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War Crazy

by: Camillo "Mac" Bica, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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(Photo: Crystal Green)

    I have always thought myself a free spirit, a philosopher mendicant, seeking an alternative, more substantive lifestyle. Others, however, see my unorthodoxy, my "spiritual seeking," as abnormal and a clear indication of my insanity. Perhaps I need to pause and reevaluate my life. After all, being insane is not something one readily admits. I guess it's part of being crazy to cling to a facade of sanity, to think oneself normal and everyone else insane.

    One thing I am certain of, however. I haven't always been crazy. Wasn't born crazy. I think insanity crept up on me, happened in Vietnam, in the war. War does that, you know, drives people crazy. Shell shock, battle fatigue, soldier's heart, PTSD. All that killing and dying can make anyone crazy.

    Some survive war quite well, they tell me. Many even benefit from its virtues. But war's effects are not always apparent. No one escapes war unscathed in body and in mind. All war, any war, every war, ain't no virtue in war.

    I think, of those not driven crazy by war, many were crazy already. But theirs was an insanity of a different kind, a hard kind, an uncaring kind. I knew people like that. Didn't like them much. Thought them fortunate, though, as killing and dying meant nothing. In fact, in a perverse way, they enjoyed it, enjoyed the jazz, the excitement, the power. They became avenging angels, even god herself, making decisions of life and death, but mostly death. Those crazies hated to see the war end. For me, the war never ends.

    Sometimes things work out for the best, though, as my unorthodoxy, my being crazy, probably saved my life. You see, sane people can't live like this, in a war that never ends. Not all crazy people can either. Guess I was lucky. Sometimes being crazy helps you cope. Sometimes I wish I were crazier than I am.

    Serious introspection has made clear the basis of my unorthodoxy, the nature of my insanity. It is a cruel wisdom allowing - no, better, compelling - a clarity of vision. I have seen the horror of war, the futility and the waste. I have endured the hypocrisy and arrogance of the influential and the wealthy, and have tolerated the ignorance and narrow-mindedness of the compliant and the easily led. War's malevolent benefactors, who pretend and profess their patriotism with bumper-sticker bravado, with word but not deed, intoxicated by war's hysteria, from a safe distance. Appreciative of our sacrifices, they claim, as they applaud the impending slaughter, sanctioning by word, or action, or non-action sending other men and women to be killed, and maimed, and driven crazy by war.

    And when they benefit from the carnage no longer, their yellow ribbon patriotism and shallow concern fade quickly to apathy and indifference. The living refuse of war that returns are heroes no longer, but outcasts and derelicts, and burdens on the economy. The dead, they mythologize with memorials and speeches of past and future suffering and loss. Inspiring and prophetic words by those who sanction the slaughter to those who know nothing of sacrifice.

    I used to try to explain war to help them understand and to know its horror, naively believing that war was a deficiency of information, understanding, discernment and vision. But being crazy has liberated me, allowing me to see that war is not a deficiency at all, but an excess of greed, ambition, intolerance and lust for power. And we are its instruments, the cannon fodder, expendable commodities in the ruthless pursuit of wealth, power, hegemony and empire.

    And now, I accept and celebrate my unorthodoxy, my insanity, as an indictment of the hypocrites and the arrogant, of the ignorant and the narrow-minded for a collective responsibility and guilt for murder and mayhem, and crimes against humanity. And I offer my insanity as a presage of their future accountability - to humankind in the courts of history, and to the god they invoke so often to sanction and make credible their sacrilege of war.

  

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Camillo "Mac" Bica, Ph.D., is a professor of philosophy at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. His focus is in ethics, particularly as it applies to war and warriors. As a veteran recovering from his experiences as a United States Marine Corps Officer during the Vietnam War, he founded, and coordinated for five years, the Veterans Self-Help Initiative, a therapeutic community of veterans suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. He is a long-time activist for peace and justice, a member of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, and the coordinator of the Long Island Chapter of Veterans for Peace. Articles by Dr. Bica have appeared in Cyrano's Journal, The Humanist Magazine, Znet, Truthout.org, Common Dreams, AntiWar.com, Monthly Review Zine, Foreign Policy in Focus, OpEdNews.com, AfterDowningStreet.org and numerous philosophical journals.

Comments

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Mac, not alone, buddy. The

Mac, not alone, buddy. The "easily led" only seem powerful because they have the backing of the opulent. The majority would partake in a counter culture movement, even if they are unaware of it. The revolution is coming, it might, however, be running too late. Peace, Justin

AMEN, BROTHER!

AMEN, BROTHER!

If you know someone who

If you know someone who thinks there is such a thing as a good war, or a just war. Please e-mail them this article

When in the name of

When in the name of insanity, prose crosses over into poetry and the unspeakable is spoken, I take heart that in the core of many, there is a fundamental decency - a basic goodness absent in those who ruthlessly pursue the politics of Empire, including I am afraid Messiah Obama.

Thank you so much for your

Thank you so much for your craziness, more, for explaining it so clearly. Not all crazy people can claim such depth of conscience and express it so coherently. In fact, I just realized I'm crazy too because I agree entirely with your views, so do the maths... It's kind of reassuring to be crazy in this way because it helps keep things in perspective, it calls for balance, for equity and foremost common sense. Now I do not know how these two end up together, craziness and common sense, but I suppose that if enough crazy people like us two got together and claimed common sense, we could make a good case of it.

