Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Independence Day, 1968

Here's how the Philadelphia Inquirer's distinguished columnist Chris Satullo, overflowing with nostalgia for the good old days, want us to observe Independence Day this year:
Put the fireworks in storage.

Cancel the parade.

Tuck the soaring speeches in a drawer for another time.

This year, America doesn't deserve to celebrate its birthday. This Fourth of July should be a day of quiet and atonement.

For we have sinned.

We have failed to pay attention. We've settled for lame excuses. We've spit on the memory of those who did that brave, brave thing in Philadelphia 232 years ago.

The America those men founded should never torture a prisoner.

The America they founded should never imprison people for years without charge or hearing.

The America they founded should never ship prisoners to foreign lands, knowing their new jailers might torture them.

Such abuses once were committed by the arrogant crowns of Europe, spawning rebellion.

Today, our nation does such things in the name of our safety. Petrified, unwilling to take the risks that love of liberty demands, we close our eyes.

We have done such things, on orders from the Oval Office. We have done them, without general outrage or shame.

Abu Ghraib. Guantanamo. CIA secret prisons. "Rendition" of prisoners to foreign torture chambers.

...and on and on and on, ad nauseum. Read the whole thing (if you can take it) and for relief, read some of the comments spawned by Mr. Satullo's pearls of wisdom.

Thanks to Banished Child of Eve.

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