The horrific images of degrading acts by American soldiers at
Abu Ghraib prison are, in a sense, nothing new. Millions of
Americans feast on similar scenes every day.
The sickening photo of a female soldier blindly staring at the
spectacle of her human prisoner, naked and leashed like a dog, is
but the latest evidence of a culture gone stark raving mad.
For the last several decades, American culture has been rotting.
While we've been busy fighting enemies around the world, we've
discarded basic morality here at home. As a result, we've steadily
weakened our stature in the world and placed ourselves in grave
danger of falling from within.
The evidence pointing to cultural rot is indisputable: Americans
spend $10 billion a year on pornography - as much as we spend on
sporting events. The average teenager views nearly 14,000 sexual
references a year on television.
Power is equated with sex, and sex with power - on television, in
movies, magazines, billboards and music. At times, it appears as if
Americans have had enough. Remember the outrage over Janet Jackson
"flashing" at the Super Bowl? How about the disgust over the video
of high school girls humiliating, urinating on and beating younger
students in an "initiation" stunt? Now there's Abu Ghraib. And
we're shocked … again?
Some denounce the reprehensible behavior, point an accusing finger
at the military and return to their family room easy chairs, where
they sit transfixed by mindless programming while their kids
retreat to their bedrooms and consume endless hours of sleaze on
MTV.
We have been sliding down the slippery sewer of cultural
immorality for so long that we don't even realize that we're
covered with stinking sludge.
Amid the noble struggle to establish and maintain a nation of moral
integrity, freedom and faith in God, our history has also included
periods punctuated by acts of shame. The horrors of slavery come to
mind. Yet, almost alone among nations throughout history, the
United States has always managed to hold itself accountable for its
ills, take corrective action and move to a higher level in our
treatment of others.
Why? Because Americans once shared a collective understanding that
ours is a society based on faith in God and his immutable laws of
unconditional love, decency and the simple but powerful concept of
treating others as we would be treated.
Our schools taught biblical principles. Our families gathered
regularly in churches and synagogues. Prayer was a standard part of
life - both private and public. Americans were taught the Ten
Commandments and the rich Judeo-Christian history of our
country.
But that all changed in the 1960s, when there began a steady
removal of God and his absolutes from the public square. As a
nation we forgot, as President Lincoln said, "that the fear of the
Lord is the beginning of wisdom." Schools were purged of prayer and
biblical values, leaving a vacuum that was soon filled with the
preaching of moral relativism, sexual anarchy and a trashing of
U.S. history. Now, about 40 years later, there is no collective
understanding of our Judeo-Christian history and the values that
once permeated our halls of government, our schools and our
lives.
Our nation once looked to the truth of the Proverbs: "To receive
instruction in wise behavior, righteousness, justice and equity; to
give prudence to the naive, to the youth knowledge and discretion."
Today, we teach our children to rely on their own wisdom and
judgment, formed by endless hours of sexualized programming,
situational ethics and group thinking. And we're surprised by the
behavior of a few Americans at Abu Ghraib?
Our military is addressing the abuses that occurred in a prison far
away and holding accountable those who are responsible - but what
are the rest of us doing to restore civility and decency here at
home? In order to preserve a real future for our children and our
nation, we must rediscover the timeless principles that helped us
to become the world's "last, best hope" - and restore them to our
daily lives.
Rebecca
Hagelin is a vice president of the Heritage
Foundation.
First appeared in the Los Angeles Times