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Chris Hedges: War Is Betrayal
from the Boston Review:
War Is Betrayal
Persistent Myths of Combat
Chris Hedges
We condition the poor and the working class to go to war. We promise them honor, status, glory, and adventure. We promise boys they will become men. We hold these promises up against the dead-end jobs of small-town life, the financial dislocations, credit card debt, bad marriages, lack of health insurance, and dread of unemployment. The military is the call of the Sirens, the enticement that has for generations seduced young Americans working in fast food restaurants or behind the counters of Walmarts to fight and die for war profiteers and elites.
The poor embrace the military because every other cul-de-sac in their lives breaks their spirit and their dignity. Pick up Erich Maria Remarques All Quiet on the Western Front or James Joness From Here to Eternity. Read Henry IV. Turn to the Iliad. The allure of combat is a trap, a ploy, an old, dirty game of deception in which the powerful, who do not go to war, promise a mirage to those who do.
I saw this in my own family. At the age of ten I was given a scholarship to a top New England boarding school. I spent my adolescence in the schizophrenic embrace of the wealthy, on the playing fields and in the dorms and classrooms that condition boys and girls for privilege, and came back to my working-class relations in the depressed former mill towns in Maine. I traveled between two universes: one where everyone got chance after chance after chance, where connections and money and influence almost guaranteed that you would not fail; the other where no one ever got a second try. I learned at an early age that when the poor fall no one picks them up, while the rich stumble and trip their way to the top.
Those I knew in prep school did not seek out the military and were not sought by it. But in the impoverished enclaves of central Maine, where I had relatives living in trailers, nearly everyone was a veteran. My grandfather. My uncles. My cousins. My second cousins. They were all in the military. Some of themincluding my Uncle Morris, who fought in the infantry in the South Pacific during World War IIwere destroyed by the war. Uncle Morris drank himself to death in his trailer. He sold the hunting rifle my grandfather had given to me to buy booze. ..................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.bostonreview.net/BR37.4/chris_hedges_war_soldiers_army_military_suicides_ptsd.php
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Chris Hedges: War Is Betrayal (Original Post)
marmar
Jul 2012
OP
benld74
(9,904 posts)1. This same mentality has been evident from the year Zero,,,,
where the lowest in a society fought and those of means stood in the back and watched. The road traveled by the lowest IS the most difficult, and every once in a great while a story is told about how someone overcame all odds. Those are the stories that rivet all of us and come in many forms. Those are the stories that make you cry, that make you sit up and take notice.
xchrom
(108,903 posts)2. Du rec. Nt