The Rev. Wesley Granberg-Michaelson is a pillar of the Religious Left. In his youth, he worked on the staff of liberal Republican Senator Mark Hatfield. Today he is general secretary of the American branch of the Dutch Reformed Church (a far different denomination from what it was in William the Silent’s day). Writing on the modestly named God’s Politics blog (maintained by leftist fakir Jim Wallis of Sojourners), he preached yesterday about how to apply the “lessons of Vietnam” to the Iraqi campaign. The sermon is the usual hogwash, but one sentence struck me. About the other side of the Vietnam debate, he says dismissively, “Despite their dire predictions of outcomes, today U.S. companies are racing to catch up with other corporations heavily investing in Vietnam’s economy.”
As Mark Tooley observes,
Yes, thirty years later, free enterprise is taking root in still communist-governed Vietnam. But this follows at least 1.7 million killed by the communist genocide in Cambodia in the immediate aftermath of the war, along with tens of thousands murdered by the victorious communists in Laos and in reunified Vietnam. There were also the concentration camps, hundreds of thousands of fleeing refugees, thousands of whom drowned at sea, and decades of totalitarian oppression, where free speech and rule of law were extinguished by nightmarish police states.
Yet, to the Rev. Mr. Granberg-Michaelson, the “dire predictions” are disproven by the fact that multinational corporations nowadays find that they can do business with Hanoi. If that is the Religious Left’s standard, what, in the Ground of All Being’s name, so upset them about General Pinochet?
John Kerry wrote an essay on Youk Chhang for Time magazine's "100 Most Influential People."
http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/time100/article/0,28804,1595326_1615754_1615879,00.html
In addition to praising Youk's admirable dedication to justice, it would have been refreshing had he acknowledged and apologized for his own role in removing US influence from Southeast Asia.
Posted by: Mike Kriskey | Sunday, May 13, 2007 at 01:09 PM