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A Disneyland of Militant Ignorance: The American Normalization of Mass Murder

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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 08:22 AM
Original message
A Disneyland of Militant Ignorance: The American Normalization of Mass Murder
A Disneyland of Militant Ignorance: The American Normalization of Mass Murder
by Phil Rockstroh


Given the nation's tottering infrastructure, imperial overreach abroad and vandalized constitutional process by a lawless executive branch, what will it take to scare the general public, mainstream press and political classes into immediate action to bring about meaningful change? At this twilight hour of the American republic, there must come a paradigm shift of seismic proportions or else the republic will perish. I'm less than optimistic. Insomuch as, I suspect, that if, during a rare press conference, George W. Bush's face were to suddenly shed its skin, right on camera, live on national television, on all channels, broadcast and cable, to reveal the countenance of a Gila Monster -- the elitist beltway punditry would begin to catalog the merits of his reptilian single-mindedness. Then proceed to an interview with an "expert" from a right-wing funded, zoological think tank, "The American Institute for the Advancement of Predatory Policy," who would assure us that: "...in an era when evil is as proliferate as flies around the stinking dumpster of the world, Americans will be kept safe by a lizard-faced leader who eats flies for breakfast." And the general public would only be concerned because the broadcast happened to preempt the finals of American Idol.

To survive as a republic, a great many American idols will have to topple, and not only those inane, fame-obsessed clowns and crooners sharp-elbowing each other on the Fox Network's televised exercises in Pop Stardom for Dummies. As far as idolatry goes, by far the most pervasive, ruinous, and in need of toppling is the position of unquestioning worship the US military holds in American life. One would think that after the Götterdämmerung of macho folly we've witnessed over the past half-decade that the country would have had its fill of self-proclaimed alpha male posturing and adolescent-minded, military hagiography.

The media is rife with right-wing fantasist nonsense about the "feminized" American male, when, in fact, the country has grown outright psychotic from testosterone-induced toxicity (TIT). In the 1960s, hippies were ridiculed for their naive assumptions that life on earth could be magically transformed into an egalitarian paradise of free love, good dope, waterbeds and Lava Lamps for all, if "the straights" could simply be induced to "raise their consciousness" by the engagement in and the utilization of the erotic acts, illicit substances and goofy, counterculture accouterment mentioned above. Accordingly, the current fantasy -- that all US soldiers are good, righteous and brave, standing ever vigilant against all threats to the Homeland -- could be regarded as a kind of Woodstock Militarism.

Thus, this puerile glorification of American servicemen and women is a view of human nature that is every bit as naive as the hash-pipe dreams of Sixties idealists involving peace, love and flower power -- and one that can't be blamed on a communal use of L.S.D. Excuse me, but why should the military establishment and its foot soldiers hold a position of being beyond scrutiny or even reproach? The last I looked "our troops" were being used as mindless instruments of our country's imperialist aggression. Moreover, the perpetually pimp-slapped and habitually on-their-knees before Bush's macho-narcissistic bluster, congressional Democrats, who gained a legislative majority on the strength of the anti-war vote, are up to their lickspittle lips in the legalized mass murder being perpetrated in the name of our nation. It is time to see through and reject the right-wing propaganda and liberal paternalism of viewing the soldiers of the US military as victims ... Oh cry me a river of Iraqi blood ... When the truth is: We are a nation of people possessed of Bronze Age minds, who are armed with 21st Century weapons. Ergo, our soldiers are the delivery system of said weaponry.

This is the reason the American military machine exists on such a massive scale: Our leaders wish to establish, by force, if necessary, global hegemony. Accordingly, what do platitudes such as, "I support the troops" translate to when those troops are engaged in an illegal and immoral occupation of a foreign land, invaded under false pretenses? Where is the line to be drawn between having empathy for an army comprised to a large degree of economic conscripts and giving tacit approval to the war crimes they commit? Since the enacting of the Nuremberg Laws, the claim of "I was only following orders" has been ruled an inadmissible defense. Shouldn't the plea of "I couldn't get a good job after high school, so I joined the military, was shipped off to Iraq, where I grew so scared, frustrated and angry, that, every once in a while, I lit-up a few Haji civilians, with my M16, turning them into twitching jellyfish" be regarded as equally inadmissible?

