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They Died in Vain; Deal With It
Many of those preaching at American church services Sunday extolled as “heroes” the 30 American and 8 Afghan troops killed Saturday west of Kabul, when a helicopter on a night mission crashed, apparently after taking fire from Taliban forces. This week, the Fawning Corporate Media (FCM) can be expected to beat a steady drumbeat of “they shall not have died in vain.”
But they did. I know it is a hard truth, but they did die in vain.
As in the past, churches across the country will keep praising the fallen troops for protecting “our way of life,” and few can demur, given the tragic circumstances.
But, sadly, such accolades are, at best, misguided — at worst, dishonest. Most preachers do not have a clue as to what U.S. forces are doing in Afghanistan and why. Many prefer not to think about it. There are some who do know better, but virtually all in that category eventually opt to punt.
Should we fault the preachers as they reach for words designed to give comfort to those in their congregations mourning the deaths of so many young troops? As hard as it might seem, I believe we can do no other than fault — and confront — them. However well meaning their intentions, their negligence and timidity in confronting basic war issues merely help to perpetuate unnecessary killing. It is high time to hold preachers accountable.
Many preachers are alert and open enough to see through the propaganda for perpetual war. But most will not take the risk of offending their flock with unpalatable truth. Better not to risk protests from the super-patriots — many of them with deep pockets — in the pews. And better to avoid, at all costs, offending the loved ones of those who have been killed — loved ones who can hardly be faulted for trying desperately to find some meaning in the snuffing out of young lives.
Best to Just Praise and Pray
Far better to pray for those already killed and those who in the future will “give the last full measure of devotion to our country.” In sum, by and large, American preachers are afraid to tell the truth. They lack the virtue that Thomas Aquinas taught is the foundation of all virtue — courage. Aquinas wrote (to translate into the vernacular) that all other virtue is specious if you have no guts.
Writer James Hollingsworth hit the nail on the head: “Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear.” Like the truth.
Those who often seem to ache the most in the face of unnecessary death are mothers. Many mothers do summon the courage to say — and say loudly — ENOUGH. Yes, my son (or daughter) died for no good purpose, they are strong enough to acknowledge, painfully but honestly. He (she) did die in vain. Now we must all deal with it. Stop the false patriotism. And, most important, stop the killing.
Cindy Sheehan, whose 25 year-old son Casey was killed in Iraq in 2004, is one such mother. She and others have tried to put a dent into the strange logic that attempts to translate unnecessary death into justification for still more unnecessary death. But they get little air or ink in the Fawning Corporate Media. Rather, what you will hear in the days ahead from the FCM is well honed rhetoric not only about how our troops “cannot have died in vain,” but also that Americans must now redouble our resolve to “honor their sacrifice.”
President Barack Obama set the tone on Saturday:
“We will draw inspiration from their lives, and continue the work of securing our country and standing up for the values they embodied.”
Gen. John R. Allen, the top U.S. general in Afghanistan, also primed the pump for the FCM, saying Saturday, “All of those killed in this operation were true heroes who had already given so much in the defense of freedom.”
And Joint Chiefs Chairman went even further in professing to know “what our fallen would have wanted” us to do — namely, “keep fighting.” Mullen added that, “it is certainly what we are going to do.” All this was duly reported in Sunday’s Washington Post and other leading U.S. newspapers —without much comment.
Over the next several days, TV viewers will get a steady diet of this kind of disingenuous logic from talk show hosts feeding on the grist from Obama, Mullen, Allen, and others. After all, many pundits work for news organizations owned or allied with some of the same corporations profiteering from war.
Too bad CBS’s legendary Edward R. Murrow is long since dead; and the widely respected Walter Cronkite, as well. Taking the CBS baton from Murrow, who had challenged the “red scare” witch hunt of Sen. Joe McCarthy, Cronkite gradually saw through the dishonesty responsible for the killing of so many in Vietnam. He finally spoke up, and said, in effect, any more who die will have died in vain.
(The very long hiatus between Cronkite and Scott Pelley, newly appointed “CBS Evening News” anchor, has been particularly painful. The jury is still out, but I harbor some hope that Pelley may try to follow CBS’s earlier, prouder tradition, if by some miracle his corporate bosses allow him to. Given today’s prevailing atmosphere of obeisance to Establishment Washington, Pelley certainly has his work cut out for him. We shall have to wait and see if he has it in him to take the risk of rising to the occasion.)
