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“Our American Heroes”: Why It’s Wrong to Equate Military Service with Heroism
When I was a kid in the 1970s, I loved reading accounts of American heroism from World War II.
I remember being riveted by a book about the staunch Marine defenders of Wake Island and inspired by John F. Kennedy's exploits saving the sailors he commanded on PT-109. Closer to home, I had an uncle -- like so many vets of that war, relatively silent on his own experiences -- who had been at Pearl Harbor when the Japanese attacked on December 7, 1941, and then fought them in a brutal campaign on Guadalcanal, where he earned a Bronze Star. Such men seemed like heroes to me, so it came as something of a shock when, in 1980, I first heard Yoda's summary of war in The Empire Strikes Back. Luke Skywalker, if you remember, tells the wizened Jedi master that he seeks "a great warrior." "Wars not make one great," Yoda replies.
Okay, it was George Lucas talking, I suppose, but I was struck by the truth of that statement. Of course, my little epiphany didn't come just because of Yoda or Lucas. By my late teens, even as I was gearing up for a career in the military, I had already begun to wonder about the common ethos that linked heroism to military service and war. Certainly, military service (especially the life-and-death struggles of combat) provides an occasion for the exercise of heroism, but even then I instinctively knew that it didn't constitute heroism.
Ever since the events of 9/11, there's been an almost religious veneration of U.S. service members as "Our American Heroes" (as a well-intentioned sign puts it at my local post office). That a snappy uniform or even intense combat in far-off countries don't magically transform troops into heroes seems a simple point to make, but it's one worth making again and again, and not only to impressionable, military-worshipping teenagers.
Here, then, is what I mean by "hero": someone who behaves selflessly, usually at considerable personal risk and sacrifice, to comfort or empower others and to make the world a better place. Heroes, of course, come in all sizes, shapes, ages, and colors, most of them looking nothing like John Wayne or John Rambo or GI Joe (or Jane).
"Hero," sadly, is now used far too cavalierly. Sportscasters, for example, routinely refer to highly paid jocks who hit walk-off home runs or score game-winning touchdowns as heroes. Even though I come from a family of firefighters (and one police officer), the most heroic person I've ever known was neither a firefighter nor a cop nor a jock: She was my mother, a homemaker who raised five kids and endured without complaint the ravages of cancer in the 1970s, with its then crude chemotherapy regimen, its painful cobalt treatments, the collateral damage of loss of hair, vitality, and lucidity. In refusing to rail against her fate or to take her pain out on others, she set an example of selfless courage and heroism I'll never forget.
Hometown Heroes in Uniform
In local post offices, as well as on local city streets here in central Pennsylvania, I see many reminders that our troops are "hometown heroes." Official military photos of these young enlistees catch my eye, a few smiling, most looking into the camera with faces of grim resolve tinged with pride at having completed basic training. Once upon a time, as the military dean of students at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California, I looked into such faces in the flesh, congratulating young service members for their effort and spirit.
I was proud of them then; I still am. But here's a fact I suspect our troops might be among the first to embrace: the act of joining the military does not make you a hero, nor does the act of serving in combat. Whether in the military or in civilian life, heroes are rare -- indeed, all-too-rare. Heck, that's the reason we celebrate them. They're the very best of us, which means they can't be all of us.
Still, even if elevating our troops to hero status has become something of a national mania, is there really any harm done? What's wrong with praising our troops to the rafters? What's wrong with adding them to our pantheon of heroes?
The short answer is: There's a good deal wrong, and a good deal of harm done, not so much to them as to us.
To wit:
*By making our military a league of heroes, we ensure that the brutalizing aspects and effects of war will be played down. In celebrating isolated heroic feats, we often forget that war is guaranteed to degrade humanity. "War," as writer and cultural historian Louis Menand noted, "is specially terrible not because it destroys human beings, who can be destroyed in plenty of other ways, but because it turns human beings into destroyers."
When we create a legion of heroes in our minds, we blind ourselves to evidence of their destructive, sometimes atrocious, behavior. Heroes, after all, don't commit atrocities. They don't, for instance, dig bullets out of pregnant women's bodies in an attempt to cover up deadly mistakes. They don't fire on a good Samaritan and his two children as he attempts to aid a grievously wounded civilian. Such atrocities and murderous blunders, so common to war's brutal chaos, produce cognitive dissonance in the minds of many Americans who simply can't imagine their "heroes" killing innocents. How much easier it is to see the acts of violence of our troops as necessary, admirable, even noble.
