A Sunny Day at the Circus
by
David Calderwood
by David Calderwood
DIGG THIS
Three years
ago a Blue Angels’ practice session for the 2004 Chicago Air and
Water Show prompted me to compose a piece
for LRC about my brush with joining the US Navy back in the 1980s.
That column
explored the rationalizations people must make in order to follow
orders like the "pre-conscience" Jason Bourne in the recent
movie The Bourne Ultimatum, to accept orders to kill and
maim other unidentified persons simply on the say-so of some accepted
authority figure.
Like the fictional
Jason Bourne, real-life pilots operate on a foundation of belief
that what they are doing is moral and right in a "big picture"
way, much as Jason Bourne accepted the role of assassin on the belief
that his murderous acts were "right" because they were
saving American lives.
The movie well
captures the reality; those doing the killing have no way of actually
knowing if what they are doing is right or moral. They just accept,
just as men have accepted such orders since before the dawn of civilization.
It’s a carryover of savagery into modern life we all seem to ignore.
Today’s boat
ride on Lake Michigan stirred a different take on this year’s practice
sessions of America’s sleek, high performance jet fighters (the
admittedly small dots above and to the left of the Sears Tower in
the photo represent what I think are an F-15 and an F-22 with a
nearly invisible P-51 Mustang between them).

This year we
were treated to flybys by a variety of planes, including a B-52,
a B-1 (oh boy was that an ear-splitter!) and the Air Force Thunderbirds
aerobatic team.
The roaring
pass of plane after plane after plane could have made me sad, thinking
of the innocent people who find themselves within the blast radius
of a General Dynamics’ MK82
bomb.
Not today.
All I could do was to look around at the awe-struck faces of revelers
thronging Navy Pier and think how successful is the game.
The game? We
all know it. How do a few people successfully parasitize a vastly
larger number of people?
They stage
circuses.
They appeal
to a sense of the collective: "We’re all in this together."
They appeal
to pride.
Look around.
What the IRS doesn’t extract, the Fed colludes to allow the Congress
to borrow…and spend (the very engine of inflation, which steals
our savings every hour of the day). A billion here, a billion there,
and pretty soon you’re talking about real money.
New weapons
systems to battle adversaries who don’t exist; a worldwide empire
of military bases; unimaginable riches showered via foreign aid,
the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund; a couple of
wars through which to launder yet more of the Public Treasury; space
programs to send men into orbit and even potentially back to the
moon to collect a few more rocks; and an army of people to make
a tidy living administering the entire sorry program.
Of course the
real money is in skimming a tenth of a percent here and a hundredth
of a percent there. Given that Uncle Sam’s accounting has been a
shade short of FASB standards for a lifetime or so, it’s not much
of a stretch to assume that some individuals have found a path to
real riches in "public service" or its "corporate
provision." Somebody’s got to buy those penthouse condos on
the lake and the seacoasts, and maybe there aren’t enough honest
entrepreneurs and trust fund babies around to fulfill demand.
When we look
skyward and see some really cool machine that only Americans can
boast of, and the roar of the afterburners sends a chill down our
spines, recall that the circus is in town, the magicians are diverting
the audience’s attention from one side of the stage to the other,
and sure as shootin’ there’s a hand in your pocket
and it’s lifting more of your hard-earned cash.
There’s
plenty of justification. Just ask the Ringleader…or is that Ringmaster?
The death and
destruction is bad enough, but I can’t help imagining the smirking
faces of the people who have figured out how to ride me like a draft
animal.
I don’t recall
being born with a saddle on my back.
August 20, 2007
David
Calderwood [send him
mail] a businessman, artist, and author of the novel Revolutionary
Language, selected January 2000 Freedom Book of the Month
at Free-market.net.
Copyright
© 2007 by David C. Calderwood
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