Western leaders taking cues on oppression from the Taliban
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — By now you’ve probably heard that the Taliban — fighters whose battle
fatigues look like those of neo-hippies on campus at the University of
California, Berkeley — are on the verge of being back in charge in Afghanistan.
All thanks to the failed programs funded by Western taxpayers that were
apparently more like Ponzi schemes. How else could one characterize what the
U.S. Defense Department estimated as $815.7 billion spent to stabilize the
country and develop its institutions when the result is the NATO-trained Afghan
army collapsing like it was ordered from an online cheap goods store?
If you can’t create a democracy in Afghanistan after 20 years and hundreds of
billions of dollars, then you aren’t ever going to. But where exactly did all
the money go?
The internet provides some clues. As American and NATO allied troops evacuate
ahead of U.S. President Joe Biden’s Sept. 11 withdrawal date, images have shown
Taliban fighters sliding their flip-flop-clad tootsies into some heavy artillery
co-opted from the NATO-trained Afghan army, whose sub-commanders were bought off
by the Taliban as soon as the training wheels came off.
But that’s not all. Because this is apparently like the Showcase Showdown on
“The Price Is Right,” where the winners played so well that they get to take
home the prizes of all the players.
When NATO troops abandoned the Bagram Air Base earlier this year, ceding it to
the Afghan army protégés whom they had spent the better part of two decades
training, images quickly appeared online of the Taliban commandeering some nice,
shiny gym equipment on that military base. Ah, the spoils of war. Hey, look at
that Taliban guy cranking out reps on that state-of-the-art chest press! Check
out the dude in the long robe and sandals with socks on the stationary bike!
The idea of the Taliban being back in power is enough to make a lot of people
who made personal sacrifices in this war irate. But they see the straw in their
neighbor’s eye rather than the beam in their own, as the biblical saying goes.
Apparently the Taliban are less militant than our own sanitary ayatollahs here
in the West — at least in the gym. They didn’t even have to sign up for a time
slot, apply hand sanitizer and wear masks.
Judging by the lack of social distancing and other Covid-era behaviors in the
Taliban gym videos, it’s hard to imagine that they would impose strict sanitary
measures on the population the way our leaders have here in the West.
“But they’ll probably oppress and kill people with whom they don’t agree!” you
might be saying. Perhaps. But we’re living in countries where leaders are
increasingly using the COVID-19 pandemic pretext to force people to take an
experimental injection or risk losing their livelihood — contrary to the
principles of personal autonomy and free will.
We in Paris have spent the past 17 months being placed periodically on house
arrest for our own “good,” being forced to wear cloth over our faces for fear of
government-imposed punishment, having our movement controlled, and now being
segregated and marginalized if our personal choices don’t align with those of
our rulers. Moreover, when some people speak out against such oppression,
they’re either censored or targeted by institutions or authorities promoting the
government’s official narrative.
And now we’re seeing the leaders of our so-called democracies introducing
increasingly intrusive monitoring through digital technology such as smartphone
applications and QR codes, all under the pretext of ensuring adherence to the
government’s chosen ideology of sanitary purity.
Those among us who have been relieved of critical thought after being bombarded
with fear-driven propaganda now cry out for punishment when a Western woman
whips off her symbolically oppressive mask in her local grocery store, proclaims
her emancipation from the sanitary regime, or rejects the imposition of a
medical act like an injection by claiming, “My body, my choice.”
Indeed, the women of Afghanistan are going to have to contend with the Taliban’s
return to power. But since the pandemic, the governments of allegedly free and
democratic countries are not really in a position to be giving lessons on
liberty to the Taliban or to anyone else. Our governments don’t get to claim
moral authority regarding oppression when they’re increasingly responsible for
perpetrating it themselves.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN