Sunday, June 26, 2005

A DECENT LETTER

A Letter To The People in The Red States by Susan Schroeder

www.opednews.com

I am writing this letter to the people in the red states in the middle of the country -- the people who voted for George W. Bush. I am writing this letter because I don't think we know each other.So I'll make an introduction. I am a New Yorker who voted for John Kerry. I used to live in California, and if I still lived there, I would vote for Kerry. I used to live in Washington, DC, and if I still lived there, I would vote for Kerry. Kerry won in all three of those regions.Maybe you want to know more about me. Or maybe not; maybe you think you know me already. You think I am some anti-American anarchist because I dislike George W. Bush. You think that I am immoral and anti-family, because I support women's reproductive freedom and gay rights. You think that I am dangerous, and even evil, because I do not abide by your religious beliefs.Maybe you are content to think that, to write me off as a "liberal" -- the dreaded "L" word -- and rejoice that your candidate has triumphed over evil, immoral, anti-American, anti-family people like me. But maybe you are still curious. So here goes: this is who I am.I am a New Yorker. I was here, in my apartment downtown, on September 11th. I watched the Towers burn from the roof of my building. I went inside so that I couldn't see them when they fell. I had friends who were inside. I have a friend who still has nightmares about watching people jump and fall from the Towers. He will never be the same. How many people like him do you know? People that can't sit in a restaurant without plotting an escape route, in case it blows up?I am a worker. I work across the street from the Citigroup Center, which the government told us is a "target" of terrorism. Later, we found out they were relaying very old information, but it was already too late. They had given me bad dreams again. The subway stop near my office was crowded with bomb-sniffing dogs, policemen in heavy protective gear, soldiers. Now, every time I enter or exit my office, all of my possessions are X-rayed to make sure I don't have any weapons. How often are you stopped by a soldier with a bomb-sniffing dog outside your office?I am a neighbor. I have a neighbor who is a 9/11 widow. She has two children. My husband does odd jobs for her now, like building bookshelves. Things her husband should do. He uses her husband's tools, and the two little girls tell him, "Those are our daddy's tools." How many 9/11 widows and orphans do you know? How often do you fill in for their dead loved ones?I am a taxpayer. I worked my butt off to get where I did, and so did my parents. My parents saved and borrowed and sent me to college. I worked my way through graduate school. I won a full tuition scholarship to law school. All for the privilege of working 2,600 hours last year. That works out to a 50 hour week, every week, without any vacation days at all. I get to work by 9 am and rarely leave before 9 pm. I eat dinner at my office much more often than I eat dinner at home. My husband and I paid over $70,000 in federal income tax last year. At some point in the future, we will have to pay much more -- once this country faces its deficit and the impossible burden of Social Security. In fact, the areas of the country that supported Kerry -- New York, California, Illinois, Massachusetts -- they are the financial centers of the nation. They are the tax base of this country. How much did you pay, Kansas? How much did you contribute to this government you support, Alabama? How much of this war in Iraq did you pay for?I am a liberal. The funny part is, liberals have this reputation for living in Never-Neverland, being idealists, not being sensible. But let me tell you how I see the world: I see America as one nation in a world of nations. Therefore, I think we should try to get along with other nations. I see that gay people exist. Therefore, I think they should be allowed to exist, and be treated the same as other people. I see ways in which women are not allowed to control their own bodies. Therefore, I think we should give women more control over their bodies. I see that people have awful diseases. Therefore, I think we should enable scientists to try to cure them. I see that we have a Constitution. Therefore, I think it should be upheld. I see that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Therefore, I think that Iraq was not an imminent danger to me. It seems so pragmatic to me. How do you see the world? Do you really think voting against gay marriage will keep people from being gay? Would you really prefer that people continue to die from Parkinson's disease? Do you really not care about the Constitutional rights of political detainees? Would you really have supported the war if you knew the truth, or would you have wanted to spend more of our money on health care, job training, terrorism preparedness?I am an American. I have an American flag flying outside my home. I love my home more than anything. I love that I grew up right outside New York City. I first went to the Statue of Liberty with my 5th grade class, and my mom and dad took me to the Empire State Building when I was 8. I love taking the subway to Yankee Stadium. I loved living in Washington DC and going on dates to the Lincoln Memorial. It is because I love this country so much that I argue with my political opponents as much I do.I am not safe. I never feel safe. My in-laws live in a small town in Ohio, and that town has received more federal funding, per capita, for terrorism preparedness than New York City has. I take subways and buses every day. I work in a skyscraper across the street from a "target." I have emergency supplies and a spare pair of sneakers in my desk, in case somethng happens while I'm at work. Do you? How many times a month do you worry that your subway is going to blow up? When you hear sirens on the street, do you run to the window to make sure everything is okay? When you hear an airplane, do you flinch? Do you dread beautiful, blue-skied September days? I don't know a single New Yorker who doesn't spend the month of September on tip-toes, superstitiously praying for rain so we don't have to relive that beautiful, blue-skied day.I am lonely. I feel that we, as a nation, have alienated all our friends and further provoked our enemies. I feel unprotected. Most of all I feel alienated from my fellow citizens, because I don't understand what you are thinking. You voted for a man who started a war in Iraq for no reason, against the wishes of the entire world. You voted for a man whose lack of foresight and inability to plan has led to massive insurgencies in Iraq, where weapons are disappearing into the hands of terrorists. You voted for a man who let Osama Bin Laden escape into the hills of Afghanistan so that he could start that war in Iraq. You voted for a man who doesn't want to let people love who they want to love; doesn't want to let doctors cure their patients; doesn't want to let women rule their destinies. I don't understand why you voted for this man. For me, it is not enough that he is personable; it is not enough that he seems like one of the guys. Why did you vote for him? Why did you elect a man that lied to us in order to convince us to go to war? (Ten years ago you were incensed when our president lied about his sex life; you thought it was an impeachable offense.) Why did you elect a leader who thinks that strength cannot include diplomacy or international cooperaton? Why did you elect a man who did nothing except run away and hide on September 11?Most of all, I am terrified. I mean daily, I am afraid that I will not survive this. I am afraid that I will lose my husband, that I will never have children, that I will never grow old and watch the sunset in a backyard of my own. I am afraid that my career -- which should end with a triumphant and good-natured roast at a retirement party in 2035 -- will be cut short by an attack on me and my colleagues, as we sit sending emails and making phone calls one ordinary afternoon. Is your life at stake? Are you terrified?I don't think you are. I don't think you realize what you have done. And if anything happens to me or the people I love, I blame you. I wanted you to know that.

