Making an example of Ehren Watada" February 7, 2007
"The Pentagon vs. press freedom" January 23, 2007
"The headless Horseman of the Apocalypse" January 10, 2007
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