Obviously, this title alludes to the Jews killed during World War II. Recent research indicates this number could be much higher. Although much genocide litters human history, the Holocaust draws certain connotations in our minds.
Last spring, I read a blog review
of “How Do You Kill 11 Million People?”
by Andy Andrews. Moved by the review and the premise behind the book, I left a
comment to this effect. Despite the stack of unread books on my shelf, I
intended to buy that book, sooner rather than later. And it would go to the top
of the stack. A few days later, I received an email from the blog owner saying
I had won the weekly blog giveaway.
My prize? You guessed it. The
book has 80 pages, and I read it in less than an hour. A simple concept doesn’t
have to be wrapped in a lengthy expose. The book definitely lived up to my
expectations.
Among the insight the author
gives, he challenges the reader with the following:
·
Why
do the ages of our world’s greatest civilizations average around two hundred
years?
·
Why
do these civilizations all seem to follow the same identifiable sequence—from
bondage to spiritual faith, from spiritual faith to courage, from courage to
liberty, from liberty to abundance, from abundance to complacency, from
complacency to apathy, from apathy to dependence, and finally from dependence
back into bondage?
·
The
United States is the longest tenured government in the world.
So how do atrocities in history
correlate to life in the 21st century? Are we doomed to repeat past
mistakes by not learning from them? Certain mileposts would indicate so.
When my daughter was little, she
loved to say it was opposite day when I tried to get her to do something she
didn’t want to do. We’ve slowly come to accept certain things in this country
that are opposite to our belief system, while at the same time embracing the
inane.
You only have to look at our
current social issues to draw the correlation between fallen civilizations and
our current way of life.
Three thousand babies are
murdered legally each day in the United States. We look the other way
when stories surface on corporations like Pepsi that test new products on aborted
fetal cells. The revelation barely registered a blip on the media’s radar.
Yet we’re outraged when
Starbucks’ use of dye obtained from crushed bugs surfaces. I mean, that’s really
something to get upset about. Right?
Compare the current political,
social, and economic situation in the U.S. to a party on a frozen lake in
rising temperatures. The party-goers are caught up in the revelry; they don’t
hear the subtle cracking sound of ice melting. The cracking continues until
it’s too late—the ice is separating under their feet.
The ice is cracking all around
us, folks. We only have to look at history to see moral decline precedes
economic decline when civilizations collapse. A solution exists, and we’re
all part of it. Hope for our future begins with each individual putting down
their drinks and walking off the ice before it’s too late.
So how do you kill 11 million
people?
The answer is simpler than you
could imagine, and it’s key to our hope as a nation. I’m not one to give away
the major premise of a book, so you’ll have to read the book to discover it. It’s
available on Amazon.com and other book outlets.
I’ll leave you with one final
thought from the book, a quote of President James Garfield from his centennial
address to Congress in 1876:
“Now, more than ever before, the
people are responsible for the character of their Congress. If that body be
ignorant, reckless, and corrupt, it is because the people tolerate ignorance,
recklessness, and corruption. If it be intelligent, brave, and pure, it is
because the people demand these high qualities to represent them in the
national legislature.” Then he added, “If [one hundred years from now] the next
centennial does not find us a great nation…it will be because those who
represent the enterprise, the culture, and the morality of the nation do not
aid in controlling the political forces.”
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