Susan Schroeder is an attorney in NY City.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

A “Decent Response” to Susan Schroeder and other Kerry Supporters

Susan, I enjoyed reading your letter. You sound like a patriotic, hard-working American who wants the best for her country. But as a liberal, you yearn to understand how other decent Americans could possibly support President Bush in the War on Terror. As a conservative, allow me to share my perspective, and maybe together we will arrive at a better understanding of reality.

You explained in great detail your world and your suffering at the events of September 11, 2001. I also grieve at the pain you have endured and the loss of people dear to you. But who caused this event? Why did they do it? How do we prevent it from happening again, perhaps next time with thermo-nuclear weapons? It is interesting that in your long letter, not once did you address these questions or accuse the actual perpetrators.

There are many fallacies surrounding this event. Some say it did not actually happen; it was staged by Hollywood. Most folks in the Middle East say it was a conspiracy by Jewish Americans or President Bush himself, as suggested in the huge French bestseller “9/11: The Big Lie”. Colorado University professor Ward Churchill believes this event was caused by the victims themselves—the “little Eichmanns” who got what they deserved as surely as “chickens come home to roost”. Churchill is celebrated by many liberals as a champion of free speech. But who do you think was responsible? What should have been done? Should this have been treated as just another routine police action like the first attack on the World Trade Center? Do you think bullies respond best to strength or appeasement?

