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Celebrating A Killing
MAN is shot in the head, and joyous celebrations break out 7,000 miles A away. Although Americans are in full agreement that the demise of Osama bin Laden is a good thing, many are disturbed by the revelry. We should seek justice, not vengeance, they urge. Doesn´t this lower us to "their" level? Didn´t the Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr say, "I will mourn the loss of thousands of precious lives, but I will not rejoice in the death of one, not even an enemy"? (No, he did not, but the Twitter users who popularised that misattributed quotation last week found it inspiring nonetheless.) Why are so many Americans...
THE FORCE OF THE DEED
WATCHING the talk shows, thinking about the tumultuous last American decade, reflecting on the death of Osama bin Laden, I feel grateful for many things but not least this: the invisibility of the heroes. For once it is the deed itself that speaks. The deed, so often lost in this age of celebrities and reality shows and Donald Trump´s monumental ego, stands unadorned. In its daring, its professionalism and its effectiveness, the deed is there, making words look cheap. The deed was that of the 79 US commandos, who have met with their commander-in-chief, President Obama, and who are known to one another, but are unknown to us. For secrecy is their covenant. Dispatched from Jalalabad, Afghanistan...
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