Corporal Shank & Specialist Kirkland
Five years ago I was giving talks in Missouri, when the body of 18 year-old Cpl. Jeremy Shank of Jackson, Missouri (population 12,000) came home for burial. He was killed in Hawijah, Iraq on September 6, 2006 while on a “dismounted security patrol when he encountered enemy forces using small arms,” according to the Pentagon.
Which enemy forces? Two weeks before Shank was killed, Stephen Hadley, George W. Bush’s national security adviser, acknowledged that the challenge in Iraq “isn’t about insurgency, isn’t about terror; it’s about sectarian violence.” Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Makiki added, “The most important element in the security plan is to curb the religious violence.”
So was Shank’s mission to prevent Iraqi religious fanatics from blowing up one another? What do you think; was that worth his life?
On September 7, 2006, the day after Shank was killed, President Bush, in effect, mocked his unnecessary death by drawing the familiar but bogus connection between 9/11 and the “war on terror,” of which he claimed Iraq was a part. Bush said, “Five years after September 11, 2001, America is safer — and America is winning the war on terror.”
Flowery Funeral Words
Back at the First Baptist Church in Jackson, Missouri, Rev. Carter Frey eulogized Shank as one of those who “put themselves in harm’s way and paid the ultimate sacrifice so you and I can have freedom to live in this country.”
Correction: It was not Cpl. Shank who put himself in harm’s way; it was those who used a peck of lies to launch a bloody, unnecessary war — first and foremost, Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, not to mention the craven Congress that authorized it and most of the FCM that led the cheerleading for it.
Was separating Shia from Sunni a mission worth what is so facilely called the “ultimate sacrifice,” or — for other troops — the penultimate one paid by tens of thousands of veterans trying to adjust to life with brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and/or missing limbs?
Despite the self-serving rhetoric about “heroes,” the young, small-town Shanks of America stand low in the priorities of Establishment Washington. They are pawns in the war games played by generals and politicians far, far from the battlefield.
Even in the Army in which I served, troops were often referred to simply as “warm bodies;” that is, at least before they became cold and stiff. But that term was normally not accompanied by the mechanistic disdain reflected in the memo by a Fort Lewis-McCord Army major that came to light last year.
On March 20, 2010, Specialist Derrick Kirkland, back from his second tour in Iraq, hanged himself in the barracks at Fort Lewis-McCord, leaving behind a wife and young daughter. Kirkland had been suffering from severe depression and anxiety attacks, for which he had to bear severe ridicule by his comrades.
Expendable
As for his superiors, it was Army policy to do everything possible to avoid diagnosing PTSD. And so, Kirkland ended up becoming a new entry on a little-known statistical table; namely, the one that shows that more active-duty soldiers are currently committing suicide than are being killed in combat.
Not a problem for Maj. Keith Markham, Executive Officer of Kirkland’s unit, who put the prevailing attitude all too clearly in a private memo sent to his platoon leaders. “We have an unlimited supply of expendable labor,” wrote Markham.
And, sadly, he is right. Because of the poverty draft (aka the “professional Army”), more than half of U.S. troops come from small towns like Jackson, Missouri and the inner cities of our country. In both these places, good jobs and educational opportunity are rare to nonexistent.
I suspect that one factor behind the very high suicide rate is a belated realization among the troops that they have been conned, lied to — that they have been used as pawns in an unconscionably cynical game. I would imagine that corporals and specialists, as well as high brass like the legendary two-time Congressional Medal of Honor winner, Marine Gen. Smedley Butler, often come to this realization belatedly, and that this probably exacerbates the pain.
Butler wrote “War is a Racket” in 1935, describing the workings of the military-industrial complex well before President Eisenhower gave it a name. It is not difficult for troops to learn that the phenomenon about which Eisenhower warned has now broadened into an even more pervasive and powerful military-industrial-corporate-congressional-media-institutional-church complex. Small wonder the suicide rate is so high.
And for what? Please raise your hand if you now believe, or have ever believed, that the White House and Pentagon have sent a hundred thousand troops to Afghanistan for the reason given by President Obama; namely, “to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat” the 50 to 100 al-Qaeda who U.S. intelligence agencies says are still in Afghanistan.
