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01 Dec 2008 01:17 pm
"With Malice Toward None"
A reader writes:
Obama won't pursue war crimes. This is just based on my reading of the man, so obviously I could be completely wrong, but I don't believe that Obama will legally pursue anyone from the Bush administration for war crimes.
And I think this comes out of some very deeply held beliefs on Obama's part. I don't think it's because he doesn't understand the problem, or that he just wants to do what's expedient.
Obama is all about building bridges, and building up ties. When Obama's
white grandmother made racial comments, Obama didn't write her off, or
think of her as a terrible person. I think that instead he saw it as a
kind of misunderstanding, or a rupture that had to be healed. Something
that came out of ignorance. And that doesn't happen if you denounce
people.
I believe that Obama is going to have a very strong instinct toward
decency in our policies, and that he's going to try to rebuild the
American polity so that it is more decent. Part of that will mean a
rejection of torture; part of it will be more compassion for the poor
and the working poor; and part of it will be about reaching out to
people who disagree with him, and trying to bring them on board.
I'm pretty confident that Obama is going to try to justify his new
strategy in the war on terror by getting results. He'll do things the
right way, and work hard to bring the consensus around so that people
in both parties believe in what he's done.
Biden has said that he wants to prosecute, and I'm sure Rahm would want
to as well. But I'll be amazed if Obama does it.
Honestly, I want to prosecute them as well. I'm angry, and I want
vengeance. But I think that's one of the reasons Obama is a better man
than I am.
Remember what Lincoln said:
With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the
right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the
work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who
shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all
which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves
and with all nations.
We need to remember that refraining from punishing someone who does
wrong doesn't mean we don't know right from wrong. It's possible to
have "firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right" and to
have "charity for all". They're not contradictory. Those two things
are, in fact, Christlike.
And think about the context in which Lincoln made that speech -- all of
the things that had happened, and how reasonable vengeance must have
seemed. It was harder for Lincoln to be charitable than it is for us to
do it now, in our present circumstances.
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