*By making our military generically heroic, we act to prolong our wars. By seeing war as essentially heroic theater, we esteem it even as we excuse it. Consider, for example, Germany during World War I, a subject I've studied and written about. Now, as then, and here, as there, the notion of war as heroic theater became common. And when that happens, war's worst excesses are conveniently softened on the "home front," which only contributes to more war-making. As the historian Robert Weldon Whalen noted of those German soldiers of nearly a century ago, "The young men in field-grey were, first of all, not just soldiers, but young heroes, Junge Helden. They fought in the heroes' zone, Heldenzone, and performed heroic deeds, Heldentaten. Wounded, they shed hero's blood, Heldenblut, and if they died, they suffered a hero's death, Heldentod, and were buried in a hero's grave, Heldengrab." The overuse of helden as a modifier to ennoble German militarism during World War I may prove grating to our ears today, but honestly, is it that much different from America's own celebration of our troops as young heroes (with all the attendant rites)?
*By insisting programmatically on American military heroism, we also lay a firm foundation for potentially dangerous post-war myths, especially of the blame-mongering "stab-in-the-back" variety. After all, once you have a league of heroes, how can you assign responsibility for costly, debilitating, perhaps even lost wars to them? It's just a fact that heroes don't lose. And if they're not responsible, and their brilliant, super-competent leaders (General "King David" Petraeus springs to mind) aren't responsible -- then it's only a small step to assigning blame to weak-willed civilians and so-called unpatriotic elements on the "home front," especially since we're not likely to credit our enemies for much. By definition, cravenly hiding among civilians as they do, our enemies are just about incapable of behaving heroically.
Of Young Heroes and Front Pigs
In rejecting the "heroic" label, don't think we'd be insulting our troops. Quite the opposite: we'd be making common cause with them, for most of our troops undoubtedly already reject the "hero" label, just as the young "heroes" of Germany did in 1917-18. With the typical sardonic humor of front-line soldiers, they preferred the less comforting, if far more realistically descriptive label (given their grim situation in the trenches) of "front pigs."
Whatever nationality they may be, troops at the front know the score. Even as our media and our culture seek to elevate our troops into the pantheon of demi-gods, our "front pigs" carry on, plying an ancient and brutal trade. Most simply want to survive and come home with their bodies, their minds, and their buddies intact. Part of the world's deadliest war machine, they are naturally concerned first about saving their own skins, and only secondarily worried about the lives of others. This is not beastliness. Nor is it heroism. It's simply a front pig's nature.
So, next time you talk to our soldiers, Marines, sailors, or airmen, do them (and your country) a small favor. Thank them for their service. Let them know that you appreciate them. Just don't call them heroes.




127 Comments so far
Show AllThe title was good enough. And i won't thank them because they haven't served me. I personally tend to tell them i feel sorry for them, at best. Compassion, if warranted.
Or i say nothing. Or ask lots of questions about what they witnessed and experienced.
Sometimes i even offer them ways of working through PTSD. Even if i meet them on a train. It's what i do.
I am not saying that this piece didn't make some good points.
But thank them? No 'thank you' retired colonel.
peace.
I absolutely agree with readytotransform. William Astore wishes to reassure his readers that even though he does not believe American soldiers should be considered heroes he is certainly proud of their service. Mr. Astore, what exactly are you proud of? These robots in the military that you lavish your praise on are taking part in the illegal and immoral occupations of two countries in the Middle East. I strongly suggest that the patriotic Mr. Astore take in the documentary Sir! No Sir! because if he did he might perhaps reach an epiphany by realizing that the soldiers that should be lauded are those soldiers who take part in rebelling against U.S. imperialism which is what Sir! No Sir! brings out about those in the military who said NO during the Vietnam conflict.
There should be no moral equivalency here as both types of soldiers cannot be praised since one group is saying that they are not going to blindly and meekly obey the illegal orders that they are given while the others are doing just that. Perhaps Mr. Astore should ask himself if he would be proud of soldiers who were occupying this country or would he be instead proud of those in that military who would say that they would not be part of occupying the United States.
