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	Enabling Israeli Aggression:  
	Moral Imperatives America Needs To Address
	 
	By Ben Tanosborn 
	Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, March 24, 2010 
	   Back in June 2009, President Barack Obama stated clearly and 
	categorically that providing Americans with affordable health insurance is 
	not just an economic but a moral imperative.  At that time he 
	advocated, and appeared committed to, a so-called “public option” plan that 
	would help create competition in the delivery of health-care… in contrast to 
	the oligopoly status that insurers maintain today.   Nine months 
	later, and with a clear showing of how America is governed – or at the very 
	least legislated through a corporate-interests controlled Congress – a 
	minimalist version of near-universal health-care, without a public option or 
	even a formula to keep costs in check, is being signed into law while an 
	unhappy, GOP-led part of America promises to fight the implementation of 
	such legislation tooth and nail.   Signing of the diluted health-care 
	bill by the President will take place tomorrow, March 23, the same day he is 
	scheduled to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu on 
	yet another diluted version of US foreign policy, and the always elusive 
	prospects for peace between Israel and the Palestinians.  Two clear 
	opportunities, back to back, to look into this nation’s conscience and 
	ascertain the moral imperatives for both the welfare of its citizens and for 
	world peace.   Truth be said, our American government always seems to 
	operate with a conscience-in-progress, thus circumventing any recognition or 
	acknowledgement of moral imperatives.  Forget about Immanuel Kant, 
	Jean-Paul Sartre or the Golden Rule!  And so it happened with the 
	one-year struggle in enacting second rate health-care legislation; and now 
	in our latest surrender to the shaper of our foreign affairs’ conscience, 
	Israel.   It is sad, while laughable, that Israel’s government 
	announced plans to build 1,600 new homes in occupied east Jerusalem while 
	officially welcoming US Vice President Joe Biden on a peace mission; this, 
	one day after the Obama White House had hailed the beginning of indirect 
	peace talks between Israel and Palestinians.  Our government’s 
	indignation was said to be great… but for masochist America, when it comes 
	to matters pertaining to Israel, only the anticipated protocol was to be 
	heard.  No condemnation by Congress or any other credible act, God 
	forbid… just a verbal slap on the wrist as Bibi Netanyahu kicks our “God 
	Bless America” ass!     A verbal slap that will a day later be 
	taken back, as Hillary Clinton tells omnipotent and omnipresent AIPAC 
	(American Israel Public Affairs Committee) Monday morning (3/22) that US 
	commitment to Israel is “rock solid”… hours before Netanyahu tells this same 
	powerful group, by omission, of his intransigent ways: refusing to give back 
	occupied territories, accepting any part of Jerusalem as the capital of a 
	Palestinian state, ceasing and desisting in the continuance of more Israeli 
	settlements in occupied Palestinian land, and underlining the inappropriate 
	time (too early) for the creation of a Palestinian state.  No, 
	Netanyahu’s tripartite approach to any negotiations (political, security and 
	economic) appears as just another boondoggle for leaving things as they are 
	today.    At present, about 8 percent of Israel’s population lives in 
	occupied lands in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, giving Israel grounds 
	for some type of future joint-governing; more so if an Israeli heritage plan 
	announced in February is allowed to go forward.  Both reasons and 
	excuses have for years created a continuous impasse in getting to the 
	negotiating table; that, together with the inability of the international 
	community to force a resolution knowing that the United States is 
	predisposed to listen only to what Israel has to say.  Time after time 
	the world community, via the United Nations, has condemned Israeli actions 
	affecting the creation of settlements in occupied territories and the 
	treatment of the Palestinian people; most recently, the inhumane manner in 
	which Israel deals with 1.5 million Palestinians who live, as if under 
	siege, in Gaza.   That brings us to the question: if the world at 
	large sees the need for social justice for the Palestinians as a moral 
	imperative, why is it that we do not?  And the follow-up question: are 
	we so righteous as to think we hold the truth in our hands, while the rest 
	of the world does not?   Yesterday I was reading a statement by Kaiser 
	Permanente, the not-for-profit health care organization to which I have 
	entrusted my physical well-being.  Under the title “Where we stand on 
	health care reform,” KP gave in just a couple of hundred words an account of 
	what health care reform should be.  To them, affordable universal 
	health care is, without saying so, a moral imperative.   There is a 
	moral conscience, one that encompasses more than just Judaeo-Christian 
	values, or those of other religions or philosophies.  And there are 
	moral imperatives that emanate from that moral conscience.  
	Unfortunately, many Americans, often for selfish reasons, prefer not to 
	address some of them… as in the case of universal health-care, or in social 
	justice for the Palestinians now under Israel’s thumb.    Ben 
	Tanosborn www.tanosborn.com       
	   
	 
       
       
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