|
I woke up Saturday morning thinking how wonderful it is to live
in New Hampshire during the presidential primary season. I was going
to go see Senator Hillary Clinton in afternoon for some "conversation"
at a local high school, and Barack Obama had just announced his
presidency and would be coming back to New Hampshire on Monday to
speak with New Hampshire voters.
I first heard Hillary Clinton speak some sixteen years ago when
I was a student at Wellesley College. At that time, she was stumping
for her husband’s first presidential campaign and also speaking
passionately about the need to protect and nurture our most valuable
resource: children. I liked her then (she was a Wellesley woman,
after all), voted for her husband, and can still remember the sense
of elation I felt on that Tuesday evening in November 1992 when
Bill Clinton won the U.S. Presidency. On Saturday afternoon, I pressed
into the Concord High School gym with hundreds of others to see
and hear what Hillary had to say about her own presidential vision.
As I found a seat I pondered an idea that could make any feminist
giddy: For the first time in U.S. history, there could be a woman
president. During the program, she said some things I really
liked. She was adamant about keeping abortion “safe, legal
and rare,” and mentioned the need for conservation twice during
her speech. That said, she had a black glossy SUV waiting for her
outside that I’d bet gets less than fourteen mpg.
However, she had nothing of substance to say
about the madness in Iraq. And she did not commit to do
the one thing that the Senate can do within its constitutional power
to end the Iraq occupation – vote against the $100 billion
supplemental budget request when it comes up for a vote later this
spring.
Afterwards I joined the throng surrounding her – most were
people who wanted books signed and pictures taken, for she really
is like a rock star – to ask her about a statement she made
last week about Iran in which she said “no options are off
the table.” I asked her how she could threaten nuclear genocide
on another nation’s children. She told me that we cannot
tolerate a nuclear-armed Iran, for it would be an “existential”
threat to the U.S., and repeated that all options are on the table.
When I tried to ask her about the very real role the U.S. is playing
in spurring proliferation with our repeated threats and actual nuclear
arsenals, she said she didn’t want to discuss it and turned
away stiffly.
Now I’m really glad that I majored in philosophy at Wellesley,
so I have at least a cursory grasp of concepts like “existential.”
It’s interesting that Hillary used the word, because it’s
not a term used much in American political vernacular. It’s
much more common in Israel, where the term is used to describe possible,
rather than actual, threats. For instance, from Israel’s perspective,
the whole Middle East is an existential threat. Yes, Hillary, we
do need moral leadership. We need candidates from both sides of
the political aisle who are staunchly and courageously committed
to solutions for international challenges grounded in diplomacy,
international law, and human rights, instead of military power and
the threat and use of nuclear weapons. It’s not Hillary’s
being a woman that is a problem - it’s her humanity. Never
again can the U.S. use nuclear weapons on another nation’s
children. And we, the good citizens of New Hampshire and of this
nation, must not support any candidate who believes that the use
of nuclear weapons can ever be an option.
Anne Miller
Peace Action New Hampshire
|