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G.I. Joe, Post-American Hero: The Long, Slow Death of American Triumphalism
The Prequel: In my childhood, I played endlessly with toy soldiers -- a crew of cowboys and bluecoats to defeat the Indians and win the West; a bag or two of tiny olive-green plastic Marines to storm the beaches of Iwo Jima. Alternately, I grabbed my toy six-guns, or simply picked up a suitable stick in the park, and with friends replayed scenes from the movies of World War II, my father's war. It was second nature to do so. No instruction was necessary. After all, a script involving a heady version of American triumphalism was already firmly in place not just in popular culture, but in the ether, as it had been long before my grandfather made it to this land in steerage in the 1890s.
My sunny fantasies of war play were intimately connected to the wars Americans had actually fought by an elaborate mythology of American goodness and ultimate victory. If my father tended to be silent about the war he had taken part in, it made no difference. I already knew what he had done. I had seen it at the movies, in comic books, and sooner or later in shows like Victory at Sea on that new entertainment medium, television.
And when, in the 1960s, countless demonstrators from my generation went into opposition to a brutal American war in Vietnam, they did so still garbed in cast-off "Good War" paraphernalia -- secondhand Army jackets and bombardier coats -- or they formed themselves into "tribes" and turned goodness and victory over to the former enemies in their childhood war stories. They transformed the V for Victory into a peace sign and made themselves into beings recognizable from thousands of westerns. They wore the Pancho Villa mustache, sombrero, and serape, or the Native American headband and moccasins. They painted their faces and grew long hair in the manner of the formerly "savage" foe, and smoked the peace (now, hash) pipe.
American mytho-history, even when turned upside down, was deeply embedded in their lives. How could they have known that they would be its undertakers, that their six-shooters would become eBayable relics?
You can bet on one thing today: in those streets, fields, parks, or rooms, children in significant numbers are not playing G.I. versus Sunni insurgent, or Special Op soldier versus Taliban fighter; and if those kids are wielding toy guns, they're not replicas from the current arsenal, but flashingly neon weaponry from some fantasy future.
As it happens, G.I. Joe -- then dubbed a "real American hero" -- proved to be my introduction to this new world of child's war play. I had, of course, grown up years too early for the original G.I. Joe (b. 1964), but one spring in the mid-1980s, during his second heyday, I paid a journalistic visit to the Toy Fair, a yearly industry bash for toy-store buyers held in New York City.
Hasbro, which produced the popular G.I. Joe action figures, was one of the Big Two in the toy business. Mattel, the maker of Joe's original inspiration and big sister, Barbie, was the other. Hasbro had its own building and, on arriving, I soon found myself being led by a company minder through a labyrinthine exhibit hall in the deeply gender segregated world of toys. Featured were blond models dressed in white holding baby dolls and fashion dolls of every imaginable sort, set against an environment done up in nothing but pink and robin's egg blue.
Here, the hum of the world seemed to lower to a selling hush, a baby-doll whisper, but somewhere off in the distance, you could faintly hear the high-pitched whistle of an incoming mortar round amid brief bursts of machine-gun fire. And then, suddenly, you stepped across a threshold and out of a world of pastels into a kingdom of darkness, of netting and camouflage, of blasting music and a soundtrack of destruction, as well-muscled male models in camo performed battle routines while displaying the upcoming line of little G.I. Joe action figures or their evil Cobra counterparts.
It was energizing. It was electric. If you were a toy buyer you wanted in. You wanted Joe, then the rage in the boy's world of war play, as well as on children's TV where an animated series of syndicated half-hour shows was nothing but a toy commercial. I was as riveted as any buyer and yet the world I had just been plunged into seemed alien. These figures bore no relation to my toy soldiers. On first sight, it was hard even to tell the good guys from the bad guys or to figure out who was fighting whom, where, and for what reason. And that, it turned out, was just the beginning.
The Sequel (August 2009): Nobody's mentioned it, but the most impressive thing about the new movie, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, comes last -- the eight minutes or so of credits which make it clear that, to produce a twenty-first century shoot-em-up, you need to mobilize a veritable army of experts. There may be more "compositors" than actors and more movie units (Prague Unit, Prague Second Unit, Paris Unit) than units of Joes.
