I'm a little confused.
I watched the first half of ABC's 2-hour special about Peter Jennings tonight. It was an incredible program. Among other things, I saw how Jennings exposed the US State Department ordering its employees to lie by claiming there were not concentration camps in Bosnia, helped expose how the United States government was illegally arming the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, and how he made sure to show the Arab/Palestinian viewpoint (contrary to US wishes) in his reporting from the middle east. He had other run-ins with official corruption or, at the very least, misleading actions.
Jennings lived and worked in the United States for years -- decades, even -- as a Canadian citizen. Just a few years ago (2003, I think), he became an American citizen.
What was it that he saw in the United States and its government that made him change his mind? And why did it take him so long?
I'm often cynical about our government. Just this week we learn how the federal government is squandering our tax money with pork-barrel spending in the highway bill. The number of times that government officials have lied and misled the American people and the world, and even violated American law, is staggering. And it has happened with people from both parties.
I believe that this country has never really lived up to the great dream embodied in the Declaration of Independence. We have, over the course of our history, systematically and intentionally deprived entire groups of the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness: Native Americans, blacks, poor people, Japanese, women, conscientious objectors to war, Germans, and the list goes on. When I hear our presidents talking about how the United States has always been a land of freedom, I cringe.
What is it that made Peter Jennings want to be a part of it? What is it that I'm missing? And why did it take him so long to arrive at the conclusion he eventually did?
We can, of course, look to a great many people across the globe that have less freedom than we do, and be grateful for the rights and privileges we enjoy. But Canadians don't likely rank among those that are stifled by authoritarian regimes.
Comments
Fri, 18.07.2008 12:48
Actually, I just had a horribl e experience with VPSLink. Lon g story short, they did not pr otect our Xen4 (we were [...]
Fri, 18.07.2008 10:43
Good job, John! There is a fai rly large group here at my off ice that rides every day to wo rk, most from Goshen (ab [...]
Thu, 17.07.2008 04:46
Your earlier post inspired me and I too travel occasionally to office on bicycle. Howeve r, I could not manage it [...]
Wed, 16.07.2008 10:21
Please send the config files,I want to have an experience of it. Thanks, Regards, J ayadev Kranti
Wed, 16.07.2008 06:12
Did we file a bug yet? :) I have also been seeing this, f or at least a year, with both usb and ps2 keyboards an [...]
Tue, 15.07.2008 11:30
Hi Cliff, Thanks for the co mment! No idea what happened to your earlier one; strange. After your experience [...]
Mon, 14.07.2008 20:53
Hi John, I came back to reread this post it is one of the be st. Nice Job. I left a comme nt the day it was first [...]
Mon, 14.07.2008 10:17
Thanks to everyone for all the tips. It looks like this CON FIG_GROUP_SCHED is the most li kely culprit; I will hav [...]