Celebrating a Media Maverick
(Page 8 of 9)
November / December 2006
Karl Weber from the book The Best of I.F. Stone
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Stone on the Vietnam War
- 'Under the supposed benevolence of our policy one soon detects
a deep animosity to the Vietnamese and a vast arrogance. We assume
the right to remold them, whether they choose to be remolded or
not.'
- 'The simple fact that occupying armies, whether allied or
enemy, always become unpopular hardly ever figures in official
calculation.'
Stone on Robert F. Kennedy and the Vietnam
War
- 'Honor requires the soldier to kill or be killed, whatever his
scruples. But it is not regarded as dishonorable for the politician
to swallow his misgivings and allow the young to go out to die
without protest.'
Stone on World War II
- 'Some of the causes of this war went deeper than any enemy men
or movements.
. . . Some of these causes lie in our own minds and hearts as well
as in those of our defeated enemies.' - 'I wish it were possible to throw on some gigantic screen for
all to see some fraction of the suffering, the treachery, the
sacrifice, and the courage of the past decade. For how are we in
America to fulfill our responsibility to the dead and to the
future, to our less fortunate allies and to our children's
children, if we do not feel a little of this so deeply in our bones
that we will be unswervingly determined that it shall never happen
again?'
Stone on the civil rights movement's March on
Washington
- 'They carried upon them a story more plainly writ than any
banner. These were, literally, the downtrodden and the treadmarks
of oppression were visible upon their faces. They sang, 'We shall
not be moved.' But those who saw them-and what life had done to
them-were moved.'
Stone on the Nazi persecution of Jews
- 'The essence of tragedy is not the doing of evil by evil men
but the doing of evil by good men, out of weakness, indecision,
sloth, inability to act in accordance with what they know to be
right.'
Stone on the hydrogen bomb
- 'Why should these matters be cloaked in secrecy, the decisions
on them made without popular discussion? The lack of real debate
has allowed a thick deposit of dubious ideological fallout to
contaminate the public mind. A whole series of doubtful
propositions have been rubbed in by official statement and their
echoes in a well-coordinated press.'
Stone on Barry Goldwater and his followers
- 'The frontier virtues they claim to embody are as synthetic as
the frontier they inhabit. . . . In their favorite campaign photos,
on that horse and under that ten-gallon Stetson, looking into the
setting sun, is no cowboy or even rancher but a Phoenix
storekeeper. The Western trade he caters to, in business as in
politics, is dude ranch.'
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