As the movie theater empties, those credits still scroll inexorably onward, like a beachhead in eternity, the very eternity in American cultural life that G.I. Joe already seems to inhabit. The credits do, of course, finally end -- and on a note of gratitude that, almost uniquely in the film, evokes an actual history. "The producers also wish to thank the following," it says, and the list that follows is headed by the Department of Defense, which has been "advising" Hollywood on how to make war movies -- with generous loans of equipment, troops, consultants, and weaponry in return for script "supervision" -- since the silent era.
Undead Joe
Think of G.I. Joe as a modern American zombie. "He" may never have existed, but he just won't die. More on that later.
As a start, I'm sure you want to know about the new Joe movie which was meant, like Star Trek earlier in the summer, to reinvigorate a semi-comatose brand by retelling its ur-story. In the process, the hope is to create a prequel to endless sequels that, like the Transformers series (also from a toy that was an eighties hit), will prove to be Hollywood's Holy Grail of endless summer, bringing in global mega-profits forever after.
I caught G.I. Joe, the Rise of Cobra, one sunny afternoon in a multiplex theater empty of customers except for a few clusters of teenage boys. So where to start? How about with the Joes' futuristic military base, all flashing screens, hi-tech weaponry, and next generation surveillance equipment, built under the Egyptian desert. (How this most postmodern of bases got under Pharaonic sands or what kind of Status of Forces Agreement the Joes have with the government of Egypt are not questions this film considers.) But here's the thing: well-protected as the base is, spectacularly armed and trained as the Joes are, it turns out to be a snap to break into -- if you happen to be a dame in the black cat suit of a dominatrix and a ninja dressed in white.
And then there's that even spiffier ultra-evil base under the Arctic ice (a location only slightly less busy than Times Square in movies like this). It's the sort of set-up that would have made Captain Nemo salivate.
Oh, and don't let me forget the introductory scene about a Scottish arms dealer in seventeenth century France condemned to having a molten mask fitted over his face for selling weapons to all sides -- and his great-great-great-something-or-other who's doing the same thing in our world. Then there are those weaponized exoskeletons lifted from Iron Man (which also had its own two-faced arms dealer), the X-wing-fighter-style space battle from Star Wars but transposed under the ocean (à la James Bond in Thunderball), not to speak of the Bond-ish scene in which the evildoer, having captured the hero, introduces him to a fate so much worse than death and so time-consuming it can't possibly work.
And how can there not be a scene in which a famous landmark (in this case, the Eiffel Tower) is destroyed by the forces of evil, collapsing on panicked crowds below -- as in Independence Day or just about any disaster film you'd care to mention? Throw in the sort of car chase introduced a zillion years ago in Bullitt, but now pumped up beyond all recognition, and, oh yes, there's someone who wants to control the world and will do anything, including killing millions, to achieve his purpose (ha-ha-ha!).
Is that clear enough? If not, it doesn't matter in the least. Movies like this are Hollywood's version of recombinant DNA. They can be written in the dark or, as in the case of this film, in a terrible hurry because of an impending writers' strike. All that matters is that they deliver the chases and explosions, the fake blood and weird experiments, the wild weaponry and futuristic sets, the madmen and heroes at such a pace and decibel level that your nervous system is brought fully to life jangling like a fire alarm.
These, today, are the son et lumière of American youthful screen life. Their sole raison d'être is to deliver boys and young men -- and so the franchise -- to studios like Paramount (and, in cases like Joe, to the Department of Defense as well): the Batman franchise, the Bond franchise, the Terminator franchise, the X-Men franchise, the Bourne franchise, the Iron Man franchise, the Transformers franchise. And now -- if it works -- the G.I. Joe franchise.
After all, the first word that appears on screen without explanation in this latest junior epic is, appropriately enough, Hasbro. We're talking about the toy company that is G.I. Joe and, in a synergistic fury, is just now releasing an endless range of toys (G.I. Joe Rise of Cobra Night Raven with Air-Viper v1), action figures, video games, board games, Burger King give-aways, and who knows what else as synergistic accompaniments to this elaborate "advertainment."
Barbie's Little Brother
Hasbro first brought Joe to market in 1964. He was then 12 inches tall and essentially a Barbie for boys, a soldier doll you could dress in that "Ike" jacket with the red scarf or a "beachhead assault fatigue shirt," then undress, and take into that pup tent with you for the night.
