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Veterans Day or Rulers Day?

by: Bob Richards, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

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(Photo: The U.S. Army; Edited: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t)

How is it that Veterans Day gets turned around into US Military Hegemony Day? The airwaves were buried under an avalanche of lip service about veterans, but the moving lips were all about the myth that the warfare decisions this country's rulers make have something to do with anyone's freedom. Just as soldiers and sailors are doing around the world today, I did in my time. I was there as a teenager, ignorant of the forces moving me, believing whatever line I was being fed.

I grew up on the hundreds of war/propaganda movies that came out of WWI, WWII and Korea. Today we are deluged with more nationalistic propaganda than ever before in my lifetime. It can't be avoided. The TV spews the images nearly nonstop. Recruiters are in our schools, along with the pop machines. The words Army, Navy and National Guard are on race cars at the drags and the ovals. "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" has been replaced with "America the Beautiful" with cordons placed at Yankee Stadium to keep fans from going to the bathroom while the dose of nationalism is served up.

Once a year the veterans are rolled out, but without a real veterans' voice. The physical support for veterans comes nowhere near what is needed. Suicides of veterans always wind up taking more lives than the wars that set them up.

It is important to some vets to keep believing the myth they fought for, that going into that foreign country had a bearing on anyone's freedom here. These are the vets who get a voice, as this is the only voice acceptable to the ruling powers. The Revolutionary War and the Civil War may have had some bearing on someone's freedoms, but even then, not everyone's. The former held only for white male property holders, and the latter for humans who were property themselves. In both of these cases, those native to these lands could not be included, as they were busy at the time being relieved of their homelands and freedom.

If you want to thank anyone for your rights and freedoms, thank an activist. No soldier ended segregation in the 1960's. No sailor got women the vote. No National Guardsman got you the 40-hour week or took children off the shop floors or out of the mines. No, they were called out by the states to kill the very people who were fighting for the rights they eventually won for you.

Mostly what the vets have done is to be tricked into serving the forces that have used them, and in many cases, used them up. The vets deserve your support mostly because they believed, and gave what was asked, and were promised something in exchange. When promise-keeping time comes up, they find they have to get in a line and wait and then they must fight to receive what was promised. In many cases, what they get is enough for a little cheap wine and a bed at a shelter. These aren't the vets that get dragged out before the game or race, or at half-time. Nope, those vets are the believers. The "presentable" ones.

So, here we are at war to get Unocal's dream pipeline route across Afghanistan secured and prop up that ex-Unocal employee's stolen election. Then there's still that war we don't talk about so much anymore. The one that the lie to get us in there changed nearly every day, when the truth may have been as simple as the Decider told us himself, that Saddam tried to kill his daddy, and that he would use that war for his own ends.

These two wars send home more corpses and vets every day. These vets are more often acute cases needing the highest levels of attention, overloading the system and triaging the old farts back down the waiting lines. The government will front load the wars with the drones, missiles, guns, mines, ships, planes and trained bodies as its priority. It will use up more than it gets from its taxpayers and hand the debts to the future, and vets will fight for crumbs. This is the record from every war the country has ever done. Still, its propaganda works, and it won't have any trouble finding believers to march in the parades. It can parlay that percentage into a rock-solid myth and keep the guns-and-butter gravy train rolling along.

  

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Bob Richards is a military veteran who served as a submariner in the 1960s.

Comments

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Thank you Bob, for an

Thank you Bob, for an excellent article. Your words resonate with me strongly as I too am a veteran from the 60's who has become extremely disillusioned with my country's murderous ways. Unfortunately, I fear that your implicit warning to your countrymen will, as usual, fall on deaf ears.

