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C.R.MUDGEON's home
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Who is C.R Mudgeon?
He's a reclusive free-lance writer and folk
philosopher who resides in an old, spacious house perched on the top of a
hill in the lovely Sagacity Mountains. He has a good view of the Plains of
Conformity, which he sometimes visit. On very clear days he claims that he
can see the Ocean of Tranquility. He is known in his little community as a
liberal and a non-conformist. Some people call him a crank, or worse, behind
his back. He cares deeply about fair play and justice. Few things make me
angrier than to see little people taken advantage of, abused, and
persecuted. When the spirit moves him, C.R. Mudgeon submits articles to
www.theamericans.us which we
usually publish.
We think his piece "A Liberal's Confession" is a
powerful statement of what liberals really believe.
If you'd like to see more of C.R. Mudgeon's ideas and
give him feedback, go to his blog at
www.liberalidea.blogspot.com.
A
LIBERAL’S CONFESSION
By C.R. Mudgeon
I am known as a liberal, and sometimes must walk alone;
But I am not lonely.
My companions are Jefferson and Lincoln, Emerson and Nightingale, Gandhi
and Thoreau, FDR and MLK.
They saw clearly, glimpsed better worlds, ended slavery, broke taboos,
spoke for sweat-shop children, defended the rights of their mothers, and
were called liberals, too.
Call me a liberal because…
I know how often those on the right have been in the wrong—burning
books and witches, excommunicating scientists, opposing Independence,
despoiling the environment, supporting dictators, fighting for slavery and
Jim Crow, hounding dissenters, persecuting Jewish, Italian, Irish, Greek,
and Asian immigrants then, and now Arabs and Hispanics; barring women from
voting booth, jury, and office;
I can see that every vestige of birth-based discrimination is doomed
to suffer slavery’s fate;
I abhor tyrannies of the mind, no matter in whose name--God's, the
nation's, or a political party's;
I detest bullies, and refuse to believe that noise makes light;
I contend that human rights take precedence above all other rights;
I believe that I should judge what is best for my body—what to do with
it, put on it and in it;
I believe that government of the people can do great things for the
people;
I believe in justice for all without respect to citizenship, wealth or
power, gender, religion, or race;
I am wary of unrestrained power and wealth;
I cherish the right to differ;
I value my privacy, consider my home my castle, and want no one to
enter it uninvited;
I appreciate diversity;
I believe that the highest good is to love—to show generosity with a
broad mind, an open heart, and an outstretched hand to neighbor and
stranger, friend and foe.
Call me a liberal. Please. It's a compliment.
Other
comments from C.R. Mudgeon
"What sometimes passes for
patriotism is nothing but chauvinism and bigotry."
Below is what C.R. Mudgeon wrote about the War With
Iraq just before it was launched. Sadly, much of what he predicted has
happened.
THE
CURE IS WORSE THAN THE DISEASE
April 5, 2003
Abraham Lincoln made a wise statement that’s worth
reflecting on right now.
Lincoln said, “The true rule in determining to embrace or reject anything is
not whether it has any evil in it, but whether it has more of evil than of
good. There are few things wholly evil or wholly good. Almost
everything…is an inseparable compound of the two, so that our best judgment
of the preponderance between them is continually demanded.”
Let’s look at the mixture of good and evil in what
America is doing in Iraq.
President Bush’s explanation for invading Iraq is the desire to remove evil
from the world. Saddam Hussein is a bloody tyrant who’s bent on using
weapons of mass destruction. The President believes that a regime change
will usher in democracy for the entire Middle East. The President’s cure,
he hopes, will stabilize the region. The poor people of Iraq will become
wealthy and America will get a reliable source of oil. Surely this is a good
cure.
But is the cure worse than the disease? Below are
17 warnings I would put on the medicine even when we succeed militarily:
One. Many of America's best and brightest are being
sacrificed. We already know that dozens are dead, and more will follow.
And it will continue after the occupation begins. Ask any mother, father,
wife, sweetheart, or child about the loss. It’s incalculable. If these fine
Americans had been spared to live out their lives, who knows what
contributions they might have made?
I thank God for the Americans who serve in our armed
forces. Their patriotism, their intelligence, and their bravery make me
feel proud. What makes me angry is the questionable cause these Americans
are dying for.
Do not call me disloyal if I ask troubling questions
about this war. I am more loyal to our fighting men and women than
warmongers who easily sacrifice them.
We can learn from our past. Over 31 million casualties
occurred during WW I. Americans who opposed that war were persecuted. Some
were jailed. What did we gain from our involvement in that war? Nothing.
