How to Support Our Troops, pt. 4

About two weeks ago I listened to conservative radio talk-show host Alex Jones interviewing Dr. Doug Rokke about Depleted Uranium (warning: click only if you are prepared to view graphic, disturbing images.)  What Dr. Rokke had to say was both insightful and disturbing – that the effects of DU contamination are now appearing throughout Iraq and among our veterans, that the radiological contamination of Iraq will be impossible to clean up and will affect the Iraqi people for generations to come, that our country will not be able to afford to treat the illnesses DU will cause in our veterans. 

Alex Jones listened respectfully, made comments that made it sound like he was truly concerned.  Then Dr. Rokke signed off, and Alex Jones immediately shifted his monologue to try to link the looming epidemic of problems caused by DU contamination to Obama’s health care reform initiatives and “death panels.”   

What??!    

Get this straight, people.  George  Bush started a needless, senseless war and the world will suffer the consequences of that invasion for many generations to come.  But Alex Jones wants you to think it’s Obama’s fault because he has tried to reform a broken health care delivery system.  That’s Tea-Jerk logic for you.

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How to Support Our Troops, pt. 3

“Gifts of War”

They came here clean,
our springful youth,
their vigor a joyous stride,
their hunger a welcome shout.

The work they broached
as determined troops
was sold as a noble cause,
was labeled a valiant crusade.

But who told them
the routine truth
of dust that infiltrates lungs
with atoms that burn away cells,
of bodies that will never mend,
of nightmares that won’t go away.

They came here clean,
but what goes home?

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How to Support Our Troops, pt. 2

Approximate area and major clashes in which DU...

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One weekend there was a big “Support Our Troops” demonstration at Window on the Bay Park in Monterey.  I prepared for the rally by making seven or eight large signs that drew attention to the Bush cuts in veterans’ benefits, and the dangers of Depleted Uranium (DU), and set the signs up on the other side of the boulevard so all the people across the street would be able to see them.  It was too much information for people in the cars passing by to take in, but I figured that the people standing across from me for a couple of hours would  be able to read and ponder what my signs said. 

I tried to get the TV news crew to get footage of one of the signs about DU, but a “real patriot” kept covering my sign with a big flag. I could not understand why someone who boasted that he supported our troops would try to keep the truth from them. 

The map that accompanies this post relates to the first Gulf War under Poppy Bush, not W.’s invasion of Iraq.  The thing to remember here is that everything on this map is still there, and has been added to ten thousand-fold by the DU used during W.’s invasion, which lasted years longer.

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How to Support Our Troops

During exercise Joint Resolve 26, in Bosnia an...

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As we pause to remember and thank the men and women who have served our country in peace and war, it might be good to reflect on what the phrase “Support Our Troops” means.   To some people it might mean waving the flag and patting a soldier on the back for doing a good job.  To others it might mean working to prevent a flawed US foreign policy that propels our troops into senseless war,  or working to make sure that servicemen and women come home to a country that provides them with the health care, educational opportunities, and employment prospects that offer them and their families a secure future. 

During the invasion of Iraq I participated regularly in peace vigils on a busy avenue.  One day a car driven by a young man in uniform stopped in front of us for the red light.  He looked at our group, the signs, the peace flags.  With a bewildered tone he said “Shouldn’t you support your troops?” 

My answer was “We do support our troops.  We want to bring them home and give them the health care they need.”

The light changed to green.  The young man leaned out his window and drove slowly  across the intersection, saluting our group the whole way.

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Intimidation Segue pt. 4

The Holocaust, West Bank security fence and th...

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And the flip side? What happens to the psyche of a people who are the target of pogroms and a holocaust?  To what length will survivors be willing to go in order to maintain permanent control over their future?

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Intimidation Segue pt. 3

Protest against Israel

Image by looking4poetry via Flickr

What happens to the psyche of people who are subjected to relentless intimidation?  In my case the intimidation was minor, being followed around by nameless individuals – not exactly the stuff of nightmares.  But it made me feel powerless, made me seek to gain a position of power by finding out who these people were.   

