America has spoken
Dismayed, I watched the results of the US elections roll in from my small crypt in Hanoi. ‘The American people have spoken’ George Bush proclaimed in his victory speech, after winning the crucial state of Ohio and winning the popular vote by a huge 3.5 million vote margin. Many around the world, not least in the Arab world, will see the result as an endorsement by the American people of the administration’s foreign policy from its last four years in office.
‘Values’, a CNN exit poll revealed, was the surprise issue which swung the election to Bush in the heartland states and smaller communities. Bush’s right-wing Christain fundamentalism appealed to puritanical voters on issues such as gay marriage and Stem Cell research. That these lightweight issues swung a US election in todays world climate is a scary thing. Yes Bush has values, immovable ones, but they are anything other than what I would describe as Christian. Measure a mans values by his actions, not his rhetoric.
Noam Chomsky, in his book ‘Hegemony or Survival’ posits there remain two world powers - The US, and world public opinion. I think that this is contestable - never before has an administration showed such contempt for public opinion, the UN, its traditional allies (NZ included), and the Geneva Convention. And frankly swaths of Americans couldn’t care less about what the rest of us think – excluding of course every American traveller I have met who has stepped out of his or her own backyard and taken a look at the world.
As the most powerful nation in the world, America should practice its altruism and work to strengthen international democratic institutions such as the UN, rather than weakening and undermining them through unilateral action and constant vetos. No country will accept any other as the worlds policeman.
Mr Bush, look at the conditions that breed and incite terrorism – don’t sell the line these people are ‘jealous of our freedoms’. Mr Bush, we all want Democracy, but it’s an oxymoron to think Democracy can be won at the point of a gun - at least any Democracy that I would want to live under. World peace, Mr Bush, will only come through unity, not divisiveness.
If I could have been granted a vote in the US elections my choice too would’ve been driven by moral values - human values - respect and compassion, applying to ourselves what we demand of others.


November 9th, 2004 at 4:49 am
All poetic explanations of my thoughts exactly when I heard he had again taken the role “Leader of the Most Powerful Nation in the World”, a title that I am sure Hitler would have been aiming to achieve.
It’s not surprising to find out that the U.S. is still using a voting system that was instigated in a big way by the then slave-trading southern states, in an effort to hold onto their rights to keep men and women as slaves for as long as possible.
By keeping the most influential voting power in the southern states as opposed to the northern more populated states, it seems even in times like this it can be used to keep America in the dark ages and become un-attached to the U.N’s and the Geneva Convention’s purposes of guarding basic human rights.
And I won’t even mention the billion dollars that was used to fund this election, it’s not like there are people starving in the U.S. or anywhere else in the world, those details are insignificant when compared to the mass purchasing of media to sway(?) a populations opinions.
The fallout of this election? over 1 million Americans applying for residency in Canada the week after the elections? no… a super-power becoming dangerously dominate and causing once allied countries to closely examine their ties? maybe… The deaths of more innocent people caught in the crossfire of “The War on Terrorism”? definately.
I just hope their isn’t going to be another world war in our lifetimes or our childrens…
Thanks for sharing your thoughts on this issue Rog, you sum up so elloquently what alot of us have been feeling/thinking… if only the world could vote…
November 10th, 2004 at 12:44 am
There’s an email joke going around since the election… a map showing “United States of Canada” and “Jesusland”. Speaks for itself.
November 11th, 2004 at 5:21 am
Oo, please forward it on Jac