To bestow unquestioning and unilateral support for the soldiers of a ruthless empire's immoral invasion of a sovereign nation is a recipe for war crimes and atrocities. Soldiers represent a cross-section of a nation's population, evincing a mix of human traits and characteristics, some admirable and worthy of support and others reprehensible and deserving of condemnation and contempt. Accordingly, many soldiers are not heroes and all heroes need not be soldiers. Resistance and the refusal to fight immoral wars constitutes bravery as well.

This most recent version of the proto-fascist glorification of the military has its origins in the rightist revisionist history of the Vietnam War. Over the decades, the right has deftly and dishonestly framed the narrative and succeeded in foisting its mythos of unquestioning loyalty to all things military upon the history-bereft, reality-resistant American populace.

At its dark and deceitful heart, this is a fantasy that is as fact free as it is invidious. Accordingly, the public of the United States was bilked into believing conservative propaganda such as the preposterous urban legend involving hippies spitting on returning Vietnam vets. Yep, that sounds plausible: scrawny hippies, afflicted with pot-induced cotton mouth, expectorating on trained killers, just returned from the killing zones of Southeast Asia. If you believe that nonsense, I'll sell you, on Ebay, the Stairway To Heaven -- the very one that inspired the Led Zeppelin song.

Almost every utterance on the subject by conservatives is either bullshit or an outright lie. The biggest of the Big Lies was and remains roughly as follows: The Vietnam War was lost, not during the battles and skirmishes fought in that country's emerald jungles and muddy rice paddies, but in the privileged confines of college campuses and in the sun-drenched enclaves of Hollywood liberals. To hear conservatives tell it, the North Vietnamese Army and Vietcong guerillas were all but on their knees, beaten, on the verge of surrender, when Jane Fonda flew to their side, rallying their flagging spirits with the succor of her American troop-hating, commie-suckling sedition, hence rallying them on to final victory.

Next, under the influence of that cultural laughing gas known as Reaganism, Hollywood created a Vietnam mythos even more preposterous than the one chronicled above. Whereby, in the nineteen eighties, Chuck Norris and Sylvester Stallone refought the Vietnam War and won. In these epics of testosterone-poisoned kitsch, Norris and Stallone, freed of government restraint and hippie bad mojo, reaped revenge on the godless, yellow hordes, by deploying the terrible weaponry of their male pheromonal musk defoliates and hairstyling jell napalm. It would seem, from the POV of these movies, that the Vietnamese communists were brought to heel with prop automatic assault weapons and blow dryers. On the screen of suburban cineplexes, Asian extras, costumed as Vietnamese soldiers, fell before Norris' and Stallone's barrage of blanks like Hollywood Indians of old.

Once again, the world had been set right; those runty, upstart, Southeast Asian bastards had been put in their place. The United States was victorious. Of course, not in historical truth -- but in the only place that mattered to us -- in our Cold War fevered minds, a place where Americans believed that the "Evil Empire" plotted to invade our post-war, consumer paradise, because the commie hordes lusted to collectivize our Buicks, our blondes, our pool furniture and our lawn statuary. All in the same insane way, we hallucinate, at present, that "Islamo-Fascists" scheme to invade us and put Lindsey Lohan in a Burka.

In truth, the only place the people of Vietnam ever constituted a threat to the United States was within the toxic mindscapes of paranoid cold warriors. This death-enamored realm -- where the most psychotic is king -- is the place (and only place) where Iraq's weapons of mass destruction existed, and is where, at present, Iran's threat to the United States looms. Resultantly, we have erected this walled and fortified domain of delusion, this heavily armed Disneyland of militant ignorance, with all its attendant, noxious myths of the sacrifices of its noble warriors, for a less than noble reason and purpose. The purpose of this jingoistic blarney is to shield the general public from the ugly reality of how and why an empire's armies exist; because an empire's armies are mustered -- not to protect the Homeland -- but to secure plunder for its ruling elite and provide mollifying bribes for its hoi polloi.