I agree with you, Bob. My

I agree with you, Bob. My time was Viet Nam; went into the Navy at 17 in 1962. Clueless, of course. All sorts of reasons, most having not much to do with patriotism. Mainly I had nothing going for me at home, I wanted an adventure and I thought the girls might like me better if I had a uniform. Sound familiar? I got out nine years and five tours later. Now my seventeen year old son wants to join the Marines. He might do it, too. How do I make him understand that a man's honorable service can be dishonorably used by his country? How do I get it into his video game trained mind that when he drops the hammer on real people it's going to fuck him up forever? He wants to prove himself. He doesn't say that, but you and I know that's what it is. And nobody questions the manhood of a U.S. Marine. Nobody much gives a shit either. Not really. If he survives, body and mind, he can start from scratch when he gets out, years behind the kids who didn't go in. Then he can drift from crap job to crap job the rest of his life. Just like his old man.

So well said. Let's get out

So well said. Let's get out of Iraq and Afghanistan. Write Obama and your congress members.

Amen.

Amen.

Couldn't agree more. I

Couldn't agree more. I remember during the Viet Nam war wondering how they were going to take away our freedoms and take over America when they didn't even have airplanes. And just how was Iraq and is Afghanistan (the Taliban) going to take away my rights and freedoms and ruin our democracy and way of life. The closest thing to ruining our lives and taking away our freedoms was Cheney/Bush. To constantly give the excuse that our "boys" are dying for our freedoms is patently false. Even Hitler and Tojo didn't want to take over America and our freedoms. Hitler wanted all of Europe for himself and Tojo just wanted oil and rubber that we were denying Japan. Sending good brave men to die for political or corporate gain and then covering it up with lies about "if we don't kill them there, they'll kill us here" is a disgusting joke.

Doesn't the military still

Doesn't the military still harvest the young and unemployed from primarily impoverished areas? Areas where there's no WallyMart or MickyBurgers - to offer far better (relatively speaking) pay and benefits. How do we tell these kids about the "old lie"? Many corporate interests require the consumption of our Nation's youth, it's their bottom line we're talking about.

I wrestle with this every

I wrestle with this every Memorial Day and Veteran's Day. How do you thank someone for being an unwitting pawn in someone else's contemptible political game? Or worse, how do you thank someone who was there and still believes the propaganda?

You have to be careful in

You have to be careful in pointing out the vicious effects of wars on our own soldiers and on the vast numbers of citizens of foreign countries that have suffered from the imperialist policies of the United States. People live by the myths that inform their lives and the myth of the United States astride its white horse going to battle to stamp our the forces of Evil is very powerful. People get angry when their perspective on the world is questioned. Because of their experience in the military, veterans are in a special position to criticize the myth of the rightness of War. Thanks to Bob for doing so.

Since 1980 US has been

Since 1980 US has been active in 6 wars, 4 of which we started. We also supported 5 - 6 or 10 - 12 others, depending on how you count support for terrorists. And we have sent billions of dollars of weapons around the world to create or support wars, hostilities, terrorism. Flags fly everywhere, everyone is a patriot. We spend $1.2 trillion per year on the military, spies, and we even have a cable channel that glorifies war and the military. But the vets? Want to fix this problem? Make every elected official in the nation spend at least 1 week per year doing volunteer work at a veterans hospital. Go to a funeral there and you will be the 3rd or 4th person - the others will be the person who does whatever ceremony of the dead, the cemetery manager, the back hoe operator. So much for being honored by your country for the sacrifice of your life.

Most vets hate veterans day

Most vets hate veterans day since they must work while govt. employees and bankers get they day off with pay, even those who dodged the draft. More here: http://www.g2mil.com/vetsday.htm

Thanks Bob for your

Thanks Bob for your comments. I am one of those veterans of Vietnam,( June '69 to June '70 with the 1st Air Cav infantry) who never spoke of the war or attended ceremonies related to veterans, then in 1995 I had a breakdown , my marriage of 20 years had ended I lost my job of 18 years. If hadn't been for a social worker who had retired from the V A and continued working with Vietnam veterans on mental issues which were buried deep I don't know what would have happened to me. The only real friends I have had are veterans. None are pro war but all want to see these veterans of today get home safely. I am thankful for those who speak out and wish I could find the words to really express how I feel. I love my fellow veterans and I am grateful for those who get home and find their way.

