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Respect
for each other is the
cement that fits all life together
Commentary by Maceo Martinet
A
couple of days ago, I was watching the news reports on how the White
House is threatening to use nuclear weapons to fight terrorism.
I guess wiping out an entire continent is one possible way to end
terrorism?
Maybe
we can reach into our pockets and come up with hundreds of millions
of dollars to develop smart nuclear bombs that will
only kill the bad guys and leave only dust on the shoulders of the
good guys.
Changing
the channel, I caught a movie right when a car with somebody in
it exploded, sending car parts all over a parking lot. Exploding
cars and acts of violence are hallmarks of great entertainment in
this country.
Meanwhile,
in other countries these events are a reality people are constantly
struggling to survive and end.
The
next channel I turned to was good old Action-7 news, which never
fails in its excellent coverage of the latest shoot-out or car crash.
What we describe as our democratic and virtous values are not always
the ones that we learn from reality, let alone from television.
Finally,
shutting off the television, I found myself wondering whether these
images we are constantly being fed have contributed in some way
to our acceptance and drive toward responding to violence with more
violence in the war on terrorism.
Ingrained
in our attitudes is the ability to legitimize the role that violence
plays and at the same time generate an incredible fear around the
enemy whoever it may be. Have we become totally desensitized
and blind to what violence produces? It is still an amazing nightmare
how bombing another country has catapulted our sense of pride of
who we are and unified all of civilization?
The
century we just stepped out of was indeed a violent one. With the
legacies of two world wars and an endless cycle of wars ravaging
the people of Latin America, Asia and Africa, it is clear violence
turns life and everything it touches into pieces that never seem
to fit into their right place anymore.
The
new generation will have the same task as the old. What does it
say about our respect for life, as it does for any other country,
when we are able to rally around and feel good in response to a
bombing campaign?
Respect
for one another is the cement that fits all life together, and when
we forget this we are left struggling against a mentality that combines
violence and entertainment as a way of life.
As
the sun warms up the air for another generation, I pray for a new
beginning from the warmth of justice and equal rights. Even if too
much of the U.S. public is not being properly informed on what is
going on with our foreign policies, nor where our tax payer money
is going, we can make an effort to become more conscious and speak
against the attitudes and policies that reduce human beings to purchasing
machines and their lives to entertainment filled with explosions
and Pepsi commercials.
Maceo Martinet is a columnist for the Daily Lobo at the University
of New Mexico. This column was distributed by U-Wire.
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