Not one blessed thing.
Two. America is losing its good name. Not too long
ago the people of France felt so good about us that they gave us the Statue
of Liberty. America was a bastion of democracy and freedom, not an
invader. As recently as 9/11 there was a worldwide outpouring of affection
even from America’s former foes.
That has quickly evaporated. Everywhere on earth
America is viewed as an arrogant, dangerous, imperialistic invader.
Three. The United Nations has been damaged. After
WWI the League of Nations came to nothing because the U.S. would not support
it. If it had grown strong, the horrors of WWII might have been prevented.
Who can say? Then, after WWII, the world tried again. The United Nations
was created to provide the people of earth a way to solve problems without
resorting to war. The UN has not been a perfect organization, but it has
done many things well. Now the U.S. thumbs its nose at the organization it
gave birth to. In coming years when powerful nations decide to take out
little nations they happen to dislike, where will the U.S. speak, and what
will it say?
Four. The world’s foremost religious leaders—including
the Pope and the leaders of the President’s own Methodist Church—pleaded
with the President not to go to war. They called the war unjust. The
President thanked them for their time and went to war.
Five. Bush’s War has raised fanatical extremism to new
levels all across the Muslim world. The result will be many new Bin Ladens.
Six. America has damaged valuable relationships.
France, which has been a strong friend of America from the time of our
Revolution on has become the demon de jur. This demon of the day is
being castigated, chastised, and scolded, and its
products boycotted. Germany is once again our enemy. Even loyal,
dear Canada is not beside us. Bush never asks Canada’s prime minister down
to the ranch. In a great irony, NATO is becoming anti-American.
Seven. Enormous problems have been created for many of
America’s best friends. Egypt’s Mubarak is under pressure to close the Suez
Canal to American warships. The King of Jordan pleaded with Bush not to
start the war. Turkey refused to join America in war with her neighbor even
though we offered many lavish gifts. Pakistan’s
Pervez
Musharraf is once again in a precarious position because of hostility
toward us. The Saudis, who are protectors of Mecca, are feeling enormous
pressure to distance themselves from us.
Eight. Dangers multiply at home. Terrorist retaliation
is a very real threat.
Nine. America’s national treasure is vanishing. The
national debt will soon reach the highest point in history. The price tag
for the first few weeks of the war is about $80 billion plus covert payments
that don’t show up in the budget. The President proposes to pay the debt
with a tax cut.
Ten. Old tensions are being revived. Russia and China
with their huge Muslim populations are making ominous noises. America may be
the only superpower, but no American in his right mind wants to take on
Russia or China.
Eleven. The President did not count on Iraqi
patriotism. Even now he still seems not to understand that people will
fight for their native land. The Arabs have a saying: “I will fight with my
cousin, but my cousin and I will fight a stranger.” We were told to expect
Hosannas. That hasn’t happened. Now we are told the Iraqis are waiting to
see if it’s safe to cheer. Everybody’s just afraid of Hussein. But if that’s
true, why are thousands of Iraqis in Jordan returning to fight for Iraq?
Nobody is holding a gun to their heads. Stalin was a bloody tyrant, but the
Russians fought bravely, not because of fear or love of Stalin, but because
they loved Russia.
Twelve. Bush’s War has made it dangerous for ordinary
Americans to walk safely in fifty-plus Islamic nations. It also has put
America’s international investments at risk.
Thirteen. The war is dividing America in ways not seen
since the Viet Nam War. Just listen to the angry accusations on the radio
talk shows. But the struggle for the soul of America is not between good
Americans and bad Americans. It is between good Americans and good
Americans.
Fourteen. The costs of the occupation will be
staggering. When coalition forces manage to occupy Iraq, who will pacify
the nation? Fathers and mothers who have lost their children, and children
who have lost their parents will look for opportunities for revenge.
Americans will call their desperate acts “terrorism.” When we leave, who
will we put in charge? Some secular Sunni strongman who will become
ruthless just to stay in power? Some weak, unstable coalition government?
Or some clever Shia mullah who will give us another Iran?
Fifteen. Bush’s War could make Iraq ungovernable.
When ancient grudges are exploited to gain temporary advantages, there is no
telling what the outcome will be. Who could have predicted that WWI would
produce a Lenin and a Hitler? We are pitting Shias against Sunnis, secular
Muslims against Islamic fundamentalists, and Kurds against non-Kurds. Who
will put Humpty-Dumpty back together again?