Hello, Mac. Thanks for your

Hello, Mac. Thanks for your keen observations. You might find interesting these words from Cervantes' "Don Quixote": " I have been a soldier and seen my comrades fall in battle...I have held them in my arms at the final moments. These were men who saw life as it is, yet they died despairingly. No glory, no gallant last words... only their eyes filled with confusion, whimpering the question: Why? I do not think they asked why they were dying, but why they had lived. Perhaps life itself seems lunatic, who knows where madness lies? Perhaps to be too practical is madness. To surrender dreams - this may be madness. To seel treasure where there is only trash. Too much sanity may be madness. And maddest of all, to see life as it is and not as it should be." Best regards, David Harris, Vets for Peace Ch 115, Red Wing, MN

My dear friend Dauphin

My dear friend Dauphin precedes me in applauding Mac's thoughts. NO war is "just"! However, there are some "distinctions" as to involvement. Or, are there? Having lost friends to 'Nam and other conflicts, and seeing the ongoing slaughter across the Globe, I'm at a loss to explain Humanity, but I'm an eternal optimist. But, first, let's deal with the "financial wizards" who've cost many innocent lives and many a broken dream. Damn them all, but BLESS those innocents!

mac-thank you for the

mac-thank you for the writing you do. i found some of your poetry well written and touching. but your piece posted here at 'truthout' titled 'winter soldier' is a piece i can study and ponder for hours. some of your statements come up when talking to my right wing family members. i hoped to meet you at the veterans for peace national convention in saint paul this past summer. sorry you were not there. would you like to come to seattle the first weekend of march to attend a veterans for peace northwest meet-up? thank you.

Too much sanity may be

Too much sanity may be madness as David writes. In an insane world, as characterized by mass delusions, those who see reality as it really is and remain the last sane people standing, are necessarily looked at as mad by the masses. Madness and sanity is turned upside down. Americans are arguably the most mass delusional people on earth. Being it in economic thinking, imperialism, perception of power, justification of war, and interpretation of moral cause. The biggest mass delusion in human history, the superiority of unchecked capitalism and an insane believe in risk control systems, just collapsed in front of our eyes. Those who spoke out about it the last years were considered insane by the system and the masses. Who is the sane one and the mad one now? The sane one is the one who laughs last! More mass delusions will collapse the next years and those not going mad will be the sane ones all along.

In 1968 I dropped out of

In 1968 I dropped out of college and the safety of my 2S deferment. My father, a WWII vet and ardent supporter of any war against the Commies, asked me what I meant to do. I told him I couldn’t get an honest 4F so wouldn’t try. Newly married to an already well pregnant woman, I hoped I’d get a fatherhood deferment, but the draft board had not been encouraging. I told him that if I were drafted, I would request the medical corps since I had a taste for nursing as well as some talent and experience at it. He begged me not to because medics are an obvious target—get them and you get all the soldiers they might have saved—so had the highest mortality rate. Did I not want to live? Already crazy at 20, I told him I would rather die than kill. “Idealism is admirable,” he said, “but we’re talking about your life.” The daddy deferment came through so I was able to hit the streets against the war, for whatever good it did. Many of us on the streets, myself included, blamed and shamed the soldiers departing to and returning from the debacle. Later I realized the shame was mine because I failed to realize that most of those soldiers were unwilling killers, young men as crazy as I was. Only luck that kept me from having to kill and, very probably, alive. As I read your poetry, which I had some difficulty doing for the strange intermittent blurring of my sight, I wished for the impossible: that we had seen we were brothers then. And hoped we could do so now, so that maybe our grandchildren and their children would not carry a private hell through their lives or have their lives stolen for the sake of the power games of the safely exempt.

It didn't hit me for about

It didn't hit me for about 10 years. I was too busy re-assimilating into civilian life and finishing college. Then looking for a career and getting settled. It was when I got"settled" that my mind had a chance to replay the war movie. I became depressed for a couple of years but a very good woman helped me through it. There are occasions when the war movie just pops into your head and you kind of catch yourself looking at the wall with your jaw hanging slack. You snap yourself out of it, file it as deep as you can and go on.

"There never was a good war,

"There never was a good war, or a bad peace." -- Ben Franklin -- Take heart, Mac, you're in GREAT company. Blessings

Inspired writing. Eloquent,

Inspired writing. Eloquent, humane. How many like you never made it back? But now you are here, among us, who are even crazier, by denial. In a nation of laws, our President denies our law. In a nation of law, we pin our hopes on force. Shop for Christmas presents in the name of the Prince of Peace, while we support the indiscriminate murder of women and children. Who is really crazy? You know the source of your malady, while America, in denial, is hysterical to enforce denial. Giving billions to bankers, we cannot afford medicines for our children, cut money for wounded veterans, cut school lunches while giving millions in tax refunds to corporations who paid no taxes in the first place. But you are no longer required to turn the crank of the meat grinder. It was either that or be sausage. The rest of us pretend there is no sausage. You are not as crazy as we are. But there is shelter from the storm here among us crazies-- and your words demonstrate our essential sanity and humanity. Now is the time to stop the insanity of mass murder. Those who value money over people are governed by fear. That's crazy.

My insanity kept me sane. I

My insanity kept me sane. I understand. "And the men of war need the fresh young minds in the labs of doom. We've got to interdict the flow." Fugs

Thanks Mac for the clarity

Thanks Mac for the clarity that I never seem to be able to muster. I too feel crazy sometimes or most times. My attitude about wars has cost me two wives and a recent lady friend gave me shit about it saying "why do you laugh at it Rich? I reply "rather laugh than cry for all those young kids (on both sides) I saw dead and dying." The pain I feel for those kids is horrible--they never even lived and then they were dead in a paddy or a jungle or a swamp for no good reason.

I would just like to say

I would just like to say thank you for these inspiring words. To you that you have been there and have not lost your moral compass is eye opening, even more is the understanding, depth of empathy and awareness you show in that the enemy is not 'over there'... it's above us at all times...... Thanks man

Thank you - from the bottom

Thank you - from the bottom of MY heart. Yes, you have great insight and courage, seems to me- and bless you for sharing both.