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Religious Dick

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"Support Our Troops"
« on: December 29, 2006, 01:12:28 AM »
Would You “Support the Troops” in Bolivia?
by Jacob G. Hornberger, December 27, 2006
Soldiers who join the military voluntarily sign a very unusual contract with the federal government. It is a contract that effectively obligates the soldier to go anywhere in the world on orders of the president and kill people as part of an invasion force against other countries. It doesn’t matter whether the intended victims deserve to die or not. That issue is irrelevant as far as the soldier is concerned. His job is not to question why people he is ordered to kill should be killed; his job is simply to invade and carry out the killing, no questions asked.

For example, let’s say that President Bush orders U.S. troops to invade and occupy Bolivia. The order would reach the Pentagon, which then would pass the order downward to generals, colonels, majors, captains, sergeants, and privates in America’s standing army. With perhaps one or two exceptions, no soldier would challenge the president’s decision to invade Bolivia, because that’s not part of the employment contract he has signed with the military. The soldier’s duty would simply be to carry out the president’s order to invade Bolivia.

Suppose a soldier says, “Mr. President, I can’t carry out this order because it would involve killing innocent people wrongfully, including the people who are going to defend their nation from this attack. You have no moral right to order an invasion of Bolivia because neither the Bolivian people nor their government has attacked the United States. Moreover, the invasion would be illegal under our form of government because you haven’t secured the constitutionally required congressional declaration of war. My conscience will not permit me to kill any Bolivians as part of this operation, including Bolivian soldiers defending their nation from this attack. Therefore, I simply cannot participate in this invasion. ”

That soldier would be taken aside by a few superior officers for a very candid and direct conversation. His superiors would explain to him that it is not within his job description to second-guess the president’s decision to attack Bolivia. The soldier’s job, he would have carefully explained to him, is to trust that his commander in chief is making the right decision and to carry out his order. The soldier’s superiors would also explain to him that if he persists in his refusal to participate in the operation, he will be court-martialed and severely punished.

What about conscientious-objector status? Wouldn’t that relieve the soldier from participating in the attack on Bolivia?

No, because under military rules conscientious-objector status applies only if a soldier objects on moral or religious grounds to all war. A soldier is not permitted to gain conscientious-objector status if he happens to object to a particular war as being illegal, unjust, or immoral.

Back to our Bolivia example. To make it easy on U.S. soldiers who might feel a bit squeamish about killing Bolivians, the president could announce that they were invading Bolivia in order to oust the recently elected socialist president, a man who has close ties to Venezuela’s president, Hugo Chavez, who is another socialist and who has close ties to Fidel Castro, who is both a socialist and a communist and who had close ties to the communist Soviet Union, which had once promised to bury America.

Thus, by invading Bolivia, the president would argue, the troops would be helping bring freedom and stability to Latin America and also be protecting the United States from the threat of communism. Moreover, U.S. troops occupying Bolivia would be serving as a magnet for attracting Latin American communists and terrorists that U.S. troops could then exterminate. Finally, the president could provide another rationale for the invasion: that by invading Bolivia, U.S. troops would actually be defending the United States from an invasion by undocumented Bolivian immigrants.

It would be all the troops would need to go forward with a clear conscience. Undoubtedly, 99 percent of U.S. troops would obey the orders of the president to invade Bolivia, even if they felt a bit uneasy about killing people in the process. They would faithfully fulfill the terms of their employment contract.

How do we know that this is true — that U.S. troops would faithfully do their duty by carrying out the orders of their commander in chief to invade Bolivia? Easy — because we know that they followed the president’s order to invade Iraq, a country that never attacked the United States or even threatened to do so. And on invasion day, they would dutifully drop 500-pound bombs on Bolivia, fire missiles into cars and buildings, and shoot Bolivian soldiers who resisted the invasion. Women and children who would be killed as part of the operation would be considered the unfortunate collateral damage of war. And the more the Bolivian military resisted the invasion, the more it would be held morally responsible for Bolivian casualties.

