June 11, 2007
Torture and Illegal
Spying: Our Illusionary ‘Ring of Power’
In
the epic fantasy Lord of the Rings, a character named Boromir
meets a tragic ending. Charged by his father with protecting the people
of Gondor, Boromir is anxious. The Dark Lord’s power grows and Gondor’s
fighting capabilities decline. Out of fear and desperation, Boromir
tries to take the Dark Lord’s evil ring from Frodo the hobbit and dies
fighting to protect Frodo’s kin from the evil Urukhai.
Boromir’s fall, repentance, valor and death form one of the most moving
sequences of the trilogy. His fate also offers a lesson for the United
States today.
The Boromirs of our time, such as U.S. Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales, are those who frame the conflict in just two choices. Either
we go all out, and in so doing violate this nation’s basic principles by
torturing terror suspects and conducting illegal wiretapping, or we
surrender. These are our only two options, such Boromirs insist. After
all, we do have the right to protect ourselves; thus any means of
self-defense are fully justified.
Back to the trilogy. While Boromir advocates using the One Ring of Power
against the Dark Lord, others disagree. Gandalf the wizard and Elrond
Half-elven argue for a third way. They opt to defend themselves and all
free beings of Middle-earth by destroying the ring and fighting the Dark
Lord’s minions to the best of their ability.
Their reasoning is twofold. The first is strategic deception. The very
last thing the enemy, so blinded by his desire for total power and
control, would ever expect is for his opponents to forswear the means to
become powerful and dominant themselves. In seeking to destroy the ring,
their strategy becomes invisible to the Dark Lord until it is too late.
Their second reason is their wisdom. Learning from history instead of
ignoring it, Gandalf and Elrond know that most rings of power are
inherently evil. The One Ring of Power is the most evil of all. For any
of them to wield it would condemn the wearer of that ring to become an
evil Dark Lord despite his best intentions. The One Ring itself is
inherently evil, and thus has to be destroyed.
“A
treacherous weapon is ever a danger to the hand,” Gandalf warns. This
argument is right out of the prayer Jesus taught to his disciples:
“…lead us not into temptation…” It is also an echo of Lord Acton’s
dictum: “Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
The wise of Middle-earth are well aware of their own limitations and
admit to themselves that they are vulnerable to being corrupted by their
fear of defeat and the temptation to use an evil yet powerful weapon
against their formidable foe. Just as Gandalf and Elrond decline to use
the One Ring, they would also not choose torture or illegal spying were
they in charge of the United States today. They would wisely fear the
corrosive effects of morally indefensible means even to attain a good
end.
Such astute reckoning, of course, flies in the face of current and past
human history, and is the real reason that the Lord of the Rings
is fiction, not reality. Can any of us imagine a nation inventing an
ultimate weapon – say, a nuclear bomb – but not using it? Of course not.
But thanks to the fantasy window dressing in the Lord of the Rings,
we accept the conclusion of wizards and sages without question. Of
course, the good peoples of the west must find a way to destroy the One
Ring lest it destroy them. Magic indeed.
Not so in the post-9/11 United States. If our Boromirs today had the
chance to wield an ultimate weapon like the One Ring of Power, they’d
grab and use it in a heartbeat, dooming themselves and the rest of us.
Lacking such a handy tool, they rely on more prosaic methods.
Yet the effects of torture and illegal spying, while not much of a
spectacle, are no less insidious than those of the One Ring. They are
gnawing away at this country‘s moral standing in the world community,
causing other nations to distrust us even when we are telling the truth
or acting with good intentions. Torture and illegal spying are also
undermining the protections of the U.S. Constitution, which set up this
country as a republic of laws, not a presidential monarchy.
The road to perdition stretches before us. Is it too late to turn back?
© 2007
North Star Writers Group. May not be republished without permission.
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