Will Kester, the author, book discussion site

Will Kester will describe and discuss his books, share views on many different topics, related to the books which he will be releasing, and invites his readers and potential readers to share in informed, logical discussions.

Talking Points: Shifting Sands; A Clash of Cultures

 

In the book, I am trying to make several points that I wish to share with Americans.  Some will misinterpret what I say as sympathizing with the enemy, approving of terrorism, and blaming America for taking a stand against those who would kill us.  Nothing is further from the truth. 

 

I hesitate to use the “walk in my moccasins” expression, but I will.  I have walked the desert sands in sandals, with Arabs, Bedouins, friends.  I still don’t completely understand them, but there are things I do understand and wish to share. 

 

They are afraid of us, not of our military (and even less lately), but of our way of life--our threat to their way of life.  Americans are both proud of our influence on the rest of the world, and oblivious of our impact on the rest of the world.  We export our culture, our colas, our fast food, our music, and our lack of respect for traditional values—our traditional values and especially those that aren’t our traditional values. 

 

Many politicians are coming around to what I propose in this work of fiction, written years before I heard anyone expressing the idea.  The idea is that the Middle East needs to solve their problems regionally, engaging the regional members in conversations, support of peace initiatives, and building improved infrastructure for the people in the region.  The “Baker Report” and others propose we engage in diplomacy with Iran and Syria—I agree.  We find diplomacy somehow distasteful, recently, for some reason.  We prefer making demands and threatening those countries we don’t like, but we only make things worse when we do this. 

 

There has been a major shift in attitudes of the majority of Americans since I wrote the book, but the principal reason for writing it is as important now, as it was a few years ago.  We need to understand our relationship with the Middle East, our responsibility to the world, and exercise our power responsibly.  We need to respect ways that we don’t accept, and I’ll admit it’s hard to do, but it’s vital to our position, ourselves, and our security, now, more than ever before. 

 

In the book, I introduce the main character, whom I knew when we were young.  I fictionalize his adult life, and I hope he forgives me for what I did.  I put him in the middle of the clash of two cultures, Western, Christian, Republican extremism, Militant American—and Middle Eastern, Islamic, Radical, Militant, Traditional, Arabic cultures, the way of many generations before him, and his roots.  Saleh, the main character, travels to America to learn, returns to Saudi and is drawn into terrorism, despite his lack of support for their efforts.  He makes decisions about how to resolve the conflicts, based on his experiences, as we all make our decisions in life, based on our experiences. 

 

What I’m trying to do, is expand the experiences of my readers, through the book, instead of having to go to the Middle East and live that experience, but simply read about one man’s (fictional) life, and develop more understanding of the problem, and how to go forward, peacefully, thoughtfully, and hopefully.  I make Saleh become a negotiator, a diplomat, and a positive force in the Region, to make the point that we can change; we can use our experiences to improve the world.  His best diplomatic argument seems to work on both sides, as he reminds powerful world leaders that the decisions we make today will affect our children and our grandchildren.  

 

 

 

 

2008/5/1

After some time away, I'm back....

Tags:
@ 10:18 AM (2 months, 3 days ago)

 After a successful book tour, some vacation time, and a lot of time invested in supporting Barack Obama's candidacy, I am back to this blog site.  Why?  I have no idea...bored, I guess. 

There is currently a power play occurring in the book publishing industry, between amazon.com and publishers.  Amazon thinks they are now powerful enough to squeeze out the competition.  We'll see who wins, soon.  If there is only one publisher/bookseller left in a few years, they can keep their money in the one remaining bank, and fly on the one remaining airline...if there is a remaining airline. 

Obama handled the Rev. Wright issue better than I could have.  I would have said, "I was just in his church to see how crazy the guy really was?"  Obama tried to keep the Reverend as a friend.  I've made that mistake before.  Now, they parted ways, Obama onto bigger and better things: the presidency, peace in the Middle East, restoring the value of the dollar as a world currency and America’s image and standing in the world.  Rev. Wright will get his own talk show soon, as he should; he fits the profile:  Outrageous, out-of-touch with real people but claims to know how "real people" feel about issues he determines to fit his agenda, and angry...oh, and loves hearing himself talk and looking at himself on the monitors.  I'm not sure his message fits Fox News criteria, though; maybe the "Even Worse and More Offending News Hour." 

I love politics, news, world events, but even I am getting tired of this campaign and there are still six more months left to go.  So, to make it more interesting, I'll make some predictions and track to see how close I come. 

McCain will get the sympathy vote when he is rushed to the hospital after collapsing at a Republican function.  "What happened?" will be asked by many journalists.  There will be wild speculation for a day, as pundits speculate if it was a heart attack, or diabetes, chronic post-traumatic stress disorder, a Viagra reaction or just learning how much money the campaign had cost his supporters, all three of them.  After a few days, he will emerge to be photographed from the balcony of the hospital, dressed in his hospital gown.  He'll wave and smile to the crowds of three people and promise to return to campaigning soon after the election is over.  Enhanced digital examinations will reveal it is not really McCain, but Hillary who has taken his identity and is still running against Obama.  That should be fun. 

Hillary will appear at the inauguration to congratulate him, kneecap him one more time, and announce her 2012 candidacy, asking Americans to decide who should have won this election.  "I was the most capable, the most worthy, the meanest and the most ambitious," she will scream to the crowd, ending her pitiful plea with a familiar cackle. 

Saturday Night Live will do a skit where Hillary thinks she is president, takes over the asylum and campaigns to remove the staff and replace them with her leadership.  “I am in it to ruin it,” will still be her campaign pledge.   

 

 

 

 

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