Throughout the operation, the troops would be reporting back on how they’re killing the “bad guys.” American reporters, donning military helmets and embedding themselves with the troops, would dutifully attend Pentagon briefings, after which the U.S. press would breathlessly exalt the heroic exploits of the troops. Bronze and silver stars would be awarded soldiers who fought courageously against Bolivian soldiers and insurgents.

No one would keep count of how many Bolivians were killed in the operation because no one would want to know and no one would care. Only the deaths of American soldiers would count and be counted.

The American people would be infected with war fever. Dissidents would be challenged with “Now is not the time to debate whether we should have gone to war against Bolivia. The fact is that we are at war and so we’ve got to support the troops.” The FBI would monitor anti-war protests for threats to national security from socialists, communists, and terrorists. The country would be rife with anti-immigrant hysteria, and there would be raids, round-ups, and deportations of Hispanic immigrants.

Protestant ministers and Catholic priests would exhort their parishioners to support the troops in harm’s way. Those ministers and priests serving in military reserve units as chaplains would accompany the troops to Bolivia and explain to them that war is in the Old Testament, that as soldiers they could trust the judgment of the president, and that they could kill Bolivians with clear consciences. Church newspapers and bulletins would wax eloquent on how this was a “just” war, especially given that it would be protecting the national security of the United States from communism and also liberating the Bolivian people from the horrors of socialism and the threat of communism. The American flag would be displayed proudly in church altars, especially during Sunday service or mass (except, of course, in churches in Bolivia, where Protestant ministers and Catholic priests would be proudly displaying the Bolivian flag.)

People who came to the assistance of the Bolivians from Colombia, Ecuador, and other Latin American countries would be considered “terrorists” or “bad guys.” Those who came from Cuba would be called “communist terrorists.” And U.S. troops would kill them all, especially if they were trying to kill U.S. troops.

But what about the morality of the entire operation? Where is the morality of killing people who have never attacked the United States and who have done nothing worse than try to defend their country from a wrongful invader? Where is the morality in killing in “self-defense” when you don’t have a right to be there killing people in the first place? Does a burglar who has entered someone’s home in the middle of the night have the moral (or legal) right to claim self-defense if he kills the homeowner who shot at him while he was burglarizing the homeowner’s home in the middle of the night?

Indeed, where is the morality in signing a contract that obligates a person to go kill people who haven’t attacked his country?

“But we signed the employment contract thinking that we were defending America,” soldiers say. “We’re just trying to be patriots.”

But everyone knows that presidents don’t use their standing army to defend America. They use it to attack countries that haven’t attacked the United States. After all, how many times has America been invaded by a foreign army in the last 50 years? (Answer: None!) What country in the world today has the military capability of invading the United States? (Answer: None!)

By signing a contract that obligates the soldier to kill people in the process of obeying the president’s order to invade other nations, the soldier effectively agrees to surrender his conscience to the will of the president. After killing people pursuant to that contract, he effectively says to himself and to God, “I’m not responsible for killing that person I just shot or bombed because I signed a contract with my employer that obligates me to kill people on his command and that relieves me of having to decide whether my employer’s order was right or wrong.”

But the troops aren’t the only ones who surrender their consciences. As soon as the troops are committed to battle, many citizens also surrender their consciences, rallying to support the troops and cheering them to victory, praying that God bring an end to the violence and the “terrorism” in the country that the troops have invaded, without heed to whether the troops have the moral right to be in the invaded nation killing people.

How wise is the surrender of conscience, both among the troops and the citizenry, in both the short term and long term, especially in a country that prides itself on Judeo-Christian principles?

In my opinion, not wise at all.

Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation. He is one of 23 speakers at The Future of Freedom Foundation's upcoming June 1-4 conference “Restoring the Republic: Foreign Policy and Civil Liberties” in Reston, Virginia. Send him email.

http://www.fff.org/comment/com0612f.asp
I speak of civil, social man under law, and no other.
-Sir Edmund Burke

Religious Dick

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Re: "Support Our Troops"
« Reply #1 on: December 29, 2006, 01:16:54 AM »
Strakon Lights Up

"Support Our Troops"

 

This year I let February 22 pass by unremarked, and I regret it. I'm not referring to the fact that it's the birthday of Old Father George. No, this year February 22 was the 60th anniversary of the guillotining, in Munich, of Hans and Sophie Scholl and Christoph Probst.

