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Where Have All The Young Ones Gone?
They saunter into my classroom alone or with friends, at the height of their youthful beauty. They may be 17 or they may be 22; they may dress in classic preppy style or, more likely, they may have thrown on a pair of jeans and t-shirt, slapped a baseball cap on and hurried, half asleep, to class. As I look at them, my heart tightens in my chest: if they reinstate the draft, how many of these young men and women will have low numbers in the conscription lottery? How many will be sent to fight? How many will be picked off at a guard post by a sniper? Or blown to pieces when their jeep hits a mine? For this is what George W. Bush's war comes down to: The death of innocents for a senseless war, led by a man who shirked his own duty during a time of war.
Much has been made of Bush's privileged experience during the Vietnam era; I have heard some comment that they cannot criticize Bush for doing what anyone in his position would have done and, in fact, did: Avoid going to Vietnam by using whatever means necessary. Vice President Richard Cheney got two deferments. Former President Bill Clinton won a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Oxford.
Yet when I hear my contemporaries boast about how they got out of serving in Vietnam, I taste bitterness on my tongue. So many of my working-class peers died in Vietnam! It was a debacle; to sustain it, several presidents, Democrats and Republicans, lied about it. Each lied because he did not want to be the first American president to lose a war. For that hubris, my generation paid and continues to pay: 58,229 dead and still counting.
u003cbr> 9,087,000 or about 9.7% of the men in my generation fought in Vietnam. 7,484 women served, most of them as nurses. Names continue to be added to the Vietnam War memorial in Washington, D.C. because the fatalities did not stop when President Richard Nixon declared victory and abandoned the war. u003cbr> u003cbr> We need only look in the doorways and on the park benches of our cities to find the human detritus of the war. Many of these veterans are so scarred from their experiences in Southeast Asia that they will never recover. Some will commit suicide; many already have. u003cbr> u003cbr> Those 58,229 young men and women were once students in our schools, raised to love God and country. 76% of the men sent to Vietnam were from lower middle/working class backgrounds. One quarter were from homes whose family income was below the poverty line. u003cbr>u003cbr> These are the students who would have been in my classroom had I been teaching then. It is not so far-fetched to imagine my current students pressed into service for this war. u003cbr>u003cbr> u003ci>u003csup>The Vietnamese lack the ability to conduct a war by themselves or govern themselves. --u003c/sup>u003c/i>Vice President Richard M. Nixon, April 16, 1954u003cbr>u003cbr> Where have we heard similar sentiments recently?u003cbr>u003cbr> u003cbr>u003cbr> u003ci>Rosa Maria Pegueros (u003ca hrefu003d\"mailto:pegueros@uri.edu\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">pegueros@uri.eduu003c/a>) is an associate professor of Latin American History and Women\'s Studies at the University of Rhode Island.u003cbr>u003cbr> u003c/i>u003cp> Dr. Rosa Maria Peguerosu003cbr> Department of Historyu003cbr> & Women\'s Studies Programu003cbr> University of Rhode Island, RI 02881-0817u003cbr> Phone: (401) 874-4092u003cbr> E-mail: u003ca hrefu003d\"mailto:pegueros@uri.edu\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">pegueros@uri.eduu003c/a>u003cbr> u003ca hrefu003d\"http://drpegueros.googlepages.com/home\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\"> http://drpegueros.googlepagesu003cWBR>.com/homeu003cbr>u003cbr> u003c/a>u003cfont faceu003d\"georgia\">",1] ); //--> u003cbr> 9,087,000 or about 9.7% of the men in my generation fought in Vietnam. 7,484 women served, most of them as nurses. Names continue to be added to the Vietnam War memorial in Washington, D.C. because the fatalities did not stop when President Richard Nixon declared victory and abandoned the war. u003cbr> u003cbr> We need only look in the doorways and on the park benches of our cities to find the human detritus of the war. Many of these veterans are so scarred from their experiences in Southeast Asia that they will never recover. Some will commit suicide; many already have. u003cbr> u003cbr> Those 58,229 young men and women were once students in our schools, raised to love God and country. 76% of the men sent to Vietnam were from lower middle/working class backgrounds. One quarter were from homes whose family income was below the poverty line. u003cbr>u003cbr> These are the students who would have been in my classroom had I been teaching then. It is not so far-fetched to imagine my current students pressed into service for this war. u003cbr>u003cbr> u003ci>u003csup>The Vietnamese lack the ability to conduct a war by themselves or govern themselves. --u003c/sup>u003c/i>Vice President Richard M. Nixon, April 16, 1954u003cbr>u003cbr> Where have we heard similar sentiments recently?u003cbr>u003cbr> u003cbr>u003cbr> u003ci>Rosa Maria Pegueros (u003ca hrefu003d\"mailto:pegueros@uri.edu\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">pegueros@uri.eduu003c/a>) is an associate professor of Latin American History and Women\'s Studies at the University of Rhode Island.u003cbr>u003cbr> u003c/i>u003cp> Dr. Rosa Maria Peguerosu003cbr> Department of Historyu003cbr> & Women\'s Studies Programu003cbr> University of Rhode Island, RI 02881-0817u003cbr> Phone: (401) 874-4092u003cbr> E-mail: u003ca hrefu003d\"mailto:pegueros@uri.edu\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">pegueros@uri.eduu003c/a>u003cbr> u003ca hrefu003d\"http://drpegueros.googlepages.com/home\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\"> http://drpegueros.googlepagesu003cWBR>.com/homeu003cbr>u003cbr> u003c/a>u003cfont faceu003d\"georgia\">",1] ); //-->9,087,000 or about 9.7% of the men in my generation fought in Vietnam. 7,484 women served, most of them as nurses. Names continue to be added to the Vietnam War memorial in Washington, D.C. because the fatalities did not stop when President Richard Nixon declared victory and abandoned the war.
