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John's avatar

“I have no doubt that Jasmine Crockett cares about Palestinians and about human suffering abroad. But she is running for the Texas State Senate, and that distinction matters.

Whoever ultimately holds that seat will not be setting U.S. foreign policy, negotiating ceasefires, or directing arms transfers — they will be legislating on behalf of Texans.”

What?!? She’s running for the US Senate. Hard to believe you whiffed this.

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James Quinn's avatar

What always strikes me, and I speak as one formally trained in anthropology with a special focus on human origins and evolution is that the essence of our problems both at home and in our dealings abroad is the central human paradox.

We are one species, and yet throughout our history we have spend an inordinate and often quite destructive amount of time trying to amplify what we imagine divides us, almost of which is completely illusory, while determinedly ignoring what in reality unites us - that humanity.

Religion, of course, is a prime example. The other one is politics. Between them over the last five thousand years we have caused ourselves more death and destruction than any sane person would assume possible, and yet the results are clear.

And as of 1945, with the same brain and opposable thumbs that gave us the most transformative creations in all our history - the tool, the plow, the written word, the steam engine, and the computer have also given us the power to utterly destroy both ourselves and all the rest of life on earth.

One pundit I read some time ago said of the Israel/Palestine situation, sticking the nation of Israel in the midst of the Arab world after the Holocaust was at once morally necessary and politically disastrous. And so it has proven to be. But of course that is only one of the points of potential disaster with which we’ve saddled ourselves.

We may with some justification take many if not all of our Presidents to task for aspects of their foreign policy, which ignores the fact that most, along with those who voted for them, have been equally ineffective here at home in bringing this nation together with some kind of resolution.

I always think of the cartoon character Pogo’s rephrasing of James Lawrence’s announcement following the battle on Lake Erie during the War of 1812, “We have met the enemy, and they is us."

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