I committed a small act of desecration when about a year ago I drew a little peace symbol on a National Guard recruiting poster that was inside my local post office in my small rural conservative town. Surprisingly that poster and that peace symbol continue to remain on that wall in the post office. Perhaps a more honest message should be given to potential enlistees in places like post offices around the country such as this bumper sticker which I have on my car:
"Join the Army. Travel to exotic distant lands, meet exciting interesting people and kill them."
The robots in the military would do well to recall the words of former Green Beret Donald Duncan who observed in Sir! No Sir! that:
"I was doing it right but I wasn't doing right."
Astore cannot have it both ways. He either supports those in the military who have said NO to what the U.S. is doing overseas or he gives his support to those who willingly go along with the program. What Astore never mentions is that the former are the ones who most certainly deserve the title of hero.
The main truth Astore fails to mention is that in the US and globally most members of the military, if they weren't drafted, joined the military to obtain a secure job with good benefits.
The military industrial media complex fabricated the hero thing to assure that anybody who criticized ever expanding miltary budgets would immediately be labelled unpatriotic.
And the disastrous economic policies of the neo-cons help to swell the ranks of the war machine that the rich find easy to avoid.
The military industrial media complex fabricated the hero thing to assure that anybody who criticized ever expanding miltary budgets would immediately be labelled unpatriotic.
........Those are my thoughts as well !
Dont thanks military types, tell them they are bankrupting the country
Right on!
Current economic conditions have created a de facto draft (job shortage for young Americans to the extent that for many of them the military is their only job prospect) and none of these folks were driven by patriotism to join the military.
This is so true, and maybe another reason the US avoids universal health care; if everyone, in any job (or unemployed) has access, what is the benefit of military service?
NMlib - great connection of the dots I'd not considered. All the comments in this line have given me pause. Thanks all.
Jack
Errol - do a google search for Todesrune - and then one for Algiz.
which symbol do you choose?
You said everything you needed to say, RTT.
.
Ready, you addressed very pointedly what I was going to say.
Indeed, what service, according to the author, are we supposed to thank our paid soldiers for?
Has anyone invaded the United States of late?
Are we supposed to thank our paid soldiers for occupying and devastating other lands, for being stationed for decades on end in hundreds of unwelcome and often deleterious military bases established in dozens of foreign lands?
and then return to the US and cost the taxpayers a fortune in medical costs and other expenses for years to come.
Thanks for starting off one of the best threads of comments I've read on CD. Great work all.
That is my favorite Yoda quote, even if it took me a while to pick it up.
Heroism implies a noble courageous act for or on behalf of others, an act usually perilous to the hero. Aside from there being virtually nothing noble about our motives or actions in these current wars, there is very little courage required for a person to use advanced military (video game) technology against much less sophisticated people and arms. It is not like our alleged hero soldier of today is throwing himself on a hand grenade to save his comrades, or is otherwise placing himself into the line of fire to protect innocent strangers.
I completely agree that we have glorified the inglorious. The nightly network TV news has made a practice of referring to every local soldier as a "hero." I've seen military men and women praised for no other reason than they are in the military.
Respect, honor, courage, integrity, dignity and sacrifice are required of the glorious, and when you cheapen those you devalue all which we should be aspiring to become as transcendent beings. When everybody qualifies for an achievement award or for a title of honor just for showing up you marginalize every exceptional person and every act of true greatness - you are then celebrating mediocrity and exalting the ordinary.
COSMO: I like your post, especially the concluding paragraph. I'd like to add something, however; and that is that to the degree a society becomes comfortable with violence masked as heroism, it makes way for brutes and brutality.
America today, with so many uniformed guards (Homeland Security, Army, Air Force, Marines, Highway Patrol, Sheriff departments, Police, DEA, Marine Patrol, Navy/ Navy Seals, CIA, etc!!!!) is coming to resemble Germany in the early 1940's. The best film depiction, in my view, was CABARET.
The film begins with an absolute disgust for the uniformed soldiers who begin to enter the chic Cabaret. However, as time passes, and even families begin to fall under idolatrous thrall to Hitler, the Nazi soldiers find themselves welcome fixtures inside these clubs.
There's a reason it's often referred to as "creeping fascism," as it's creeping into the fabric of our nation by virture of the use of soft (film/entertainment) as well as hard propaganda. Both fuel its march.
Siouxrose, very nice corollary. I'm sure you too appreciate how the brutes and brutality have become more insidious, being more artful in deception and skilled in the violence against our better humanity, working to marginalize our faith and hope in a harmonious future and vision for a more spiritually attuned existence.