There is a very interesting

There is a very interesting list of at least 80 U.S. military operations from 1980 to present at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_United_States_military_operations My concern is now and has been since early in the presidential campaign of 2008 that clearly the ruling class would use Barack Obama and the Democratic party faction of the ruling class to intervene over and over again in Latin America. After a year of Obama in office, we see this in the coup in Honduras (carried out from a U.S. base), last week's agreement between the U.S. and Colombia over U.S. presence on 7 Colombian bases to assure U.S. "continental reach", US propaganda regarding Venezuela, and official and unofficial US subversive activities in Ecuador, Boliva and elsewhere in the hemisphere. I will mourn the loss of no U.S. life in any action in Latin American, nor in any other imperialist adventurism. Bring them home now and shut down the network of 700 plus U.S. bases around the world.

A long time adviser to Barry

A long time adviser to Barry Goldwater was interviewed early this year by Bill Moyers. Barry's man was very clear in denouncing our involvement in Iraq especially. On so-called Veterans Day, it is harsh but accurate to quote him: "Those who have died or been wounded in Iraq and these optional wars are wasted heroes". I guess all of the holidays we celebrate these days have been taken over by the media/military industrial complex to keep their $$ flowing.

Veterans Day is to honor

Veterans Day is to honor our Veterans . How many veterans died in vain in the past 100 years because of the lies and distortion of truth such as happened with the Bush regime . They say "Support Our Troops " as they send young innocent kids to some corrupt little crap country on the other side of the world to DIE for Democracy and Freedom [ or is it to support Halliburtan etc.] We throw out one dictator and install our own corrupt dictator such as in Iraq and Afghanistan . They skim the cream off the top of our Billions in aid and tuck it away in their secret bank accounts. SUPPORT OUR TROOPS ? What about our Sailors and Marines who were MURDERED by one of "our so called best friends " back in June 8 , 1967 . Israeli Jets and Torpedo Boats attacked the U.S.S. Liberty in broad daylight and MURDERED 34 of our young men and gravely wounded 171 . Our government and the media fluffed it off and never really investigated it . As President Johnson said , " We don't want to embarrass our ally " Check it out : WWW.USSLIBERTY.ORG Treason , Duplicity and Murder

I notice all the vets here

I notice all the vets here that have made comment have agreed with you. I do to. It is a shame in this country (if the first myths are taken into account) that this type of piece needs to be written. I too am a combat vet of Vietnam. It's to bad too that there have not been any vets of these current wars writing in, but then as you say they are bombarded with patriotic fluff from the moment they wake up until they go to bed at night. There are few dissenting voices as there were back then. Nothing now for them to hear and learn from. That's a shame.

Such a thoughtful

Such a thoughtful piece-thanks Bob.

Thank you Bob. For Andy

Thank you Bob. For Andy Howell and other who would seek the perspectives of the veterans of OEI and OEF, they need look no further than Iraq Veterans Against the War. (www.ivaw.org ) In 2003 I spoke to an audience at Crawford, TX and told them of a photo I had seen of a Marine rifle company that had "formed up" to spell the message "We Remember 9-11." I explained how, on seeing this photo, I had wept. I saw myself among those Marines but on the tarmac of Da Nang Air gase, having just arrived in Viet nam in 1968. I believed deeply that I was on a mission to protect my country and serve my oath. I told the audience that my experience forced me to realize that many, perhaps ultimately, most of those Marines would come to know the lies that had sent them to war and, like myself and many thousands of other veterans of Americans War in Vet Nam, would suffer the deep pain and anger that grows out of being betrayed in the worst possible ways. Today, sadly, I see my dire prediction born out on a daily basis. Dave Collins USMC 1967-71 RVN 1968-70