The
Choice Before Us
Starhawk
Somewhere tonight in
Iraq, a small girl lies sleeping who in a few weeks may
be a lump of scorched flesh buried under
concrete.
On a basketball court
somewhere in the United States a young man lands a jump
shot, who in a few weeks may have no legs, or eyes, or
have tumors already brooding in his brain from exposure
to the depleted uranium of our own weapons.
A young boy who is
healthy and vibrant today will be racked with cancer. A
mother will hear her children crying for food and have
nothing to give them but tainted water to quench their
thirst. Land that is today rich and fertile will, a short
time from now, be contaminated with radioactivity that
lasts longer than all the years between ancient Sumer and
Babylon and now. And young men and women who in the
innocence of their hearts volunteered to serve their
country will be led to perpetrate unspeakable crimes that
will haunt their nights and blight the rest of their
lives. When they complain of strange ailments, the
Veteran's Administration will admit no connection. And
for years afterwards, as has happened since the first
Gulf War, they will take their own lives in a steady
stream of suicides. They will not be the sons and
daughters of the men and women who sit in Congress or the
White House. A disparate number of them will come from
communities in our own land who suffer poverty,
dispossession, discrimination.
And all of this will be
done at the command of men who have never themselves
faced combat or fought a war, who rob our schools and
hospitals to pay for their own weapons of mass
destruction, who promote an empire-building agenda of
their own that will not provide the security they claim.
For the sheer injustice of our attack on a country that
has not attacked us will provoke such fear and hatred
against us that all our bombs and missiles and cops and
spies will not be able to keep us safe.
The media and the
politicians tell us this war is inevitable, that we can't
stop it, that our protests and petitions and pleas make
no difference. They murmur a constant incantation of our
powerlessness, lulling us into a nightmare
sleep.
But we can still wake
up. We can choose to walk out of the nightmare, and dream
a different dream.
All it takes is for
each one of us who cherishes the lives of children to
refuse to be silent, to say no to war, to say yes to
peace.
And to ask ourselves,
how have we abandoned our country, our fate, into the
hands of callous men who have no compunction about
wasting lives? What spell has been cast that fogs our
eyes and binds our hands? What lies have we believed?
What power have we let slip away?
Replace the nightmare
with this dream: that in the moment when one world power
has amassed the unchallenged military might to make its
bid for global empire, its own people rise up and say,
"No. That is not what we want to be. We don't want to
rule the world over the broken bodies of children. We
don't want blood on our hands. We want children who are
sick to have the best possible care, in Iraq and in our
own country. We want schools and jobs and parks and
hospitals and food for the hungry. We want to join hands
with the people of the world, and strengthen the
institutions that are slowly and painfully learning to
solve conflicts without bloodshed, and teaching us to
respect our differences. We know that peace must be built
on justice, and we want peace."
Dream that we wake up,
stand up, speak out, not in the thousands but the
millions, joining with millions around the world. Dream
that soldiers refuse their orders, dockworkers refuse to
load ships, secretaries shut off their computers, workers
close their factories, and even politicians find the
courage to stand for what is right.
And make the dream
real. If you have spoken out before, now is the time to
speak again, to make another phone call, write another
letter, stand in another vigil. If you have marched
before, march again and this time bring more of your
friends and neighbors. If you haven't marched, if you
have been immersed in the demands of your own life, if
you feel that your small voice makes no difference, now
is the time to speak anyway, to interrupt your ordinary
pursuits, to become the one small drop that just might
turn the tide.
If you can get to New
York or San Francisco on the weekend of February 15-16
for the big marches and rallies, come&emdash;because the
numbers are vitally important.
If you can't, there
will be marches and rallies and vigils to join all across
the country. Find one, or call one of your
own.
Be public. Be visible.
Be the loud, uncomfortable conscience that has
disappeared from the halls of power.
And believe that truth
is stronger than lies, love trumps fear, and no cabal of
power can contain the multitudes when we awaken and
choose life.