Consider then the need of Palestinian people to regain some kind of control over their own lives, to return to a time when they weren’t relentlessly dominated and constrained by Israeli rule – a time when they could travel freely from one village to another without being detained for hours at checkpoints, a time when their children could freely seek an education, a time when an ambulance carrying a critically injured person wouldn’t be detained by Israeli soldiers while the person bled to death, a time when food and medicine from other countries flowed into their villages without problems, and the villagers could sell the products of their harvest to other people without having it destroyed by Israeli soldiers.

The need to regain control made Palestinian youth pick up rocks and throw them at soldiers wearing helmets and bullet-proof vests.  For this they were gunned down.  So some of them sought weapons larger than rocks, and gave their allegiance to whatever organization promised to blow the biggest hole in the wall cutting off their freedom.

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Intimidation Segue pt. 2

Map of Israel, the Palestinian territories (We...

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To learn more about the conflict in the Middle East, I read the book “A Season of Stones” by Helen Winternitz. 

“A Season of Stones” (Atlantic Monthly Press, 1991) is a haunting look at the effect the establishment of Israel has had on the people who have inhabited Palestine since before the first Hebrews settled there centuries ago. 

Author Helen Winternitz, an award-winning journalist, lived among Palestinian villagers in the five-hundred-year-old stone houses of Nahalin during the time of the first Palestinian uprising against Israel.  She spent a year learning the language, the customs, the structure of village society,  and saw the devastation brought upon these people by Israeli rule.  For a better  review of this book, go to http://www.enotes.com/season-stones-salem/season-stones    Then buy a copy of the book and read it.

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Intimidation Segue pt 1

I participated in many vigils to protest the impending US invasion of Iraq.  At the end of one vigil, as people were drifting away, an acquaintance pressed a magazine into my hands.  “This has an excellent article you should read,” she said. I wondered at the gleam of mischief I detected in her eyes, but figured I’d find out what that was about when I read the article.

Just before I got to my car a young bearded man wearing a black bowler hat stopped me.  He wanted to know the name of the magazine I was carrying.  I thought his curiosity was a bit presumptuous, but didn’t see the harm in letting him see the magazine.  I hadn’t taken a real look at it yet myself.  So I showed him the cover of “The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs.” 

He asked me what it was about.  I said I didn’t really know since I hadn’t read it yet.  That seemed to satisfy him, and he left.

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Intimidation, part four

Some people have reacted to the trilogy “they never read” with extreme dislike.  I believe that for some of them, that reaction is caused by the way the trilogy presents the possibility that a person who has been abused and intimidated and persecuted might be spurred by fear to become exactly like the persecutor they hate the most.  That the victim can become the monster.

The major source of conflict between Kate and Daron stems from Daron’s belief that intimidation is the only way to achieve his goal.  He wants information, so he’s going to force Kate to tell him by using threats and fear and pain.  Their conflict cannot be resolved until they spend an hour sitting silently in the same room, neither trying to dominate nor intimidate the other. The story would have been much shorter if he’d just played nice to begin with. 

The problem with intimidation is that it creates fear. And fear causes a person to go to extremes in order to find a position of power that makes them feel safe.

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Intimidation, part three

1995-1998 Ford Explorer photographed in USA. C...

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So who were these people?  I’d guess a nosey little girl and her boyfriend looking for some fun through the power trip of spying on someone else. I have to admit, it was fun to purposely follow that SUV to find out where it came from.  Chasing something makes you feel powerful – it’s programmed into the lizard brain in all of us.  Not that I plan to make a habit of it.

 I can’t rule out the possibility those kids have a gang connection.  In this area everything has some kind of gang connection.  But what would that have to do with me?  Oh, right. Read that post in my old blog I told you about in part one of this post. 

Now let’s talk about the connection this topic has to themes in the trilogy —

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