Final Word from Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Bill Clinton set down in the disaster zone and said, "The nation as a whole can be built back stronger, in a more-just society, a morally educated society." It was Haiti in 2010, but it could have been Czechoslovakia in 1990. Like the Haitian earthquake, Communism was an equal-opportunity destroyer, to use Clinton's term. It affected everyone, although the elite of both countries were clearly affected less. Like Haiti, Czechoslovakia was a failed state, if you accept the arguments of historian Mary Heimann. The main difference with Haiti is the degree of the failure, not the substance. The Czechs had a unique opportunity to start over, to build a more-just society, a morally educated society. They got some things right, but the economic crisis has highlighted what they got wrong. And as Haiti shows, the crisis that has hit the CR so far is minor compared to what remains within the realm of possibility.[Czech Republic United States of America Czechoslavkia: The state that failed]
Glossary of difficult words
failed state - a state perceived to have failed at some of the basic conditions and responsibilities of a sovereign government;
to set down - to land; to go ashore;
equal-opportunity destroyer - used by Clinton with regard to the earthquake; a word play on the term "equal-opportunity employer," meaning an employer who treats all employees the same, regardless of sex, race, age, etc.;
Mary Heimann - author of "Czechoslovakia: The state that failed," published in 2009;
within the realm of possibility - that which is possible.