Quote of the day II
When it comes to avoiding the repetition of sin, nothing works like abject contrition. We should, therefore, tell the people of Cuba that we are sorry for having made such a hash of U.S.-Cuban relations for so long. President Obama should speak on our behalf in asking the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki for forgiveness. He should express our deep collective regret to Iranians and Afghans for what past U.S. interventionism has wrought.
The United States should do these things without any expectations of reciprocity. Regardless of what U.S. officials may say or do, Castro won't fess up to having made his own share of mistakes. The Japanese won't liken Hiroshima to Pearl Harbor and call it a wash. Iran's mullahs and Afghanistan's jihadists won't be offering to a chastened Washington to let bygones be bygones.
No, we apologize to them, but for our own good -- to free ourselves from the accumulated conceits of the American Century and to acknowledge that the United States participated fully in the barbarism, folly and tragedy that defines our time. For those sins, we must hold ourselves accountable.
-Salon's Andrew Basevich makes a compelling case that most of the troubles we currently face abroad are a direct result of our own past follies and that apologizing for those past sins in the quickest way to unfuck ourselves and move forward.






3 comments:
Hiroshima and Nagasaki are "past follies"? Sorry, I'll take a pass. There should be zero interest in "apologizing" to a country a)for a righteous act b)that STILL teaches its children that the rape of Nanking didn't happen.
Fuck that. This shit has gone too fucking far. Sure, go out and make nice with the world, speak softly and carry a big stick and all that. But that's where it has to end.
@nick...somehow i knew you'd disagree with that guy.
of course Nick, because we have no culpability right? You miss the point entirely of what he is saying, but that is true of most people who are very vested in being "right" rather than looking within themselves to see how/why they contributed.
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