Crying for a Horse
by
Mark
G. Brennan
by Mark G. Brennan
For
those of us who are not avid horse racing fans, this weekend effectively
ended our interest in the sport until next year. Until this past
Saturday there still existed the potential for a Triple Crown winner.
Unfortunately the tragic injury befalling Barbaro at the Preakness
Stakes erased that possibility. Now the nation waits with bated
breath to find out if Barbaro will even survive his broken
ankle. For horse racing fanatics like Judi Hunt of Aberdeen, Washington,
who has listened to or seen each and every Triple Crown race since
1948, the reaction was as expected. The New York Times reported
Ms. Hunt as saying, "I cried yesterday when the horse came
up lame. I just want to know how the horse is going to do."
Such empathy and pity are both predictable and natural in such a
heartrending circumstance. However if Americans cared as much about
people as they do about horses, Sunday night’s presentation of the
HBO documentary Baghdad ER might have actually awoken the
somnolent majority of our citizenry who are as indifferent to the
carnage in Iraq as they are to tax rates in Tanzania.
Sunday
night’s premiere of Baghdad ER brought the horror of an American
medical hospital in Iraq’s Green Zone into full view and perfect
focus. Unlike countless episodes of MASH, the only humor
was gallows humor and the laughs, when they occurred, were so obviously
forced that they seemed to be the only way to fight back tears.
Doctors and soldiers in the film reflect on the gut-wrenching misery
usually with Tourette-like cursing but, more frequently, depressed
resignation. These heroic medical personnel never become inured
to the missing limbs, burned skin, and mangled corpses that are
the raw materials of their production line. No sane human being
ever could. Instead we get a vivid portrait of the only Americans
who have seen the unspeakable carnage up close and way too personally.
These are also the most credible Americans who seem to be taking
a vocal stand on the mounting casualties as they futilely rush about
like the Dutch boy trying to plug the dike.
Perhaps HBO’s
film will open the eyes of the apathetic voting public. But since
the film does not include any information on how to get rich in
real estate, lose weight, or buy cheap gas, it probably won’t. And
since none of the wounded or killed American soldiers hails from
Great Neck, Grosse Point, or Glendale, "elite" opinion
will remain dormant. Whether that opinion is of the "Stay the
course (as long as my kid does not have to miss a semester or two
at Yale)" variety best represented by your typical Republican
suburbanite, or of the "I am angrily marching in protest of
‘No Blood for Oil’ this weekend (but not next weekend since I have
to chaperone Tyler’s class trip to the organic farm on Saturday)"
variety espoused by liberals on both coasts, no one but the doctors
in the American military hospital in Baghdad seems bold enough to
speak up for the injured piling up unnoticed like dust bunnies under
a bed.
If you
do in fact watch the documentary, and every American should watch
its replay on Memorial Day regardless of his position on the American
occupation of Iraq, the scenes of injury and suffering are more
graphic than words can explain. Limbs dangling from tendons, open
torsos filled with shrapnel and the dazed stares of shell-shocked
soldier, all shove the horrors of war into our untroubled living
rooms. Watching a nurse mop up a blood-covered a floor or cataloging
a body part in a jar would (should?) provide even the most ardent
supporters of our occupation with reason to pause. And in their
pause they should ask themselves: Why am I not over there fighting
this fight which I so stridently insist must be fought? Is this
occupation really worth losing an arm, both arms, both legs, or
both legs and an arm (as in fact happens to one of the soldiers
in the film)? If red-blooded Americans from small rural towns I
have never heard of are sacrificing life and limb so that the Boca
Raton Little League can play its games free from terrorists and
the shoppers of Bethesda can pile up debt, shouldn’t I or my progeny
either take a role in fighting or, conversely, work to stop the
unnecessary slaughter?
Alas, such
questions will never get a fair hearing from those most in need
of such introspection. Instead, remote controls will instantaneously
remove any bloody images from our 54-inch flat screens should they
too closely resemble the half-eaten, extra-large, Domino’s pepperoni
pizza sitting on our laps. In a recent interview, one of the film’s
co-creators Jon Alpert said, "We're giving you the veneer of
the violence. But it's much, much worse than we portrayed it. We
just didn't think that an audience would tolerate that." If
Mr. Alpert could predict the stock market as well as he can predict
Americans’ tolerance for carnage, he would be richer than Warren
Buffett. Let’s hope that he kept the more brutal scenes for history’s
sake; even though we as a society rarely take the time to do a cost-benefit
analysis of war, the evidence on the cost side keeps piling up while
the benefits remain illusory. Maybe Saddam was in fact going to
nuke me, my wife, our two cats, and the dry cleaners across the
street. And maybe monkeys will fly out of my… In either case, he
is now behind bars while suicidal maniacs with I.E.D.’s strapped
to their chests are killing Americans whose kids are not benefiting
from the services of $500 per hour SAT tutors or figuring out how
to redeem their American Express Platinum Membership Rewards Point
so that they can attend the ESPN Golf School with a "focus
on the importance of swing mechanics, club control, and body behavior."
One can safely assume that ESPN has made no special provision for
any military amputees in attendance who might need special instruction
in "chipping with one arm" or "putting while blind"
since Iraq reminds the intended customer base of little more than
the unraked sand trap on the 15th hole at their country
club. At this point a complimentary invitation to even a handful
of the 17,000+ wounded American soldiers would be a welcome statement
of thanks as we approach Memorial Day, but in reality it remains
just a wish.
We have
reached a deplorable state where an injured horse elicits a stronger
response than a dead or maimed fellow American. Recall for a moment
the soldier cited in the film who lost both legs and an arm. He
won’t ever again ride a bike as he did as an energetic young boy.
He won’t be able to take leisurely evening strolls with his wife.
He won’t be able to practice tackling or jump shooting with his
son. And he won’t be able to walk his daughter down the aisle on
the most important day of her life as he "hands" her off
to the man of her dreams. But in this case the dream our future
bride will live with will be a nightmare – seeing her father suffer
and struggle while remembering that her fellow Americans cried for
a horse.
May
23, 2006
Mark
G. Brennan [send him email]
writes from New York City.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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