Most conservatives believe that the attack of 9/11 was merely the most dramatic in a long series of attacks against the west by religious fanatics—the truly dangerous kind, not the Christian fundamentalists that Democrat politicians love to demonize. I view this event as a wake-up call, similar to Pearl Harbor, to force all Americans to face the danger of Islamofascism. Apparently, many have still not done so; speaking this simple truth is still not “politically correct”. We believe the terror is religiously motivated because this is what the terrorists themselves have told us. Do you know the meaning of “Allahu Akbar”? Did you know it appears on the Iraqi flag? The truth is we were attacked by vicious ideological enemies; we have a right to protect ourselves; if it doesn’t meet the “global test”--if the French don’t like us, too bad.

Did Saddam Hussein have weapons of mass destruction? Of course he did; they were used on his own people, the Kurds. Did he have them at the time of our invasion? Many people, including almost all of the Democrat leadership, thought he did. Did Bush “lie” because we failed to find WMD? Did Kerry, Kennedy and Clinton also “lie” about Iraq having WMD? Was Saddam directly culpable in the carnage of 9/11? Does it matter? Did Saddam support terrorists? Was he one himself? Did Saddam really pose a grave threat to the world? Here are the facts:

Between 1975 and 1990, Saddam Hussein spent $65 billion on military arms; he was one of the largest purchasers of arms in the world. His ultimate dream was to possess nuclear bombs; he fervently was pursuing this dream.

In 1980 Saddam Hussein attacked Iran which began a bloody war that lasted eight years and cost about a million lives. In 1988 he dumped poison gas on his own dissident people, resulting in the deaths of about 100,000 mostly civilian Kurds. In 1990 Hussein invaded Kuwait without provocation.

Having attacked his neighbors to the east, then his neighbors to the south, do you doubt he would have attacked his rich, weak neighbors to the west? Then with Saddam in possession of the oil of Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia, he would control over 70% of the world’s oil. He easily would become the richest man on earth. He could dictate world oil prices; triple, quadruple the price and we still would have to pay. While this evil dictator was enriching himself and building weapons of mass destruction, the rest of the world would plunge into desperate economic depression and collapse into third world nation status, or be consumed in thermo-nuclear fire.

This is what we conservatives dare to call a “threat to our national security”. Apparently you not believe or feel threatened by this scenario. Apparently you see no parallel between Saddam’s plans and Hitler’s. Apparently you feel that we should have appeased his ambitions, like Chamberlain in WWII. Do you think we stopped Saddam because of his skin color? Did we really invade Iraq to enrich Haliburton? How utterly stupid does someone have to be to display, or wink at people who display, signs proclaiming “End War and Racism” and “No Blood For Oil”?

Regardless of how you initially felt about the wisdom of our invading Iraq, are you really prepared for the disastrous consequences of a humiliating defeat for the U.S. in the Middle East? Do you think Islamists would hesitate to use nuclear weapons on the Great Satan (you and me) just as soon as Russia or France or the Iran or North Korea sells them the technology in exchange for petro dollars?

Your letter concludes with this condemnation of your fellow Americans who support a proactive, offensive response to the global threat posed by terrorists:

I don't think you realize what you have done. And if anything happens to me or the people I love, I blame you.

On the contrary, we realize exactly “what we have done”. Since we have taken the war to the terrorists, there have not been any more attacks on U.S. soil. The Islamists have their hands full in Iraq; this is a good place for our enemies to be concentrated. However, if we are attacked and you blame your fellow Americans who hold opposing political viewpoints, instead of blaming our enemies, then yes you will deserve to be considered just another leftist traitor.

"What we have done" is reluctantly engage in a long-term global war against evil enemies every bit as formidable as those we faced in World War II.

“What we have done” is stop the long, dark reign of terror, rape and murder in Iraq. Thousands of people will live, who would have died under Saddam. Bombings of Muslims by other Muslims have not ceased, but the future belongs to the millions throughout the Middle East who eventually will vote in free elections and breathe the sweet air of freedom and justice, courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue. All the people of the world will be safer as a result.

Steve J. said...

"But who caused this event?"

Osama Bin Laden, the guy who escaped at Tora-Bora.

Steve J. said...

"Did Bush “lie” because we failed to find WMD? "

Yes, Bush lied. The evidence from the Downing Street Memos is damning.