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Minerva, Chapter 42 by Bob Murphy
President
Anthony Black hurled his coffee mug at the wall.
Did they think he wouldn’t have the balls to do it? Black
calmed himself and sat back at his desk.
Especially after the briefing, Black was sure that there was simply
no other option. Still,
killing anywhere from 500,000 to two million people was not something done
lightly. Black didn’t care
about the whining marchers, who would howl no matter what
he did, but he still had posterity to consider. The
first point was obvious: The
Minervans had put the nuclear card on the table.
So he clearly had the right to
retaliate in kind. Now it was
just a matter of prudence.
What would best advance the cause of mankind? It
seemed to Black that the conflict boiled down to a clash of two
irreconcilable systems. The
fact that things had come to this, less than two decades after the
island’s founding, proved that the so-called anarchists could not exist
side-by-side with democratic republics. So
the question was, which system was better?
Black was a man who always trusted experience rather than theories.
And in practice, the Black
caught himself. He realized
that he had been trying to play god. No,
it wasn’t his business to decide which system was better.
Just like a good attorney always argues for his client, so too
Black realized that he had to give the system of constitutional government
the fairest possible hearing. If
it could be beaten, even when its military had its hands untied, then so
be it. Maybe,
decades down the road, the anarchists would be proven right.
Until then, Black couldn’t abandon his responsibility to defend
the security of the American people. As
his generals had rightly stressed, the President
Anthony Black took a deep breath. He
realized with some amusement that he was now the only other man in human
history to understand what Harry Truman had endured. discuss this column in the forum Bob Murphy has a Ph.D. in economics from New York University. He is the author of Chaos Theory and has a personal website. |