Of course, nobody could say such a thing. Officially, the doll was declared a "poseable action figure for boys," and that phrase, "action figure," for a new boy toy, like Joe himself, never went away. He had no "backstory" (a word still to be invented), and no name. (G.I. -- for "Government Issue" -- Joe was a generic term for an American foot soldier, redolent of the last American war in which total victory had been possible.) Nor did he have an enemy, in part because young boys still knew a version of American history, of World War II and the Cold War. They still knew who the enemy was without a backstory or a guide book.
Though born on the cusp of the Vietnam War, Joe prospered for almost a decade until antiwar sentiment began to turn war toys into the personae non gratae of the toy world and, in 1973, the first oil crunch hit, making the 12-inch Joe far more expensive to produce. First, he shrank and then, like so many of his warring kin, he was (as Hasbro put it) "furloughed." He left the scene, in part a casualty, like much of war play then, of Vietnam distaste and of an American victory that never came.
Despite being in his grave for a number of years, as the undead of the toy world he would rise again. In 1977, paving the way for his return, George Lucas brought the war flick and war play back into the child's world via the surprise hit Star Wars and its accompanying 3¾-inch high action figures that landed on Earth with an enormous commercial bang. Between them, they introduced the child to a self-enclosed world of play (in a galaxy "far, far away") shorn of Vietnam's defeat.
In 1982, seeing an opening, Hasbro's planners tagged Joe "a real American hero" (which once wouldn't have had to be spelled out), and reintroduced him as a set of Star-Wars-sized action figures, each with its own little bio/backstory. Hundreds of millions of these would subsequently be sold. The Joe team now had an enemy as well, another team, of course, and in this case, though the Cold War was still going full blast in those early years of Ronald Reagan's presidency, it wasn't the Russians.
As it happened, Hasbro's toymakers did a better job of predicting the direction of the Cold War than the CIA or the rest of our government. They sensed that the Russians wouldn't last and so chose a vaguer, more potentially long-lasting enemy -- and in this, too, they were prescient. That enemy was a bogeyman called "terrorism" embodied in Cobra, an organization of super-bad guys who lived not in Moscow, but in -- gasp -- Springfield, U.S.A. (Hasbro researchers had discovered that a Springfield existed in every state except Rhode Island, where the company was located.)
In story and style, the Joes and their enemies now left history and the battlefields of this planet behind for some alternate Earth. There, they disported themselves with bulked-up weaponry and a look that befitted not so much "real American heroes" as a set of superheroes and supervillains in any futuristic space epic. And so, catching the zeitgeist of their moment, at a child's level, the crew at Hasbro created the most successful boy's toy of that era by divorcing war play from war American-style.
The Next War, On-Screen and Off
Twenty-seven years later, Joe, who lost his luster a second time in the 1990s but never quite left the toy scene, is back yet again with his new movie and assorted products. Whether this iteration proves to be another lucrative round for the franchise depends not just on whether enough American boys turn out to see him, but on whether his version of explosive action, special effects, and up-muscled futuristic conflict is beloved by Saudis, Poles, Indians, and Japanese. Today, for Hollywood, when it comes to shoot-em-ups, the international market means everything.
Abroad, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra opened smashingly in South Korea and, in its first week, hit number one in less-than-all-American China and Russia as well. It took in nearly $100 million overseas in its first 12 days, putting its U.S. take in the shade. Here, it started strong, but fell off quickly in a deluge of terrible reviews.
Whatever his fate, Joe, we know, can't die. On the other hand, that all-American tale of battle triumph shows little sign of revival. Admittedly, the new G.I. Joe movie does mention NATO in passing and one member of Joe's force is said, again in passing, to have been stationed in Afghanistan. In addition, the evil arms maker's company produces its super-weapons in that obscure but perfectly real former Soviet SSR, Kyrgyzstan, where the U.S. rents out a base to support its Afghan War activities. Otherwise, the film's only link with real world battlefields comes from those borrowed Pentagon Apache helicopters and Humvees -- and the fact that some of the military extras lent by the Pentagon have been unable to see the film because they're now stationed in Iraq or Afghanistan.
And did I even mention that those missiles around which the movie's plot (such as it is) revolves are filled with "nanomites," supermicroscopic, potentially world destructive robots? Whether blasting into the Eiffel Tower or a bus, they produce a signature green fuzz that looks like a potentially useful replacement for Styrofoam. Anyway, nanomites, typically enough, are not yet on this Earth.
