What follows is my guest blog on UCLA professor Russell Burgos' blogsite
Danger Close. You can read it and much more
HERE. I learned a lot about tolerance for dissenting views from this experience. He is as kind and generous as he is sharp-tongued, witty and insightful. I hope you enjoy it.
Chuck
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Why Young Americans Should Care About the Republic of Georgia
The Republic of Georgia. Small, undistinguished by most measures, far from us by any. Why should anyone care? It’s a good question.
Early this year I taught a forgettable adult-ed class about Russia. First questioner out of the box: “Tell me why I should care about Russia.” Are you kidding me? Russia?
Another man said “Didn’t we beat those guys?” These were adults taking an opt-in paid class, not ninth-graders sitting in front of a 5-color map. It was enough to make an instructor weep.
I told the first guy “That’s like asking why you should read a book. Maybe you’ll learn something, maybe you’ll re-think something you thought you knew and maybe you’ll add depth or beauty to your life. You won’t know until you read one.” The second guy, why bother?
If Russia is barely in our national consciousness, why should Georgia be?
Rule out beauty. If beauty was a consideration Svaneti would already be a destination on par with Yosemite but we would have even less than our national yawn for Darfur. Besides, there’s the beholder angle and all. No, beauty isn’t it.
Rule out truth. Neocons and homo liberalis will first tell you what they think you want to hear, only later and grudgingly what they hope might be some semblance of their truth. No exceptions. Figure it out for yourself.
Rule out justice. As I once heard and still believe, “Come Judgment Day I’m hoping for mercy, not justice.” We, you and I, will not be dispensers of justice on any grand scale.
How about the irreducible minimum reason: It’s in your own best interest to care about Georgia.
You (this is me on the mountaintop, speaking to the throngs of young American readers of Danger Close) are going to be involved in the international game of titans all of your lives. BUT… you won’t have a say in the outcome unless you care enough to learn the names of the pieces (queen, rook, bishop, Russia, Georgia, Iran) and how and why they move (one square forward, diagonally, aggressively, defensively, timidly).
Maybe you don’t want a say in the outcome. That’s OK (so why get an education?) but there will be outcomes with or without your participation. At least learn the minimum for understanding conversations, sort of like your old Conversational Spanish class. If you read a blogger who says something that piques your interest, know enough to say “yeah, that’s right” or “no, I disagree”. Especially, “no I disagree”, and then speak your mind. Care about Georgia that much at least, enough for your own meaningful self-expression.
Money. Don’t overlook that it’s your billions, trillions, that are being spent in ill-defined attempts to rescue you from those who are spending it. I won’t have to pay for it nearly as long as you will so pay attention. The costly wars that recently were the only American political issues barely get page-3 notice most days. Shouldn’t you know the where and why of all this spending? The money supply is finite. GM or Georgia? AIG or Afghanistan? We really can’t buy it all, political promises to the contrary. Care about those choices enough to understand what your money is buying. There won’t be enough of it to go around. Care enough to influence the decision-makers. Care about your money.
Energy. Georgia isn’t an energy play but it is an energy lesson. You might have read “The interest is not democracy -- it is energy. Let's at least be honest about it.” Don’t be fooled. I don’t know how much the US relies on using, shipping or refining Georgian oil but my guess is zero. There aren’t any significant energy resources in Georgia. None. They don’t even have a strategic reserve outside of some rusting tank farms. There is the BTC pipeline, sure, moving someone else’s petro through someone else’s pipeline for someone else’s benefit. That’s it, that’s energy in Georgia.
Did you know there used to be two pipelines? The other one ran west to Poti. That irritated Russia because it didn’t control that one so they bombed it out of existence in August. They bombed the BTC too but they missed. Russia doesn’t want anyone else to control non-gulf petro. That would imply independence. That’s the energy lesson. Care enough to resist aggression. Care enough to support independence.
Outcomes. Money. Energy. What about freedom and democracy? It is popular to be cynical about those topics. In some circles it lends cred to people who disdain those motives and ideals.
You’ll read things like “as a matter of state we could give a rat's a** about democracy in Georgia.” Don’t believe it. I was there before, during and after the Rose Revolution. I knew some of the players and I was an advisor to the man who became prime minister after Zurab Zhvania died. We most certainly “as a matter of state” cared about democracy in Georgia. I don’t say that our motives were entirely pure (I don’t know otherwise either) but I do say we cared. It was better afterward than it had been before and better in 2008 than 2004. That’s the definition of progress, not whether it all got perfect overnight. It’s a matter of state.
It wasn’t always so about freedom and democracy, either. Once they were rallying cries that united Americans and gave hope to the rest of the world that they, too, might someday break the chains of their tyrants. Don’t think so? Everyone of age in Georgia knows the difference between life today and life from Lenin to Gorbachev. No, it’s not always easy today but it is freer. Freedom is good. Freedom is to die for. There are way too many people who want to take freedom away from Georgians… and from you.
In another format I wrote this:
1. America's doctrine regarding the invasion of allies and the suppression of liberty is known and it is this:
“Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty.”
2. Another president said this:
"Younger parents aren't sure that an unambivalent appreciation of America is the right thing to teach modern children. And as for those who create the popular culture, well-grounded patriotism is no longer the style. Our spirit is back, but we haven't reinstitutionalized it. We've got to do a better job of getting across that America is freedom--freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of enterprise. And freedom is special and rare. It's fragile; it needs protection."
Would that I could write and speak as well. Will we turn our backs on our giants in favor of hiding in dark rooms and hoping that no one finds us and hurts us? Will no one say "Stop! Not on my watch."
As long as I've indulged in quotes already I'll end with this one:
"Better to die on your feet than live on your knees."
Maybe you really don’t care about Georgia or freedom or progress or where your money’s going. Not caring is allowed in America. But if you are a concerned American citizen who wants, who demands a say in how this country is run and in what state it and its world will be left to your children, then care about Georgia and what it symbolizes. Care enough to say “Stop! Not on my watch” when Georgia is imperiled. It’s in your own best interest.