I’ve
published this blog for more than four years now, and the one subject I’ve
largely (if not completely) avoided is politics. Opportunities to talk about politics
abound, but I prefer to let others seize them. An argument can be made that the
state of American politics has almost always been abysmal, even if today we
seem to be searching for new depths. And I’ve generally avoided the subject.
It
will be no surprise that I lean to the conservative side. I used to lean a lot
more to the conservative side, until the inept response of government at all
levels to Hurricane Katrina. People died because of that inept response. And
then to learn that the ineptness had been a disaster waiting decades to happen –
poor construction of so many of the levees – well, it was more than I could
stomach.
I
didn’t think the ineptness of Katrina could be surpassed.
Then
came Syria.
What
my government was preparing to do in Syria – after so badly mismanaging what
had come before, not only in Syria but also in Libya and Egypt – compelled me
to write letters to my two senators and my congresswoman, urging them all to
vote against military action. We’ve demonstrated we don’t understand what’s
happening in Syria, and why we believed military action would solve the problem
we didn’t understand in the first place was beyond me.
And
we still don’t understand the problem. What is happening in Syria is not the
good guys versus the evil government, but some good guys (we’re not sure who
they are, though) and some bad guys (remember al-Qaida?) sometimes fighting the
government, and sometimes each other. And caught in the crossfire are both
innocent Muslim civilians and innocent Christian civilians as well. (And here's an interesting note: Christians are being killed and churches destroyed, and not by the Assad government.)
Of
all the things I’ve seen and read, what’s made the most sense to me are some
comments by Christian speaker and apologist Ravi Zacharias. And it makes the
most sense because all we have right now are questions and uncertainties, and no real understanding of what's happening in Syria, or why.
Top photograph: Wounded civilians arrive at a hospital in Aleppo, Syria, October 2012; photo courtesy of Wikipedia Commons.
Thanks for posting this.
ReplyDeleteWe used to think the Cold War was dangerous. Suddenly it seems far more safe and predictable than what is happening now...
ReplyDeleteIt is true. What Mr. Z. really thinks, the leaders of this country do not, can not and will not understand. It is not political, it is a matter of not being able to see what is truth.
ReplyDeleteOh, amen. I have not written, primarily because I cannot come up with anything cogent or even coherent to say beyond, PLEASE DO NOT DO THIS, IN THE NAME OF ALL THAT'S HOLY AND GOOD, STOP. What a mess. I actually hope that this may become one issue on which both liberals and conservatives might agree - wouldn't that be something!
ReplyDeleteI listened to Ravi's thoughts yesterday and realized how complicated and misunderstood (if anyone can really fully understand)the situation is. Thanks for your thoughts Glynn.
ReplyDeleteRavi is a preeminent thinker and apologist'. He makes perfect sense here
ReplyDeleteRavi is a preeminent thinker and apologist'. He makes perfect sense here
ReplyDeleteI've never heard of Ravi. Interesting interview though I wish he would have said some of the things it seemed like he was holding back about politics.
ReplyDelete