We need only look in the doorways and on the park benches of our cities to find the human detritus of the war. Many of these veterans are so scarred from their experiences in Southeast Asia that they will never recover. Some will commit suicide; many already have.
Those 58,229 young men and women were once students in our schools, raised to love God and country. 76% of the men sent to Vietnam were from lower middle/working class backgrounds. One quarter were from homes whose family income was below the poverty line.
These are the students who would have been in my classroom had I been teaching then. It is not so far-fetched to imagine my current students pressed into service for this war.
The Vietnamese lack the ability to conduct a war by themselves or govern themselves. --Vice President Richard M. Nixon, April 16, 1954
Where have we heard similar sentiments recently?
Rosa Maria Pegueros (pegueros@uri.edu) is an associate professor of Latin American History and Women's Studies at the University of Rhode Island.
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9 Comments so far
Show AllAll the Vietnamese wanted was one country, their own country, free of occupiers and oppressors.
Where have we heard similar sentiments recently?
Unfortunately, a draft is the best way to exert pressure to end the occupation. And to keep our armed services from becoming private armies, the dictator's Praetorian Guard, as Blackwater is.
Why do they hate us? That's easy. This invasion of Iraq appears to have been designed to create hatred in order to turn into an occupation. The Iraqis really liked us before we started bombing them, kicking down their doors, terrorizing their children and shaming their women and dragging their men off to Abu Ghraib, shooting them at checkpoints and machine-gunning them if they came too close to our convoys. And at the same time employing unreconstructed racists to stand over them with feet on their necks.
All this while piously saying we're doing everything possible to protect civilians. Right.
Martin Luther King Jr. said "An insurgent act is the last desperate attempt of a man to control his own environment". This insurgency was not an immediate response to our invasion, it was a response to our violence.
It's a tragedy that Americans are like infants who bite and hit with no ability to be aware of the pain they are inflicting since they don't feel it themselves. Except that we are torturing and killing. What's wrong with us? Are we so addicted to our luxuries and comforts that deep inside we are willing to condone what we are doing to others? Are we deep down no different than our rulers who will do anything including murder and torture to control other people's assets?
Years ago, a prescient woman wrote a letter to the Eugene Register-Guard saying "don't tell me we don't tolerate homelessness and child abuse because if we didn't we wouldn't have them". So obviously just as the Democrats in Washington are saying one thing and doing another, so is the rest of America.
A draft is only a good way for ugly scumbags to vote for an army to topple the middle east; nothing else. Another generation does not deserve to be sent to war; Iraq needs to be left alone now!
"Yet when I hear my contemporaries boast about how they got out of serving in Vietnam, I taste bitterness on my tongue."
I was just a little too old for Vietnam but I wasnt walking into my local recruiter saying "take me, take me". I saw no reason for the war and sure as hell didnt want to lose my life fighting in it. If my son had been of draft age I would have encouraged him to leave the country. There will be no draft as the fools in Washington are not that big of fools.
A few more stats for Ms Pugueros article as an Infantryman for 24+ years in the Army, I can attest to the outrageous number of minoities who made 25-30 per cent of my infantry platoon in VN. They were mostly Draftees who were also BTW far and away the best soldiers we had. I do not advocate a return to the draft, but I do think the Iraq war would not have happened if we had a draft. Draftees were always the best soldiers, they had work experience, were older, smarter etc than their RA brothers. Take it from the old retired CSM.
I heard a mother yelling at her son to "cut his head off, CUT HIS HEAD OFF" while the boy of maybe 10 was playing a martial arts type computer arcade game when they first came out about 35 years ago.
Now my Maximum PC monthly disk comes with free trials for all the latest FPS (first person shooter) and other violent games. Many of these kids look forward to the real thing, real guns, the latest weapons, and with no Social Security retirement, pensions etc. and low paying jobs, why not? Violent movies are rampant too.
War is normal, violence is normal in there minds. The world is messed up. Throw in some beer, drugs, sports, reality TV, music, sex, etc. they don't have interest or time in there numb minds to worry about 5 or10 years from now. Just the way the Neo Cons want it.
I guess there are no jobs where people can play video games all day or camp out for the latest in gaming equipment.
War is not virtual it is real. A shame.
"Vice President Richard Cheney got TWO deferments."
It was actually FIVE deferments....