COSMO: Everything you say (which I agree with) strains both sanity and credulity. My understanding of the longer/larger cycles of time helps me to know that beyond this awful cloud, a silver lining will later emerge. This transition phase is not an overnight process; and therein lies the challenge. As the thousands who attend the World Social Forum assert, "Another world IS possible." Those with entrenched interests in that which is passing away are pulling out all legal, moral, and just stops in their efforts to hold on... but, "The times, they ARE a changin..."
Woe is the nation that has no heroes. Rather, woe is the nation that needs heroes.
The military gave out 8000 medals to the 7000 soldiers who invaded Grenada to save nutmeg from global communism. Given that they fought against a handful of 'soldiers' and some construction workers it seems somewhat easier to get medals these days than it was in the past. Many soldiers get medals just for showing up and not shooting themselves. It seems to support Napoleon's opinion that many men will risk their lives for a bit of ribbon.
If you've never read it please seek out Smedley Butler's 1935 book...War is a Racket.
In it he tells how he came to realize that he had mostly acted during his long and distinguished career as muscle for American corporations.
There was nothing noble or heroic about it. It was ugly. Still is...
True about old Smedley, one of my heroes, but remember he only criticized the military after he had resigned. Maybe he would have have more credibility with the masses if he had said something when still in uniform.
Butler also scuttled the American fascists' attempt to kill FDR. Prescott Bush (Dubya's grandad) and Henry Ford were among the fascists involved in that plot.
Butler is an unsung hero.
This is the best article I have read in a very long tiome about the truth of militasry service and war, And especially about "hero's"
"military service (especially the life-and-death struggles of combat) provides an occasion for the exercise of heroism, but even then I instinctively knew that it didn't constitute heroism"
This is the unvarnished truth for those of you and thats most of you that know nothing about war.
To those that want to keep up the pretense of "robots" or still want to enoble themselves in their own eyes by sopitting on those who serve (and for those that are so literal minded, thats a euphamism, or want to make "hero's" of those that break their word or can't find the compassion to "thank them" for their service...they wouldn't know honor, courage, integrity, dignity or personal sacrifice if it swam up on tyheir personal beach and bit them in the butt.
Time to move on from the sixties and join the real world before it buries you.
Time for a little reality check, Mr. Mightymite. As I mentioned in my earlier comment, what exactly are we supposed to be thanking the robots for? No matter how much you try to justify it, they are still a part of an organization that is occupying and brutalizing and terrorizing the people of Afghanistan and Iraq and Pakistan. The U.S. military is dropping 500 lb bombs on innocent Afghan children and grandmothers which results in those children and grandmothers being ripped to pieces by your benevolent U.S. soldiers. Drone missiles are tearing to shreds innocent people in Pakistan. Courage, integrity, dignity, personal sacrifice? It certainly does not take much courage to obey the orders that one is given by one's commanding officer. But it certainly takes far greater courage to say NO to the illegal and immoral orders that they are given by their superior officers. You may want to take those emotional flag waving sentiments to one of those neoconservative web sites as that it is where it would seem more appropriate place for you to post your John Wayne and Rambo beliefs. You may wish to ask the average Afghan or Iraqi or Pakistani if they feel proud of the personal sacrifice that those brave soldiers are doing on their behalf. In all likelihood their fervent desire is for those soldiers to show their solidarity with the Afghans and the Iraqis and the Pakistanis by deserting from their units. As with so many patriotic Americans, your first allegiance is to those who meekly obey the orders that they are given instead of the people in Third World countries who have felt the sting and the lash and the heel and the bullets and the bombs of the United States military.
Also, the word that you are looking for is not "hero's". It is, instead, spelled heroes.
Sorry mightymite, but the words you write won't cut it now.
But, I understand. You and your kind are paranoid and fearful of the world, and rightly so. Anyone who has been part of the American military machine that has over the decades, killed and destroyed so many in so many lands around world have a right to be terrified, and you should be. You are correct, there are probably many around who'd like to "bury" you. However, somehow, I don't feel the fear anymore. There was a time I'd argue on your behalf, but seeing now what you've "protected" and built in the wake of your violence, I'm no longer getting That Old Patriotic Feeling.