Soon after the film begins, a caption announces, Star Wars-style, that we're "in the not too distant future," and immediately you know that you're in Hollywood's comfort zone, a recognizable battle landscape that is no part of what once would have been the war movie. Also recognizable is that loaned Pentagon equipment and the fantasy weaponry mixed seamlessly in with it -- "That's a Night Raven!" -- that make the film "advertainment" as well for the techno-coolness of the U.S. military. The Pentagon, you might say, is perfectly willing to make do with post-historical battle space. It may be ever less all-American, but it's where the recruitable young are heading.
For Hollywood, deserting actual American battlefields isn't the liberal thing to do, it's the business thing to do. In fact, those planning out the film for Hasbro and Paramount reportedly wanted to transform the Joes into an international special ops force based in Belgium, where NATO is headquartered. However, fan grumbling at the early teasers Paramount released for the film (and evidently a Pentagon reluctance to help a less than American force) caused them to pull back somewhat.
Still, one thing is certain: if the American car has gone to hell, Hollywood's products still rule the globe. And yet, in that international arena, American-style war, as in Iraq or Afghanistan, is a complete turn-off and real-world all-American triumph just doesn't fly any more. That's certainly part of what's happened to the American war film, but far from all of it.
After all, how long has it been since all-American mythology and imagery -- the bluecoats' charge, the Marines' advance (as the Marine hymn wells up in the background) -- has brought a mass audience to a movie screen. The last such film, in 1998, was Saving Private Ryan, and it was already an anomaly. Today, as close as it gets is the parallel universe that passes for World War II in Quentin Tarantino's new hit Inglourious Basterds.
So here's something to contemplate in the moments of lame dialogue that lurk between Joe's explosions and chases: American audiences seem largely in accord with the international crowd. They may not want their Joe force stationed in Belgium, but they don't want to see real war American-style on a recognizable planet Earth either. They voted with their feet most recently on a bevy of Iraq films.
Given the couple of hundred years that made triumphalism a kind of American sacrament, it's nothing short of remarkable that the young are no longer willing to troop to movie theaters to see such films. If you think of Hollywood as a kind of crude commercial democracy, then consider this a popular measure of imperial overstretch or the decline of the globe's sole superpower. Only recently has a mainstream discussion of American decline begun in Washington and among the pundits. But at the movies it's been going on for a long, long time.
It's as if the grim reality of our seemingly never-ending wars seeped into the pores of a nation that no longer really believes victory is our due, or that American soldiers will triumph forever and a day. There may even be an unacknowledged element of shame in all this. At least there is now a consensus that we fight wars not fit for entertainment.
As a result, war as entertainment has been sent offshore -- like imprisonment and punishment. Hollywood has launched it into a netherworld of aliens, superheroes, and robots. Something indelibly American, close to a national religion, has gone through the wormhole and is unlikely to return.
Joe lives. So does war, American-style -- the brutal, real thing in Afghanistan and Iraq, at Guantanamo and Bagram, in the Predator and Reaper-filled skies over the Pakistani tribal borderlands, among Blackwater's mercenaries and the tens of thousands of private, Pentagon-hired military contractors who now outnumber U.S. troops in Afghanistan. But the two of them no longer have much to do with each other.
If the Chinese, and South Koreans, and Saudis, and enough American young men vote with their feet and their wallets, there will be another Joe film. And if Washington's national security managers have anything to say about it, there will be what's already regularly referred to as "the next war." Film and war, however, are likely to share little other than some snazzy weaponry, thanks to the generosity of the Department of Defense, and American kids who will pay good money to sit in the dark and then perhaps join up to fight in the all-too-real world.
Succeed or fail, the screen version of G.I. Joe is now the new normal. Succeed or fail, the war in Afghanistan is also the new normal.
In this way, an entertainment era ends. The curtain has come down and the children have gone off elsewhere to play; meanwhile, behind that curtain -- Americans would prefer not to know just where -- you can still faintly hear the whistle of incoming mortars, the rat-a-rat of machine guns, the sounds of actual war that go on and on and on.


35 Comments so far
Show AllAnother book which also explores how the mainstream media and in particular the U.S. cinema has helped to perpetuate American militarism throughout the twentieth century [and usually with the aid and assistance of the Pentagon] is the well written and illuminating book The Hollywood War Machine: U.S. Militarism and Popular Culture by Carl Boggs and Tom Pollard [2007].
