Honor Veterans…But Don’t Claim They’re Defending Our Freedom
Veterans Day was a few days ago, and as usual, I kept hearing that perennial mindless refrain (uttered as if by Pavlovian response), that we should “honor veterans because they’re over there fighting for our freedom and keeping us safe.”
Excuse me, but no, they’re not.
Our troops are in Afghanistan and Iraq fighting for Afghanistan’s and Iraq’s freedom (regardless of whether they want it) and trying to keep the Afghan and Iraqi people safe (even if it’s actually having the opposite effect). There is NOTHING our troops are doing in Afghanistan and Iraq (or in any other country) that is even remotely promoting American freedom and safety (I served in Afghanistan, and I assure you, we were not protecting your right to free speech or making sure you slept safe at night). On the contrary, our actions in both theaters have made us demonstrably LESS safe since we continue to breed resentment and create more terrorist recruits determined to do us harm. And last I checked, our freedoms were being rapidly eroded by a Bush administration consumed by the darkness of totalitarianism and using a nonsensical and Orwellian “War on Terror” to justify the emerging police state.
Don’t get me wrong–I don’t blame the troops for any of this. I blame the political leadership. The troops are simply doing what they agreed to do when they signed up. They’re fulfilling legally binding employment contracts, a noble and honorable thing. They should be honored because, deep down, they really did join because they thought they would get a chance to defend our freedom and keep us safe. It’s not their fault they ended up being used as tools to accomplish some fanatical neoconservative reordering of the Middle East in a grand scheme that Bush believes was hand delivered to him by some omnipotent being. I mean, they really couldn’t have seen that one coming, especially when most of them sign on the dotted line right out of high school (or even during their senior year like I did).
I find it particularly abhorrent that our government continues to send troops into Afghanistan to fight al Qaida and the Taliban while simultaneously empowering those enemies by trying to shut down opium farming in the country. Our failed war on drugs apparently hasn’t caused enough ruin in our own country, so we felt the need to export that ruin to a country that could actually emerge as a prosperous and peaceful place if it wasn’t for the fact that Western politicians with a poor grasp of human nature and an even worse grasp of economics have decided that certain substances, including heroin, must be banned by the coercive state.
So yes, honor veterans if you like, but do it for the right reasons. And let’s get some folks elected (like, say, Ron Paul) who will stop putting the people that signed up to defend America and the Constitution in the position of having to carry out self-defeating (and very un-American) foreign policy around the world.
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Comments
Comment from Sven
Time: November 20, 2007, 11:17 am
Let’s take it one step futher… why honor them at all? They fullfilled their contracts and were paid for their service. Isn’t that compensation enough? If we were to honor them, why not honor the highrise construction worker who also puts his life in danger to fullfill his contract for pay. And since putting one’s life in danger is part of the contract, why is that even an issue, they knew that was part of the deal? If we are honoring the soldiers we should be honoring the kids cooking fries at McDonalds.
Comment from Darren
Time: November 20, 2007, 8:43 pm
@TexasFred: Unfortunately, I believe Bush does indeed have a clue. I think he knows exactly what he’s doing when he attacks third world countries and sends our people to die there.
@Sven: I see no flaw in your logic. It does indeed make little sense (outside of primitive appeals to jingoistic nationalism) to bestow special honor on those of us who decided to go to work for the government in a military capacity. We certainly don’t set aside special honor for government bureaucrats or elected officials. Nor do we have special honors for those who go to work for private companies in a military capacity (even though what they do is often much more legitimate than what government troops end up doing). I imagine it will be a long time (if ever) before mankind is largely able to overcome our natural tribalism that evolution endowed us with and rise above the irrational appeals to national pride and identity that often lead us to give up our freedoms.






Comment from TexasFred
Time: November 16, 2007, 7:17 pm
You sound a lot like me, honor the troops for their service, courage and dedication, but their mission sucks, and their CiC hasn’t got a clue…