In your "real world", you protected and died for Wall Street and your employer ($)–the MIC. That's all. And they're the ones that fully represent and control the nation. Not only did you kill men, women and children overseas, with trillions of tax dollars, you killed America. You killed the small towns. You lost the jobs. You destroyed the economy. You destroyed the middle class. You destroyed the environment. All because you blindly carried out the policies of the most murderous, most corrupt and destructive political, war and financial machine this planet has ever produced, all in the name flag, patriotism, and country.
And by the way mm, speaking of "joining the real world before it bites you", where were you and your grand, multi-trillion dollar MIC the morning of 9-11? For nearly two hours you were MIA. Nowhere in sight.
You want to be seen as a hero, mightymite? Then you and your buddies go arrest those in Washington and Wall Street, the same ones that have played you all for fools, taken your limbs, minds, lives and destroyed our nation. Then you can rightly be called "heros".
Wow, MOON PIE! Smedley Butler, John Perkins, and Martin Luther King would probably salute your post. Harsh words, but then the truth is anything but kind, gentle, decent, or remotely linked with acts of integrity these days!
I was thinking about the power behind the American mantra of exceptionalism... that so many are utterly clueless about what their nation's military is tasked with doing in their names. Even after leaving Iraq littered in DU, 4 million homeless, one million dead... the machine travels onto Afghanistan, where as Rosemary pointed out, the latest general rhapsodies about the JOY/fun of killing!
A nation that makes war at its pleasure and inverts language to support campaigns of naked (literally) torture, can no longer claim it's on the side of the angels. When this fact, and its karmic boomerang, truly hits home, our country will become a shadow of its former self. We're watching this transition in slow motion.
The tropical system crossing the Caribbean now appears to be aiming at New Orleans and the oil WOUND. Katrina hit that zone as the first wake-up call. The wars have not stopped, nor has the ecocide in a mad, senseless rush after oil. Where is the call to conservation? Where is the conscience on the part of elected "leaders" to take stock of the meaning of these events? To lessen the military-oil footprint, to ask citizens to walk or bike or drive less?
Silence in the face of calamitous disregard is criminal. One wonders how long these deadly charades can go on?
Good post
It's easy for you to hate the troops without going after people who pressure them to stay and serve. Whether you serve or not, you're still dependent on the military like everyone else.
> you killed America. You killed the small towns.
> You lost the jobs. You destroyed the economy.
> You destroyed the middle class. You destroyed
> the environment. All because you blindly carried
> out the policies of the most murderous, most
> corrupt and destructive political, war and financial
> machine this planet has ever produced, all in the
> name flag, patriotism, and country.
You mean it's the troops who did it, not those nasty corporations or the politicians?
Moonpie:
Excellent response. Thank you.
Superb comment. Hats off to moonpie. mightymite is vanquished.
Along with this "hero" worship of the military in America comes the notion that serving in the military makes one deserving of the best health care available. I'm not saying that military members don't deserve access to quality health care, but what about the rest of the population? We don't show the same concern for thousands of others who lack the means to seek care and treatment and often die as a result.
THANKS, BUT NO THANKS.
They are putting us a risk. We would be much safer if they'd stop killing civilians with drones...............
Anyone here remember Gen Mattis saying, "...you know it's a hell of a hoot. It's fun to shoot some people..." Mattis was just promoted to replace Petraeus in the McChrystal Military Musical Chairs fiasco.
The real heroes and heroines are the ones who, once in the military, check in with their consciences and realize that they can't do what is required of them. It takes phenomenal courage for soldiers to speak out while they are in the system, and a growing number of them are finding the courage to resist. War will stop when soldiers refuse to fight.
Domisol
Bravo! Very well said. My earlier comments most emphatically echo what you have written. A documentary that speaks to this issue is called Soldiers of Conscience which, if I remember correctly, concerns four soldiers who refused to fight for the U.S. military as they realized how wrong it is for the United States to be occupying and waging war against the citizens of Afghanistan and Iraq.
As Albert Einstein once observed:
"The Pioneers of a Warless World are those youth who refuse military service."
Since when are war criminals heroes ?
Whether it is Blackwater or enlisted military, they are all mercenaries paid to kill whoever our corporate imperial government asks them to kill.
They would kill protesting Americans if asked to do so as they have in the past.
The hero culture is a way to justify the murder and bring false honor to the profession.
