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No Room on the Wall

by: John Cory, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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Vietnam, Iraq and beyond. A moment to reflect.
(photo: thomasbopedersen.org)

When there is no room left on stone
To write the wrong
Or spell the sin
Who will name the dead?
- John Cory

    May 1, 2008, marked the fifth anniversary of the "Mission Accomplished" spectacle by George Bush. Twelve days or so later, Staff Sgt. Travis Twiggs, a three-tour Iraq veteran, committed suicide and killed his brother, Willard J. Twiggs.
A Marine for fifteen years, Travis suffered from PTSD, even wrote about it; tried to still the beast by reaching out to help others, but in the end it killed him. Collateral damage included his brother and a stunned and grieving family. Editor and Publisher has the article.

    While Bush, McCain and the GOP shout hosannas to war and scream about supporting the troops - back home and in need of help, veterans like Staff Sgt. Travis Twiggs find this as their support. You really don't have PTSD, Sarge, just the readjustment blues. It will pass.

    Miz Remy recently sent out a link to her vets regarding Agent Orange and prostate cancer rates among Vietnam Veterans. A glimpse of war without end.

    In the absurdity of false wars, this article says it all. War memorials are running out of room to list the dead. Mission Accomplished.

    Memorial Day is here, and with it the cheap carnival sales pitch of patriotism and sacrifice and paying the price for freedom. The sideshow of this holiday weekend will be the primary campaign pre- election blather and speeches about honoring the men and women who serve our nation. Nickel-and-dime phrase and praise, sleight of hand and tongue, to divert our eyes from the real issue of supporting our troops and veterans.

    Senator Jim Webb has a bill before Congress to increase the GI Bill education benefits of our veterans, but McCain and the GOP will not support it. Why aren't Obama and Clinton raising this issue during their primary race? Why are the media more focused on who is or is not wearing a patriotic lapel pin? Useless questions, I know, because for the media the election is nothing more than entertainment: American Idol goes to Washington. And questions about supporting our troops and veterans are about money, and true patriots understand there is always money for war - emergency funding and billions to keep the lie going. War is expensive. Care for the veteran and his family? That smacks of entitlement programs like welfare - and that's too costly and too wasteful of taxpayer dollars. Welcome to Wonderland.

    Close your eyes and picture that long obsidian wall of the Vietnam Memorial glistening with the tears of heaven on a rainy day, the etched names so vivid you can see their senior prom photos. As people move along you see the reflections of the families and veterans passing each panel to pay their respects, occasionally reaching out to touch a name as fingers rub and linger over each letter that spells out that life - trapped within the wall.

    Now picture the last panel, a soggy rain-soaked piece of cardboard with black ink streaked like weeping mascara that reads:

"There is no room on the Wall for more names. "Thank you for supporting the troops. - Come again."

    Today is Memorial Day. Miz Remy asked veterans to write messages to share with each other in the week leading up to this holiday. It is a tough time for a lot of veterans. Maybe we all could share with her and her guys. Wouldn't hurt to reach out with a few words for a struggling vet to be able to hang onto or pass on a paragraph of hope. After this administration's regime, aren't we all veterans of the good fight?

    As memorials are running out of room for the names of the dead, maybe the blogs can dedicate a corner for Memorial Day with a roll call of those who have paid the ultimate price, and then just below that, a petition to end the war and deception. Maybe radio stations will play, "Christmas In Fallujah" and "We Gotta Get Out of This Place" at the top of every hour, followed by John Lennon's "Imagine."

    And because this administration loves corporate sponsorship so much, perhaps they should reach out to Chevron, Shell, ExxonMobil, Halliburton and all the oil conglomerates that are reaping record billions in profit and get them to build care houses at VA facilities for the wounded and their families, such as the MacDonald House for families of cancer victims. Isn't this war just another form of cancer? Make the corporations earn their obscene profits and tax breaks by giving back to the nation - to the veterans and soldiers and families. And better yet, make them put the picture of every wounded and killed soldier on a wall in each and every gas station across this country.

    And maybe this president, who bought his way out of war and service to his country, should dedicate an entire wing of his proposed library to the names and images of those who have paid for his legacy of war.

    I know - never going to happen. And that is the piteous sin in all of this.