And keep your hands up, those of you who fear you might throw something at the TV screen the next time Gen. David Petraeus intones that wonderfully flexible phrase “fragile and reversible” to describe what he keeps calling “progress” in Afghanistan.
Troops returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan know better. It must be particularly hard for them to hear the lies about “progress,” and then be ridiculed and marginalized for having PTSD. It seems a safe bet that some of those have read Kipling, and on occasion wish they had found release by following his morbid advice — awful as it is:
“When you're wounded and left on Afghanistan's plains,
And the women come out to cut up what remains,
Jest roll to your rifle and blow out your brains
And go to your gawd like a soldier.”
The Establishment Church
I added “institutional church” into the military-industrial-corporate-congressional-media-institutional-church complex coined above because, with very few exceptions, the institutional church is still riding shotgun for the system — and the wars.
I find that most men and women of the cloth avoid indicting “wars of choice,” even though such wars were quite precisely defined at the post-WWII Nuremberg Tribunal as “wars of aggression” and labeled the “supreme” international war crime). They know that in such wars thousands upon thousands die — civilians as well as military.
But then fear seems to walk in, for preachers all too often fall back on platitudinous, fulsome praise for those who “have given their lives so that we can live in freedom.” And, as the familiar phrase goes, they say/think, “I guess we’ll have to leave it there.”
And there continue to be relatively few outspoken folk like Cindy Sheehan, painfully aware that courage and truth are far more important than fear, even when that fear includes the painful recognition that the life of a beloved young son was ended unnecessarily. There are some who dare to point out that the mission given our troops has made us less, not more, safe at home, and ask what is so hard to understand about Thou Shalt Not Kill? The FCM ignores these Justice folks, so all too few know of what they say and do.
It is a curiosity that the Bible and the teachings of Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., for example, seem to have become OBE (overtaken by events) and no longer inform the sermons of many American preachers. Odd that the relevant teachings from this treasure trove seem to have become passé or, as former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said of the Geneva Conventions, “quaint” and “obsolete.”
I have this vision of Stephen Decatur smiling from the afterlife as he watches more and more acceptance being given in recent years to his famous dictum: “Our country, right or wrong.”
Let me suggest that preachers consider drawing material from yet another source in thinking about the wars in which the U.S. is currently engaged. Instead of fulsome encomia for those who have made “the ultimate sacrifice,” they might be directed to Rudyard Kipling for words more to the point, if politically and congregationally incorrect.
Two passages (the first a one-liner) shout out their applicability to U.S. misadventures in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, and — God help us — where next?
“If they ask you why we died, tell them because our fathers lied.”
and
“It is not wise for the Christian white
To hustle the Asian brown;
For the Christian riles,
And the Asian smiles
And weareth the Christian down.
At the end of the fight
Lies a tombstone white
With the name of the late deceased;
And the epitaph drear,
A fool lies here,
Who tried to hustle the East.”
Comments
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181 Comments so far
Show AllGreat article. The on-going silence of religious leaders on this moral issue is inexcusable.
Best paragraph: "I find that most men and women of the cloth avoid indicting “wars of choice,” even though such wars were quite precisely defined at the post-WWII Nuremberg Tribunal as “wars of aggression” and labeled the “supreme” international war crime). They know that in such wars thousands upon thousands die — civilians as well as military...." Can be summed up to say that the deaths could have been avoided if the troops were not involved in the act of war crimes. These war crimes do NOT keep us safe, but in reality endanger us. Blowback will surely result.
The question that was repeatedly asked by peace promoters during the Viet Nam occupation era needs to be asked today:
WHAT IF THEY HAD A WAR AND NOBODY SHOWED UP TO FIGHT IT ?
He's the universal soldier and he really IS to blame...to quote from Buffy Sainte Marie's 1964 UNIVERSAL SOLDIER lyrics.
.
The answer, my friend is blowin' in the wind; the answer is blowin' in the wind.
Mr. McGovern's essay reminded me of the Viet Nam era when we marched and sang
protest / folk songs to make our point about how useless/futile war is. One of the difference then was that there was a military draft, so most young men were conscripted into the Army - they had no choice (except for folks like Cheney, Bush, etc.).
We thought ending the draft was a good way to deny the MIC war machine the fodder it needed to conduct illegal invasions ....we were wrong. Now, they've destroyed the education system and the economy (to the extent joining the military is one of the few ways for young men/women to 'make a living') and perpetrated crises (9/11) to rile up fear in the masses and justify their endless wars.
