Does the Pope Know a Boy Is About to Be Crucified?
By David Swanson
September 23, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
The Pope will speak to Congress on Thursday.
No other institution on earth does more to destroy the habitability
of the planet for future generations. Will the Pope raise his
concerns with them or only when he's thousands of miles away?
No other institution sells and gives as many
weapons to the world, participates in as many wars, or invests
remotely as much in planning, provoking, and pursuing war after war.
Will the Pope speak up for abolishing war in the U.S. Capitol or
only when he's nowhere near the leading maker of war on earth?
As Nicolas Davies documents in a forthcoming
article, when the U.S. has reduced military spending, the world has
followed. When it has increased, the world has followed. The Pope
wants nuclear weapons eliminated. Will he mention that to the
leading investor in nuclear weapons?
Occasionally a particular variety of horror serves
to catch people's attention. The boy in the photo at right has been
sentenced to be crucified. His crime was participation in a
pro-democracy rally. Now he will have done to him what the
Pope's religion says was done to Jesus Christ. He won't be smiling
blissfully like a Christ on a crucifix either. He will suffer
immense pain and torment, and then die.
Who would do this? Why, Saudi Arabia, of course.
And who is Saudi Arabia's chief ally, weapons provider, and oil
customer? Why, the United States Congress.
Is it possible that this particular murder can
arouse action among all of those moral leaders in the United States
so desirous of being followers that they're focusing all attention
on the Pope?
And if this murder can attract attention, what
about all the others? During the course of a brutal civil war in
Syria in which all sides have slaughtered numerous innocents with
all variety of weaponry, we've been advised at certain points to be
indignant over the use of chemical weapons or beheadings. But we
don't seem to have managed to carry that over to the full range of
murder going on.
Saudi Arabia is dropping bombs, including
U.S.-made cluster bombs, on Yemen, slaughtering children by the
hundreds. Saudi Arabia is brutalizing the people of Bahrain, not to
mention the people of Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabians are funding ISIS
and other murderers in the region. Are all of these murders
acceptable even if the crucifixion isn't? Or can we seize this
opportunity to build opposition to all murder? Or might we if the
Pope mentions it to Congress?
On Tuesday the Senate Armed Services Committee
brought in David Petraeus to testify yet again on how to escalate
more wars. Petraeus recently proposed arming al Qaeda. Senator John
McCain gave Petraeus credit on Tuesday for extending the Iraq war
from 2007 to 2011. Petraeus noted that the whole region is in
horrible turmoil. Nobody made any connection between the U.S. wars
on Iraq and Libya that have created that turmoil and the results.
Nobody questioned the wisdom of using more war to try to repair the
damage of war.
Well, a few of us did. The wonderful CodePink was
there as always. I was there with a sign that said "Arm al Qaeda?
Reagan tried that."
The mad men who run the U.S. government have
reached the point of re-arming the enemies of enemies whose blowback
first drove them to radically escalate the global murder of innocent
people in the name of opposing terrorism while increasing it.
The
National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance had an answer to
this on Tuesday, taking a protest of endless war and environmental
destruction to the gate of the White House.
The Secret Service arrested the people in the
photo below rather than accept a letter from them articulating their
opposition to policies of massive cruelty to the earth and its
inhabitants.
The Pope has the opportunity to speak that same
message to Congress and to the U.S. corporate media. Will he use it?