Giving thanks for open minds
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Knowing a column will be coming on a major holiday is more a curse
than a blessing. Ignoring it marks the writer as insensitive, and
addressing it stumbles over the question of what hasn’t already been
said about Thanksgiving.
Columnist Art Buchwald had the only viable answer I know. In his
early years with the Herald-Tribune in Paris, he wrote a wonderful
column explaining this most American of holidays to the French -- and
he has repeated it every year since.
Since I have no such classic in my files and I’ve decided that
making the case for prime rib or beef rather than the archaic turkey
as Thanksgiving fare wouldn’t support an entire column, I will tip my
World Series cap to the spirit of the holiday and move on to another
matter in the current news for which I am thankful.
The recent spate of news stories and pictures of student
demonstrations for peace at UCI and Fullerton Union High School was
deja vu -- as Yogi Berra allegedly said -- all over again for me.
I was teaching in UCI’s English Department throughout the campus
chaos during the Vietnam war, and I find the current growing student
reaction to the threatened war in Iraq a heartening sign that young
people are once again tapping into the world around them in
substantive ways.
One of the things the student protesters won after the Vietnam war
was lowering the voting age to 18. So far, I’ve seen very little
evidence that newly franchised young voters have made extensive use
of this opportunity. Maybe it will take a war in Iraq -- or, much
better, a threatened war -- to make them voting participants in our
society.
I find this a perfectly legitimate motive, especially when the
people most aggressively pushing the current war with Iraq never
fought one themselves and won’t be fighting this one. If it takes the
threat of being drafted into a preemptive war to get our young people
involved, so be it.
I can remember facing a class at UCI the day after our invasions
of Panama and the island of Grenada and asking the students how they
felt about these actions.
In both instances, well over half the class didn’t even know the
invasions had taken place. When I suggested the possibility that they
might be required to serve their country if these actions were to
trigger something larger, they said they would deal with that when
and if it happened. And when I then asked if there were any current
public issues that might move them sufficiently to get personally
involved, they couldn’t think of any.
So I find these new examples of student involvement in public
affairs both positive and encouraging, especially because they open
healthy public debate among young people on issues that may deeply
affect their lives. It has also opened debate among often sharply
divided faculty members, which can only illustrate the most important
element of the lessons being taught in the classroom: the ability of
individuals to think critically in a democratic society.
Caitlin Orr, the 16-year-old junior who started the “Think Peace”
movement at Fullerton High School, has expressed her views in an
antiwar column in the student newspaper in tandem with a counterpoint
column strongly supporting an attack on Iraq -- which caused history
teacher Jeff Rupp to say proudly, “They’re using their heads.”
The protest got more dramatic at UCI, where fake bombs exploded,
scattering flour that turned civilians into victims when it settled
on them. Even though a young letter-writer to the Pilot missed it,
the point was clear: Bombs don’t just fall on soldiers.
The protest was mounted by 14 campus organizations, from the
Society of Arab Students to Amnesty International and was addressed
by a faculty member who suggested that the antiwar movement “needs to
grow and mature and move into a new phase” -- which wasn’t what some
of the protesters wanted to hear.
All of this reminds me of another UCI protest 30-some years ago,
when the library plaza was packed with angry students who had trashed
a bank building and were threatening to get out of hand again.
In this chaotic moment, Chancellor Dan Aldrich appeared on the
library balustrade and quieted the crowd by the sheer size of his
presence. Then for the next half hour he talked to them. I can’t
remember what he said, only that he literally talked them down, until
they began to break up into small groups and drift away.
I would hope -- and expect -- that the current protests don’t
regress to that point. But given the present ineffectiveness of the
Democratic party, we sorely need someone besides Russian President
Vladimir Putin to question the virtually unchallenged assertions
coming from the Bush war camp.
We have been led to believe that a war in Iraq -- including the
taking of Baghdad -- would be a walk in the park in which our air
superiority would bring Hussein to his knees with virtually no
casualties on our side. When a conservative columnist like James
Pinkerton takes issue with such rosy perceptions -- as he did last
week in the Los Angeles Times -- the people pushing a war on Iraq
should at least take notice.
Pinkerton quoted an Air Force Times writer recalling the disasters
suffered by invading armies in the streets of Stalingrad, Hue and
Mogadishu, who concluded, “If our leaders seriously intend to fight
in metropolitan centers, I hope they’ll think again.” Then Pinkerton
went on to quote U.S. Gen. Tommy Franks on the need to deploy 250,000
troops in the Iraqi theater to get the job done.
We can hardly fault the young people who might be drafted into
that force for questioning the wisdom of such a war and the validity
of the information being given them -- and all of us -- in support of
it. If the Bush administration can bypass the constitutional
requirement for approval from Congress to launch a war in Iraq, then
perhaps it should listen to the people who may end up fighting it.
I’m thankful on this Thanksgiving Day that they’re finding such a
voice in our own back yard.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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