The Scholls, brother and sister, and their friend Probst were among the principal members of The White Rose, a group of Christian antiwar, anti-Nazi youths who understood that the criminal regime that ruled them would have to suffer defeat in the criminal war it was waging before their beloved homeland could have a hope of recovering — eventually — its "freedom and honor." (That phrase is from their fourth leaflet.)

They wrote and surreptitiously distributed five leaflets, but unfortunately Sophie Scholl's distribution of a sixth leaflet was less than surreptitious. A Gestapo informant observed her scattering copies into the courtyard from an upper gallery at the University of Munich, and then the game was up, and their lives were over.

"We must soon bring this monster of a state to an end," The White Rose wrote in their third leaflet. "The military victory over Bolshevism dare not become the primary concern of the Germans. The defeat of the Nazis must unconditionally be the first order of business." Though characterizing their approach as "passive resistance," the youths called for outright sabotage across the economy and throughout the culture, too. They urged people not to donate to the periodic war-drives: "The government does not need this money; it is not financially interested in these money drives. After all, the presses run continuously to manufacture any desired amount of paper currency. But the populace must be kept constantly under tension, the pressure of the bit must not be allowed to slacken!" (Did George Orwell read that last sentence before writing 1984?)

I honor the courage of the young men and the young woman of The White Rose. How much less courage is required of us, in a polite-totalitarian country where the penalties for dissent, though pervasive, are still (pace the gangster Ashcroft) largely informal and nonviolent! And how much easier the choice is for us than for those of The White Rose, who had to resign themselves to being overrun and ruled, for an unknown period of time, by the Bolsheviks and the Western imperialists before their country's "freedom and honor" could be restored. No Iraqi horde threatens to overrun and rule us.

***

Remarkably enough, the sheeple baaing their way to the various flag-waving country-music-warbling politician-infested "patriotic" rallies seem to understand something basic that escapes those verbally nimble activists who proclaim, "Support Our Troops — Bring them home NOW!"

In practical fact, what can Supporting Our Troops possibly mean besides Supporting Their War?

If the authorities, resorting to "impolite" totalitarianism on the home front, declared that all books critical of the regime were to be seized, would we tug our forelock, scuffle our feet, and meekly mumble, "Well, I oppose the seizure, but, you know, we've got to Support Our Police"? Nonsense. The police are the arm of the authorities: it is they and only they who make the pronunciamentos of the authorities more than empty wind. Just so are the U.S. troops in Mesopotamia the arm of Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, and Perle: it is they and only they who make those villains' pronunciamentos more than empty wind.

As an anarchist, naturally I am no constitutionalist — like Lysander Spooner, I consider the Constitution "of no authority." But since almost everyone else out there is always bleating about the sanctity of the Constitution, I will observe that the war in Iraq is just as unconstitutional as a seizure of books would be. If this war is not illegal, there is no such thing as an illegal war.


But leave aside the Constitution. The war is illegal and unjust in terms of nonstate legal theory and moral principle. Are we really to condemn the crime and celebrate the criminal?

The question would be more complicated if Our Troops were hapless conscripts — slaves dragooned abroad to murder other slaves. But they are not. They are careerist mercenaries, and the question is simple. Dead simple. If the troops of the United State will not leave Iraq voluntarily, we must — to Support Our Country — hope for their defeat.


***

I am sick and tired of the whole series of weepy mini-melodramas we're being treated to by both the networks and local stations, in which military family members moan about the dangers their loved one is facing in a distant land. One almost has the impression that the military individual was kidnapped from his home in the dead of night or press-ganged down at the mall, instead of deliberately joining a warmaking organization and freely turning his fate over to the likes of Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, and Perle. I'd feel some sympathy if one of those relatives would say, "I begged him not to get involved with that gang. I begged him not to go. He just wouldn't listen," but that's one thing we never hear.

