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Daveparts still Donating Member (614 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 10:27 AM
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This Thing We’ve Become
This Thing We’ve Become
By David Glenn Cox


During World War II my father served as a flight engineer on a Navy blimp. It was called a “K” ship, about one and a half times the size of the Goodyear Blimp. They were stationed near Cocoa Beach, Florida, and their job was to fly out over the Atlantic Ocean for twenty-four hours at a time searching for German U-boats.

You see, radar was still new then and the sets were in short supply and cumbersome, so by putting men on blimps they could be in the air for twenty-four hours at a time. But there was a dirty little secret known only to the officers on board. They weren’t hunting for U-boats, they were just watching them. The Navy had cracked the German's naval code so my dad’s job was to make sure that the U-boats were where they were supposed to be.

He never considered himself a hero, just a guy doing a job that needed to be done. On days when their flight was over and they were headed back to the base they would park the blimp and tie it off to a palm tree in Key West and stop for a beer. He was twenty-one and the second oldest in the crew, and they weren’t the only crew stopping by for a brew.

My dad’s brother Pete wasn’t as lucky; he got the bright idea to join the Army National Guard in 1941. They told him, “If you sign up now you’ll be home from basic training by Christmas.” But it didn’t work out that way. After December 7th Pete didn’t see the United States again for almost five years. He served as a dogface infantryman all across the Pacific. He had malaria, beriberi, trench foot, and saw and did things that no twenty three-year-old should ever have to see or do. He once dove into an open pit latrine to avoid a strafing Japanese Zero, but he never considered himself a hero, just a guy doing a job. He used to say, “The highest award I ever received in the Army was the rank of civilian.”

My buddy Kenny served in Vietnam up near the DMZ. He earned a Bronze Star and two Purple Hearts. I asked, "How did you earn your Bronze Star?"

“The lieutenant got pinned down in a field and he was screaming and crying like a baby so the sergeant slaps me in the shoulder and says, 'Parker, go get him!' So I run out there with them shooting at us and I grabbed him and told him to come on! But he wouldn’t move so I punched him in the head and grabbed him by the collar and kept kicking him until he got up.” Kenny never considered himself a hero. "It was bullshit, man, just bullshit,” he would say.

They all had in common that they did not consider themselves heroes, just men doing the job they were assigned to do. But now, ever since 2001, all of our service people are heroes. We hold ceremonies before football games to honor them and we invite them to the State of the Union message. I don’t want anyone to think for a moment that I am deprecating their service, I am talking about the people who are exploiting their service and their sacrifice. They call them heroes for a cynical reason, because if they are always to be remembered as heroes then who can presume to question their mission?

The German navy in WWII lost 750 U-boats. Were those men heroes? The Third Reich thought so and today we can admire their courage and their devotion to duty, but we cannot call the men fighting for Nazism heroes. So the distinction is not in their individual courage but in their national goal.

Have we forgotten that the war in Iraq is a fraud? That it's the largest national lie ever foisted on the American populace, plus its stepsister Afghanistan. The last administration would generate a new lie as each of the old ones were exposed, all playing on the patriotism of those who had to pay the price in blood and loss for their serendipity.

These are wars for the control of natural resources and for their distribution. A few thousand will profit from it and millions will suffer from it. But we take this big lie and wrap it up tightly in the flag and call it patriotism when it is nothing more than gangsterism. This is misuse of our youth and our military to confiscate things which don’t, by rights, belong to us.

The My Lai Massacre evoked worldwide outrage during the Vietnam War, but today they can drop white phosphorus on Palestinians or drop bombs on suspected safe houses in Pakistan, and if the bad guys aren’t there, well that’s just tough titties for the innocents. Charges were dropped against Blackwater employees who opened fire on a crowd of Iraqis. “Sucks to be them! Doesn’t it?”

"At around 1 a.m., three nights ago, some American troops with helicopters left Kabul and landed around 2km away from the village. The troops walked from the helicopters to the houses and, according to my investigation, they gathered all the students from two rooms, into one room, and opened fire." (Jerome Starkey, 'Western troops accused of executing 10 Afghan civilians, including children,' The Times, December 31, 2009)

The allegations of civilian casualties led to protests in Kabul and Jalalabad, with children as young as 10 chanting “Death to America” and demanding that foreign forces should leave Afghanistan at once. President Karzai sent a team of investigators to Narang district, in eastern Kunar province, after reports of a massacre first surfaced.