By necessity, the fantasy must be large and all pervasive. Within it, a frightened citizenry must believe that all its potential leaders must embody the traits of a bona-fide, baptized in blood, warrior king. Ergo, the gun-caressing, bible-clutching, dog-baiting, "the-ruling-class-took-everything-leaving-me-with-nothing-but-my-masculine-pride" crowd is never going to accept the junior senator from the state of New York, currently vying for the throne -- even if she has re-branded herself as Hillary W. Bush.

At this point, it is imperative that we let the world in on a dirty, little secret that many naive liberals have managed to lockout of their minds: (Bill) Clintonism was a continuation of Reaganism, sans the Grecian Formula and pomade. Furthermore, Bill Clinton was the diametric opposite of FDR, not in personal style -- but in his administration's domestic policies and social priorities. While Roosevelt was accused of being a "traitor to his class," for betraying his aristocratic ilk, by the enacting of The New Deal, Bill Clinton, also, proved to be a traitor to his class, by betraying those who shared his laboring class beginnings, by means of his ruinous neo-liberal trade policies and his anything-for-the-boys-on-Wall-Street economics. As far as his relationship with the nation's military/industrial complex, Clinton, because he had avoided military service during the Vietnam War, had to prove he wasn't a patchouli-reeking peacenik by constantly kowtowing to the Pentagon establishment. Withal, the situation will be worse with Hillary, who, time and time again, will have to establish her macho credentials by bombing somebody, anybody, anytime and anywhere.

In this way, due to his charm, intelligence and his almost preternatural talent to feign empathy -- Bill Clinton was more dangerous than George W. Bush -- because Bush, at least, reveals to the world the true face of empire. Although, at present, most Americans are unwilling or unable to face our true face. Accordingly, the crack-brained narrative of the present moment goes: to be viable as commander-in-chief, Hillary must prove her toughness, preferably, in some he-man display of resolute stupidity. Since the flight-suit on the deck of an aircraft carrier gambit has been played-out, perhaps her handlers could set-up a photo-op involving the masculine iconography of the World Wrestling Federation. It should be arranged that she wrestle and then body slam two midget wrestlers portraying Dennis Kusinich and Ron Paul. Such an act of political stagecraft could prove to be Hillary Clinton's so-called "Sister Souljah moment."

Sarcasm, you say? Barely. Our collective mindset regarding the nation's pernicious militarism rises to about the level of thoughtful insight and searching introspection that is on display in the realm of professional wrestling. Furthermore, at least, the wrestlers themselves (and most of their audience) know the violence of the sport is staged. Unfortunately -- while the political theatre of US politics is fake as well -- in Iraq, the blood isn't.
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 08:30 AM
Response to Original message
1. Welcome to DU!
That is some ode to testosterone-poisoning! I agree with most of it, too.

TC




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Tyler Durden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 09:14 AM
Response to Original message
2. Outstanding.
I can picture it being read aloud by Murrow, Shore, or a VERY YOUNG Walter Cronkite.

Kicked, Recommended, and WELCOME. We have lost some deep thinkers lately, and it's very good to see one show up to help bolster us oldies who are running out of gas...

Figuratively.
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irislake Donating Member (967 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 09:43 AM
Response to Original message
3. The wonderful American fairytale isn't true?
You aren't really "a beacon of light and freedom to the world"?

But but but violence has been the solution to everything from the most noble and heroic American Revolution on. And you need your guns and weapons of mass destruction cuz the rest of the world is so evil and so jealous of your "freedom".

Support your John Waynes or where will this end?
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Astrad Donating Member (374 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 09:54 AM
Response to Original message
4. Fantastic piece.
Thank you! :)
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Usrename Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 09:56 AM
Response to Original message
5. ...this heavily armed Disneyland of militant ignorance...
:applause:
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OwnedByFerrets Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 10:21 AM
Response to Original message
6. K & R and let me thank you for putting into words
what has been on my mind and on my computer sitting for quite some time. Those 700,000 Iraqi's died because those "troops" we are supposed to blindly support either pulled a trigger or released a bomb. And "following orders" just dont cut the mustard.
Wish I could recommend this again and again.
Welcome to DU.
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sinkingfeeling Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 10:27 AM
Response to Original message
7. Absolutely true. I've been saying this for decades and our worship of violence and the
military and empire is why I will leave the USA in 2010.
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mimitabby Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 10:41 AM
Response to Original message
8. excellent post!
and why i won't vote for Hillary in the primary
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eridani Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 11:54 PM
Response to Reply #8
23. All the "top tier" candidates have exactly the same problem--
--which is why the MSM labels them that way in the first place. Edwards at least has some very specific and pretty good domestic policy proposals, though.
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Jackpine Radical Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 10:55 AM
Response to Original message
9. You have found your home here.
Welcome.