As for the military members themselves who get banged up or captured in Mesopotamia, or in whatever exotic realm they invade next, they are in for little sympathy hereabouts, at least as sympathy is usually understood. I have more sympathy for heedless teenagers who wreck themselves performing stunts with snowmobiles. At least those clowns aren't going over into somebody else's country and shooting people. They're asking for trouble, but only for themselves. And they're not financing their heedlessness with money robbed from us taxpayers.

By way of contrast, the U.S. military member in Iraq isn't just asking for trouble — he's going halfway around the world to create trouble. And all on our dime. Thanks for nothing. It's remarkable: the Iraqis would present no threat to Americans if Americans would just stay the hell out of Iraq! The only Americans being shot, blown up, maimed, or imprisoned by Iraqis are the ones who have attacked and invaded the Iraqis' homeland.

What sympathy I do feel is really more of a lowering melancholia, an awareness that in a fundamental way the troops were lost before ever falling in battle. It is an awareness of tragedy, arising from the recognition that optima corrupta pessima sunt: The best, once corrupted, are the worst. I've used that saying before in my writing, and I will surely do so again. If you think about it, it could be the great motto for American history, fatally mixed and mangled and poisoned as that history has been with United State history. The military members who have gone to Iraq include some of the most resourceful, organized, focused, hard-working, courageous young Americans there are. And most loyal, too — to their freely chosen masters, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, and Perle. What a loss for the cause of liberty, justice, and peace!

The word tragedy has been made threadbare by overuse in our time, but if that's not a tragedy, I don't know what is.

March 31, 2003

© 2003 by WTM Enterprises. All rights reserved.



NOTE
for Nicholas Strakon's
"'Support Our Troops'"

 

* I find especially revolting the bellowed declarations of many "patriotic" Americans — most of them Constitution-ravers — to the effect that we war resisters have to shut up now that the shooting has started. But since it did not declare war under the Constitution, the regime is under no presumed obligation ever to declare peace. And as a practical matter George W. Bush's Crusade against World Evil would result in the closest thing to an eternal state of warfare as could readily be imagined.
What the "patriotic" war fans are really telling us, then, is to shut up forever. What ugly children they are. And what good little United Statians, toddling their way all by themselves so far down the road to serfdom.

***

From the first leaflet of The White Rose: "Nothing is so unworthy of a civilized nation as allowing itself to be governed without opposition by an irresponsible clique that has yielded to base instinct."
And: "Do not forget that every people deserves the regime it is willing to endure!"

The White Rose Website is at http://www.jlrweb.com/whiterose.

http://www.thornwalker.com/ditch/lights124.htm
I speak of civil, social man under law, and no other.
-Sir Edmund Burke

Lanya

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Re: "Support Our Troops"
« Reply #2 on: December 29, 2006, 03:16:06 AM »
I have never heard of The White Rose.  Thank you.
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Plane

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Re: "Support Our Troops"
« Reply #3 on: December 29, 2006, 04:29:48 AM »
Quote
The question would be more complicated if Our Troops were hapless conscripts — slaves dragooned abroad to murder other slaves. But they are not. They are careerist mercenaries, and the question is simple. Dead simple. If the troops of the United State will not leave Iraq voluntarily, we must — to Support Our Country — hope for their defeat.
 

   Well that is refreshingly frank.


Quote
  But everyone knows that presidents don’t use their standing army to defend America. They use it to attack countries that haven’t attacked the United States. After all, how many times has America been invaded by a foreign army in the last 50 years? (Answer: None!) What country in the world today has the military capability of invading the United States? (Answer: None!) 


     As a card carrying member of the Industrial -military complex I say , Your welcome!

These two questions can be answered in the negative due to the quality and size of the US Military -Industrial complex ,even though it is shrunk a lot since 1988 it is still second to none .

( It isn't even second to all the others put together)