I love this article by Gerard Baker, from the UK Times Online: What have the Americans ever done for us? Liberated 50 million peopleā¦
ONE OF MY favourite cinematic moments is the scene in Monty Pythonās Life of Brian when Reg, aka John Cleese, the leader of the Peopleās Front of Judea, is trying to whip up anti-Roman sentiment among his team of slightly hesitant commandos.
āWhat have the Romans ever done for us?ā he asks.
āWell, thereās the aqueduct,ā somebody says, thoughtfully. āThe sanitation,ā says another. āPublic order,ā offers a third. Reg reluctantly acknowledges that there may have been a couple of benefits. But then steadily, and with increasing enthusiasm, his men reel off a litany of the good things the Romans have wrought with their occupation of the Holy Land.
By the time theyāre finished theyāre not so sure about the whole insurgency idea after all and an exasperated Reg tries to rally them: āAll right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, a fresh water system, and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?ā
I canāt help but think of that scene as I watch the contortions of the anti-American hordes in Britain, Europe and even in the US itself in response to the remarkable events that are unfolding in the real Middle East today.
Oh, and this part is specifically for my friend, Joe Marshall:
It was always the express goal of the Bush Administration to change the regime in Baghdad, precisely because of the opportunities for democracy it would open up in the rest of the Arab world. George Bush understands the simple but historically demonstrable thesis that freedom is not only the most basic of human rights, but also the best way to ensure that nations do not go to war with each other.
In a speech one month before the start of the Iraq war in 2003, Mr Bush laid out the strategy: āThe world has a clear interest in the spread of democratic values, because stable and free nations do not breed the ideologies of murder. They encourage the peaceful pursuit of a better life.ā
Read, as they say, it all. Youāll like. Hattip: Lucianne.com.