Seems to me there was an massive industrial encouragement to develope video game skills, in mostly boys, in order to prep them for their real life video wars.
Glenn Ford
Nick Turse, in his most relevant and incisive book The Complex: How the Military Invades Our Everyday Lives [2008], devotes a chapter to how the video game industry has joined with the military in its attempt to indoctrinate boys by making war seem glamorous and attractive. As Turse writes:
"The military is now in the midst of a full-scale occupation of the entertainment industry, coincided with far more skill [and enthusiasm on the part of the occupied] than America's debacle in Iraq" [p.116]. That debacle can also be applied to America's latest misadventure in Afghanistan, also.
We have 865 military installations around the world. We are invoved in two wars (Iraq and Afghanistan). We are being pushed into a confrontation with Iran. National debt is going thru the roof.
What can we learn from Churchill and DeGaulle about Empire??
Then there's COlombia. We're building up there, officially to wage the war on drugs (Which I oppose) but in fact to go up against an increasing number of Latin American countries who say "ENOUGH, LEAVE US ALONE". The Stop the drug war website has a slogan, "How do you spell Vietnam in Spanish? C-O-L-O-M-B-I-A."
Hopefully all they didn't get themselves.
If you have to write this much, you have little new to add and not a lot to say.
What is your point?
Very revealing article. However a little to bland for my taste but probably by softening the edges it makes the subject a little more palatable for detractors. Most of the attempts to dissuade the public from accepting this ongoing aggression is to expose the horrors of combat. This has not been effective because the problem lies in the belief that the absence of war is peace. the absence of war is NOT peace, it is a lesser degree of suffering, and therefore this doesn't seem worth saving. However if the enormous beauty of real peace were experienced for only a few seconds, the impact and contrast of this realization would wipe out apathy and compel us to not trivialize this gift which if done, would return us to the belief that war promises safety. In short we need to discover that which is worth saving, that which is always here,and that which is what we are, peace.
Today's military triumphalism is very reminiscent of the serials of the 1930s: Star Wars and Indiana Jones are both "tributes" to those movies, as well as the "alien" movies of the 1950s. In both of these genres the enemies are not directly associable with real world antagonists for fear of inciting political backlash from one quarter or another. Media so influences views of history that many people know of no other than they have seen dramatized and so are not aware of the roles played by real historical actors of the time.
For a most effective antidote regarding WW2, "the good war," I recommend the on-line book "The Nazi Hydra in America." Today's public needs to know that had anyone but FDR (or Henry Wallace) been elected president in 1940, the US might well have allied with the Nazis, using them as proxies to fight the Commies in Europe, as most of the American business community, the American congress, and the American military establishment felt the country ought to do.
What made "the greatest generation" great was its employment of left-leaning solutions to its obstacles – its subsequent abandonment of such leftism as it entertained became its shame following upon the death of FDR.
Haven't read the Hydra book yet, but thanks for the reference.
Anti-semitism and anti-communism were rampant in the US in WW2 days. It always struck me as odd that the US would join sides with Britain. Germany's main enemy was Russia, and it's main scapegoat was Jews. So why would the US join the enemy of an apparent friend? (Glad we did, just doesn't make sense.)
What?
Anti-Communism ceased being even official propaganda in the U.S. after the "Separate Peace" ended and the Soviet Union joined the war effort with the Allies. Before that, sympathy toward the Communist Party had been fairly strong amongst workers and the common people, as the Great Depression cut some of Capitalism glow. Stalin's purges and the disaster of "Collectivisation" of the Soviet Union's agrarian production were limiting factors on this, but I have never heard that anti-communism was "rampant" at this time. Popular yes, "rampant"? Not until after the war.
What does anti-semitism have to do with the U.S. joining the Allies? The U.S. was officially already sympathetic and fraternal toward Britain and France, and when Germany's Ally, Japan, attacked the U.S. war was declared on them and so on their Ally, Germany. Thus the U.S. became Britain's and France's and eventually the Soviet Union's (and Poland's and Czechoslovakia's and all other anti-Axis States') Ally in the war. That's how being Allies WORKS.
Making the U.S.'s involvement in WWII all about Germany's treatment of the Jews is like making the Federal involvement in the War Between the States all about the Confederate States' treatment of black people: it is historically inaccurate, ludicrously simplistic, and ridiculously hindsighted.
Seriously, my friend, it is important not to over-simplify and over politicize history.
