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Taming the Wolf Institute's avatar

In the late 60's Frank Oppenheimer was my physics professor. During the time of the Vietnam War. He invited students to remain after class to discuss current events. As the class was attended primarily by engineering students, there were no takers. I'll always recall the profound sadness that accompanied J. Robert's brother. I made note of the human, emotional scars that remained. (And, as my father, was also a nuclear physicist, I looked there for something similar, which I did not find.) With respect to Gaza, one of my mentors in peacemaking shared with me a year ago that he had attempted to bring about movement with Hamas for over thirteen years. He concluded that it was not possible. The changes in Japan are not possible because of the heartened hearts of Hamas, a very different situation.

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John Anthony's avatar

David, I’m truly impressed by this essay. Twenty or so years ago I naively hoped that Iraq would rise from the ashes as Germany and Japan had after WW2. My disappointment at the outcome led me back to 1968/69 when I was in junior high school and being introduced to multiculturalism. As an Italian-American whose family rose from New York tenements to my father’s impressive career in early nuclear medicine (biology and physics, where many of the pre-eminent Manhattan Project physicists transitioned to, perhaps from a feeling of needing to apply their specialties to helping rather than destroying their fellow humans) and my uncle who was awarded the National Engineering Award (later, by President Clinton), I truly believed in the melting pot theory and I won’t apologize for still believing in it. The realization that multiculturalism had rooted itself so deeply in America’s institutions as I saw all the blood and treasure in Iraq wasted because we were too virtuous to point out that a cultural change, an alignment to Western values, would violate progressive ideology caused a fundamental shift in my own politics. I’ve read enough of your essays to say it makes me happy that you are speaking out and that I can support you.

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