Where We Are
by
Michael Gaddy
by Michael Gaddy
DIGG THIS
At the ripe-old
age of nineteen, I failed to understand the paradox that was Vietnam.
I believed for years this failure exposed a serious weakness in
my cognitive abilities; after all, like my predecessors who had
worn the same uniform, I was fighting for the freedom of all Americans,
wasn’t I?
For many more
years I routinely swallowed my daily hallucinogenic: "everything
will be OK just as soon as we elect the right people." My blind
devotion to the state would not allow me to entertain any alternative
thoughts.
Then it happened:
I was surfing through the Internet one day pursuing my love of history
and somehow found myself looking at a website called, LewRockwell.com.
As best I can remember, my fondness of all things Southern led me
to an article there by Professor Thomas DiLorenzo. My grandfather
had taught me since early childhood that Abraham Lincoln was a tyrant;
Professor DiLorenzo gave me meat I could bite into and long sought
after evidence my grandfather had been correct.
While my grandfather
hated Lincoln because he was a "damn Yankee," that had
been insufficient evidence for my public school teachers whose classrooms
were adorned with pictures of the tyrant. After all, pennies and
five-dollar bills contained his likeness, and he freed the slaves
didn’t he? Who could doubt these giants of academia; hadn’t the
state made it mandatory for me to attend school so I could learn
the truth?
Like Lay’s
Potato Chips, at LRC, one cannot have just one. I read for hours
and went back and forth referencing what I had read to other sources.
In a very short period of time I discovered Professor Butler Shaffer’s
Wizards of Ozymandias.
That was the clincher; I was done. I couldn’t believe it; answers
to questions that had gone unanswered in my mind for decades.
Like all strong
medicines, with LRC I experienced side effects that were severe:
I began to have a rudimentary understanding of free market economics
and enjoyed reading articles about it. I questioned everything I
had been taught about freedom and liberty and began to understand
the term "brainwashed."
All this brings
me to the point of this article: I began to see how this once great
country had become the rotting corpse of what had been intended
by our founders; I understood what my grandfather meant when he
said this country was founded in 1776 and died a most painful death
in April of 1865. I understood why I no longer looked on that red
white and blue banner with the same reverence and why my stomach
became upset when I would hear the phrase "the land of the
free and the home of the brave" and watch the ignorant scream
and cheer.
What I saw
yesterday confirmed what I came to believe some years ago: criminals
control our government and there is no political remedy to the problems
we face. Yesterday, I heard the Vice-President of this country admit
to war
crimes, crimes we hanged
foreign leaders for in the aftermath of WWII. He not only admitted
to the crimes, he embraced them as "remarkably successful."
We have become
that which we hated, despised, and supposedly fought a war to defeat
over sixty years ago, charring some 72 million souls in the effort.
Lew and his
fellow lovers of true liberty helped save me from having to prostitute
myself with others of the so-called "right" and those
Christian warmongers who will continue to support Cheney, his fellow
criminals and their admitted crimes.
For that I
am truly grateful.
December
18, 2008
Michael
Gaddy [send him mail],
an Army veteran of Vietnam, Grenada, and Beirut, lives in the Four
Corners area of the American Southwest.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
Michael
Gaddy Archives
|