Last night at Gaming, the host got a call from his Brother in Law, a Medic 
In Iraq.  A quick showed that the people in the room collectively knew about 
seven people in Iraq.  There are now three military veterans in the group. 
The two active duty Air Force guys left to find another group to play with.

Read this article.  We, you and I are the "Disposable People"


http://www.fredoneverything.net/WarsAftermath.shtml

Wars And Their Aftermath

Things Seldom Spoken Of

December 4, 2004

The observant will have noticed that we hear little from the troops in Iraq 
and see almost nothing of the wounded. Why, one might wonder, does not CNN 
put an enlisted Marine before a camera and, for fifteen minutes without 
editing, let him say what he thinks? Is he not an adult and a citizen? Is he 
not engaged in important events on our behalf?

Sound political reasons exist. Soldiers are a risk PR-wise, the wounded a 
liability. No one can tell what they might say, and conspicuous 
dismemberment is bad for recruiting. An enlisted man in front of a camera is 
dangerous. He could wreck the governmental spin apparatus in five minutes. 
It is better to keep soldiers discreetly out of sight.

So we do not see much of the casualties, ours or theirs. Yet they are there, 
are somewhere, with missing legs, blind, becoming accustomed to groping at 
things in their new darkness, learning to use the wheelchairs that will be 
theirs for fifty years. Some face worse fates than others. Quadriplegics 
will be warehoused in VA hospitals where nurses will turn them at intervals, 
like hamburgers, to prevent bedsores. Friends and relatives will soon forget 
them. Suicide will be a frequent thought. The less damaged will get around.

For a brief moment perhaps the casualties will believe, then try desperately 
to keep believing, that they did something brave and worthy and terribly 
important for that abstraction, country. Some will even expect thanks. There 
will be no thanks, or few, and those quickly forgotten. It will be worse. 
People will ask how they lost the leg. In Iraq, they will say, hoping for 
sympathy, or respect, or understanding. The response, often unvoiced but 
unmistakable, will be, "What did you do that for?" The wounded will realize 
that they are not only crippled, but freaks.

The years will go by. Iraq will fade into the mist. Wars always do. A 
generation will rise for whom it will be just history. The dismembered 
veterans will find first that almost nobody appreciates what they did, then 
that few even remember it. If-when, many would say-the United States is 
driven out of Iraq, the soldiers will look back and realize that the whole 
affair was a fraud. Wars are just wars. They seem important at the time. At 
any rate, we are told that they are important.

Yet the wounds will remain. Arms do not grow back. For the paralyzed there 
will never be girlfriends, dancing, rolling in the grass with children. The 
blind will adapt as best they can. Those with merely a missing leg will 
count themselves lucky. They will hobble about, managing to lead semi-normal 
lives, and people will say, "How well he handles it." An admirable freak. 
For others it will be less good. A colostomy bag is a sorry companion on a 
wedding night.

These men will come to hate. It will not be the Iraqis they hate. This we do 
not talk about.

It is hard to admit that one has been used. Some of the crippled will 
forever insist that the war was needed, that they were protecting their 
sisters from an Islamic invasion, or Vietnamese, or Chinese. Others will 
keep quiet and drink too much. Still others will read, grow older and 
wiser-and bitter. They will remember that their vice president, a man named 
Cheney, said that during his war, the one in Asia, he "had other 
 priorities." The veterans will remember this when everyone else has long 
since forgotten Cheney.

I once watched the first meeting between a young Marine from the South, 
blind, much of his face shot away, and his high school sweetheart who had 
come from Tennessee to Bethesda Naval Hospital to see him.

Hatred comes easily.

There are wounds and there are wounds. A friend of mine spent two tours in 
Asia in that war now little remembered. He killed many people, not all of 
them soldiers. It is what happens in wars. The memory haunts him. Jack is a 
hard man from a tough neighborhood, quick with his fists, intelligent but 
uneducated-not a liberal flower vain over his sensitivity. He lives in 
Mexican bars few would enter and has no politics beyond an anger toward 
government.

He was not a joyous killer. He remembers what he did, knows now that he was 
had. It gnaws at him. One is wise to stay away from him when he is drinking.

People say that this war isn't like Viet Nam. They are correct. Washington 
fights its war in Iraq with no better understanding of Iraq than it had of 
Viet Nam, but with much better understanding of the United States. The 
Pentagon learned from Asia. This time around it has controlled the press 
well. Here is the great lesson of Southeast Asia: The press is dangerous, 
not because it is inaccurate, which it often is, but because it often isn't.

So we don't much see the caskets-for reasons of privacy, you understand.

The war in Iraq is fought by volunteers, which means people that no one in 
power cares about. No one in the mysteriously named "elite" gives a damn 
about some kid from a town in Tennessee that has one gas station and a beer 
hall with a stuffed buck's head. Such a kid is a redneck at best, pretty 
much from another planet, and certainly not someone you would let your 
daughter date. If conscription came back, and college students with rich 
parents learned to live in fear of The Envelope, riots would blossom as 
before. Now Yale can rest easy. Thank God for throwaway people.

The nearly perfect separation between the military and the rest of the 
country, or at least the influential in the country, is wonderful for the 
war effort. It prevents concern. How many people with a college degree even 
know a soldier? Yes, some, and I will get email from them, but they are a 
minority. How many Americans have been on a military base? Or, to be truly 
absurd, how many men in combat arms went to, say, Harvard?

Ah, but they have other priorities.

In fifteen years in Washington I knew many, many reporters and intellectuals 
and educated people. Almost none had worn boots. So it is. Those who count 
do not have to go, and do not know anyone who has gone, and don't interest 
themselves. There is a price for this, though not one Washington cares 
about. Across America, in places where you might not expect it-in Legion 
halls and VFW posts, among those who carry membership cards from the 
Disabled American Veterans-there are men who hate. They don't hate America. 
They hate those who sent them. Talk to the wounded from Iraq in five years.



-- 
Jay P Hailey ~Meow!~
MSNIM - jayphailey ;
AIM -jayphailey03;
ICQ - 37959005
HTTP://jayphailey.8m.com

NASA delenda est



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