Just days short of his 82nd birthday, the U.S. president handled the heat of a Nevada afternoon fine. He sat patiently listening to the speeches of Northern Nevada Democrats, smiling widely for individuals with cameras.
I stood near the front of a surprisingly small crowd. Iโd expected the Manzanita Bowl on the University of Nevada, Reno campus to be packed. Even though Jimmy Carterโs agenda was obviousโcampaigning for his son Jack Carter, a Nevada candidate for U.S. Senate, itโs not often a former president visits, especially one whoโs a Nobel Peace laureate.
Finally Carter took the stage and addressed everything on my mind.
Heโs deeply frustrated that weโve transformed the goodwill of the world in the wake of Sept. 11, 2001, into a widespread disrespect for U.S. foreign policy. Recent reportsโfrom Republican administration agenciesโconcur that our โpreemptiveโ war in Iraq has exacerbated terrorist threats, making the world a more dangerous place.
Whoโs in charge of our nationโs policies? Carter calls it like it is.
โIโve noticed gas prices are going down,โ he said. โWhy do you suppose that is?โ
Of course, Republican leaders are telling supporters from Exxon and Halliburton, โHey, lower prices for the next few weeks.โ People will feel better about voting Republican. Itโs such an obvious mind game. Yet I stood in the sun thinking how well this works in a nation where the top-rated TV show is American Idol.
Carterโs rightly ashamed of our human rights record, furious that weโre imprisoning men without trials and flouting the Geneva Convention. Heโs distressed over the disastrous negligent tactics that characterize the United Statesโ relationship with Iran and North Korea. When President Bush dubs these nations part of the Axis of Evil and then forcibly occupies Iraq, these nations begin to see nuclear weapons programs as justifiable defenses.
Carterโs been through this before.
In 1994, it looked like North Korea had the capability to reprocess fuel rods from nuclear power plants into weapons-grade plutonium. Operation Desert Storm had made North Korea nervous. Would U.S. forces build up in South Koreaโto be deployed against the North?
The Clinton administration had no plan for communicating with the government of North Korea.
Carter, whoโd studied nuclear physics and reactor technology in college, was invited to visit North Korea. Though the Clinton administration wouldnโt grant Carter the right to represent the U.S. government, Carter traveled on his own to meet Kim Il Sung. Not only did Carter help stabilize the situation, he also paved a way for talks between North and South Koreaโsomething Carter at the time called a โmiracle.โ
Imagine that. A bold leader who used diplomacy to defuse tense foreign conflicts.
Not that manyโfrom Clinton to the American publicโfelt much gratitude toward Carter.
This baffles me. Hereโs a man who lives his Christian faith at the deepest levelsโand yet in 1980, evangelicals in the United States overwhelmingly chose a right-wing, pro-corporate, failed movie star over a compassionate leader. Carter inherited a mess. Yet he had the potential to instill our nation with productive attitudes toward energy use, sound environmental ideals and fair labor policies for workers. His goals were blissfully simpleโliberty and justice for all.
He didnโt just claim Jesus Christ was his favorite philosopher (as Bush does), but Carter didnโt even put his lifelong career as Sunday School teacher on hold during his stint as U.S. president. (Can you see Dubya teaching from the Bibleโs Book of James. where โtrue religionโ is defined as taking care of orphans and widows?)
After campaigning for his son across Nevada, Carter was heading to India where his organization, Habitat for Humanity India, plans to build homes for 250,000 people by 2010.