Sixteen. Israel will be more vulnerable than ever.
Ariel Sharon wants to see American troops close by. But Sharon has not
taken into account what will happen if democracy comes to the Middle East.
The new regimes will be more anti-American and more anti-Israeli than the
leaders they replace. If democracy comes to Egypt, might not the gang that
produced the 9/11 terrorists come to power? If democracy comes to Saudi
Arabia, might not Bin Laden’s supporters come to power?
Seventeen. We are creating an irresistible temptation
for Iraq’s neighbors. Iraq has the world’s second-largest pool of oil. At
the first opportunity Iran, Turkey, and Syria will be tempted to take
whatever they can. Will this mean that America will have to stay forever to
protect its spoils?
Below is a letter C.R. Mudgeon wrote us about an op ed piece by Elmo
Frank, who was a strong supporter of the Iraq War.
I agree with Elmo's quote about learning from history.
President Truman used to say that the only new thing in the world is the
history you don’t know. All of this propaganda has been used before. Who
can think of one good reason to justify the millions of deaths that occurred
during the First World War? Yet Americans were put in prison for opposing
it. The same arguments were made then that Elmo is making. His last
paragraph also sounds like something straight out of Senator McCarthy’s
hearings on un-American activities. During the McCarthy era many American’s
lives were ruined, and thousands were slandered for being un-American—even
Presidents.
Reminds me of something my uncle Ernest told me back in
the 1950s. Uncle Earnest worked at a funeral home in a little town in
Alabama. One day Earnest declared that the owners of the local funeral home
were Communists. I had been studying about Communist ideology in school, so
I asked, “Uncle Ernest, do they oppose private ownership, and do you think
they’re committed to the violent overthrow of the government?” Uncle Ernest
replied gravely, “I don’t know about that, but I do know they’re mighty mean
people.”
Elmo gave you six reasons why he thinks the anti-war
movement’s wrong. Well, here are six good reasons why I think it’s the
American thing to do.
One. There are lots of evil leaders in the world, and
always have been. Hussein looks like a Sunday School teacher compared to
Joseph Stalin. Stalin killed more innocent people than Hitler. During the
Cold War, Stalin and his successors weren’t just trying to create weapons of
mass destruction. He (and they) had them, and they were pointed at us. The
world was able to escape a nuclear catastrophe because Americans contained
the threat and didn't try to “take Stalin out.” If the United States is
going to take it upon itself to “take out” all the rulers of the world who
oppress their people and torture and kill their enemies, we will be at war
forever. Bush appears to have a very long “regime change” list: North
Korea, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Cuba, Venezuela, and no-telling how many
other nations that don’t measure up to his standard of democracy. I’m sure
he would love to have a regime change in France and Germany.
Two. Who says I shouldn’t criticize a President in
time of war? If it was a dangerous and wrong-headed policy before shots
were fired, why is it a wise policy now? Holding a President accountable
during time of war is a great American tradition that goes all the way back
to George Washington, who was wildly popular and is rightly regarded as one
of the world's finest leaders. George W. Bush is no George Washington. Why
should he be immune from criticism? Another President deemed great by
historians was Abraham Lincoln, who had many detractors. Lincoln was
constantly explaining to Congress, journalists, friends and foes what he was
about. Americans don’t give their politicians blank checks. People who
promote the Don’t-criticize-the-President attitude must have a secret
longing for a King or a Pope. This submissive attitude toward rulers makes
dictatorships like Hussein’s possible.
Three The demonstrations actually may make the world
safe for Americans by keeping the world from hating Americans
indiscriminately. I can’t think of a single nation where rank-and-file
citizens support what this administration is doing. The marches tell the
world that all Americans don’t behave like the gang that’s running
Washington.
Four Elmo says people don’t have the right to march
against the government in Iraq. So, what does Elmo propose? Stop the
marches so that we will act just like Iraqis.
Five I’m more loyal to our troops than the warmongers
are. I love our young people, and think it’s criminal to wound or kill even
one of them for such a wrong-headed foreign policy as this one.
Six. The United States was born when Americans decided
to disobey their rulers. Americans are still an independent-minded people
who, if given sufficient time and information, will not follow any leader
down a wrong path very far, very long.
And let me add one thing. If Elmo read a good
newspaper, like the Los Angeles Times, he wouldn't be repeating as gospel
the propaganda that Hussein supported the 9/11 terrorists. There's not a
bit of evidence to support that piece of misinformation, but we can get into
that in a later issue.
MORE
OBSERVATIONS FROM C.R.MUDGEON
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