The
Slow & Painful Death of Outrage in the USA
Sibel
Edmonds
19
July, 2013
I
have been reading and watching reports on the rallies in Russia in
support of protest leader Aleksey Navalny. And I have been comparing
these protests and rallies to what we have, or actually what we
haven’t, over here in the United States, the supposed land of the
free
Where
are the supporting rallies and protests over the prosecution, jailing
and torturing of Bradley Manning? Where are they? Other than a few
dozen gathering here and there, and a handful writing in this or that
alternative page on the web? We are talking about an established
outrageous case – even acknowledged by pawns such as Human Rights
Watch and Amnesty:
Same
goes for the hunt for NSA whistleblower Edward
Snowden. Same goes for the
jailing of John
Kiriakou. Same goes for the
persecution of hundreds of other courageous truth-tellers
and whistleblowers. Same goes
for the disclosures of our government’s torture, kidnapping
and illegal detainments, illegal
wiretapping …
Where
are the protests and rallies? Where is the outrage?
What
distinguishes the reaction of Russians from Americans? Is it because
they lived under the open despotism of communism and still carry
fairly fresh memories? Is it the cabbage in their diet, or Vodka? No
really; what is it?
What
does separate those protesting in Turkey and elsewhere in the Middle
East against their oppressive regimes from us Americans under our
oppressive regime? Where does their resolve, unity and commitment
come from? What does our lack of resolve and courage stem from?
Don’t
take me wrong, we have plenty of rage and outrage-directed towards
our abused children in the millions, road rage, urban violence,
suburban rage … But somehow we seem to have no rage or outrage when
it comes to the truly outrageous system governing us from above –
untouchable and unaccountable. It has been a gradual death. It has
been a painful death – the death of needed outrage against the
corrupt, oppressive and ruthless regime in the USA.
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