By Michael Leonardi
My daughter is 4 and she
goes to school in this country of the United States. My wife and I are
seriously contemplating leaving for her safety, not only from the sporadic
violence but from the toxicity of poisoned air and water and land and the
incredible emotional burden it is putting on us. Is there anywhere left to go
on this Earth, to escape the bloody grip of the militarization, violence and
contamination of our global economy coupled with the broadening societal
psychosis? These United States have a policy of killing children around the
world. At least in many other parts of the world life is held to be far more
sacred, while here it too often seems that we are reduced to numbers of dead
and collateral damage.
Today I was dealing with
the county welfare office where there are a good number of young people who
entered the field of social work in hopes of helping people. Each caseworker is
responsible for 700 families and these young people whot are trying their best
to help people are reduced to dealing with damage control in a system that is
an overburdened, underfunded nightmare. I have learned that to receive
assistance in the state of Ohio you must work at least 35 hours a week and that
this work is paid barely minimum wage that does not allow people enough to
survive in one of the poorest cities in America -- Toledo, Ohio. Here in Toledo
about 60 people have been killed by guns this year -- mostly young people.
In this city and its
surrounding suburbs there are many that claim we are blessed by the likes of
British Petroleum Corporation, First Energy Corporation, Chrysler Corporation,
Detroit Edison Corporation, which provide under 3 percent of the regional
population good paying jobs to poison our air and water. It is said by our
politicians that nuclear power, refining oil, burning coal, and making cars are
what makes our city strong.
When I was dealing with
the welfare office today, I finally spoke to a young woman who was very helpful
after waiting on hold for over half an hour -- the average wait time when
calling Jobs and Family Services. When I asked her name she explained that for
security reasons they were not allowed to give out names on the phone because
people have been tracked down on Facebook and threatened. She was number 63. I
don't want my daughter to grow up to be a number in a society that does not
value life--human life, or the rest of the natural world to which we should be
so integrally linked.
In Italy recently there
has been a major movement developing around this concept of respect for life.
This movement is also happening in Japan and India and Egypt and Gaza and
Canada and Pakistan and many other places where people have had enough. I know
Italy because my daughter was born there. Workers have walked out the largest
steel plant in Europe because they do not want to choose between a good paying
job and the risk of their child developing early childhood leukemia and dying a
miserable death as many children in the town surrounding this plant have been.
The United States has a major military base nearby as they do in many areas of
Italy. The bankers at the helm of the country are attempting to overrule the
judges, the citizens and the workers that want this plant shut down. The United
States military has been dumping radioactive waste around Italy, most recently
near the northern city of Trieste.
In the United States of
America there is such a movement but it is tiny as the society suffers from a
myopic and sickly depression. Many are drugged into oblivion on antidepressants
fed to them by criminal Pharmaceutical companies that part own our government
along with the military and energy companies that keep everyone thinking that
all is gonna be just fine again soon. In this country many children are drugged
from a very early age, and the rest of the world thinks this is a sickening
madness. Those that aren't clinging to sick care seem content to pretend that
nothing is seriously wrong, while still others feel powerless in the face of it
all and do nothing. In this country many children are drugged from a very early
age. The rest of the world thinks this is a sickening madness. You would be
hard pressed to find any child on Ritalin in most countries. It is as if
America has been zombified.
Shortly after the
Columbine shootings president Clinton said that "we need to teach our
children to resolve conflicts without violence." Today, Obama cried as
many of us have. These presidents uphold a system of killing around the world.
Bombs drop in Afghanistan, Somalia, Yemen, Pakistan, from our unmanned drones
killing children regularly. Here are some excerpts ofrom Michael Moore's film
Bowling For Columbine that still today hold many truths,
At the U.S. Air Force Academy, south of Littleton, we see a shell of a B-52 bomber as a memorial to the North Vietnamese people it killed on Christmas Eve, 1972. Then Michael Moore’s voice-over continues, as we see images of Rocky Flats, where weapons-grade plutonium was manufactured—now a vast toxic waste dump. A few miles away is NORAD, buried in Cheyenne Mt., the center of all nuclear weapons control in case of a World War. Then Moore notes that once a month Lockheed transports one of its completed missiles on the highways of Littleton—late in the night. Moore’s voice-over: “…passing nearby Columbine High School. The rockets are transported in the middle of the night, while the children of Columbine are asleep.”
And
Graphic on the screen: “April 20, 1999.” Shots of the bombing of Kosovo, conducted under the aegis of NATO. Graphic on screen: “Largest one day bombing by U.S. in Kosovo War”—a title that’s more than a little misleading. Then file footage of dead villagers killed when bombs were accidentally dropped on their village. Cut to Pres. Clinton, who says, “We are striking hard at Serbia’s machinery of repression.” Then we hear a foreign correspondent’s voice saying “on the hit list were a hospital and a local primary school.” Graphic on the screen: “One Hour Later.” We see President Clinton again. “We all know there has been a terrible shooting in a high school in Littleton, Colorado. I hope the American people will be praying for the students, and the parents, and the teachers."
This
country has a long way to go to healing and until the chains of slavery to a
neoliberal police state are shaken, the process will not have even begun.
Michael Leonardi is a Toledo resident, an activist currently working to end nuclear power and a frequent contributor to Counterpunch.
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