A small note of advice, though. It isn't good to read David Icke while smoking pot just before bedtime.
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Igel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 10:57 AM
Response to Original message
10. Not even Gila monsters are all bad.
http://money.cnn.com/2005/04/29/news/fortune500/byetta/index.htm

My father-in-law apparently uses the drug. Oddly enough, he also has had to deal with Gila monsters.
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Mr_Jefferson_24 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 11:41 AM
Response to Original message
11. K & R. nt.
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starroute Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 12:05 PM
Response to Original message
12. But why bad-mouth the hippies once again?
We've had a torrent of stories lately suggesting that Republicans are primarily animated by fear, sexual repression, and twisted fantasies. The hippies weren't wrong in recognizing that. They weren't wrong in thinking that if the conservatives could just shed some of their psychic armor and come to terms with their own desires many of the country's problems would be solved.

Their naivete lay in not recognizing that for every dope-smoking libertarian who emerged from the right as a result of contact with the counterculture there would three more who would cling desperately to their fears and their defenses, and all the more strongly for any offer to relieve them of that burden.

Right diagnosis, wrong cure. But to compare that failure to give due credence to the limits of human nature to the fascistic glamorization of Homo militarius on the right does an injustice to hippies everywhere.



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tactics Donating Member (32 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 12:08 PM
Response to Original message
13. i am currently a soldier
im a combat infantryman, so ive definitely earned my right to be heard. very rarely do you have prior service zen buddhist infantrymen with a ba in philosophy. (infantry! again!!!!! dfgijughuyadgn ) just as very rarely do you have pyschopaths in combat. i just left the 502nd at campbell, the same unit that all those guys raped the girl and burnt their family. good soldiers, bad officers. good unit, bad sector. im somwhere special now, thankfully, but that place, that face of war, BREAKS YOU DOWN. irag is the magnet under the moral compass. yes, it is a powerful feeling, the literal hands of death, but have mercy on the troops. reserve the most solemn corner of your essence for those who were too young in life, too nieve in being to truly know what they were encountering. feel not pity, but empathy, for how great a man will you be in that place. how righteous will your path be? who are you at 18, 19, 20, far from home , close to hell. how strong will you be when every breath could be ones last gasps.
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TrogL Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 12:40 PM
Response to Reply #13
15. thank you for posting the truth
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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 12:59 PM
Response to Reply #13
17. "[Soldiers] "who are you at 18, 19, 20,[...]"
" "who are you at 18, 19, 20,<...>" That is why it is imperative to end the propagandistic glorification of the military -- in order to keep them from being brainwashed and making decisions that are stupid for them, personally, and lethal to others.
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Joe Chi Minh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 01:29 PM
Response to Reply #13
19. Until you're in your mid-twenties at least, you're little more than a child.
And if you make it big in the entertainment industry at a relatively early age, your chance of maturing will be even more severely compromised. Hence the antics of the nymphets and crack-heads the paparazzi love to regale us with.

Unfortunately, as your post indicates, young people in the military at the "sharp end" in Iraq and Afghanistan very much tend not to have the opportunity to mature even to the indifferent level most of us manage to achieve, before the normal functioning of their minds and bodies is severely compromised by grievous injuries.

It's very understandable that you should wish to stress the impossibility of the circumstances that you and your comrades have to deal with on a daily basis, and I don't think you will find anyone on here sufficiently stupid and morally bereft to imagine that in most cases they would be in a position to apportion full blame for their actions; I'm sure it was not the intention of the writer of the OP to do so, or to claim the authority to do so.

What Phil Rockstroh has done, is to indicate and highlight a pervasive, but entirely spurious ethos peddled so successfully by the far right (i.e. Republicans and their DLC enablers) for generation after generation, concerning the nature of true strength.

