Moral
and Intellectual Confusion
Keith Olbermann
MSNBC, 8/30/06
The man who sees
absolutes, where all other men see nuances and shades of meaning, is
either a prophet, or a quack.
Donald H. Rumsfeld is not
a prophet.
We end the countdown
where we began, our #1 story, with a special comment on Mr. Rumsfeld’s
remarkable speech to the American Legion yesterday. It demands the deep
analysis - and the sober contemplation - of every American. For it did
not merely serve to impugn the morality or intelligence - indeed, the
loyalty - of the majority of Americans who oppose the transient occupants
of the highest offices in the land; worse, still, it credits those same
transient occupants - our employees - with a total omniscience; a total
omniscience which neither common sense, nor this administration’s
track record at home or abroad, suggests
they deserve.
Dissent and disagreement
with government is the life’s blood of human freedom; And not
merely because it is the first roadblock against the kind of tyranny
the men Mr. Rumsfeld likes to think of as "his" troops still
fight, this
very evening, in Iraq.
It is also essential.
Because just every once in awhile… it is
right - and the power to which it speaks, is wrong.
In a small irony,
however, Mr. Rumsfeld’s speechwriter was adroit in invoking the
memory of the appeasement of the Nazis. For, in their time, there was
another government faced with true peril - with a growing evil - powerful
and remorseless. That government, like Mr. Rumsfeld’s, had a monopoly
on all the facts. It, too, had the secret information. It alone had
the true picture of the threat. It too dismissed and insulted its critics
in terms like
Mr. Rumsfeld’s - questioning their intellect and their morality.
That government
was England’s, in the 1930’s. It knew Hitler posed no true
threat to Europe, let alone to England. It knew Germany was not re-arming,
in violation of all treaties and accords. It knew that the hard evidence
it had received, which contradicted it’s own policies, it’s
own conclusions - it’s own omniscience - needed to be dismissed.
The English government of Neville Chamberlain already knew the truth.
Most relevant of all - it "knew" that its staunchest critics
needed to be marginalized and isolated. In fact, it portrayed the foremost
of them as a blood-thirsty war-monger who was, if not truly senile -
at best morally or intellectually confused. That critic’s name…
was Winston Churchill.
Sadly, we have no
Winston Churchills evident among us this evening. We have only Donald
Rumsfelds, demonizing disagreement, the way Neville Chamberlain demonized
Winston Churchill. History - and 163 million pounds of Luftwaffe bombs
over England - had taught us that all Mr. Chamberlain had was his certainty
- and his own confusion. A confusion that suggested that the office
can not only make the man, but that the office can also make the facts.
Thus did Mr. Rumsfeld
make an apt historical analogy excepting the fact that he has the battery
plugged in backwards. His government, absolute and exclusive in its
knowledge, is not the modern version of the one which stood up to the
Nazis. It is the modern version
of the government… of Neville Chamberlain.
But back to today’s
Omniscient Ones. That about which Mr. Rumsfeld is confused is simply
this: This is a Democracy. Still. Sometimes just barely. And as such,
all voices count - not just his. Had he or his president perhaps proven
any of their prior claims of omniscience - about Osama Bin Laden’s
plans five years ago - about Saddam Hussein’s weapons four years
ago - about Hurricane Katrina’s impact one year ago - we all might
be able to swallow hard, and accept their omniscience as a bearable,
even useful recipe, of fact, plus ego. But,
to date, this government has proved little besides its own arrogance,
and its own hubris.
Mr. Rumsfeld is
also personally confused, morally or intellectually, about his own standing
in this matter. From Iraq to Katrina, to flu vaccine shortages, to the
entire "Fog of Fear" which continues to envelope this nation
- he, Mr. Bush, Mr. Cheney, and their cronies, have - inadvertently
or intentionally - profited and benefited, both personally, and politically.
And yet he can stand up in public, and question the morality and the
intellect of those of us who dare ask just for the receipt for the Emporer’s
New Clothes.
In what country
was Mr. Rumsfeld raised? As a child, of whose heroism did he read? On
what side of the battle for freedom did he dream one day to fight? With
what country has he confused… the United States of America?
The confusion we
- as its citizens - must now address, is stark and forbidding. But variations
of it have faced our forefathers, when men like Nixon and McCarthy and
Curtis LeMay have darkened our skies and obscured our flag. Note - with
hope in your heart - that those earlier Americans
always found their way to the light and we can too.
The confusion is
about whether this Secretary of Defense, and this Administration, are
in fact now accomplishing what they claim the terrorists seek: The destruction
of our freedoms, the very ones for which the same veterans Mr. Rumsfeld
addressed yesterday in Salt Lake City, so
valiantly fought.
And about Mr. Rumsfeld’s
other main assertion, that this country faces a "new type of fascism."
As he was correct to remind us how a government that knew everything
could get everything wrong, so too was he right when he said
that - though probably not in the way he thought he meant it.
This country faces a new
type of fascism - indeed.
Although I presumptuously
use his sign-off each night, in feeble tribute… I have utterly
no claim to the words of the exemplary journalist Edward R. Murrow.
But never in the trial of a thousand years of writing could I come close
to matching how he phrased a warning to an earlier generation of us,
at a time when other politicians thought they (and they alone) knew
everything,
and branded those who disagreed, "confused" or "immoral."
Thus forgive me for reading
Murrow in full:
"We must not
confuse dissent with disloyalty," he said, in 1954. "We must
remember always that accusation is not proof, and that conviction depends
upon evidence and due process of law. We will not walk in fear - one,
of another. We will not be driven by fear into an age of un-reason,
if we dig deep in our history and our doctrine, and remember that we
are not descended from fearful men; Not from men who feared to write,
to speak, to associate, and to defend
causes that were - for the moment - unpopular."
And so, good night, and
good luck.
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