I used to be proud to be an American because our country—for the most part anyway—stood firm against the totalitarians of the world. We were, indeed, a beacon to the nations in that regard.
It’s now the reverse. We feed them.
That began to a great degree under the Obama administration and has grown under the current administration.
Everywhere you look—China, Venezuela, Iran, and even Russia, because we’re essentially financing its war on Ukraine through our energy policies—you find the United States on the wrong side of the equation, on the side of the despots against the people.
“When the children of the Iranian elite—known locally as Aghazadeh—are loudly and publicly attacking the basic principles of the revolutionary regime and calling for international action, you know that the ruling elite is cracking and that the regime could actually be heading for collapse.
I would like to think the author of the piece, Avi Davidi, isn’t being unduly optimistic—we’ve heard about the end of the vicious theocracy many times before—but maybe this time, it could actually happen. We can only hope.
But the point is where in all this is the United States—the folks who stormed Omaha Beach, risking life and limb to an extraordinary degree, to rid the world of Nazism? Living under a government that secretly makes oil deals with the mullahs as they do with the communist oppressors in Venezuela, propping both up, while at the same time telling themselves and others that they’re doing all this to rid humanity of “global warming.”
No, they’re not. They’re doing this for reasons of greed and the most errant political ambition.
Meanwhile, in China, mass protests continue against lockdowns and the regime itself in the world’s most powerful communist state ever, dwarfing the former Soviet Union at its height.
Where’s the United States as people in the world’s most-populous country struggle against pervasive oppression, turning human beings into automatons that, because of technology, was unimaginable even a few years ago?
Mum’s the word from our administration.
At least when we were cooperating with Stalin, there was a decent excuse—a more potent enemy on the march who had taken over most of Europe.
Now, there’s no excuse.
As with many putative statements by famous men and women, the alleged quote by the 18th-century Irish statesman Edmund Burke—“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing”—may be apocryphal.
Burke did, however, definitively say something similar in his “Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents”:
“When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.”
An unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle—eloquent, though daunting, words that accurately reflect our times. Burke’s advice that “the good must associate” is also more timely than ever.
It’s the best recommendation I’ve seen so far to make us proud to be Americans again—not just in a song, but in reality.