The Masterly Strategy of Inactivity (Not In My Name)
(This is a re-post from 2013, the time the Commons decided not to take military action against al Assad. It was feared that to do so might encourage fundamentalist groups to profit. So that went well.)
You passed a man in the street
He was beating his dog
The dog was cowed; its welts bled; its back broken
You said “Someone should do something”
And you did nothing.
You came upon a soldier
He was raping a young girl
She pleaded and cried for her mother
Then she was silent
You said “Someone should do something”
And you did nothing.
You watched a group of men
They were kicking a child
He shielded his head but they stamped on his skull
As he lay on the ground
You said “Someone should do something”
And you did nothing.
You spoke to an old Jew who survived Auschwitz
He said to you,
“Why did you not bomb the concentration camps?
Some of us would have survived.
But you did nothing”
You watched an evil man, mighty in his own land,
Gas his own people.
They twisted and twitched and vomited in their death throes
You said “Someone should do something”
And this time you did do something
You wrung your hands and said,
“Someone should do something”.
The wreak of Bush and Blair
Hangs heavy in the air
As little men conduct analysis;
“Do nothing. Let’s not rush.
Remember Blair and Bush”
Endorsing death by their paralysis;
Which helps Assad decide
To repeat this genocide
And brings you one step nearer to your shame;
You may give succour, quarter
“Spectating Assad’s slaughter”
Don’t ever think you do so “in my name”.
John Coopey
Mon 7th Dec 2015 23:13
I'm just re-reading "The Haj" by Leon Uris, Harry. Excellent historical fiction but also revealing about Arab psychology.
...and pluralist democracy will come when icebergs float down the River Jordan.