Aaron Bushnell’s self-immolation was ultimately a religious act, one that radically delineates good and evil and calls us to resist.
Chris Hedges
Feb. 29, 2024
Aaron Bushnell, when he placed his cell phone on the ground to set up a livestream and lit himself on fire in front of the Israeli Embassy in Washington D.C., resulting in his death, pitted divine violence against radical evil.
As an active duty member of the U.S. Air Force, he was part of the vast machinery that sustains the ongoing genocide in Gaza, no less morally culpable than the German soldiers, technocrats, engineers, scientists and bureaucrats who oiled the apparatus of the Nazi Holocaust.
This was a role he could no longer accept. He died for our sins.
“I will no longer be complicit in genocide,” he said calmly in his video as he walked to the gate of the embassy. “I am about to engage in an extreme act of protest. But compared to what people have been experiencing in Palestine at the hands of their colonizers, it’s not extreme at all. This is what our ruling class has decided will be normal.”
Young men and women sign up for the military for many reasons, but starving, bombing and killing women and children is usually not amongst them.
Shouldn’t, in a just world, the U.S. fleet break the Israeli blockade of Gaza to provide food, shelter and medicine?
Shouldn’t U.S. warplanes impose a no-fly zone over Gaza to halt the saturation bombing?
Shouldn’t Israel be issued an ultimatum to withdraw its forces from Gaza?
Shouldn’t the weapons shipments, billions in military aid and intelligence provided to Israel, be halted?
Shouldn’t those who commit genocide, as well as those who support genocide, be held accountable?
These simple questions are the ones Bushnell’s death forces us to confront.
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