Here's another protest song I remember singing back then...... you can substitute the word "Afghanistsn" for Viet Nam and it still works......
"I Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag"
by Country Joe and the Fish circa 1965 (?)
Well, come on all of you, big strong men,
Uncle Sam needs your help again.
He's got himself in a terrible jam
Way down yonder in Vietnam
So put down your books and pick up a gun,
We're gonna have a whole lotta fun.
And it's one, two, three,
What are we fighting for ?
Don't ask me, I don't give a damn,
Next stop is Vietnam;
And it's five, six, seven,
Open up the pearly gates,
Well there ain't no time to wonder why,
Whoopee! we're all gonna die.
Come on Wall Street, don't be slow,
Why man, this is war au-go-go
There's plenty good money to be made
By supplying the Army with the tools of its trade,
But just hope and pray that if they drop the bomb,
They drop it on the Viet Cong.
And it's one, two, three,
What are we fighting for ?
Don't ask me, I don't give a damn,
Next stop is Vietnam.
And it's five, six, seven,
Open up the pearly gates,
Well there ain't no time to wonder why
Whoopee! we're all gonna die.
Well, come on generals, let's move fast;
Your big chance has come at last.
Now you can go out and get those reds
'Cause the only good commie is the one that's dead
And you know that peace can only be won
When we've blown 'em all to kingdom come.
And it's one, two, three,
What are we fighting for ?
Don't ask me, I don't give a damn,
Next stop is Vietnam;
And it's five, six, seven,
Open up the pearly gates,
Well there ain't no time to wonder why
Whoopee! we're all gonna die.
Come on mothers throughout the land,
Pack your boys off to Vietnam.
Come on fathers, and don't hesitate
To send your sons off before it's too late.
And you can be the first ones in your block
To have your boy come home in a box.
And it's one, two, three
What are we fighting for ?
Don't ask me, I don't give a damn,
Next stop is Vietnam.
And it's five, six, seven,
Open up the pearly gates,
Well there ain't no time to wonder why,
Whoopee! we're all gonna die.
I applaud you and yours for your ability to mock faith, tradition, honor, and service with protection along with duty and sacrifice to GOD and COUNTRY. Now, we'll all pray that someday, what need be done be done in a swift and justifiable manor in accordance with humanity and fiscal responsibility and know how...but, I reckon you already know how fiscally irresponsible any humanitarian effort for peace, freedom, recognition of rights, and the duty that befalls all when genocide, torture, and the exploitation and death of innocence strike any man, nation, and creed. THOSE WHO SERVED HAVE ENDURED TO ENSURE YOUR LIBERTIES AND FREEDOMS REMAIN A CONSTANT REMINDER TO ALL OF MAN, THOUGH YOU CARE NOT, CAN NOT, AND WILL NOT, REAL MEN SHALL RALLY, SHOUT, RISE UP AND TAKE ARMS TO DEFEND THE DEFENSELESS AND PRESERVE HUMANITY FOR ALL.
Dear bigdaddy,
Do not confuse a cry against using God to justify killing as mocking faith. There is faith in the God of Love and Peace. Do those words offend you?
There are acts that are loving, or acts that are made out of fear not love. There is peace, and there is warmaking. Why do you think being the aggressor is defense?
Hitler's minions must have spoken EXACTLY as you have here.
Do not pretend that what your country does in the name of war and empire and profits is God's work.
Defending the defenseless? How would you like it if a foreign government, with hundreds of times the weaponry as your country, decides you need a regime change and bombs and invades, accidentally killing your children for "our democracy and freedom," storming down the door of your home and taking you and your sons away, leveling your town to root out insurgents against the invaders? How would you like it if a foreign nation claimed the resources in your nation as their own?
The Iraqi people and the Afghan farmers did NOT invade your country! It's the opposite.
You dare speak of torture of innocents yet you serve the torturers? Do you think it's okay that the great USA tortures its captors, innocent or not? Acts with complete disregard of the Geneva Convention because it became no longer convenient?
You are taking away our liberty and freedom not to be mass killers! We don't want your authoritarian police state! We want to turn your weapons into plowshares.
