There’s a big news item in Britain
at the moment concerning a young man from the north of England who has become Britain’s
youngest suicide bomber. He was killed fighting for one of the Islamist groups
in an attack on an army post in Kenya.
The report emphasises that he was groomed online, that his family is
devastated, and that it’s a terrible tragedy. Whilst I have every sympathy with
his family, I have to say that this raises a question.
Is it not true that we in the West are groomed by the
Establishment from the earliest age to give unthinking allegiance to the State
and be prepared to die in the service of that institution? It used to be the
tribal leader for whom we were expected to sacrifice our lives, and then it
became the king or emperor. Nowadays it’s the State. There are plenty of people
in Britain
who still laud the concept of Empire and regard ours as having been a great
and glorious thing. When our military personnel die in conflicts ordered by our
politicians we regard them as heroes, and nobody uses words like ‘grooming’ and
‘tragedy.’
So let’s ask the question honestly: why is it so heroic, so
noble, so glorious even, to die at the behest of the Establishment and in the
name of the State, and yet so reprehensible and tragic to die in the name of
something else in which you strongly believe? And while I abhor those who abuse
and kill the innocent individual in the name of God, I feel the same way about
those who do it in the name of allegiance to the State. It happens often
enough.
* * *
I further read today that the tyrant al-Bashir has somehow
managed to circumvent the legal stay on his right to leave South Africa while his war crimes are further
considered, and has flown back to Sudan anyway. Now that’s tragic.
2 comments:
So well put. I know what you mean too, about the Mothership :)
Mothership? So that's where the hum is coming from.
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