A
DAD TACKLES THE REALLY TOUGH ONES
May
3, 2007
Michael
Smerconish
ON SUNDAY, I took my three
sons to the annual A-Day celebration at Delaware Valley College in Doylestown.
Think farm animals, kids' activities, decent food. The milkshakes are
legendary.
A-Day is staged a baseball's
throw from where the Manion family resides. I know, because my mom sold them
their house.
We had no way of knowing it,
but as my boys and I slurped our shakes and soaked in the sun, a Marine
contingent would soon arrive to tell the Manions that their 26-year-old son
Travis had just died in Iraq. It's a disturbing thought - me, enjoying my boys,
while a nearby family from the town where I was raised got the tragic news.
Especially disturbing when I
recall the conversation in our car as we drove home. My oldest son is 11,
starting to think big thoughts. When we got home, I quickly recreated our
discussion. You can quarrel with my answers, but I'm proud of his
questions.
"Dad, we looked
at a Web site in school this week that shows how world population keeps going
up. I'm worried we are going to run out of things like places to live and
food."
"We have plenty of food
and space in this country. Next time we fly to California, you can have a
window seat and see how much land here is still undeveloped."
"But that's desert and
tornado areas, and other places you don't want to live."
"Some of it is. Still,
if you're worried about your future, I think illegal immigration and energy are
more serious problems than where to live and what to eat. If you ask me,
energy independence is the greatest challenge we face."
"France uses nuclear
power. Maybe we should do that."
"To some extent, we do.
But cars are our big problem, and they can't run on nukes. We don't use public
transportation in this country, we all drive. That makes us dependent on people
in the Mideast for oil because that's where most of it is. It's also why
there's always conflict in the Mideast. Everyone wants the oil."
"Dad, I'm
confused about something. Who were the Sept. 11 hijackers?"
"Nineteen guys, most of
them from Saudi Arabia."
"If they were from
Saudi Arabia, why are we at war with Iraq?"
"Iraq had nothing to do
with Sept. 11. But after Sept. 11, there was a consensus that we wouldn't let
ourselves be victims of terrorism again if we could first take action against
people who were about to harm us."
"Was Iraq about to harm
us?"
"No, it turns out they
weren't. Our government mistakenly thought Iraq had an evil plan which you hear
referred to as weapons of mass destruction."
"If they didn't have
those weapons, why did we go to war?"
"Because our president
believed they did have them, based on what he was told by our intelligence
people."
"Did the president tell
the truth?"
"He and his advisers
were wrong. Some people like to say he lied. They think he wanted to settle a
score with Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi leader, because his father had gone to war
with Saddam and Saddam wanted his father killed.
"That isn't what I
believe. I don't think our president is the sort of man who would lie to take
us to war. I think he really believed that Saddam had these terrible weapons
and might use them, and he didn't want a repeat of Sept. 11."
"Does this one guy make
a decision to go to war?"
"No, he relies on his
advisers, and the Congress also voted in support of his using force in
Iraq."
"Why don't they ask us
before they go to war?"
"We have a democratic
form of government. It means we elect leaders who make the difficult decisions
for us. We can't decide important questions like whether to go to war by
polling 300 million people."
"Why aren't we learning
about this in school instead of Robin Hood and the Roman Empire?"
"That stuff is
important, too, and I wish you learned about everything. Sometimes it's hard to
teach subjects like this because so many parents have strong and differing
views, and it would put your teacher in a difficult spot to try to present the
facts in a way that everyone would find acceptable. That's why I'm glad you
asked me." *
Listen to Michael
Smerconish weekdays 5:30-9 a.m. on the Big Talker, 1210/AM. Read him Sundays in
the Inquirer. Contact him via the Web at www.mastalk.com.