Conservatives complain that the left "blames America first." I'm sure there are some on the left who are guilty of going too far in that direction, like saying that 9/11 is all our fault. But I just don't think these conservatives realize how damaging it can be to go too far in the other direction.
I was surprised when I came across Glenn Beck's website
The 9/12 Project -- I could agree with almost all of
the project's principles. The only one I straight up couldn't agree with was "I believe in God and He is the Center of my Life" (why do conservatives insist on tangling government with religion?). The one that made me a little queasy is "America Is Good."
To say "America Is Good," full stop, makes me queasy, not because I think America is bad or because I feel the need to "blame America first," but because it is a blank check. It is unqualified. Regardless of what we actually
do our country is good, according to this attitude.
To me that attitude leads straight to this quote from the elder George H. W. Bush:
I will never apologize for the United States — I don't care what the facts are... I'm not an apologize-for-America kind of guy.
"I don't care what the facts are," and in this case the facts were that a U.S. warship had just shot down a civilian Iranian airliner (
Iran Air Flight 655) that was operating according to its scheduled flight plan. It was transmitting a "friend-or-foe" beacon indicating that it was a civilian aircraft. The U.S. ship launched the missiles from within Iranian territorial waters.
If Iran had shot down a U.S. commercial airliner, we would have been very angry. And in fact, we were very angry when the Soviets shot down
Korean Air 007 five years earlier, even though that aircraft had ventured into Soviet airspace due to a navigational error. Ronald Reagan said at the time:
I'm coming before you tonight about the Korean airline massacre, the attack by the Soviet Union against 269 innocent men, women, and children aboard an unarmed Korean passenger plane. This crime against humanity must never be forgotten, here or throughout the world.
[...]
This was the Soviet Union against the world and the moral precepts which guide human relations among people everywhere. It was an act of barbarism, born of a society which wantonly disregards individual rights and the value of human life and seeks constantly to expand and dominate other nations. --Address to the Nation on the Soviet Attack on a Korean Civilian Airliner.
If shooting down a civilian airliner is so bad (which it is), why do we refuse to apologize for it when we do it? Why does any American excuse the position "I will never apologize for the United States — I don't care what the facts are"?