Heraldnet.com
SUNDAY, JULY 5, 2009 4:25 pm
LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Herald Editorial Board

Bob Bolerjack,
Opinion Editor
bolerjack@heraldnet.com

Carol MacPherson,
Editorial Writer
cmacpherson@
heraldnet.com


Allen Funk,
Herald Publisher
funk@heraldnet.com

Kim Heltne,
Assistant to the Publisher
heltne@heraldnet.com

Send letters to the editor by e-mail to letters@heraldnet.com, by fax to 425-339-3458 or mail to The Herald - Letters, P.O. Box 930, Everett, WA 98206.

 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Saturday


Fireworks blamed in Marysville house fire
Sailors for a day: Naval Station Everett opens ...
Edmonds backs off red-light cameras
Friday
Armed man shot by deputies in Arlington
Police ID make of vehicle in fatal hit-and-run
Boeing's 6-month tally: 1 net order
Thursday


One fire rips through $2 million home, another ...
Swine flu claims 2nd victim in Snohomish County
Jetty Island firefight continues; hot weather ...
Wednesday


Fire District 1 negotiates to take over service...
Snohomish County population rising fast since 2...
Honey's owners indicted by feds
Tuesday


Mobile home tenants along Snohomish River told ...
Lincoln to leave Everett in 2013
Put on your sailor's cap and explore Naval Stat...
Monday


Disabled people will be left without a ride
You'll soon have 4,500 reasons to trade in that...
Pay hike deserved, Monroe chief says
Sunday


1,670 local students in county are without homes
Monroe's business gets done in secret
$9 million to be sought for U.S. 2 in federal t...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Opinion   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
HAVE YOUR SAY
Feel strongly about something? Share it with the community by writing a letter to the editor.
You’ll need to include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) We reserve the right to edit letters, but if you keep yours to 250 words or less, we won’t ask you to shorten it. If your letter is published, please wait 30 days before submitting another.
Send it to:
E-mail: letters@heraldnet.com
Mail: Letters section
The Herald
P.O. Box 930
Everett, WA 98206
Fax: 425-339-3458
Have a question about letters? Contact Carol MacPherson (cmacpherson@heraldnet.com or 425-339-3472).
 
Published: Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Voters made wishes known; they must demand action

These are dark days. We go to work in the dark and come home in the dark.

In between, we're lucky if the sun makes an appearance between the storms of December. These are also the days of holiday and hope. Each of us participates in a festival of light, of love, and of hope for a better future, for peace on earth. But it is hard to express a hope for peace when we have American soldiers halfway around the globe fighting and dying in one war that has already been lost - Iraq.

But perhaps there is more hope to share this year than last. After all, the voters demanded an end to the folly of Iraq in the elections last month.

But don't fool yourself into believing that just because you voted a certain way, or because you might have joined in an anti-war protest before the invasion of Iraq, or not, that you are off the hook now.

Hope is not just a feeling, it demands an action. We can't wait for another Iraq Study Group report to chart a path to peace. We have already destroyed a country, while spending $700 billion and counting. Every day more and more casualties pile up. In the first 11 days of December, 46 American soldiers were killed in Iraq. They include Marine Corps Major Megan Malia McClung, who has family in Coupeville. Major McClung was a graduate of the Naval Academy. She organized a Marine Corps Marathon in Iraq and ran in it.

While she was escorting reporters in Ramadi, she was killed by a roadside bomb.

We want to believe that we are good and moral people, but one vote in one election and one holiday greeting of "peace on earth" don't add up to ethical actions. A moral life demands much more than that.

And that's the problem for all of us. The culture that surrounds us is saturated with the idolatry of material excesses. Our economy zooms along a winner-take-all track, with a few doing very well, the majority of people just hanging on, and everyone encouraged to buy, buy, buy. We are led to believe that our houses are too small, our cars are too old, our bicycles are too heavy. So we have to go out and remodel, trade in, and buy the latest, maxing out our credit cards. Being a consumer trumps being a citizen.

We should expect more from ourselves as Americans. Yes, we can and should vote. But if we leave it there, the president and our elected representatives will take the easy road (for them) of postponing decisions.

So we need to combine the idea of hope with the demand that our members of Congress hold George W. Bush accountable for getting us out of Iraq, quickly.

Democrats are especially responsible, now that they control the House and the Senate. Let's keep in mind that several of them voted to get us into this folly, including Reps. Norm Dicks and Adam Smith, as well as Sen. Maria Cantwell. We need to make Iraq a topic for discussion that won't go away and will make people uncomfortable and uneasy until we get out of the war we created there. The newly elected senator from Virginia, Jim Webb, has already set the example. At a White House reception, President Bush asked him "How's your boy?" referring to Webb's son, a Marine serving in Iraq.

Webb responded, "I'd like to get them out of Iraq, Mr. President."

If the people are silent, then the decider, as George W. Bush likes to call himself, will indeed determine how long to allow the sacrifice of Americans to continue for the sake of his own ego. We claim to be a democracy. In a democracy, the people are active citizens. So we can demand that our government get our troops out of Iraq. In fact, we must. If we want to honor the season of peace on earth, we must end our participation in war in Iraq. And we can only do that if we are, at the foremost, citizens, not shoppers.

John Burbank, executive director of the Economic Opportunity Institute (www.eoionline.org), writes every other Wednesday. Write to him in care of the institute at 1900 Northlake Way, Suite 237, Seattle, WA 98103. His e-mail address is john@eoionline.org.

1. Waves wash away Explosion's title hopes
2. You've got your pick of Fourth of July fun
3. Snohomish entrepreneur bounces back with new venture
4. Inslee downplays fears Boeing will send second 787 line elsewhere
5. Popular park changing hands
6. Deputies shoot armed man near Arlington
7. Why, governor?
8. Edmonds backs off red-light cameras
9. Vehicle that killed girl was Chevy Astro minivan
10. Arlington buys up more water rights
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Warriors looking for balance
Three Scots vying for QB slot
Jackson looks for another title
Decorated veteran continues to serve as active volunteer
City Council reviewing sign regulations
Wildcats get a peek at newcomers
Lynnwood still in rebuilding mode
Shoreline feels a kindergarten growth spurt
Leave the patriotic pyrotechnics to professionals, cities urge
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes


ADVERTISEMENT