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Ignoring Genocide Is Inexcusable

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  • Ignoring Genocide Is Inexcusable

    IGNORING GENOCIDE IS INEXCUSABLE
    Michael Teahan

    Glendale News Press
    http://www.glendalenewspress.com/articles/20 10/04/21/columns/gnp-teahan042110.txt
    APril 21 2010
    CA

    It is difficult to make a more compelling case for the Armenian
    Genocide resolution working its way through Congress than to recognize
    the suffering of a people for whom the word "genocide" was invented.

    There are, even for those without the gene for empathy, damn good
    reasons to care. Reasons that go beyond the tragedy of the original
    event.

    How we choose to remember the Armenian Genocide will say a lot about
    who we are as a people. This is no longer about the choices of the
    Turkish government or the actions of the Ottoman Empire, but the active
    role some in this country are about to play as accomplices after the
    fact. To deny a historical fact for political expediency, or to say
    that it doesn't matter because it was another people or another time is
    to take an active role in the crime. The truth is supposed to matter.

    For a senator or member of Congress to vote against the resolution
    means that they can never be trusted. It means that they are perfectly
    willing to lie in service to a political agenda. In the face a
    politically sensitive fight, I suppose that a politician can make
    a case for anything. I think, though, that when the truth becomes a
    commodity that can be bargained, it starts to lose its meaning.

    It is that willingness to lie that is the core issue. It means that
    when we expect to get straight answers about health care, banking
    regulations or global warming, we will never be able to trust that
    the answer isn't colored by a political motivation in contravention
    to the truth.

    If a politician is willing to whitewash the deaths of hundreds of
    thousands of innocent victims in service to the ego of a foreign
    power, selling out the voter to the highest political contributor is
    all too easy a task.

    In some respects, this is an easy litmus test for how dishonorable
    a politician can be.

    More daunting than all of this is what it means to the victims
    of genocide not yet born. If politicians outside Texas are given
    a pass on rewriting history, it becomes a license to kill. Whole
    generations are now being wiped out because the victor controls the
    story. We rarely hear of Darfur, and our outrage over the atrocities
    in Bosnia was tempered by our own bias toward the victims -- many of
    whom happened to be Muslim.

    Our inability to stand firm to defend the truth gives permission to
    exact cruel and inhumane acts in the future. This is no longer about
    properly giving a name to a historical fact; striking a bargain with
    propaganda is a crime for which we will condemn our children to pay.

    For my part, I will not give my president permission to waffle on
    the truth no matter what it costs in the near term.

    I would gladly sacrifice the air space over any country if it is one
    step toward drawing a line in the sand because I think it is better
    to sacrifice a thousand lives for a just cause than to be party to
    a crime to save one.

    We can do little to heal the pain endured by the victims of the
    Armenian Genocide, but our willingness to be honest and tell the truth,
    even if a little politically inconvenient, might prevent the next one.
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