It is always lamentable when killings become a common everyday
occurrence and in particular when many of the victims are innocent civilians,
children women, and old people. It is especially chilling when death and
destruction becomes a daily affair by the forces that were meant to protect the
population against foreign enemies and to guard their rights and privileges. It
is especially disheartening when “evil” is rationalized as essential since that
transforms a shameful and ignominious act into a trite one. That is the danger
of allowing murder, and oppression to metamorphose into a sterilized, common
and hackneyed accounting of those killed every day in cold blood by a ruthless
dictatorship whose sole interest is to maintain its ability to oppress, exploit
and abuse.
Taking away life of civilians of all ages, including
children, by their own government just because they dared protest against
tyranny is always wrong. Obviously, deontological philosophy will never permit
such egregious acts since it is based on a profound understanding of our moral
and ethical obligations to each other. But neither would consequentialism, its
opposite, approve of murderous acts that would not prevent greater numbers of
people to be killed in the future.
The irony of the daily horrendous events of loss of life in
Syria is that the tragic loss of life is being used by those that are
essentially responsible for it as an excuse and a rationale for them to
continue their senseless spilling of innocent blood by ordering heavy artillery
and tanks to level neighbourhoods that dared demonstrate for democracy and
personal rights. It is paradoxical when the oppressors who had over forty years
to adopt some reforms and let the sunshine into the dark and rotten dungeons
that they have built start portraying themselves as reformers and as democrats.
The foreign minister of this rotten regime, Walid Al Moualem, even declared
that the Syrian Ba’ath gang is ready to teach the world a lesson in democracy. He
has no shame, neither do his fellow conspirators. I wonder whether Mr. Al
Moualem even knows what is the meaning of democracy, citizenship, human rights,
diversity, personal responsibility… Obviously his Don; Bashar Assad does not,
as it was made amply clear in his interview with Danish TV where he said that
he implied that he is a dictator who knows best what is good for the Syrian
people, their personal preferences be damned. It was also laughable when he
told ABC TV , just a few months ago, that he was not in control of what goes on
in Syria and so he must not be held accountable for the approximately 6000 lost
lives, tens of thousands of prisoners, many city quarters across Syria
demolished or an economy that is about to implode.
It is not uncommon for individuals to have a distorted vision
of reality but when the preservation of such a vision results in the deaths of thousands and the
destruction of dreams then that paranoia and delusion cross a redline. The acts
of the last year have made it amply clear that those in control of the Syrian
government are driven purely by personal ambition to stay in power and to
exercise their tyranny and oppression. Syria as a country that belongs to 22
million people is an alien idea to them since the country is a fiefdom for the
Assads and their clan, a mentality based in a pure vision of personality cult
worship and a party that is all knowing.
Is there a place for such tyranny and repression or do the
citizens have the right and the moral obligation to put an end to a half a century
of exploitation and abuse? It has been long in coming but finally the Syrian
brothers have awoken from their slumber and have taken a stand for what is right
and just. It is the Ba’ath and Bashar that have tried to exploit the situation
over the past year in order to distract the revolutionaries from demanding what
is rightfully theirs; the ability to decide their own destiny. Bashar could
have avoided all this bloodshed had he declared his intension to hold free
elections and to introduce meaningful reforms over a year ago. He chose not to
do so only because he did not believe that the Syrian masses deserve to be
treated with dignity. Let him reap what he has sown.
8 comments:
Ghassan, A great graphic. Is that based on the godfather?
Dear Ghassan
Outstanding words. This is a must read.
Thanks for the kind words OTW.
I read this thanks to OTW and you hit the mark.
The president could have avoided that one year ago had he listened to the wave rolling from Tunisia to Egypt.
His first speech was a real catastrophy but little did I imagine that it would be followed by such a butchery
Annie, I wrote some time ago that it would be irrational to expect a dictatorship to reform itself into its antithesis. I still believe that it cannot be done.
Dear Ghassan
Is there any chance I can get that text you have referred to about the irrationality of expecting dictators to reform. I recall having read it but can't find it.
When theѕe troubles commencе to set іn, men will unсover themsеlves
gοing to the washroom a number of occаsіons а еvening,
possessing few rеstful nіghtѕ
of sleep, and often find themѕеlves гather frustrated
or embaгrassed.
Ηere is my web-site: Super Beta Prostate Reviews
What does an ab exercise mean?
Take a look at my blog post: Flex Belt Reviews
Post a Comment