This reminds me of a related story. It's an ancient, ancient tragedy, now only vaguely perceived, in fleeting glimpses, here & there, in myths, folklore, novels, movies, TV shows (this collective amnesia is part of the tragedy).Perhaps many tens of thousands of years ago, people knew they lived as much in a supernatural earth, as well as the natural earth. People knew they were not of the natural order of creatures of earth, but were the humblest members of the supernatural order of creatures of earth. Just as zebras, gnus, antelopes have their natural predators (lions, leopards, hyenas), so also did people have their supernatural predators (asuras, rakshas, nagas, demons and such). The soldier/warrior castes were the protectors/defenders of humanity FROM THESE enemies of mankind. They no more thought of killing people, than we think of canibalism today. We were engaged in on-going "warfare" against these inherent predators upon humanity,when, somehow, we "lost" the war. We've been victims of our (super)natural enemies ever since. They "feed" on our negative mental/emotional energy, and have "tricked" us into fighting one another ever since, to "milk" us of this negative energy. They have established a heirarchy of powerful elites(perhaps the MOST TRAGIC victims of all) & USE them to steer mankind into one tragedy after another, "milking" us all along the way.
This much of the great tragedy I've pieced together from all remaining bits & pieces of "the story". The collective amnesia prevents complete retrieval, thus keeping us incapacitated & unable to rectify the terrible situation.
INB: My reading list in things esoteric/spiritual (spanning 4 decades) is quite wide, but I have never come across your intriguing theory/observation before.
I always loved the way Martial Arts taught its devotees to best themselves! That the mastery of the self, in part through trained physical disciplines, represented the greatest of goals.
The Tarot speaks symbolically about this quest to tame the self, too. As does the Bible in the adage, "He who conquers himself is greater than he who conquers a city." Eric Prince has practiced neither, although he's quite good at assembling his private armies.
Thank you for offering a very unique perspective to the forum, and this particular discussion.
I've always had a knack for finding info (the angels of knowledge I suppose). The story is NOT in any one place. A "guiding hand" is needed to help see it.
Supernatural evil space monsters defeated our noble soldier/warring class and that's why we kill each other?
Maybe the pentagon can sell that to an obviously idiotic populace. Today it's Al Qaeda, tomorrow, demons from the nether lands in the realms of HELL! The skies the limit for military spending. But eh, maybe it'll work. If the militarist's go around thinking they are killing supernatural evil doers they might stop killing other humans. Oh the irony.
Yeah. It'll be used that way too. Reagan intmated as much when he was pushing star wars. The enemy misses no tricks.
Looking back at this, I also wish to state that I can no longer be ridiculed back into disbelief & dysfunction. Sorry. Now, addressing the enemy; That weapon no longer works. You'll have to find other weapons now.
Erroll has already made all the important points about this article, which is only a half measure toward gaining a full understanding of what military "heroism" is really about. Lt. Col. Astore (Ret.) probably makes his point best by naming his mother as the truest hero he's ever known. The kind of courage and dedication she displayed exists at levels most of us never rise to. That would be true of many mothers all around the world, also fathers, and even people struggling to keep body and soul alive in the never-ending battle against powerful interests arrayed against the powerless multitudes.
I'm not sure I'd call the kids "robots" who are mired down in the US's illegal wars in the Mideast, on behalf of American imperialist imperatives and ultimate world economic domination, but they are certainly kept intentionally ignorant of what their mission actually is. Our dysfunctional educational system spits out thousands of barely literate (or illiterate) and miseducated or totally uneducated teenagers every year, who are meant to line up at recruiting centers as volunteers, because this dysfunctional and hollowed out economy has no other place for them. It's easy to make young men believe in the myths of war and "service to their country" when they can barely read the back of a cereal box and have spent countless hours with video games that teach them the Rambo heroics of military fantasyland.
All that's needed to cure anyone of the Total Lie these kids buy into, and the majority of our corporate-programmed public keeps believing about the glories of militarism and military service, is reading Nick Turse's "The Complex: How the Military Invades Our Everyday Lives." But then, that would require READING, and these kids and their TV-addled parents can't be bothered with such a boring undertaking. In fact, just reading Chapter 12 of Turse's book, A Virtual World of War, 27 pages, would be all anyone needs to clearly understand how the military's pervasiveness and saturation of American culture has literally programmed (ok, like robots after all) millions of kids into blind fixation upon and adoration of heroism in combat.
