License Plate Wars
by
Justine Nicholas
by Justine Nicholas
DIGG THIS
"It’s
true, I’m tellin’ ya. Turn back and take a look."
Susana, a lifelong
Brooklynite, had spotted something neither she, Belinda or I had
seen before. Such is not an uncommon occurrence along Cross Bay
Boulevard, which transverses Jamaica Bay in the New York City borough
of Queens. On the shore to the east of us were the terminals of
JFK International Airport, which the Feds claimed they had just
saved from being blown to smithereens. However, on the strip of
land where we were pedaling into a 20mph headwind, an ancient tidal
marsh attracts birds and animals us cityfolk never see and people
who want to see, photograph or catch them.
However, Susana’s
discovery had nothing to do with flora or fauna, or fish or fowl.
Instead, it was affixed to the rear of a late-model Subaru Tribeca.
It was a license plate that denoted its driver/owner as a "Veteran
of the Global War on Terror."
I wish I had
enough of a gift for satire to make up such things. But as surely
as Tony Soprano don’ wan’ no witnesses, we espied the latest monument
to Bush’s War In Error, I mean, War on Terror. We thought about
taking a photo on Susana’s cell phone, but after the thought that
the plate’s proud bearer might be within striking distance, we thought
better of it. However, after our bike ride to the ocean, I did some
surfin’ (on the Net, that is) and found New
York is just one of a
number of states that have authorized such plates for veterans
who honorably discharged after tours of duty in post-9/11 Iraq or
Afghanistan.
All right.
So the ones whom Dick Cheney and friends put in harm’s way, I mean
answered their country’s call, to control Iraq’s oil, I mean protect
our freedom, deserve to be recognized. You’ll get no argument from
me on that point. Let’s authorize a new GI Bill for them. Give them
first dibs on interest-free loans so they can buy those houses that
went into foreclosure after their owners’ ARMs stretched beyond
their financial reach. Finance their educations – hey, let ’em get
MBAs so they can learn how to make the next generation of shaky
loans.
You may think
I’m making light of those selfless heroes who braved Afghanis and
Iraqis who didn’t want what American plutocrats decided they should
want. I am not; everything I have proposed for them is better than
what they
have so far endured. And what I’ve suggested is also better
than having to live with the knowledge that they risked themselves,
not as bulwarks against linen-swathed young men just barely past
puberty who dream of 72 virgins in the afterlife, but as mere tinder
against the invisible flame of that abstract enemy called terrorism.
That got me
to thinking about all of those other abstract wars: the ones on
cancer, poverty and such. All against enemies that were neither
actual people nor nations. The outcomes of all of them were the
same: lives ruined and bureaucrat’s bank accounts fattened. Should
those who paid the price, or at least contributed to the good lie,
I mean fight, also get their own special license plates? My father
spent his last days as a Coast Guard reservist back during the high
season (pun intended) of the War on Drugs. Every once in a while,
they’d manage to chase some boat they thought was carting contraband.
Back out to sea they’d go, like hermit crabs picked up on the beach
and tossed into the tide, only to return with the next incoming
tide further down the coast. Dear ol’ Dad, who was as much for law
and order as the next guy, saw and called the charade as it was.
"We may as well take the money that’s being spent on the War
on Drugs and give it to the guys we’re supposed to catch,"
he once sighed. And my father was never one to sigh.
Surely he deserves
some sort of recognition for that. "Veteran of the War on Drugs."
It doesn’t seem too much less absurd than "Veteran of the Global
War on Terror." And neither strains credibility any more than
the Wars on Anything Else I’ve Mentioned.
Now I wonder:
When are we going to see license plates that read, "Veteran
of the Defense of Liberty?" That struggle no more has an end
in sight than do the wars on terrorism, drugs, rich media celebrities
or anybody or anything else we can think of. So, like the War on
Terrorism veterans, the defenders of liberty should be so recognized
now. Certainly Lew Rockwell, Karen Kwiatkowski, Paul Craig Roberts,
William Anderson, Wilton Alston, Eric Margolis, Burton Blumert and
Gary North (who probably disagrees with me on just about anything
that doesn’t have to do with war, peace, the long arm of the state
and the non-feasibility of this country’s current economic policies)
should be near the head of the line for their plates. Special places
are also reserved for Tom Chartier for using his humor and old-school
punk rocker’s sense of absurdity as scalpels to expose the rotting
internal organs of the military-industrial welfare corpse and Becky
Ackers simply because her no-punches-pulled language is the very
antithesis of what we hear from those who declare Wars on Terror.
And I would give special places on that line to any number of people,
some of whom have written for LewRockwell.com, and countless others
who haven’t.
It’s
been said that one man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter.
If the inverse of that statement is true, all the folks I’ve mentioned
are terrorists. Does ignoring them constitute service in the war
on terrorism? If it does, well, all I can say is that they’re heroes
all the more deserving of my special license plate. And I can design
a license plate that looks better and lasts longer than any that
comes from a state!
June
12, 2007
Justine
Nicholas [send her mail]
teaches English at the City University of New York.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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