Meditations - From Martin LeFevre in California Bush and Blair: Vultures at Gleneagles
What do war, poverty, and climate change have in common? Nothing, if Tony Blair has his way at Gleneagles. And because
of that disconnect, failure by the Group of Eight (the richest countries in the world) to adequately address the most
pressing concerns of humankind is a foregone conclusion.
The pressure for what Jef Keighley, co-director of the World Peace Forum in Vancouver, British Columbia, calls “a
quantum shift in thinking with respect to peace, war, and sustainability,” increases by the month. Blair (my fingers
keep typing Bliar), being a bright boy, knows this, and desperately wants to leave something to his name besides the
appellation “poodle.”
As for George W. Bush, he just doesn’t give a damn. Though he and Blair may secretly pray together (given the worldwide
shell game they’ve been playing with prisoners, one could say that those who pray together flay together), Bush hews a
much harder line for the Lord.
One cannot understand the Republican mindset until one understands their view of human nature. They hold that people are
fundamentally selfish, greedy, and tribal. ‘Man’ is inherently evil in their view, which means that children and the
masses must be shaped and controlled--hence their obsession with spin, PR, and propaganda.
As a born-again Christian himself, Blair more or less shares this worldview. But whereas Christianity in America has
reached its dark nadir (to be confused with Darth Vader), the scorch and burn policies born of ‘end days’ madness hasn’t
burrowed so deep in Britain —except, that is, into parts of Blair’s brain. Since the Bushites believe these are the ‘end
days,’ why would they worry about global warming shutting down the ocean currents and causing a precipitous ice age?
(Here’s a riddle. Why do evangelical Christians in America continually talk about being attacked at home, when in fact
Bush, Cheney, and Rove were exhorted and exported from their ranks? Because at some repressed level they know that their
worldview is in its death throes.)
Attitudes toward war cannot be divorced from attitudes toward the earth, much less from policies regarding poverty. From
a reasonable and healthy philosophical and psychological foundation, the connection between war, nature, and poverty is
obvious.
What is not so obvious is the reason for Blair’s disconnect. Does he really believe that he can be the primary prop in
invading a country that posed no threat, and still be a world leader in addressing climate change and poverty in Africa?
Is the man a fool, or is he so sure there is no alternative to his twisted alliance with the Bush Administration that
people will respect him in two out of three areas? Perhaps there is another agenda, both implicit and explicit, since
he’s lowering expectations before the summit by saying, “I am not optimistic but that doesn’t prevent me from being
determined.”
Why is this war criminal focusing on Africa? The fact that Blair has made Africa his pet project fills me with as much
dread about the prospects for that continent (and by extension, for humanity) as the willful neglect coming out of the
Bush Administration.
Blair says, “The people are at the walls.” What walls, except those behind which the club of rich nations wield power?
Human history has moved beyond the nation-state, and national identity and sovereignty have become anachronistic. So
what are we (‘we’ being citizens of the world as it is) to do? Can we let the powerful play their archaic games, while
we build a true global polity? Or is theirs the only game in the global village?
People the world over hunger for a new compact between humans and nature, between the strong and the weak, and between
the rich and the poor. Not only is it not going to come from Bush and Blair, it’s not going to come from within national
frameworks and the international system.
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- Martin LeFevre is a contemplative, and non-academic religious and political philosopher. He has been publishing in
North America, Latin America, Africa, and Europe (and now New Zealand) for 20 years. Email: martinlefevre@sbcglobal.net. The author welcomes comments.