“The delegation concluded that a unit of international forces descended from a plane Sunday night into Ghazi Khan village in Narang district of the eastern province of Kunar and took ten people from three homes, eight of them school students in grades six, nine and ten, one of them a guest, the rest from the same family, and shot them dead,” a statement on President Karzai’s website said.

Assadullah Wafa, who led the investigation, said that US soldiers flew to Kunar from Kabul, suggesting that they were part of a Special Forces unit.

“The investigation found that eight of the victims were aged from 11 to 17. The guest was a shepherd boy, 12, called Samar Gul, the headmaster said. He said that six of the students were at high school and two were at primary school. He said that all the students were his nephews. In Jalalabad, protesters set alight a US flag and an effigy of President Obama after chanting 'Death to Obama' and 'Death to foreign forces.'”

Of course there are two sides to every story. “Nato’s International Security Assistance Force said that there was no direct evidence to substantiate Mr. Wafa’s claims that unarmed civilians were harmed in what it described as a 'joint coalition and Afghan security force' operation.

“As the joint assault force entered the village they came under fire from several buildings and in returning fire killed nine individuals,” he said.

Just more senseless killing in a war without goals or objectives. The President will propose, in his upcoming budget, spending almost three-quarters of a trillion dollars to feed this war machine even while necessary domestic functions are ignored. Last year’s stimulus package was largely swallowed by the states to plug the gaps in their budgets, and the gaps are back again this year but the stimulus is gone.

Yet still the war crowd wants more; never satiated with the blood of innocents they push for another war with Iran. Bolstered with fraudulent and faked data and sad tweets about brutal Iranian dictators and a nuclear boogey man, they will never rest until the bombs fall again. It is they who steal the laurels of heroism from the hands of our service people. They who use them for profit and gain and sell it back to us as pre-packaged patriotism while they use the flag to clean the blood from their hands and the shit off their shoes.

“Come you masters of war
You that build all the guns
You that build the death planes
You that build all the bombs
You that hide behind walls
You that hide behind desks
I just want you to know
I can see through your masks.”
(Bob Dylan)


"We need not worry so much about what man descends from; it's what he descends to that shames the human race." (Mark Twain)
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nashville_brook Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 10:37 AM
Response to Original message
1. very well done. i couldn't agree more.
i go back and forth between outrage at the cost of the wars (while our own country is falling to pieces), and desperation at the fact that we're upping the ante on atrocities by the minute. you are so right about "The My Lai Massacre evoked worldwide outrage during the Vietnam War, but today they can drop white phosphorus on Palestinians or drop bombs on suspected safe houses in Pakistan, and if the bad guys aren’t there, well that’s just tough titties for the innocents. Charges were dropped against Blackwater employees who opened fire on a crowd of Iraqis. “Sucks to be them! Doesn’t it?”

really, what have we become?
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dixiegrrrrl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 10:57 AM
Response to Original message
2. Sigh....es verdad.
Sadly.

ty for this.


K&R
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jotsy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 11:20 AM
Response to Original message
3. ...is more monster than man.
kicked.

I fail to understand why some think it should be appealing to wrap themselves in a blood soaked flag.
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truth2power Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 12:16 PM
Response to Original message
4. The most important statement in that post...
"They call them heroes for a cynical reason, because if they are always to be remembered as heroes then who can presume to question their mission?"

That's how they keep the American people in "support the troops" mode. Somehow we've got to break through that mind-set, because it causes us to be mute in the face of unimaginable atrocities.

I don't support what "the troops" are doing, and I wouldn't have one of those stupid magnetic ribbons on my car.

And if it's to be excused because they were "only following orders" then what does that say about what was decided at Nuremburg?


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Uncle Joe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 02:59 PM
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5. Kicked and recommended.
Thanks for the thread, Daveparts.
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DemReadingDU Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 03:41 PM
Response to Original message
6. So many atrocities

When do they end? How do they end?

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Moostache Donating Member (905 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 05:37 PM
Response to Original message
7. You ain't seen nothing yet...
The greatest sin is yet to come...once the nation is bankrupt and in ruins, an ideologue will come to power and the fire will reign down on the world. On the plus side, we won't have to worry about that asinine argument about evolution any longer...the roaches will replace us and eventually I hope that they can do better....
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Vidar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 06:30 PM
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8. K&R.
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silversol Donating Member (70 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-18-10 10:42 PM
Response to Original message
9. Well Said,
K&R
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