America's
Top Exports:
Grief, Sorrow, And Loss
By Mickey Z.
11 February,
2008
Countercurrents.org
"Their lives are bigger than any big idea."
- "Peace on Earth," U2
My mother passed away on January
12, after a long illness. She was nearly 72 and had been very ill
since mid-2005. Intellectually, one might think that perhaps I had
time to "come to terms" with a sense of inevitably...yet
I remain inconsolable. Despite having almost three years to "prepare"
for this reality, her death is teaching me previously unimaginable
lessons about grief, sorrow, and loss. My heart is broken, shattered
in a million pieces.
Amidst my mourning, I can't help but visualize the feelings of grief,
sorrow, and loss being experienced in places directly and indirectly
impacted by US policies. Imagine if you will, a mother in Iraq. She
walks to the market as an American bomb levels her home. Her parents,
her husband, her children (none of whom were affiliated with the "insurgency"):
all killed. What of her grief, sorrow, and loss...as the US continues
to spend one million dollars per minute on war?
And it's not just military murders. Every two seconds, somewhere on
the planet, a child starves to death. More grief, sorrow, and loss.
More anger and frustration, too. Columnist and author Norman Solomon
recently shared similar emotions when his mother died. "Our own
mourning should help us understand and strive to prevent the unspeakable
pain of others," he wrote. "And whatever love we have for
one person, we should try to apply to the world."
There's a line in the song, "Middle of the Road" by the
Pretenders: "When you own a big chunk of the bloody Third World...the
babies just come with the scenery."
What's that...we don't own anything here or in the Third World? Here's
the equation, friends: American tax dollars (and our rhetoric and/or
our support and/or our silence) fund and/or enable US domination of
institutions like the World Bank. As a result, the developing world
spends $13 on debt repayment for every $1 it receives in aid. That
means untold billions are allocated toward paying off debt to powerful
Western banks instead of being invested in water systems, infrastructure
to rural communities, education, and health care.
A 2004 UNICEF report on the State of the World's Children found:
* One in
six of the children on the planet were severely hungry
* One in seven had no access to health care
* One in five had no safe water
* One in three had no toilet or sanitation facilities at home
* 640 million children did not have adequate shelter
* 140 million children, the majority of them girls, had never been
to school
More than 10 million child deaths were recorded in 2003, with an estimated
29,158 children under 5 dying from mostly preventable causes every
day.
29,158. Under 5. Every day. From preventable causes.
The next time you're at a baseball game or rock concert, glance around
and get a feel for what 29,158 looks like. Then try your best to conceive
of the feelings of grief, sorrow, and loss inspired by those 29,158...each
and every day. These are humans, not statistics. They feel as much
as you or I. If they feel anything like I do right now, they are utterly
despondent.
"In mediaspeak and political discourse, the human toll of corporate
domination and the warfare state is routinely abstract," wrote
Solomon. "But the results-in true human terms-add rage and more
grief on top of grief."
These doomed humans cry, they mourn, they miss loved ones, and they
ask why when the UN tells them that the basic nutrition and health
needs of the world's poorest people would cost only $13 billion a
year (that's less than 10% of what the US has spent on the war in
Iraq so far).
Remember: every two seconds, somewhere on the planet, a child starves
to death. Meanwhile, the US spends one million dollars per minute
on war. Do the math: How much of our money was spent on war and how
many children starved to death while your read this article?
We often hear the question: "Why do they hate us?"
We give them an excellent reason every 2 seconds and a million more
reasons every single minute.
Mickey Z. is the author of the forthcoming novel,
CPR for Dummies (Raw Dog Screaming Press). He can be found on the
Web at http://www.mickeyz.net.