Some of us take the advice of 'Thou Shall Not Kill." It doesn't say thou shall not kill 'except when... "
REAL men, like Jesus of the bible, do not take up arms. Instead they say Love Your Enemy. That's how peace reigns. Do you call what this nation has done the preservation of humanity? I see poverty where there could be plenty, I see sick landscapes where there could be beauty and health, I see pollution and the poisoning of water and life made with total disregard to blessed nature. All in the name of the gods of war and mammon.
You may believe your iintentions are noble but please think about who and what you are serving. Read your history and decide whether or not too often your country acts on the side of evil. You hate the ones who know it is our duty and honor to shout and rally for what Jesus stood for and you spit on us. What a lie you are telling yourself that any of us would protest money for true humanitarian efforts.
And by the way you don't preserve humanity with war games. And it's really not manly to aim at unarmed people. Get over your brainwashing!
You are delusional.
Most of us here do not believe that invading countries serves God and country. In fact, just the opposite.
Since man created god, "in his own image" man can put any words in god mouth that he likes! At least that's been the way it's worked thru history. >^^<
I'm a veteran of our adventurism in Central America in the '80's, and you are definately full of shit. The United States of America is the world's largest exporter of state sponsored terrorism. They are still digging up bodies in Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, and Guatemala.
Organized religion of any sort is a form of mental illness.
Finally..a reply that makes sence and does not attack the Church and Pastors like the writter of this pethetic article tries to do with his broad brush. This article STINKS to high Heaven.
If I remember correctly this whole business started when a group of religious nuts flying a couple of planes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon while screaming, "God Is Great." We secular people have to put up with religious lunacy all the time, in Oklahoma, City or when some nut decides he doesn't want a woman to exercise her constitutional right to have an abortion and blows away a doctor practicing his profession in a perfectly legal manner. Burning down medical clinics or blocking entrance to a patient. Religious freedom is great so long as it is practiced in a non-violent and non-coercive manner. Clergy seem awful silent when these kinds of monstrous acts are committed in the name of their particular god. There are people who believe in all sorts of gods and are quite willing to kill anyone who disagrees with them. The history of religion is one of holy wars, crusades, plunder, genocide, inquisitions, witch burnings and bloodletting in general, all in the name of god. It would be a better world for us all if religious people could set their superstitions aside and just try getting along.
He's 5 foot 2 and he's 6 feet 4
He fights with missiles and with spears
He's all of 31 and he's only 17.
He's been a soldier for a thousand years
He's a catholic, a Hindu, an atheist, a Jain
A Buddhist, and a Baptist and Jew.
And he knows he shouldn't kill
And he knows he always will kill
You'll for me my friend and me for you
And He's fighting for Canada.
He's fighting for France.
He's fighting for the USA.
And he's fighting for the Russians.
And he's fighting for Japan
And he thinks we'll put an end to war this way.
And He's fighting for democracy,
He's fighting for the reds
He says it's for the peace of all.
He's the one, who must decide,
who's to live and who's to die.
And he never sees the writing on the wall.
But without him,
how would Hitler have condemned him at Dachau?
Without him Caesar would have stood alone
He's the one who gives his body
as a weapon of the war.
And without him all this killing can't go on
He's the universal soldier
And he really is the blame
His orders comes from
far away no more.
They come from him.
And you and me.
And brothers can't you see.
This is not the way we put an end to war
Thank you all for the song lyrics. I had forgotten just how great they are!
Buffy Sainte-Marie
ray, The Viet Nam/Laos police action ended because of dissension in the ranks, not civilian protest. A general mutiny was a breath away. This time, the volunteer troops are afraid to desert and killing themselves, instead of fragging officers, so far.
If the standing army was disbanded,
the world would be a much better place.
Patriotism is a fool's boast.
I understand and didn't mean to marginalize civilian protest, like the government and media did.....and worse. "68 Chicago convention - cops beat them into pulp. Kent State and Jackson - protesters were shot and killed. Jane Fonda was demonized in the media, but military personnel embraced her and, as you said, were inspired by the message. Protests in the streets didn't faze the war hounds, recruitment stations being firebombed from coast to coast didn't faze them, but when the lotto soldiers started to return the favor or refused to serve, found strength in numbers at the coffee houses, the party was over.
Today, media is god and the schizoid god tells the people:
hate each other, but act as countrymen
hate the government, but trust it.
The flock is dazed and confused.