In spite of their worst endeavours, I don't believe the essential character of American servicemen has changed very much at all since WWII.

In his book, Fighting With The Screaming Eagles, Robert Bowen, a sergeant at the time, describes how the American prisoners were too fascinated by the fire-fight going on between the Brits and the Germans on either side of his final prison camp before liberation, to dive into the trenches like everyone else, but would keep standing up to watch at the window!

It reminded me of the comment of Andy McNab in Bravo 2 Zero, to the effect that though, as prisoners of the Iraqis they were beaten up if they tried to speak to each other. Nothing could stop the Americans from talking!

Most people are unworldly and the worldy-wise of the far right exploit the naivety of young men by feeding them with grotesquely false propaganda, in order to use them for their own still greater enrichment and empowerment. I know it's meant well, and is sometimes said by other veterans, but even the phrase, intended to reassure returned veterans and console them in their various kinds of agony, "Thank you for your service", tends to make me cringe now, when I read it. And would do so even more if I were myself a returned veteran. Because of this glorification of soldiery by the far right for all the wrong reasons.

And I believe in the concept of the 'purity of arms'. Just as Conan Doyle once observed that there were more terrible deeds committed in the quietest rural village than ever happen in the darkest slums, so the common comradeship to the point of death of soldiers is seldom matched in civilian life even remotely. When it does, it's usually a woman who risks her own life to give birth. Although emergency service staff often risk their lives at the site of flash floods, fires, etc, also.

On the other hand, the most vicious of the powerful people who run our societies consider themselves genteel, even though they are responsible for the extraordinary sufferings and premature deaths of countless of their civilian compatriots through the most murderous economomic depredations.

Robert Bowen's book is based on a diary he kept each day, and it's clear that he remained a hero in civilian life. On one occasion, he risked his life to save a German soldier's life! But he said his darkest times were during the last four and a half years of his
wife's life as he sat by her bedside in a nursing facility, 7 hours a day 5 days a week, throughout those four and a half years - when she was unable even to recognise him because of the dementia she suffered throughout that time.


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eridani Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 11:56 PM
Response to Reply #13
24. That's what war does--
--it turns the empathically neurotypical majority into temporary sociopaths. Which is why you don't start wars, ever.
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TahitiNut Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-14-07 03:56 PM
Response to Reply #13
28. Word!
People who've placed their civil liberties in trust and have placed themselves in service to their nation must rely upon that nation, and it's sovereigns the people, to honor that trust and employ that service honorably.

We, the People, the sovereigns of this nation, have abdicated that duty, violated that trust and dishonored that service. We have shunned our duty and turned our backs on one another and our nation.

It is not for those in service to the nation to bear the even greater burden of their own dishonor by mutiny since they already bear the burden of the nation's dishonor.

We're a nation of outlaws and cowards demonstrating that we do not deserve a democracy - so we're squandering our legacy and consigning coming generations to tyranny and oppression ... even as we blame them for not doing what we, ourselves, show we're too cowardly or corrupt to do ourselves.


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Joe Chi Minh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 12:39 PM
Response to Original message
14. Something that needs to be impressed on the public by every available
means. Alas, the Bush's Team B is really the A Team - except others take the bullets.

Their idea of supporting the troops, is like the attachment the owner of a shooting butts has to his targets and all the other paraphernalia he makes his living with.

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jazzjunkysue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 12:56 PM
Response to Original message
16. Do we have a smiley for a Standing Ovation? Disney-war. Brilliant.
:yourock:
This is what I was feeling during the 2000 campaign: We were being scared into accepting a level of brutality that was largely unknown in my generation. And 6 years later, the facts are all available and we're still just angry when gas goes above $3. But we're still not angry or ashamed that close to a million iraqis have died, and we don't even have control of the oil, let alone peace or democracy.

The GOP is the tyrant and we are all the battered spouses, or the spouses who looked the other way.

MIHOP, LIHOP, they made us all become terrorists, and it was all on purpose.

Bravo, and keep typing. Were you a poly-sci major? Where do you get his vision and oratory from?
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Ms. Clio Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 01:02 PM
Response to Original message
18. totally frikkin awesome post
"In truth, the only place the people of Vietnam ever constituted a threat to the United States was within the toxic mindscapes of paranoid cold warriors. This death-enamored realm -- where the most psychotic is king -- is the place (and only place) where Iraq's weapons of mass destruction existed, and is where, at present, Iran's threat to the United States looms."

