I realized tonight why I shed tears as I think about the loss of our dignity, the fall of our economy, the lapse in status we are experiencing on the world stage. It, for me anyway, has nothing to do with money, nothing to do with my own personal finances, and nothing to do with loss of homes, mine included.
There is a true catastrophe unfolding in Haiti, following the massive earthquake. Thousands, maybe tens or even hundreds of thousands, are dead or dying. This horrible disaster will leave that country crippled in more ways than we can imagine. But, it would serve us well to imagine it, anyway. What Mother Nature has wrought in Haiti is likely to befall America at some point, but ours is entirely man-made and economic, in nature.
What caught my attention, and imagination, is this:
First on the scene in Haiti are the US Special Command from the Air Force, right after a few contingents who were already based there, before the disaster.
Next up-a group of specialists in disaster organization and engineering, sent by charities and universities in the US.
US Marines are on the way, if not already there, not to wage war, but to make sure the peace is maintained, as much as they can. That will be a tall order.
Tomorrow, if not already, a group of US experts on air traffic control will arrive. They will help coordinate the efforts and arrange landing schedules for the massive aid efforts that are expected in the coming weeks.
They were preceded by flights over the country by the USAF, to ascertain, as best they could, where it would be possible to land supplies by air or sea.
See a pattern here?
The US has been at the forefront of aid efforts like this countless times, usually unheralded, often unrecognized after the fact. Though we were slow in our own disaster, Katrina, we have always stood out to the rest of the world as the "shining beacon of hope". We ARE, or WERE, that light in the shadow, the dream that ANY nation could aspire to, and, possibly, hope to attain. Around the world, I believe millions, or billions, looked at us and said, "Why not here? Why not me? Why not NOW?"
Our economic troubles of the last two years weigh heavily on my mind. If we fall, what of the rest of the world?
And we are perilously close to falling. So close that I am preparing my family for that possibility. That is something I considered lunacy a short time ago. Now I view it as necessity. Frightening times surround us.
But my greater fear is this:
What if our Haiti mission is the last?
Who, then, will the world look to?
Will the world even BE there to look?
Will it matter?
Those are the thoughts that occurred to me, as our bankrupt nation did what we have always done-lend a hand to friends and neighbors in their darkest hour.
Yet, it seems OUR darkest hour is forthcoming.
Who, then, will airlift aid to us, and coordinate relief efforts? Who will stand with us, at OUR moment of need?
I fear it will be no one. Yet, I can hardly cast blame, since much of the world already views the economic collapse as being an American creation.
And they may be right.
God help us.
Best,
-dmc
There is a true catastrophe unfolding in Haiti, following the massive earthquake. Thousands, maybe tens or even hundreds of thousands, are dead or dying. This horrible disaster will leave that country crippled in more ways than we can imagine. But, it would serve us well to imagine it, anyway. What Mother Nature has wrought in Haiti is likely to befall America at some point, but ours is entirely man-made and economic, in nature.
What caught my attention, and imagination, is this:
First on the scene in Haiti are the US Special Command from the Air Force, right after a few contingents who were already based there, before the disaster.
Next up-a group of specialists in disaster organization and engineering, sent by charities and universities in the US.
US Marines are on the way, if not already there, not to wage war, but to make sure the peace is maintained, as much as they can. That will be a tall order.
Tomorrow, if not already, a group of US experts on air traffic control will arrive. They will help coordinate the efforts and arrange landing schedules for the massive aid efforts that are expected in the coming weeks.
They were preceded by flights over the country by the USAF, to ascertain, as best they could, where it would be possible to land supplies by air or sea.
See a pattern here?
The US has been at the forefront of aid efforts like this countless times, usually unheralded, often unrecognized after the fact. Though we were slow in our own disaster, Katrina, we have always stood out to the rest of the world as the "shining beacon of hope". We ARE, or WERE, that light in the shadow, the dream that ANY nation could aspire to, and, possibly, hope to attain. Around the world, I believe millions, or billions, looked at us and said, "Why not here? Why not me? Why not NOW?"
Our economic troubles of the last two years weigh heavily on my mind. If we fall, what of the rest of the world?
And we are perilously close to falling. So close that I am preparing my family for that possibility. That is something I considered lunacy a short time ago. Now I view it as necessity. Frightening times surround us.
But my greater fear is this:
What if our Haiti mission is the last?
Who, then, will the world look to?
Will the world even BE there to look?
Will it matter?
Those are the thoughts that occurred to me, as our bankrupt nation did what we have always done-lend a hand to friends and neighbors in their darkest hour.
Yet, it seems OUR darkest hour is forthcoming.
Who, then, will airlift aid to us, and coordinate relief efforts? Who will stand with us, at OUR moment of need?
I fear it will be no one. Yet, I can hardly cast blame, since much of the world already views the economic collapse as being an American creation.
And they may be right.
God help us.
Best,
-dmc
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