Supporting Death and Destruction
by
Michael Gaddy
by Michael Gaddy
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"It
may seem odd for me, a military man to adopt such a comparison.
Truthfulness compels me to. I spent thirty-three years and four
months in active military service in this country’s most agile
military force, the Marine Corps. I served in all commissioned
ranks from Second Lieutenant to Major General. And during that
period, I spent most of my time being a high-class muscle man
for Big Business, for Wall Street and for the Bankers. In short,
I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism."
~
Major General Smedley Butler, USMC, 1933
Two-time recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor
The response
to my article, Worshipping
The State: Why They Die, has been tremendous, with the overwhelming
majority of responses being positive. Especially pleasing was the
number of emails I received from veterans of Vietnam, Korea and
even WWII.
It appears
that with time old soldiers begin to see the words of General Smedley
Butler to be true, especially today, as they pertain to this nation’s
immoral, illegal war.
I did receive
several emails that were perplexing. It would appear there are still
a number of people out there who believe it is actually possible
to support the troops without supporting the war they are participating
in. I received comments such as "I can’t believe you were a
soldier and are showing such contempt for those in uniform,"
and a multitude of clichés such as "support the warrior,
not the war." Until one can fully comprehend the words of General
Butler, they will never be able to discern that one cannot support
the criminal without supporting the crime.
For those who
asked how I could say such things about soldiers, I would say to
them: I love the soldier much more than you because I do not wish
to send soldiers to be maimed or killed, or have them kill those
who are trying to defend their homeland in a war based on lies.
I do not believe you can sentence someone to death, or a lifetime
of flashbacks and horrible dreams, and call it support.
I have seen
the sacrifices soldiers make for the pittance they receive; I have
seen the effects on families that are making do with only one parent
– and now, with women serving such an active role sometimes doing
without both parents; I have seen families broken and torn apart
by returned soldiers who could not escape the horrible visions of
war and destruction that keep returning when they try to sleep.
I have seen those who have tried to suppress those visions with
alcohol and drugs and the heartache and human misery that brings.
I have seen
disabled soldiers whose families no longer want them because
of their handicaps. There is no hell hot enough for those who use
such sacrifices for their personal gain.
Were both mom
and dad working in any job other than the military, leaving their
children with others while they were gone for a year would constitute
abandonment, or at the very least, they would be charged with negligence
or child abuse. If they are off fighting in Iraq or Afghanistan
for Halliburton,
Bechtel,
Unocal
and other members of the Military Industrial Complex, everything
is forgiven, and their sacrifice to the state is considered noble.
Where did this
blind devotion to the State
begin? What makes a soldier abandon his oath, his country and his
family to increase the bottom line of a Military Industrial Complex
corporation while he/she in many cases qualifies for welfare and
food stamps?
Professor Thomas
DiLorenzo offers answers to this question in his latest work, Lincoln
Unmasked. Chapter 15, Making Cannon Fodder, is most
revealing. DiLorenzo, speaking of Walter Berns and his book, Making
Patriots, states:
"The
dilemma, says Burns is how to motivate America’s youth to become
such sacrificial lambs for the state. The answer is to devise
a new "civil religion" so that young people will think
of themselves as "religious" crusaders as they march
off to war. Not genuine religion, but a religion that worships
the state and its dictates…"
DiLorenzo says
that to assume this "civil religion," citizens must experience,
"…nothing
less than a complete repudiation of the American ideal, as expressed
in the Declaration of Independence, that citizens have inalienable
rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and that
the purpose of government is to secure these rights, period"
Evangelists
for this "civil religion," such as Walter Berns, believe
it to be,
"…the
other way around: the people, particularly young people, are to
serve – and even die for – the state to promote the state’s
whims and abstract notions, such as the forceful imposition of
"democracy" around the world. Under this scenario the
state is the master and the people are its servants."
General Smedley
Darlington Butler spoke of the reasons for this civil religion:
"I
believe in adequate defense at the coastline and nothing else.
If a nation comes over here to fight, then we'll fight. The trouble
with America is that when the dollar only earns 6 percent over
here, then it gets restless and goes overseas to get 100 percent.
Then the flag follows the dollar and the soldiers follow the flag."
I believe,
as did General Butler, that there are only two reasons we should
ever go to war:
"I wouldn't
go to war again as I have done to protect some lousy investment
of the bankers. There are only two things we should fight for.
One is the defense of our homes and the other is the Bill of Rights.
War for any other reason is simply a racket."
Not one of
the rabid Bush/war supporters that I encounter can answer one simple
basic question: If we are truly engaged in a war against terrorism;
one that can last indefinitely, and the first basic tenet of war
is to secure one’s perimeter against attack, why are our borders
unsecured? This is the greatest indicator this war on terrorism
is a farce and that we are not fighting for democracy, freedom or
any other such nonsense. We are fighting the wars General Smedley
Butler warned us about those many years ago.
Soldiers and
Citizens we are not fighting for our homes and those who led us
into this war are attacking and destroying our Bill of Rights. Who
is our enemy and why are our soldiers involved in this racket.
November
30, 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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