Bravissimo! K&R natch.
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L0oniX Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 01:57 PM
Response to Original message
20. "Military men are just dumb stupid animals to be used as pawns in foreign policy." - Henry Kissinger
I keep posting this because it really is their attitude toward our service men and women. When are they going to learn that they are being used and discarded? If Korea and Vietnam wasn't enough to teach the lesson then I don't know what can. If you are in the service you need to go awol. It is the moral high ground to take the jail time rather than to be a part of this mass spectacle of murder and mayhem. My advice is that you should never join the military unless we are being attacked on our soil by another country, and I don't mean a group of idiots who don't represent any country.

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RJRoss Donating Member (98 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 02:52 PM
Response to Original message
21. Another fine piece, Phil!
You're one of my favorite unknown polemicists! When are you going to publish?
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Phil Rockstroh Donating Member (106 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 03:16 PM
Response to Original message
22. Thanks DUers
I didn't think this piece would be much noticed, with the news of Miss Piggy's (I heard a rumor that is Rove's nickname around the private gay clubs of DC) going oink, oink, oink all the way back to Texas.
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Karenina Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-14-07 05:04 AM
Response to Reply #22
25. It's just brilliant, Phil!
Militarization of a culture is the predecessor of its demise.
:yourock::yourock::yourock::yourock::yourock::yourock:
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JohnyCanuck Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-14-07 06:21 AM
Response to Original message
26. US Marine Corps General Smedley "War is a Racket" Butler
figured it out and tried his best to alert his fellow citizens to the misuse and abuse of the military to support war profiteers and cut-throat capitalism. I wouldn't be surprised that there have been others who came after General Butler and came to the same realization but kept it to themselves rather than rock the boat that paid their salaries and pensions (not to mention provided contacts for profitable post-military careers in the "defense" industries).

WAR is a racket. It always has been.
by Major General Smedley Butler

It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives.

A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of the people. Only a small "inside" group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of the very many. Out of war a few people make huge fortunes.

In the World War I a mere handful garnered the profits of the conflict. At least 21,000 new millionaires and billionaires were made in the United States during the World War. That many admitted their huge blood gains in their income tax returns. How many other war millionaires falsified their tax returns no one knows.

How many of these war millionaires shouldered a rifle? How many of them dug a trench? How many of them knew what it meant to go hungry in a rat-infested dug-out? How many of them spent sleepless, frightened nights, ducking shells and shrapnel and machine gun bullets? How many of them parried a bayonet thrust of an enemy? How many of them were wounded or killed in battle?

Out of war nations acquire additional territory, if they are victorious. They just take it. This newly acquired territory promptly is exploited by the few -- the selfsame few who wrung dollars out of blood in the war. The general public shoulders the bill.

http://www.ratical.org/ratville/CAH/warisaracket.html

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Canuckistanian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-14-07 09:24 AM
Response to Original message
27. Wow, very powerful piece
And all the more remarkable as your viewpoint is from America itself. These things are fairly obvious to us from outside the culture.

I sometimes wonder about the almost blind hero worship of anything in a military uniform, even on this site. You can't expect impressionable young minds trained to kill on command and indoctrinated with falsehoods to make the best decisions. Atrocities eventually happen in EVERY war and it's time people faced that fact. And it's those atrocities that ultimately defeat the "freedom and democracy" theme every time.

And I especially loathe the politicians who try to co-opt this image of brave "freedom fighters" for their own purposes. Politicians of EITHER stripe. The reality on the ground is so far away from that "Disneyland fantasy" as to be laughable, if it weren't so deadly serious.

These wars are often fought in far away lands with unfamiliar cultures and histories of their own. And invariably, an "enemy" is often identified (usually incorrectly), demonized and de-humanized for propaganda purposes. Thus, the justification for the worst behavior is tolerated because of a "they'd do it to us in a second" mentality. It's all so self-defeating.

Anyways, great piece. Looks like you have the vision to see through the hype. The country needs more like you.
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