    What happens when the gardens of stone can no longer name the dead? Will the wind catch their souls and whisper their names to the midnight sky? Or will silence be the lullaby of the forgotten?

  

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John Cory is a Vietnam veteran. He received the Purple Heart and Bronze Star with V device, 1969 - 1970.

Comments

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Beautifully written,

Beautifully written, movingly descriptive. Your words touch the soul. The last paragraph couldn't have been said better. Thank you.

Thank you, John Cory, and

Thank you, John Cory, and thank you to all your veteran comrades who, over the years, served this nation. Thank you for your strong words--words I've thought but hadn't said as eloquently. Thank you for your sacrifices in Vietnam, and for speaking out on behalf of those who are sacrificing now in Iraq and Afghanistan. I wish you well, and send my hopes that a new administration in '09 will change the way our troops are cared for. May none of your names ever be forgotten. Therese

A poem for the

A poem for the living Bearing names of the dead No room on this earth For names on which we tread. May our every wish for life Be a memorial to shame May no man declare war Before reading every name.

Thank you for bringing

Thank you for bringing attention to the real needs of veterans. There are some of us out here who are launching serious grassroots efforts to do what we can. I am the Executive Director of Acupuncturists Without Borders...while we are a small organization, we are supporting the opening of free clinics all over the country to offer acupuncture in a community setting to veterans and their families for stress and post combat stress. Please go to our website at http://acuwithoutborders.org/veteransprogram.php to see where people can go for treatments.We need support for this important work. Email us at veterans@acuwithoutborders.org to see how you can get involved.

John, As always you make

John, As always you make your words sing with such clarity and truth for the needs of our Veterans and our Country. My thanks, our thanks, for that—we need a land full of voices that will carry the needs of our Veterans to the ears of those who must hear them. They are US and we need to be there, all of us, for them. Thanks, always, Miz' Remy http://www.welcomehomesoldier.com

we all need to get together

we all need to get together to take back this country from the elite ruling class. There in no more room for any one anywhere. Veterans, women, children, all out of their homes on the street. Lilly Ledbetter anyone?

Please keep writing. Your

Please keep writing. Your eloquence inspires. I am grateful I have had the opportunity to read this piece, as I am saddened by the fact that it needed to be written. I have also been touched and inspired by the following: Julia Ward Howe, who first proposed a Mother's Day, said, in her Mother's Day Proclamation: "Our husbands will not come to us, reeking with carnage, For caresses and applause. Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn All that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience. We, the women of one country, Will be too tender of those of another country To allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs. From the voice of a devastated Earth a voice goes up with Our own. It says: "Disarm! Disarm! The sword of murder is not the balance of justice." Blood does not wipe our dishonor, Nor violence indicate possession.

Dear Cory, You have put a

Dear Cory, You have put a name to my ache, eyes on my horse, and wind beneath my wings. I'm trying to think of a way to make the sleepers around me begin to chant so loud and with a voice so strong it cannot be denied N O M O R E S E N S E L E S S W A R ! This is not a time for 'wallflowers' I don't want to hear who won the 'game', 'show', etc. spare me the cruel omission of senseless killing in our name. Let us all wake up before it's too late. I salute you Cory, for you are a true patriot.

Thank you for your touching

Thank you for your touching comments. If only we could stop the carnage and help the survivors.

as long as we have 24/7

as long as we have 24/7 blathering idiots on the T.V. judging patriotism with a lapel pin, and difficult lives by gas tank tabs..we will never be able to have average guy and gal truly understand what havoc our leaders have and are causing for the world as close as next door, or as far away as Iraq...our imperialistic president and his cronies could and should be held accountable...today and tomorrow, but lapel pins and gas prices are dominating the airwaves...is it possible that a our country will not survive because not enough people are intelligent?

