‘Time’ ningunea a Bush

20070514_107.jpgRaúl Castro, primer vicepresidente y ministro de Defensa de Cuba, y los actores Leonardo di Caprio y Brad Pitt, están en lista de las 100 personalidades más influyentes del mundo que publica hoy por la revista Time. En el popular índice de importancia también aparecen Condoleezza Rice y Osama bin Laden, pero, por primera vez en su carrera, no aparece él, George W. Bush, el presidente de Estados Unidos de América. Entre los políticos estadounidenses candidatos a sucederle figuran Hillary Clinton y Barack Obama. La foto de este último es la más destacada de la portada de la revista.

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Perhaps it all comes down to birth order. The 17th son out of 54 children is a notoriously difficult slot. And if, in addition to being a hyperactive polygamist, the father is an illiterate billionaire, then a certain amount of deviousness, among the older boys, shouldn’t surprise us.

Bin Laden, 50, had to work up his enmities, which were not innate. He is surrounded by men who have been redefined by injury or torture. But Osama is a child of privilege who has never been wounded or jailed. In the 1980s, his stated policy for dealing with Americans went as follows: whenever you meet one, air your grievances. More recently, of course, his approach has evolved from suasion to indiscriminate slaughter. It is the classic path of fanaticism: your ferocity redoubles as you lose sight of your goal.

Aside from the plodding threats and grievance rosters, bin Laden’s statements are tangles of tautology. What he has is charisma—the visionary smile and a talent for asceticism. Moderate Islam has had to decide whether Osama is a good Muslim or a bad Muslim. That many have opted for the former view owes much to the sacrifices that seem to have been made by this rich but stoic troglodyte.

Fuente: Cadena SER y Time.

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