FIRST, THEY CAME FOR THE PEACENIKS
War is sell. Propaganda rules, so it's a done deal for Syria and Iran. The peacemongers will be dealt with as part of the same problem. If you're "patriotic," you'll go along.
So get your ribbons and flags ready. They'll be needed for a long time this time. Think of all the Arabs and Muslims yearning to breathe free. We might have to knock off most of them. Freedom isn't free, especially if it's given away.
We can't be neutral while cognizant of the evil-doers' hate of our freedom. Neutrality is so last century, early last century. In 1935 and 1937, the U.S. Congress passed laws to keep us neutral in all foreign disputes and wars. Congress knew the people were sick of war after the terrible First World War, and so they tried to make peace mandatory. Noble, but an act of futility.
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt dared to violate our neutrality laws in both the European and Asian theatres of war. He hired the American Flying Tigers to harass the Japanese invaders of China and sent several U.S. Navy destroyers to sink German submarines bothering British shipping in the North Atlantic.
Presidents use power, often arrogantly, as nearly everyone knows. Things will get worse before we catch on. Someday we'll decide to avoid conflict - like the French, Swiss, Italians, and Swedes who have had enough of war. Their genes remember and they want no more.
In America, it won't suffice to have new neutrality laws (we'll always have presidents willing to act unilaterally). A public feeling, a peace value and an idea that life is precious will finally save the day.
The war profiteers will cry about isolationism. No matter. Americans will tell the world: "If you can't overthrow your Stalins, Hitlers, Castros, Maos, and Saddams, then maybe you don't deserve to live free. Liberties have to be struggled for from the inside out. We'll no longer plant democratic govenments. Oh, neither will we continue to hire our CIA to assassinate your leaders. It's your country and government, you know what your problem is, solve it yourself."
Meanwhile, the happy days are far away, and we must endure the silence of the lambs being led to wars, and more wars. Making wake up calls will be more and more hazardous for those working for peace.
During the Mexican War, Henry David Thoreau went to jail for refusing to pay a tax supporting the war. When Ralph Waldo Emerson visited his friend, he said, "Henry, what are you doing in? Thoreau replied, "Ralph, what are you doing out?"
We'll soon have to decide whether to be in or out.
It's all so simple.