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Ask Not What . . . (NY Times Article)
source: NY Times
Thomas L. Friedman 2001.12.09
News anchor Tom Brokaw tells the story of meeting a young New
York City fireman a week after Sept. 11. The fireman had just participated
in a memorial service for some of his fallen colleagues and the
two of them talked about the tragedy. "As I said goodbye,"
Mr. Brokaw
recalled, "he grabbed my arm and his expression took on a tone
of utter determination as he said, `Mr. Brokaw, watch my generation
now, just
watch us.' " As the author of the acclaimed "The Greatest
Generation," the story of the World War II cohort that saved
America from Nazism,
Mr. Brokaw told me he knew just what the man was saying: "
`This is our turn to be a greatest generation.' "
There is a lot of truth to that. I have nothing but respect for
the way President Bush has conducted this war. But this moment cannot
just be about
moving troops and tracking terrorists. There is a deep hunger in
America post-Sept. 11 in many people who feel this is their war
in their backyard
and they would like to be summoned by the president to do something
more than go shopping. If you just look at the amount of money
spontaneously donated to victims' families, it's clear that there
is a deep reservoir of energy out there that could be channeled
to become a real
force for American renewal and transformation - and it's not being
done. One senses that President Bush is intent on stapling his narrow,
hard-right Sept. 10 agenda onto the Sept. 12 world, and that is
his and our loss.
Imagine if tomorrow President Bush asked all Americans to turn
down their home thermostats to 65 degrees so America would not be
so much of
a hostage to Middle East oil? Trust me, every American would turn
down the thermostat to 65 degrees. Liberating us from the grip of
OPEC
would be our Victory Garden.
Imagine if the president announced a Manhattan Project to make
us energy independent in a decade, on the basis of domestic oil,
improved
mileage standards and renewable resources, so we Americans, who
are 5 percent of the world's population, don't continue hogging
25 percent of
the world's energy? Imagine if the president called on every young
person to consider enlisting in some form of service - the Army,
Navy,
Marines, Air Force, Coast Guard, Peace Corps, Teach For America,
AmeriCorps, the F.B.I., the C.I.A.? People would enlist in droves.
Imagine
if the president called on every corporate chieftain to take a 10
percent pay cut, starting with himself, so fewer employees would
have to be laid
off? Plenty would do it.
I don't toss these ideas out for some patriotic high. There is
a critical strategic point here: If we are going to be stomping
around the world wiping
out terrorist cells from Kabul to Manila, we'd better make sure
that we are the best country, and the best global citizens, we can
be. Otherwise,
we are going to lose the rest of the world.
That means not just putting a fist in the face of the world's bad
guys, but also offering a hand up for the good guys. That means
doubling our
foreign aid, intensifying our democracy promotion programs, increasing
our contributions to world development banks (which do microlending
to
poor women) and lowering our trade barriers for textile and farm
imports from the poorest countries. Imagine if the president called
on every U.S.
school to raise money to buy solar-powered light bulbs for
every village in Africa that didn't have electricity so African
kids could read at night?
And let every one of those light bulbs carry an America flag decal
on it, so when those kids grew up they would remember who lit up
their nights?
The world's perception of us and our values matters even more now,
and it is not going to be changed by an ad campaign, or by just
winning in
Afghanistan, as important as that is. It will be changed only by
what we do - at home and abroad. This war can't end with only downtown
Kabul
on the mend, and not downtown Washington, Chicago and Los Angeles.
Remember: the victims on Sept. 11 were a cross section of America
-
black, white, Hispanic, rich, poor and middle class - and that same
cross section has to share in the healing. If we've learned anything
from Sept.
11, it is that if you don't visit a bad neighborhood, it will visit
you.
The first Greatest Generation won its stripes by defending America
and its allies. This Greatest Generation has to win its stripes
by making sure
that the America that was passed onto us, and that now claims for
itself the leadership of a global war against evil terrorists, is
worthy of that task.
Mr. President, where do we enlist?
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