Worshipping the State: Why They Die
by
Michael Gaddy
by Michael Gaddy
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Simple facts
most soldiers do not understand: The government (state) is not our
country; when you fight and die in undeclared wars, you do so for
the State and not for our country or our freedoms; when you forsake
the Constitution you swore to uphold and defend to follow unconstitutional
orders, even from your commander-in-chief, you cross the line from
defender of your country to the very real possibility of becoming
a war criminal.
The inboxes
at my email sites are constantly bombarded with pictures and articles
designed to pull at my heartstrings and make me believe there are
troops in Iraq and Afghanistan fighting for our freedoms. Many of
these have wonderful stirring music intended to make one stand and
salute. They picture our soldiers holding young Iraqi children and
playing with stray animals a fit sermon indeed for those who hold
membership in the Church of Nationalism and worship its god: the
State.
Does the insurgent
in Iraq present a greater danger to freedom than the politicians
who signed the Patriot
Act without reading it? Is al Qaeda to be feared more than the
suspension
of the Writ of Habeas Corpus? Is the young Iraqi soldier fighting
in the streets of Baghdad more dangerous to our freedoms than the
John
Warner National Defense Authorization Act, which
allows the State to take direct control of any and all National
Guard units over the objection of state and local officials to whom
they report, through the simple expedient of declaring a "public
emergency"? Just exactly who is the greatest threat to our individual
rights and freedoms in this country?
In November
of 2002, I was asked to present the commencement speech at the graduating
class of Military Intelligence Officers at Ft. Huachuca, Arizona.
It was a very difficult decision for me to accept this invitation;
the storm clouds of war were definitely on the horizon. I had seen
what I believed to be tainted intelligence in the media used to
garner support for a war in Iraq. I wanted to do or say nothing
that might in any way be seen as support for the coming conflict
those who promoted it, or those who would fight it an almost
impossible feat to accomplish in a military environment.
When the day
arrived and I was introduced to those in attendance, which included
high-ranking officers of the post, graduates, instructors, parents
and guests, I began my presentation by asking how many in attendance
remembered their oath of enlistment.
Everyone raised
a hand indicating they did. I then asked how many could repeat that
oath; a significantly smaller number raised their hand. I then read
the Oath
of Enlistment each soldier takes on entry into the various military
branches. I emphasized the following was listed first in the oath
and was therefore intended to be the most important:
"I, _____
, having been appointed an officer in the Army of the United States,
as indicated above in the grade of _____ do solemnly swear (or
affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the
United States against all enemies, foreign or domestic, that I
will bear true faith and allegiance to the same;
I reminded
them it was their duty to fully understand the meaning of the words
and phrases: support, defend, and true faith and allegiance in the
context of that oath. I told them that anytime they received orders,
no matter the origin of those orders, when such orders were in conflict
with their oath, they were honor bound to refuse to carry out those
orders. I told them their first allegiance was to the Constitution
and not to any politician who became their superior simply because
they had tricked a majority of the people into voting for them.
By this time the higher-ranking officers on the front row were beginning
to squirm in their seats.
I spoke of
domestic enemies and how much more insidious they are than those
we call "foreign." I explained that when one is ordered
by any superior to do that which is a violation of their oath, the
entity issuing the illegal order becomes the domestic enemy mentioned
in their oath.
I spoke to
those gathered of my ignorance of my obligation to that oath during
my military tenure, and the obvious offenses I felt I had committed
and the unlawful orders I had obeyed. I stated I did not want them
to make the same mistakes I had made. When I finished my presentation,
the ranking officers on the front row made a hasty departure, but
other instructors and soldiers stayed and presented their perfunctory
appreciation.
Im sure many
of the young officers in attendance that day did not fully understand
the presentation; most were in a hurry to check out, and get started
on their leave before their next assignment.
Several days
later, my son came to visit and was obviously in a state of anger.
He related he had just returned from the Tucson, Arizona office
of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) where he was interviewed
for his Top Secret Clearance. During his interview the agent conducting
his background check informed him that I was both a subversive and
a racist; subversive because I had written articles critical of
the government and racist because I was a member of the Sons of
Confederate Veterans. At least they had it half right; I had written,
and continue to write, articles that are critical of the government,
but I have never been a member of the SCV. I qualify for membership
in that organization because several of my relatives fought for
the Confederacy, but I have never applied for membership.
I relate the
incident with the agent of the DIA simply to show that once a person
drops his/her support for the collective and assumes their individual
God given rights, they become the enemy of the State.
Soldiers serving
and dying in the States illegal, immoral wars do not serve
their fellow countrymen, fight for our liberties or bear true faith
and allegiance to our Constitution they serve the collective that
is busy stealing our liberties and destroying our Constitution.
Not one opposing
force in Iraq or Afghanistan, or anyplace else on this planet, presents
a greater threat to our liberty than the
collective we call the State or the criminals who control it.
November
15, 2006
Michael
Gaddy [send him mail], an
Army veteran of Vietnam, Grenada, and Beirut, lives in the Four
Corners area of the American Southwest.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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