The Oligarchical Corporatists don't run things NEARLY so crudely or directly or absolutely, after all.
-matti.
The following is for a video interview with Dahr Jamail, who explains, based on fact(s), that the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are indeed illegal, in every possible way of considering whether they're at all legal, or not, while also touching upon the topic of the MANY, very many deserting soldiers, US troops, every year and that the already high number of them increased by around 52% over the past few years.
"'US soldiers find themselves being terrorists in Afghanistan'" (10:45), RussiaToday, Aug 27 2009
http://www.uruknet.info/?p=57393
A good web site to visit is www.courageToResist.org .
"The best way to convince a person that war is not an exciting adventure is to cut off one or two of his limbs, kill half his family, half his friends, burn his house and his workplace. Almost as effective is having cameras on the battlefield."
You don't see guys with their guts hanging out on TV. The papers don't tell you the brother of ten year old Mary who lives next door has a brother who went insane in Iraq.
I don't know why not. Surely it is as important as a passenger jet having to ditch in the Hudson River.
You are the President Of The United States Of America Obama. I'm just a worn out old pensioner but I know the difference between right and wrong. Everybody listens to you. Nobody listens to me. Why is that?
comment deleted by author
Remember the lyrics in Tom Paxton's song "What did you learn is cshool today?"
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
I learned that Washington never told a lie.
I learned that soldiers seldom die.
I learned that everybody's free.
And that's what the teacher said to me.
That's what I learned in school today.
That's what I learned in school.
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
I learned that policemen are my friends.
I learned that justice never ends.
I learned that murderers die for their crimes.
Even if we make a mistake sometimes.
That's what I learned in school today.
That's what I learned in school.
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
I learned that war is not so bad.
I learned of the great ones we have had.
We fought in Germany and in France.
And some day I might get my chance.
That's what I learned in school today.
That's what I learned in school.
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
I learned our government must be strong.
It's always right and never wrong.
Our leaders are the finest men.
And we elect them again and again.
That's what I learned in school today.
That's what I learned in school.
Re KeLeMi August 28th, 2009 12:56 pm
Good old Tom Paxton. Thanks for the reminder.
KeLeMi
This also sounds quite similar to the question that Ralph Nader's father posed to Ralph when Ralph was a child in school and that was:
"Did you learn to accept [what you were told] or did you learn to think?"
As Wayout suggested August 26th on another thread, veterans should be respected, not venerated.
People know nothing about what it's really like to fight in a war until it happens to them. Sure, war and patriotism sound so fun but what happens when you get killed or seriously injured or suffer PTSD when you're done? People don't take kindly to you and sometimes, even your own family doesn't know what to do with you or how to help you and so you feel angry like Rambo and turn that anger blindly into violence thinking that such attention grabbing will make you a hero but it doesn't. I lost two legs and an arm from Vietnam and was having a total mental breakdown. I not only cost myself my own life by fiddling around with war and patriotism but I dragged my wife and my family and hers into enormous pain, sorrow, and financial hardships. When children are subject to playing with war toys at tender ages, their desire for fun can turn into passion for violence and it is harder to pull them out of that mentality. It's as if they have been subject to PTSD before they started signing up for the military. All these war toys and movies need to be put on a moratorium so that today's young minds can be given more room to understand and embrace peace, love, and understanding.
Thank you for telling us that. It probably wasn't easy. It's the best testimonial about war I have heard recently. It should be posted over the door of every recruiting office.
The John Wayne macho swaggering mystique so seductive to farm kids with backbreaking chores and kids everywhere just hoping for some meaningful direction---this bullshit is poison for them.
They don't find out until it is too late. Forget the war on drugs. Let's stop this killing.
Nietzsche, excellent point on the John Wayne macho mentality. I can't stand to watch that man at all.
P.S.: Welcome back, JWVerez ! :-)
Maybe if American presidents stopped believing that they have to be a "war president" to earn a second term or their citizens' approval they would think twice about starting or augmenting wars. If the American people stopped revering their "commander-in-chief" (he is only the commander-in-chief of the military, not civilians I believe?) or thinking that only a president who can effect a war is good, there will be fewer American children growing up knowing only militancy. Is it that hard to love a president who prefers peace and spends public funds on US citizens, not war?
