George-the-Third-the-Second
by
Joanna Parker
The
United States of America has (have) finally come full-circle. We
now have our own George III. Our first George, of course, was Washington,
who earned his royal status in the oldest European tradition – by
having first proved to be a Great Warrior. It’s true that he is
known for steadfastly refusing to be treated like a king, and we
still think of him as among the least autocratic of our nation’s
chief executives. Yet, this ‘father’ of the newly-constructed Union
who had so recently left the battlefield in a supposed war for freedom
wasted no time in ruthlessly putting down the infant nation’s first
tax revolt, the Whiskey Rebellion – launched by only a handful of
the new citizenry who took their freedom seriously. So George-the-First-the-Second’s
devotion to freedom was already showing a gap. Old World habits
were proving to die hard. It would seem that Power, no matter whose,
is always accompanied by temptations to ruthlessness. Already, when
George was still a mere general, he didn’t hesitate to have a band
of deserters shot during the worst days of the Revolutionary War
– even though these men did not try get away out of cowardice but
because they were literally starving, freezing, and desperate. Squelching
tax revolts and killing deserters were well-established traditions
among the very sort of Old-World ruling class that colonial Americans
had just finished throwing off for good – or so they thought.
The
tradition of a glorious military background had begun to slip by
the time Lincoln came to power, though renewed somewhat for Grant
and Eisenhower (glory needs a war), but by the time George Herbert
Bush became George-the-Second-the-Second, even a mediocre military
background was of little importance (and now, grâce à
Bill Clinton, of none at all). No need to go over our second George’s
usurpations of power in domestic matters, since his predecessors
had already been doing this for decades; no need to rehash Desert
Storm, either, other than to keep in mind that George-II-the Second
and his courtiers, by making a patsy of our ambassador to Iraq (April
Glaspie), tricked Saddam Hussein into feeling free to invade Kuwait,
which was not only siphoning-off Iraqi oil but which Iraq still
considered to be part of ancient Iraq (Mesopotamia), before the
map was redrawn by the Ottomans and then, typically, by a meddlesome
Western power (Britain) in 1914. Iraq lost its best shipping route
to the sea, as well as the huge hunk of its vast southern oil fields
that was yet to be discovered (1938). Knowing the Kuwaiti ruling
class to be as corrupt as his own, or nearly so, and believing he
had received a US go-ahead, Saddam saw no reason to hesitate. So
George-the-Second-the-Second then pretended that Kuwait had to be
rescued, and the American public, brain-dead after a century of
government-run schooling, bought one more fiction. The UN bought
it, too. By that time, after all, most of its member-nations had
installed government school systems of their own.
So
the tradition of warrior-to-noblesse, firmly established
since the Middle Ages, appears to have expired quietly in its sleep.
Slick Willy is gone, and another who has never breathed the smoke
of war wields the scepter – and appears to aspire to becoming Emperor
of the world – George III-USA.
Our
rulers need never again arrive at noble or royal status by first
getting themselves bloodied in battle, much less by leading an army
at its forefront. To appreciate more fully what it meant to be an
Old World hero-king or hero-noble, I recommend reading a good English
translation of The
Song of Roland. It is a description of how Charlemagne’s
army kept the Spanish Moors from crossing the Pyrenees into Gaul
(France). Blood and guts everywhere. Not one nobleman-leader among
these warriors ever considered sparing his own, not even for an
instant. From the earliest days of the feudal system, kings, princes,
dukes, earls, and even bishops got themselves as sweaty and muddy
and bloodied as everybody else. (Our words ‘virile’ and ‘virtue’
began as medieval French cognates, both deriving from the Latin
root vir – strength, courage, wisdom, manliness – qualities
applicable to either sex, since ‘man’ was originally genderless
and meant simply a ‘human being’.)
In
Shakespeare’s Henry V you can find another vivid account
how an authentic nobleman fought a war in AD 1415, this one about
the near-miraculous English victory over the French in the famous
Battle of Agincourt. I recommend seeing the play rather than
reading it. The best easy-watching rendition I have come across
is the superb 1989 British production for television, directed by
Kenneth Branagh, who also stars as Henry, and featuring multiple
award-winner Derek Jacobi as the intermittent narrator, a common
device in Shakespeare. Buy the video if you possibly can. Even if
you’re not wild about Shakespeare, you’ll be rewarded by sticking
with this version of the play to the end. I can almost guarantee
you will be glad you did. You may even want to watch it more than
once.
Even
though wars in any age are usually waged for either silly or downright
unrighteous reasons, a single exposure to such works as Roland
or Henry V makes the underlying cowardice of modern war
not to mention wickedness abundantly clear. Henry V’s reason
for launching an attack against the French seems as dumb as those
for so many others among history’s wars, yet they were deeply believed
and heartfelt, without adulteration, without a shred of politically-motivated
pretense. Strict Christian rules were enforced. No fighting on the
Lord’s Day nor on any other Holy Days; no looting of villages; no
abominations against helpless women; no destruction of crops or
any other means of a poor man’s livelihood.
Shakespeare
shows King Henry trekking through the battle area, from encampment
to encampment in ordinary garb and sometimes on foot, as grimy and
exhausted as the men he visited. At one stop, he comes upon a group
of men surrounding a soldier he knew and even liked. The man was
clearly about to be hanged. Henry asks why. The man was caught trying
to loot a village church. Henry leaves sadly, without interfering.
A war must be honorable.
Did
the 20th century ever once preserve this kind of honorable?
The respecting of defenseless civilians and their property? The
recognition of churches as sacred sanctuaries and temples for prayer
and the celebration of eternal goodness and life? How many presidents
who got us into wars refused to harm civilians? How many of them
respected spiritual needs and cultural traditions? How many refrained
from extracting spoils from the wounded and defeated (consider the
Treaty of Versailles), mindful of the hardships such behavior would
wreak upon the innocent and powerless?
Lew
Rockwell recently suggested returning to an even simpler way of
resolving international disputes than a revival of ‘honorable’ warfare.
George-III-the-Second and Saddam Hussein would not even have to
emulate Napoleon I, if they agreed to a ‘regime change’ by means
of a neat and clean classic duel. (Perhaps George knows that even
Bonaparte didn’t stay behind in his warm and cozy imperial digs
whenever he launched a serious military campaign. Even in his madness,
Bonaparte still had enough noblesse left in him to get muddy
in the Norman plains and freeze in the Russian snow, right along
with the rest of his men.)
Now
that I reflect on the admittedly brilliant idea of settling international
scores in a matched-doubles duel among these bloodthirsty hawks,
I realize that it’s much too good for them. The only blood they
would see would be their own alone, or the other guy’s. Their tender
eardrums would be spared the terrifying blast of bombs or nearby
mortar shells or the whistle of bullets – and, above all, the screams
of pain from the men they send into harm’s way would never reach
them, to haunt their slumbers for years to come. Let those who would
bring-in a New World Order by means of war go straight to the head
of the line – of the infantry – with the foot-soldiers, that is,
where they can eat the dust and mud like the kings of old, like
Roland, Charlemagne, and Henry V.
October
10, 2002
Joanna
Parker (send her mail)
is
an escapée from teaching in government schools and [left-]leaning
Ivory Towers, successively.
Copyright
© 2002 by LewRockwell.com
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