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Soldiers, Kids Reunite, But Cameras Exploit
In one video, Army Master Sgt. Joseph Myers walks unannounced into his 10-year-old daughter Hanna's classroom in Texas after a long deployment. In split seconds Hanna's expression goes from blank to shock to joy to meltdown. She barely manages to make it toward her father's embrace. In another, at a Jacksonville Jaguars football game last month, Maj. Kevin Becar of the Florida Army National Guard runs out and reunites with his stunned fifth-grade son in the end zone, what the master of ceremonies calls a "complete surprise" during military appreciation day activities.
The scenes, repeated in video clips over the Web, are unquestionably heartbreaking. The weight of the moment is too much for these young hearts denied their fathers for what feels like eternities. They can't help but break down, sob, melt. Neither can we.
And that's just what's wrong with the pictures. These aren't private moments between soldier and child. Cameras are rolling, JumboTrons are flashing, cell phones are capturing YouTube versions ready for viral loops across the Internet. It's a whole production, contrived by TV news channels, sports franchises, the Pentagon -- by everyone involved but the children or, sometimes, the spouse on the receiving end of what's become Candid Camera in camouflage.
There's nothing wrong with honoring returning soldiers. That's not what's happening here. In this new genre of fabricated reunions, soldiers' service and children's emotions are being exploited at their most raw for mass audiences that, for the most part, have no idea what the soldier or his family are going through. Or are about to go through, considering the shattered mental state every third soldier returns in. The riveting encounter of hero returning to family defines the war to the public to the near-exclusion of less appealing realities.
In the Vietnam War, returning soldiers were, at times, explicitly disrespected. They were the scapegoats of the nation's anger against the war and its lying prosecutors, the military among them. Soldiers are still disrespected. This time, it's more subtle. They're patronized and manipulated in ceremonies that briefly manufacture feel-good solidarity while shielding the real price of war with cheap bombast and cheaper patriotism.
It costs nothing to say "bless the troops." TV stations and sports franchises make money off their "appreciation day" events. Unlike during Vietnam or any other wars in the country's history until then, Americans are not required to contribute men and women to an all-volunteer force, which has effectively become a praetorian institution segregated from mainstream society. Nor are Americans required to pay for the wars. During the last century's world wars and the Korean War, top tax rates were between 77 percent and 94 percent. Top rates were 70 percent or above during Vietnam. Since the beginning of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, when rates topped off at 35 percent, there's been four major tax cuts.
Not surprisingly, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq occupy a place somewhere between indifference and ignorance for most, their stake in those wars being nil beyond video-clip tear-jerkers. Which is why there's no real opposition to a president escalating troop levels in Afghanistan, after eight years of futility, from about 15,000 for most of the decade to 100,000 by next year. Or why there's little debate over wars that have cost more than $1 trillion, so far, with no end or pay-off in sight.
Or why voyeuristic videos of soldiers coming home to their families are the standard fantasy of a nation lying to itself about honoring troops while blindly feeding the mill that returns them in whatever shape, upright, mangled or bagged.


6 Comments so far
Show AllFox Television invented the "reality show" about 15 yeas ago because these programs are cheap to make and they are great distractions from the real reality in Amerikkka.
Now, the corporate news media have taken "reality TV" to a new dimension as propaganda designed to manipulate the emotions of the gullible and ignorant. They exploit the emotions and fears of children in flag-wrapped tripe so the military-industrial complex war profiteers can continue to reap billions of dollars in profits.
Wow. A newspaper editor who really gets it. I find it in really poor taste to exploit our military members and their families. So very many of them joined the military because they needed a steady job with benefits to support their families.
The Americans who are truly "supporting the troops" are those who protest and commit civil disobedience in trying to get the President and his puppets in Congress to end the futile occupations in the middle east.
We need to begin taxing the top 1 percent at something more appropriate, say 50 percent or more, since they are the ones who most benefit from the full-time militarism.
Amen peggy.
Joe
It's a Crusading Brainstem Media Propaganda Goebbeling Holiday Season! Sieg.
As Mr. Tristam accurately notes, American soldiers will continue to return from the Middle East "in whatever shape, upright, mangled, or bagged." And when this happens, all due to the fact that Afghans and Iraqis have the temerity to defend their countries from the U.S. military, these soldiers' relatives meekly accept the American flag that they are given by a representative from the armed forces instead of throwing that flag back into the face of that person who represents the military because they will have realized that they and their loved ones were lied to by their government. But these families refuse to do this apparently because they do not want to believe that their husbands and sons and brothers and daughters and wives and sisters died for a less than noble cause despite all evidence to the contrary.
"It is the job of thinking people not to be on the side of the executioners."-Albert Camus
But these families refuse to do this apparently because they do not want to believe that their husbands and sons and brothers and daughters and wives and sisters died for a less than noble cause despite all evidence to the contrary.
As with previous and indeed ALL wars this remains the case. The belief, either chosen or by default, that to fight for one's country is always good with no thought for reason or purpose will lead people to their deaths for no good reason or purpose in perpetuity. And likewise those who ask 'Why?' and 'What for?' will be the dubbed unpatriotic.
'Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori' was a lie 85 years ago and it is a lie today.
Let us therefore take the very simple step to stop the heartache yet to come. Bring them home, bring them ALL home! Now!