On another thread, Native Son commented on seeing the outsiders' points of view toward the war-loving American (US) mindset [my interpretation] and the fear and revulsion it inspires in non-Americans (US) [again my interpretation]. I really cannot disagree with him - many of us see the US as a rogue country bloated in its belief of its exceptionalism. I know that most CDers are well read and educated (not necessarily in an academic sense, but knowledgeable) and not like many characters we see on American TV who seem to have lost touch with reality.
It's not just the president who's the problem. The problem is also Congress and they have no limits on the number of terms they can stay in power. The Military Industrial Complex is a lot bigger and will need not just a good president but also additional countering.
If your congress had any idea what it was like to suffer the consequences you have for the wars that they endorse, maybe they would actually stand up to the MIC, but unfortunately, in your country and in mine, those who send regular persons off to do the corporations' bidding have no idea. Just like they have no idea what it is like to not be able to feed their kids, just like they have no idea what it is like to not have a job with a regular and secure income. The politicians have no idea of anything real people have to deal with. All they know is that if they don't send their country's young to war for Major Corpo, then who will provide jobs. Kind of a Catch 22 where you have to have war in order to continue to prosper. Kind of sounds a lot like 1984, unfortunately. Two different authors, but both seem to see the endless loop of political bulls***.
I wish you and your family only good things for besting the beast and I feel sure you will all continue to do so.
What gets me is that John Wayne and Gerald Mc Raney made lots of war movies, yet neither were in the service.
I am so sorry you suffered and are suffering so greatly but obviously you regained your mental health. I salute you as a man of wisdom and am gladdened in having a man such as you in my/our battle against the acceptance and glorification of an insane endeavor.
GI Joe died when the draft died and our armed forces became so many mercinary Hessian "army of One" troops who joined the military to "be all they could be" instead of to bravely defend the country against unprovoked attack.
Maybe, as Tom suggests at the beginning of this piece, this character only existed in the wishful thinking of the idealistic young.
Today, given the easily and widely known truth about both the US military forces and their use as as so much organized muscle for multi-national corporate interests, even small kids know that there ain't no more heros, only mercinary professional soldiers in the armed forces of the US.
Poet
"..instead of to bravely defend the country against unprovoked attack."
If that is the case, none of our GI Joes would have ever fought, because as we know, there has never been an unprovoked attack on the USA.
Both Tom and myself were(are) talking about myth--not truth-squading the lies of US imperialism that goes all the way back to at least the Mexican War if not to the conquest (and violations of solemn treatries not to do so) of Native American territory.
My point (which you obviously did not pick up on) was that the myth-makers destroyed their own myth by their "professionalizing" the military. It is an open question whether or not this was bumblling stupidity or a calculated and deliberate move on their part.
The end result was the same as the Tienamin Square attacks by what had formerly been called "The People's Army" of China--the military has lost the affection and respect of growing numbers of Americns-it's always that way with mercinary and imperialistic militiaries.
Poet
Now, for Christmas, the torture and rape G.I. Joe doll.
How this makes us 'safer' is a mystery.
I think the success of the GI Joe film here had everything to do with nostalgia given that so many guys from my generation grew up playing with the toys. Before the movie, the franchise was pretty much just a cult phenomenon for years made up of collectors and people who liked the comic for some reason. The cartoon was just an ad for the toys pretty much. Interestingly enough, the comic book was Marvel's top selling newsstand comic for a time, meaning that it was beating out X-Men and Spider-Man in terms of casual readership. That's because they advertised the comic on television, which was a rare thing. I was too mired in the family squabbles of the Fantastic Four, Spider-Man's personal problems, the Hulk's abusive childhood, the X-Men's civil rights allegory, The Sub Mariner's representation of indigenous peoples, Captain America: New Deal Democrat, the Black Panther's struggles against apartheid, and Ann Nocenti's politics-on-my-sleeve run on Daredevil among other things.
Oh wait, I'm not supposed to read comics, sorry.
No I won't be going to see GI Joe.
So movies, comics, and modern mythology are to blame for war?
I get what the author's saying, but if a big, loud popcorn movie based on 80's kitsch makes you want to support two wars...geez. If you're that dumb...
"The best way to convince a person that war is not an exciting adventure is to cut off one or two of his limbs, kill half his family, half his friends, burn his house and his workplace. Almost as effective is having cameras on the battlefield."
You'd be surprised at how many people are excited by gore.
Start sawing off HIS arm at the shoulder and see how excited he gets.
Do they make GI Joe prosthetics?