It's time to unplug the flat screen pulpits.
Before fools tried to draft me into the Vietnam War, I had read =The Sacred Canopy= by Dr. Peter L. Berger. IMO this was a moment of satori that has been missed by the best minds of the 20th century. Enamored of this 1968 thesis in the sociology of religion, I nearly freaked out when Carl Sagan began the first lecture of his televised series called NOVA. It was like the melding of two Rubic's Cubes.
One of the most preposterous cases of religion and war endorsement involved the Roman Catholic Church in America during the Civil War - - distributed into North and South. Parishioners on each side were exhorted to do their duty and best to kill parishioners of the other side. It would be funny if it wasn't tragic.
Trylon
And this is the church which blasts birth control and abortion, and which covers up child molestation by its clergy. If there ever was a case against organized religion, it is the Catholic church. It's not more corrupt, just more organized.
Tax it.
I have asked the question many many times...precisely in a step wise fashion please tell me how our 'freedom' is one iota more secure today than it was before both Iraq and Afghaistan were invaded and all I hear is a variation on the theme that Taliba/Al quaida are unable to walk and chew gum at the same time. What absolute nonsense. And pray tell what has been the purpose of Iraqis and Afghans dying? They are no better off at all either. How many wasted lives are enough? Lets call it like it is, these soldiers are mere cannon fodder just to maintain the life styles of the directors and share holders of the weapons manufacturers etc etc. To say that these service people have died for our freedom is just an obscene lie and anyone who utters this lie needs to be called on it.
Every time I hear the word "sacrifice" in relation to the soldiers in these misbegotten wars, my mind flashes to the human sacrifices made to assure a good crop, or to bring the rain, and all the other reasons people were slaughtered to appease some god. Modern day slaughter is made to appease the god of greed. And that god won't be appeased until the little people of all countries bow down at its feet, with all of their wealth locked away in its coffers.
Nice analogy shadre.
No it isn't- who is he talking about? nobody. nobody made "human sacrifices" for good crops. Sometimes they had orgies. you don't kill people to make things grow.
Nothing these generals and politicians are doing now could ever happen before "civilization" reared its ugly hed
Lots of communities around the world made 'human sacrifices'. The Khonds of India certainly did it for good crops. They were known to buy a child, raise it as their own and then sacrifice it when it reached a certain age. The person to be sacrificed was tied to a stake and then the whole crowd would rush at him with knives and cut off the flesh. The blood and flesh were mixed in the soil - it was thought this would make it more fertile by pleasing the Earth Goddess. The British put an end to this fine practice - their 'civilized' customs made for better killings, of course. Anyway, every time someone talks about 'preserving culture and our way of life', I'm reminded of this. It's so great it occurred to someone to change both.
"I have asked the question many many times...precisely in a step wise fashion please tell me how our 'freedom' is one iota more secure today than it was before both Iraq and Afghaistan were invaded"--marlborough
i remember watching my parents-in-law go to great expense to install rot iron window guards and a complementary rot iron privacy gate and thinking to myself, "how much will it cost you to feel secure?" when home alarm systems which automatically called the police became all the rage, many frightened people jumped at the opportunity. however, so many false alarms--oops forgot to disengage before i rushed for an emergency trip to the bathroom-went off that city police felt it a waste of time to rush off without supporting evidence of a crime in process.
fear can be an asset in the right circumstance as the adrenalin surges and the mind focuses on the here and now. watched a documentary about stress which pointed out that the stress reaction to a clear and present danger can be a life saver, but the capitalistic canrard to continuously consume more, more, our t.v entertainment, the day's best-bad-scary-story news creates a constant stress reaction which confuses the mind and keeps the body's chemistry out of balance. too few distinguish between real cause for alarm and that guy who just cut in front of my car or drives so slowly and i want to get home and pop a brew.
how do we watch in such a state of detachment as the people of somalia starve, peaceful protestors killed by government forces in arab spring, gloss over u.s. droning indiscriminately and not react to the clear and present danger stalking all living beings? our first amendment "guarantees" the citizens right to peaceably assemble should we have grievances to address, yet few bat an eye when ruly (is that the opposite of unruly?) crowds gather for the goal of peace and sanity find themselves in handcuffs. when bush spoke on another land, angry crowds gathered to jeer. he would grin and say "freedom of speech! they're learning democracy!" a wise progressive wrote, "all governments embrace "freedom of speech" in other place, but don't like it on the homefront"
too bad, that.
