Compassion makes strange bedfellows.
I loathe some of U.S. Senator Josh Hawley’s views. Neither his conduct on January 6 nor his sympathy with the Trump scam alleging voter fraud are remotely justifiable, or good for our country.
But we agree that if you harm people, intentionally or with reckless disregard for their safety, justice may require you to compensate those folks for their injuries, medical expenses, even their pain and suffering.
Well, our country harmed our fellow New Mexicans. And some Missouri folks, too.
In July 1945, the U.S. exposed New Mexicans to a new, poisonous force our leaders knew could cause great harm to anyone in the vicinity. The government planned to deploy the same force to win World War II. So it knew there could be serious harm to U.S. citizens who lived in danger zones, raising their children and growing their crops. Those residents were not told that they were about to be subject to a historically poisonous event. If it didn’t kill them, it poisoned their crops and their animals and their water, and made their very homes poisonous. Many would die slowly and painfully. While the government wrongly figured people wouldn’t be hurt, that’s like me killing that motorcyclist because I hoped I could run the red light. What arrogance! Like a kid trying a highly explosive experiment in his yard, and being sure he had everything under control.
Much is debatable. You can visit the Trinity Site, the Library of Congress, or the terribly moving Hiroshima museum right near the epicenter of the bomb dropped on August 6, 1945. My father and others who fought in the war felt “the Bomb” saved at least 500,000 lives. Other evidence suggests maybe the Japanese military was on its last legs, its most fanatical leaders were even beginning to see that, and the Bomb was a stern message to our next enemy, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. All that is interesting, but perhaps immaterial.
The circumstances explain the secrecy: if you’re about to try a surprise weapon on the Japanese, warning people around the test site might endanger national security. And the neighbors were mostly a bunch of Mexicans, so who cared?
Having an urgent reason to keeping the potential victims in the dark doesn’t make them any less victims. It cures none of the cases of various forms of cancer the U.S. caused its own citizens to suffer, some fatally. Yet for nearly 80 years, we’ve added insult to injury: we’ve let ‘em suffer and die unacknowledged. Not covering their medical costs. Long after any need for secrecy. Whether that was to save face or money, could any government official justify it? Sure haven’t heard anyone try.
Finally, the U.S. may add those folks to the other covered by the Radioactive Exposure Compensation Act. The Senate approved that, 66-31. A majority in the House apparently agrees; but there are fears that Republican House leaders will slyly remove this from the Defense Bill behind closed doors. That ain’t my suspicion, but Senator Hawley’s, a conservative Republican. He’s warned fellow Congresspersons they might be in Washington all through Christmas if they try.
What can we do? Write or call U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and even Speaker of the House Mike Johnson at (202) 225 4000. Urge them to ensure the RECA amendment stays in the final Defense Bill.
It’s the least we can do.
– 30 --
[The above column appeared Sunday, 3 December, in the Las Cruces Sun-News and on the newspaper's website, as well as on KRWG’s website under Local Viewpoints. A shortened and sharpened radio commentary version will air during the week on KRWG (90.1 FM) and on KTAL-LP (101.5 FM / http://www.lccommunityradio.org/). ]
[Do try to call. We owe it to our friends and neighbors – and it’s just the right thing to do. ]
[ Updates on earlier columns:
> with regard to efforts to get the book Jack of Hearts and other Parts tossed out of the Mayfield High Library (see column 3 September 2023), the Las Cruces School Board will here a final appeal by the folks wanting to ban the book, Friday at 9 a.m. at school headquarters. Attendance is a good idea, but to comment you’ll have to write or call or email in advance with what you have to say, because no audience comments will be permitted at the appeal hearing.; and
> with regard to the column on the NMSU Aggies Football Team:
1. The Aggies lost a tough game for the conference championship at Liberty;
2. The Aggies will play Fresno State in the New Mexico Bowl at 3:45 pm on 16 December. The game will also be aired on ESPN.
3. The Aggies whipped Auburn, as described in the column. Auburn then had Alabama beaten until Alabama connected on a last-second 4th down miracle touchdown pass.
4. Alabama the beat No. 1 (and two-time defending champion) Georgia. But for that Alabama miracle play, we could say NMSU whipped 41-10 the team that beat the team that beat the top-ranked team in the nation this year. Again, congratulations, Aggies! And good luck the 16th! ]
No comments:
Post a Comment