From video games pumped out by the Pentagon, to Hollywood to NASCAR, with thousands of stops in between, this culture is militarized to the teeth. It's just about all we are now, having off-shored and outsourced most of our erstwhile economy. The reason drilling will only increase in the Gulf and anywhere else is that BP cannot really be punished or curtailed in any way, because we need millions of barrels of oil a day to feed the war monster. When a few of these misguided kids fighting in Afghanistan, Iraq, droning Pakistani civilians, and wherever corporate profits are there for the taking, begin to see the light, the cognitive dissonance will be worse than PTSD. Expect more suicides among returning troops than we had post-Vietnam.
About all the US manufactures now is death, chaos and insanity. When a young person finally figures out that's what they've been fighting for, life can surely seem not worth living.
"When a young person finally figures out that's what they've been fighting for, life can surely seem not worth living."
...and the proof of that is in the skyrocketing rate of suicides among service people both while in service and after coming home.
EPHRAIM: A brilliant post, thank you!
Astore never takes on the real issue, that war, itself, is an illegitimate form of conflict resolution this late in humanity's game plan. He may deconstruct the idea of hero, but he never attempts to touch "the sacred cow" in this Mars-rules (MIC-controlled) land where 50% of assets are directed at The Beast. Note that the MIC's claim to cannibalizing the U.S. budget is referred to as "the sacred cow" no congress person will touch.
The irony and moral bankruptcy on display (as a result of these anything-but pro-national defense policies) could not be clearer given the fact the nation is bleeding in so many places; yet instead of directing money towards true necessities, it still goes to all the heroic soldiers, pawns on the geo-political global chessboard. As more in the homeland security state find themselves hungry, homeless, and jobless... a comprehensive connecting of dots will ensue.
Interesting posts: Jennifer B., Bernie (12:43), Socialist, Erroll & Paul Revere.
>>From video games pumped out by the Pentagon, to Hollywood to NASCAR, with thousands of stops in between, this culture is militarized to the teeth
Miltarized and Infantilized. The most dangerous of combinations.
From my perspective, many in the military are just naive and brainwashed into sincerely believing they are "protecting America"; some want an opportunity for an education, while others just want a job. What most in the military do not realize, is they are just being used as tools and pawns to protect the racket of war. The whores and respectfully bowing MSM reinforces this miasma that killing innocent people around the world for industrial greed and profit is somehow heroic. The MSM has been complicit in this canard for many, many years and has succeeded in brainwashing the American sheeple into believing this egregious lie. The soldiers that give their lives for America, are brave men and women; but unfortunately their bravery is being used for punic, puerile, nefarious, and ulterior motives, not to protect the average American; not to protect us from the fear of communists, reds, Cuba, terrorists, Muslims, ect. taking over America as these "bad guys" are the fear supply that keeps the war business in business. Oderint Dum Mutant!
gnken
As a veteran of the Coast Guard 75-79, I was trained in Radio Communications "Radioman". The job has served me well and has kept me employed. Currently Im due to retire soon after 26 years as a State Police Dispatcher. As well Im an Amateur Extra Class Operator. This highest license you can achieve in Ham Radio. When I share my radio back ground when talking to another Ham Operator, and instead of a response of "Great experience" I seem to be getting more and more of "Thank You for your Service". Years ago it was regarded as well "good, at least you weren't in the Army or had to fight that awful war in Vietnam". I use to also get the remark "Oh Coast Guard - good choice of service". Yes it was but so is the Army, Air Force, Marines, Navy, and State National Guards. All military services have there missions. But now I see alot of Veterans returning home disillusioned, or very cocky. My brother works as a officer on a Tug Boat and he is working with quite a few former Naval, Coast Guard Veterans and come into this field thinking that there gods gift to the towing industry. My brother graduated from the US Merchant Marine Academy in 1975. All I can say is it's very different then when I served. But the next time someone says "Thank you for your service" to me, I will continue to feel that it lacks sincerity. Sorry if I sound cynical.
This essay is simply watered-down military gibberish... once again making the unthinkable normal - classic soft sell rhetoric from the masters of war. Truly "American Exceptionalism" at its manifest destiny best.
And of course the military hero myth also encourages young and naive people to enlist and their families to regard this as an honorable thing to do.
Just add water. You can be a hero !
Another take on the situation is a vet who said, "Where else can I get paid to kill ragheads".
Or another who said, "How many Muslims are there in the world ? Three billion ? Do you think we can kill all of them ? "