Avoiding war the topic at OCC
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Deirdre Newman
Derrill Bodley has every reason to hate -- to hate Islamic
terrorists, to hate the injustice of the world, to hate that his
daughter was aboard Flight 93 when it crashed in a Pennsylvania field
during the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.
But instead, Bodley professes peace.
On Thursday, the music professor from Sacramento City College
joined Chapman University political science professor Donald Will in
an Orange Coast College forum to discuss ways to deal with Iraq
besides going to war. OCC’s Academic Senate sponsored the discussion.
“I think it’s a very bad policy for us to act unilaterally, and
even though the U.N. did come up with a resolution, it appears to me
it’s because they were bullied into it,” Bodley said. “They were
shamed and embarrassed into it, and these are not good feelings for
people to have toward us.
“The rest of the world will be resentful if we continue to act
this way, and that will be very dangerous in the future,” he said.
Will railed against the United States acting alone. Standing in
front of a map of the Middle East, Will characterized Bush’s foreign
policy as “downright dangerous” to globalization and to Americans.
“The United States’ policy of unilateralism undercuts global norms
of behavior and threatens the long-term safety of the citizens of the
U.S.,” Will said. “The [United Nations] has somewhat tempered this
policy only through the dogged involvement of Colin Powell, who knows
from experience in the Gulf War about the need for global
cooperation.”
Significant questions need to be addressed before the U.S. leaps
gung-ho into a war with Iraq, Will said, such as what type of warfare
will be involved, how does the U.S. expect to eliminate Saddam
Hussein when it can’t catch Osama bin Laden and what are the moral
implications of a potential war.
“War is almost invariably posed as strategic and pragmatic, but
any war is a moral dilemma,” Will said. “The power [to wage war] must
be informed by wisdom and ethics and tempered by humility, not
arrogance.”
Bodley, who held a picture of his daughter as he talked about the
terrorist attacks, said instead of wanting to exact retribution on
the terrorists, he is more concerned with looking for the root causes
of Sept. 11. The government should do the same, he advised.
“I think the country is terribly preoccupied in terms of its
history and the way it spends its resources and time and creates more
history of making war,” Bodley said.
Bodley, who belongs to a group called Sept. 11 Families For
Peaceful Tomorrows, said he doesn’t spend a lot of time thinking
about what could have been but instead focuses on trying to affect
change in the government for the future. He exhorted students to
contact their representatives with their opinions and vote.
“I don’t know why [people] don’t vote, but there are very scary
examples even today of places where people have given up, and it’s
the last thing that anyone should want to do,” Bodley said.
Student reaction to the presentation was mixed.
Lenah Hilal, 21, said she was moved by Bodley’s speech.
“For me, it was very touching,” Hilal said. “When you see someone
who’s holding their daughter’s picture, you can feel part of their
sadness. He really touched my heart.”
Bryan Tierney, 21, however, said he found the forum more one-sided
than he expected.
“The information I received from the school paper presented it
more as a debate on the pros and cons than pontificating,” Tierney
said. “I was not noticeably swayed to their position. Ultimately, war
probably will be a necessity. We should have finished the job in
1991.”
Art history professor Irini Rickerson brought her class to the
forum so they could get another perspective to form their own
decision.
“I think this is an important time in our history and believe it’s
the responsibility of educators to educate students in current issues
and have them decide for themselves, because art history is an
expression of history.”
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