| Like
most New Yorkerslike most Americansthe attacks of September
11 made me very angry. In the days after the attacks, I was incredibly
moved by the generosity and humanity that arose as people from all
over the country drove instantly toward New York to help, to work,
to dig, to rebuild spirits. Still, I was angry. Why New York? New
York, more than any other city in the world, encourages diversity
of faith. The peaceful coexistence of different cultures and beliefs
in this city is nothing short of a miracle.
A few years ago, I did a movie called Dead Man Walking.
I think the reason that film led to a dialogue about the death
penalty is that it didn't deligitimize the anger of the victims'
families. Although I would hope to not allow revenge in my heart,
I recognize the legitimacy of this human emotion. So, when our
government went after al-Qa'eda with massive bombing in Afghanistan,
I had a problem with the method but understood the motivation.
For the first time in my adult life, my country was involved in
a military action that was reactive, and I sat silent.
I do not like fundamentalism of any kind. Any movement that connects
violence with God loses mewhether it's the murder of a doctor
at an abortion clinic or the murder of busboys, firemen, or businessmen
in the World Trade Center. Radical fundamentalism, at its core,
hates all the things I love: art, free expression, music, independent
women, theater, good movies. We must be very wise in the way we
frame our argument and how we proceed as we resist this new war.
This is not the chickens coming home to roost. al-Qa'eda are not
farmers looking for self-determination and land rights in Central
America. al-Qa'eda are not Vietnamese peasants dealing with the
napalm from a government that purports to care about them. al-Qa'eda
will not stand shoulder-to-shoulder with those struggling to call
attention to Third World sweatshop labor. In fact, al-Qa'eda's
actions have hurt this burgeoning and important movement more
than any other.
Let us find a way to resist fundamentalism that leads to violencefundamentalism
of all kindsin al-Qa'eda and within our own government.
What is our fundamentalism? Cloaked in patriotism and our
doctrine of spreading democracy throughout the world, our fundamentalism
is BUSINESSthe unfettered spread of our economic interests
throughout the globe. Our resistance to this war should be our
resistance to profit at the cost of human life. Because that is
what these drums beating over Iraq are really about. This is about
business. The business of distracting American attention from
Enron and Halliburton, the financial scandals that directly connect
this Administration to the heart of what is now wrong with the
American economy. These scandals have disappeared from the front
pages of our newspapers as we argue about this war.
In the name of fear and fighting terror, we are giving the reins
of power to oilmen looking for distraction from their disastrous
economic performance. Oilmen more interested in a financial bottom
line than a moral bottom line. Oilmen ready to expand their influence
with new contracts on the soil our bombers have plowednew
contracts forged with governments that do not allow democracy
on their soil for fear of losing control over the oil that governs
their lives. That governs our lives. The majority in America
knows this. A dormant majority in America waits with anticipation
for the politician who will stand in front of the American people
in defiance of the oil companies and advocate alternative energy
as a way to extricate ourselves from this culture of violence
that threatens our future.
Let us resist this war and our impending oil war in Colombia,
and let us resist fundamentalism in all its guises. Let us hate
war in all its forms, whether its weapon is a U.S. missile or
its weapon is a domestic airplane.
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| Accomplished
actor/director TIMOTHY FRANCIS ROBBINS
was born on 16 October 1958, in West Covina, California, although
he grew up in Greenwich Village, New York. He is the fourth and
youngest child of father, Gila member of the folk band The
Highwaymenand Mary, a publishing executive. He currently resides
in New York with actor Susan Sarandon. They have two sonsJack
Henry and Miles Guthrieand a daughter, Eva Maria Amurri, from
Susan's relationship with Italian director, Franco Amurri. |