Posted on 03/01/2003 3:20:23 PM PST by MadIvan
The second Gulf war has yet to begin but already Ive taken more than my share of collateral damage. And all because I belong to that alleged minority which believes that taking out a tyrannical mass-murderer armed to the teeth with chemical and biological weapons isnt a bad idea.
Because Im a yoga-loving rock writer, people assume I ought to be a peacenik. Now I am on virtual no-speakers with friends and family whose political kinship I had taken for granted.
About two months ago I was browsing my e-mails when up popped one from my old chum Crispin, who lives in the country and drinks fine wines. How nice, I thought. Hes inviting me down for a spot of pheasant-strangling.
But no: he had forwarded me one of those round-robins urging everyone on his mailing list to Just say No to war or Boycott Bush or some such woolly nonsense. I rang him to give him a ribbing about his newfound peacenik tendencies. Instead I got his wife, and rather than Yes, I know, poor Crispin has been behaving very oddly lately, I found myself being torn apart by the Inquisition.
Lesson one: if youre pro-war, dont count on anyone be they retired colonels, gun nuts or subscribers to Soldier of Fortune magazine to share your view. Lesson two: unless youre prepared to waste an hour justifying your position, keep your mouth shut.
One of the things I find so annoying about the anti-war crowd is the assumption that theirs is a stance so right and noble that it needs no qualification. War is bad. Theyre against the war. Ergo theyre the good guys and any dissenters are evil incarnate. If only the stakes werent so high, I might enjoy this outcast status. Ha ha! I could cackle. I love the thwup of smart bomb on bunker and the smell of freshly toasted conscript in the morning.
But thats not how we in the pro-war lobby feel. We dont need to be shown grisly pictures to realise that war is a ghastly thing; we, too, want peace; we just recognise that there are circumstances when war is amply justified and were living in such a period right now.
Sure I could explain my reasoning. Except that those who are pro the war know the arguments all too well; and those who are not, simply arent interested. I fell out with my beloved sister because of this. How could I respect the position of someone whose weltanschauung is based on student politics (its all about oil) and some vague hippie notion that, even in global relations, the heart has more to offer than the brain? I tried pointing out the inconsistency of a peacenlove kind of girl marching in defence of the butcher of Halabja. She wouldnt speak to me.
Far harder is confronting people whose wisdom youd hitherto respected. Take my friend Tom. Hes a corporate whiz; a self-made millionaire who understands the global economy. How do you respond when he too sends an e-mail urging you to join the virtual march on Washington? Do you stand up to him à la Bush and Blair? Or shrink and cower like a slimy Chirac? In my case, you do a Chirac. Constantly defending yourself gets too exhausting. Far better to button your lip and console yourself that in a few months it could all be over: democracy will have been restored to Iraq and the world will be a marginally safer place.
Then the anti-war majority will turn to the pro-war minority they once reviled and say: Gosh, Im sorry. What fools we were. You were right all along. Yeah, and Saddam doesnt have a bushy moustache.
Regards, Ivan
I've lost a few friends over politics and the rest either agree with me or we've decided to not talk about it.
As far as general social situations, It's a bit of a dilemma. Sometimes I do just keep my trap shut, but other times I wonder why I should have to censor myself? Plus, I think it's good for people to be challenged on occasion. The stunned silence that meets my comments are priceless!
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