As I’ve said, been studying the life of Herbert Hoover, a complicated person who was responsible for saving millions of lives around the world during its wars and disasters but bears the historical onus of neglecting his own people in our great crisis. In Kenneth Whyte’s massive biography, I ran across an interesting passage. It states how Hoover felt that WWI would forever change how societies dealt with each other.
“Total war [Hoover] realized engendered total hate.”
That’s an interesting observation. World wars tend to change
the paradigm of history. Our politicians today spend the money that could be used
to feed the hungry to buy bombs. In an oxymoronic dribble that only fools would
cherish, they claim that war brings peace.
Does it? Or does our warlike compulsion resonate more like peeling
away layers of an onion representing our society, revealing a more pungent evil
with each stripping?
When one considers how so many so-called followers of the
Galilean have abandoned his sermon of love and now embrace and worship our dictator’s
rages of hate, we weep for Zion. It seems that in the history of Homo sapiens,
we have learned much more about how to destroy than how to love.
In short, we have abandoned our better nature, layer by
layer.