Good thoughts, but it's wrought, as in What hath god wrought.
Actually it's wrought iron because the iron is worked out of the slag by hammering it. It's a very old word, to describe a very old thing. :)
Actually, the abundance of superfluous and unnecessary gates and bars erected and installed due to free-floating paranoia and fear are made of overwrought iron.
Very good, sir, very good indeed.
LOL
Exactly. "they fight for our freedoms," and "they fight over there so we don't have to fight them over here" are two rote mottos that war-apologists created to be spat out like a mouthful of phlegm at anyone who dares question our imperial wars of aggression. They have not one iota of truth in them, are nothing but nationalistic blather, but by God they sure sound good, and make the person saying it sound patriotic and supportive and Christian and Good.
If we had never invaded Afghanistan or Iraq (or Libya, Yemen, Somalia, Pakistan, etc.), our "freedoms" would be just as intact as they ever were, which is to say under assault by our own government with every passing day. Does anyone truly believe that if we hadn't invaded Iraq or Afghanistan (etc.) that the U.S. would suddenly be invaded by a foreign army? Or that Al Queda agents would blanket the U.S. with their operatives? Or that somehow our "freedoms" would just magically vanish one day, because we didn't spend $2 trillion+ bombing the shit out of those 2-6 nations? Please. Only a complete moron would buy that. Those platitudes are spewed precisely so that people WON'T think about the real reasons the U.S. Imperium launches all of its wars - enriching the Corporate Plutocracy. Period.
And it works.
I have not heard why it is ok for the US to have 15,000 SFs in other countries along with countless CIA bases creating mayhem and assassinations. That is also terrorism is it not? But one foreign person here in the US is a terrorist. Insane.
Blowback is the right word. They hate us for our coups and installing brutal puppets who do what we want, until they don't then we have to take them out.
I agree that they got what they deserved. Coming back from a night raid, kicking in doors, killing or hauling people off to secret prisons. Didn't we fight a war against the British for that reason?
People cheered their husbands, sons and daughters to go off and slaughter. Now they get to see how it felt.
Talking about a Karmic overdose; fascist america with its killing machine military is gonna pay very hard for the suffering it has caused ! How long...at least until the slaughter and terrorist acts against humanity CEASE !
I hear you Marlborough. The remark "They are fighting for our freedom" is repeated ad nauseum every night on our local nightly news as well as on bumperstickers on these huge SUV's and doulie four wheel drive pickup trucks. Everytime I hear that, I ask how exactly are they fighting for our freedom? Are they saing us from the Afgans or Iraqis flying over here and bombing any major city, or for thaat matter any unincorapoated little blink and miss small town? An obvious no. Are the Afgan or Iraqi "Inelligence" services (do they even have them?) going to infiltrate our government and learn how to make a hydrogen bomb, or convert the U.S. population into Sharia law? No. In reality, out own "Christians" are far more dangerous in that aspect, not woth Sharia law but Biblical law. If we hadn't invaded these two sorvergn nations would our national security have been at more risk than had we not. No. In fact quite the opposite.
So tell me, how are they fighting for our freedom? Are they fighting for freedom from high gas prices. No. We are paying more not less. Are they fighting for increased profits for the big oil companies, the benefit of corrupt contractors such as Halliburton, and George W. Bu$h's manhood? Cha-Ching!!! Just one little problem for George. He ran like the coward he is from having to go to Viet Nam, as did Dick Cheney. Sorry guys, sending other people's children into a war you created on false pretenses doesn't make you a man. It makes you a war criminal.
WELL said my friend.
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Up to one heartbeat ago, everything that ever lived & died upon planet Earth lived and died in vain.
Jonathan Schell imagined that, with each tick of an Earth Clock, a new Planetary Congress exists. It consists of everything alive at that second, and has two sets of constituents: ONE - everything that ever lived; TWO everything yet to live.
TICK, now there is a new Congress.
Trylon
Yes Trylon, absolutely speaking, since nothing lasts all living and dying is in vain, but relatively speaking our soldiers didn't die in vain, they died to enrich the bank accounts of such stellar Christians and patriots like Dick Cheney.
Relatively speaking, our/all soldiers kill in vain and commit atrocities yet choose to =live by the sword=.
"Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." --Voltaire
Thanks very much for this article, which I call "great." More productive, however, might be to say that it is "chipping away" as advised by Chomsky and Zinn. People need to speak out and not just Mr. McGovern, although he is a very good example of how to do it.
My first book, THE LAST WORDS OF RICHARD HOLBROOKE (by John Escher) is anti Afghan war and now is up at Kindle Books, Amazon.
Thank you Ray for this sane and honest piece. I was sickened; but, certainly not at all surprised by the tone of the news of the deaths of the Navy Seals by the FCM. Imagine, the audacity of the enemy insurgents shooting at our guys, the good guys ? As for Scott Pelley of CBS, or for that matter the clergy being beholden and unchallenging to the myth of American might and right to make war anywhere and anytime - nothing will change. Mr. Pelley gets paid very well to not tell us and the clergy to keep the myths in place to fill the collection plates. Chris Hedges abandoned his flock because he saw that the truth has no place in our churches and that his worlds as a journalist had more potential when speaking about things we really need to hear in this god forsaken world.
Finally, someone with notoriety said it.
These men are not heroes, they were led like sheep, to do unconscionable acts for nationalism. Patriotism is not romantic and trying to dress this particular act up as if for a "rescue" mission does cut it.
The shooting down of the Chinnok has been called a "tragedy" ....when the fascist amerikan military blows up babies, mothers, and other brown skinned people is it ever called a tragedy ?!!!!
No, just "collateral damage"-how sick!
"They died in vain." Thanks for cogently cutting through all the patriotic and religious nonsense, Ray. They also died so major corporations that don't care who wins or loses just keep making profits. How soon would these wars end if all corporate profits from weapons and services were taxed at, say, about 95% just so the corporations could show their great patriotism, of course. Cut off the pensions of the generals and see how fast the wars end.
The Chinook that went down cost taxpayers $36,000,000. Was that enough to keep teachers on the payroll, send a worthy student to college, keep firemen from being fired or to buy medicine or food for the unemployed in YOUR community? Obama has betrayed the nation along with the other criminal goons in the national laboratories and the corporations that want to test their new weaponry for the next war. The US is a failed nation that fraudulently has proclaimed itself as the world leader for decades. It all stopped with our lies at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
And wouldn't it be better if those companies that don't pay taxes but make all the money had to pay for their own wars? Why do we the taxpayers have to foot the bill for the oil companies, defense contractors, ect? We are invading countries so they can have access to their oil and minerals. We pay, they keep the dough, they charge us. And arm and a leg, or a life and a soul.
Great article. I watched the boards here in UT too and they wrote the same drivel. May God welcome you home. Yeah right, after you butchered or killed many innocent civilians. I keep asking why those whose countries we are in are called insurgents or terrorists when we were the ones that invaded their country.
I ask people that question all the time and get blank looks or heated replies.
Cannon Fodder.
"How soon would these wars end if all corporate profits from weapons and services were taxed at, say, about 95% just so the corporations could show their great patriotism, of course."
Corporations and the rich have a love of money and the false power it gives, not to country. If we did not pay them they would quickly be working for the Chinese or Russians. Blackwater ring a bell. They are using our tax money to get rich and the byproduct is dead people and pissed off families.
Enjoy your day!
Chinook Helicopter cost: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_CH-47_Chinook
Average Teacher's salary: http://www.payscale.com/research/US/All_K-12_Teachers/Salary
Thank you google. This information is at our fingertips, yet if you listen to political debate the reason our schools suck is the teachers. We spend 10 times each year killing kids in other countries than we do educating our own kids.
Very good article. For a very bad topic.
If Americans have any freedoms today, those freedoms were won by the people, not the government of which the military is part. (Don't government-hating conservatives realize this? Perhaps not, if they want government to "keep its hands off my Medicare".) Those freedoms are maintained by the people, and if not, are lost, often for good. The US military does many things, but preserving our vaunted freedoms, no and hell no.
I don't think conservatives are government-hating at all. That's just their double speak for wanting total control of the government, and keeping it. That's why they've so hell-bent on destroying everything democratic so there won't be any one to challenge them. If they succeed in that destruction, they'll make sure no other party gets its feet off the ground. And trying to infiltrate their party would take some doing, what with all the tests and oaths they're attaching to those already in the party who're trying to get elected.