
Comprehending evil
I have been fortunate to grow up in safety. I do not live in fear for my life. It is always possible to fall victim to a violent crime, but it is not imminent.
Here in the New Orleans area, we recently had a radio celebrity kill his estranged wife in broad daylight. He shot her in the face twice. He waited by her car until she came out of an office building.
I wondered how a person could just walk up to someone and shoot them. No matter how mad I am at someone, I don't want them dead; I just stay away from them. I put them out of my mind.
This man was so angry or something that he had to have her dead. He at the age of 69 threw the rest of his life away in the process. He once loved her, he certainly knew her, yet he was able to somehow wait for her, talk to her, look at her, and squeeze off two bullets in her face.
The evening news in any city parades criminals and their evil deeds before our eyes as we sit safely in our living rooms. Security cameras show their animalistic behavior. It is a lot like wild kingdom watching a predator hone in on a weak member of the herd.
Something is different about someone who can hurt and kill others like this. Something was certainly evil about the individuals who perpetrated the calamity on September 11, 2001.
Some folks have a problem using the word evil to describe the terrorists we are currently at war with. They feel it is judgmental and arrogant to label someone else evil, because from the terrorists’ point of view, they are only fighting for their cause.
Evil is defined as "profoundly immoral and malevolent." The people who had anything to do with 9/11 fit this definition and then some.
When fleas get on my dog, I don't waste my time trying to reason with them. If roaches are in the kitchen, I don't suggest we sit down and talk about how we can get along, and if someone comes to this country and targets civilians just because they are Americans, I think it is clear what must be done.
Someone enlighten me. When has negotiating with terrorists ever amounted to anything? I find it incredible that some responded to the 9/11 attacks by wondering what America did to anger these folks.
Would you respond that way on the street? If someone came up to you on a street corner and punched you in the nose would you say. "Excuse me my good fellow. Tell me what I did to anger you. How can I make this up to you." Hopefully you would defend yourself.
If I have a problem with my neighbor, we would talk about it; and probably over a beer. That is because we are both willing to compromise. We both believe in the rights of the other. We know that if both of us are happy, then that is the best thing for us both.
The terrorists are focused on one thing. Killing westerners. I suppose we could convert to Islam and save our hides, but that is probably the only thing we could do.
So our choices become limited. I wish our enemy were like my neighbor. I wish we could sit down and talk. That is not an option and it is not by our choice it is by the choice of the terrorists.
They are evil. Yet the only ones who are called to task on human rights and the treatment of women is the good old USA. Incredible.
If 9/11 isn't enough proof that terrorists are evil, then a notarized letter from the Devil wouldn't help either.
How can one man take a knife and saw off the head of another man? How can someone walk on to a bus, notice women and children, then blow themselves up? How can you hate so much that you can't love anymore?
I don't know, but folks like that must be killed. They are wild animals among us. They will continue to wreck havoc until their dying breath.
The best way to remember the 3,000 citizens that died on 9/11 and about that many military personnel who have given their lives in the war on terror is to comprehend the kind of evil we are up against and work to kill it.
May the memorials today serve to renew our resolve to wipe out that evil as it exists in people.
Until the next time
John Strain