M.A.T.H. (Missing AT

M.A.T.H. (Missing AT Home) Yes, Beautiful, Thank You! There is always so much to appreciate within your paintings in words. We must get "us" ALL out of Iraq! (and out from all other killing fields!) I have read all too many credible things, and less 'generally' credible, but all too plausible things, not to respect and seriously consider that "they" have been making far, far more dead there than we hear, now running it up farther for the people all around held into it and kept there, "ours", and "their's", and those and them all no matter what side or sides those imposed into that scene might have been from, nor been on their way going or believing, no matter, worst of all, where each might have been had each just stayed home, being at home in their hearts. We must continue to MAKE room, here among us for living and dead UNTIL, among us we have stood up as a people awakened, and honoring those Missing at Home like they'd be, if Home in their Hearts had been, honoring those Left to HAVE their Right to go home, until we stand inThat, in our massive numbers together being a surge of Peace overwhelming all the makers, and all the dealers of death, removing them, all of them, every one, accounting them sequestered where none can make or deal any death anymore, none! any more than each their own! ................................................ ..................and Remember! lest we forget and let those dog eating dogs in time, start creeping back out to get in for more! !"Nevermore"! (-:G MAKE WAR OBSOLETE

Hasn’t silence always been

Hasn’t silence always been the lullaby of the forgotten? This country spends billions, trillions, on warfare where we have no business being, while shrugging off the needs of forgotten millions at home. Can a “globalized” planet be ruled by big armies, big money, big propaganda? Big lies? Probably many of us are awakening to the fact that our governments and the world-wide corporations, our being accustomed to always MORE our lives devoted to thinking ourselves apart from, better than, all creation-- don’t we fear that "who-we-have-become" is leading to our own last silence? Who-we-have-become is almost the opposite of who we, our species, were at our birth and childhood. Different from who we, humans, were for the first half a million generations, at least a hundred thousand years. We could not have survived without knowing that what there is, is all there is. We knew not to destroy the earth, not to overkill the life forms that fed us. We relied upon Nature, trusting that she worked well as long as we kept our hands off. We knew how to live with each other. We avoided conflict, or learned how to resolve before damage could be done. That fear of extinction is deep within the six and a half billion souls on this earth today. But there is a ground swell of people whose eyes are opening on a new (and very old) reality that is not to be found in remembering the dead, and so elevating war to greatness, We can learn again to share, not compete. Not greed, but generosity. Not I but we. Ordinary people are feeling the chaos from which new ways of living can emerge. The Meek shall inherit the earth. Small communities, villages rather than mega cities, will spring up when the global BIG implodes. All over the world, it seems, small groups are beginning to grow now.

John, Thank you for another

John, Thank you for another great one. Each day that goes by with Bush and Cheney (and the others who lied us into war, you know their names) walking free confounds the hell out of me. Our country is now heartless beyond recognition. The joke's on us. 16 Arab men with box cutters did not bring down the Towers. It was George Bush, Dick Cheney and their friends in the CIA and FBI who executed 9/11. It's all in the literature of Project for a New American Century. We've arrived, steadfastly established in that New Century. If there were less Diane Feinsteins and Hillary Clintons and Nancy Pelosis Congressional & Senatorial Committees would have been formed to investigate Dick Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz and all the other members of The Project as the most obvious suspects for staging the attack of 9/11. I deeply for the Vets but they should no longer be cooperating with the Republican War Machine. They should know better. They should follow Nancy Reagan's simple and timely advice: just say "no."

We should honor our veterans

We should honor our veterans by bringing this administration to international courts for trial for war crimes.

The day when Memorial Day is

The day when Memorial Day is a relic of the past will be the day that the people can rejoice because war will then be a thing of the past. ~ Drumsing Habib

No more war, no more war

No more war, no more war memorials of wars that did not have to be fought. I am aghast from living through the Vietnam war, that I am now living with the Iraq war. Have we learned nothing? If we had a true democracy, one that is not bought and sold, we would not be fighting this war. Thank you for expressing what so many of us feel. I would like to share with you these lyrics from Marvin Gays 1971 album "What's Going On?" Mother, mother There's too many of you crying Brother, brother, brother There's far too many of you dying You know we've got to find a way To bring some lovin' here today Father, father (father, father) We don't need to escalate You see, war is not the answer For only love can conquer hate You know we've got to find a way To bring some lovin' here today

John Cory, It is a

John Cory, It is a privilege to read your words. You make me realize that there is still decency in this country. Carole

You are without a doubt one

You are without a doubt one of the best writers that I have ever had the privilege to come across. not only are your articles, I read the later ones before this one, inspiring and quite rational. But also extremely rational and human. I envy you for your skill sir. And I look forward to seeing more of your writing in the future.