Fwd: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hankam/message/8717

The Glory of War

by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.

The bloom on the rose of war eventually fades, leaving only the
thorns. By the time this takes place, most everyone has already begun
the national task of averting the eyes from the thorns, meaning the
awful reality, the dashed hopes, the expense, the lame, the limbless,
the widows, the orphans, the death on all sides, and the resulting
instability. The people who still take an interest are those who first
took an interest in war: the power elite, who began the war for
purposes very different from that which they sold to the public at the
outset.

Thus does the American public not care much about Iraq. It is not
quite as invisible as other nations that were the subject of national
obsessions in the recent past. Hardly anyone knows who or what is
running El Salvador, Nicaragua, Haiti, Libya, Serbia, or Somalia, or
any of the other formerly strategic countries that once engaged
national attention.

In fact, the president of Nicaragua, Enrique Bolanos (never heard of
him, huh?) is visiting the White House next week in hopes of
soliciting support for the upcoming election, which could prove to be
dicey since the old US nemesis Daniel Ortega is running and gaining
some support on a consistently anti-US platform. Should he win, one
can imagine the White House swinging into high gear about how
Nicaragua is harboring communists, er…terrorists. Or maybe not. Maybe
he will rule the country and never make a headline. It is all up to
the state.

Why the state goes to war is not a mystery – at least the general
reasons are not mysterious. War is an excuse for spending money on its
friends. It can punish enemies that are not going with the program. It
intimidates other states tempted to go their own way. It can pave the
way for commercial interests linked to the state. The regime that
makes and wins a war gets written up in the history books. So the
reasons are the same now as in the ancient world: power, money, glory.

Why the bourgeoisie back war is another matter. It is self-evidently
not in their interest. The government gains power at their expense. It
spends their money and runs up debt that is paid out of taxes and
inflation. It fosters the creation of permanent enemies abroad who
then work to diminish our security at home. It leads to the violation
of privacy and civil liberty. War is incompatible with a government
that leaves people alone to develop their lives in an atmosphere of
freedom.

Nonetheless, war with moral themes – we are the good guys working for
God and they are the bad guys doing the devil's work – tends to
attract a massive amount of middle class support. People believe the
lies, and, once exposed, they defend the right of the state to lie.
People who are otherwise outraged by murder find themselves
celebrating the same on a mass industrial scale. People who harbor no
hatred toward foreigners find themselves attaching ghastly monikers to
whole classes of foreign peoples. Regular middle class people, who
otherwise struggle to eke out a flourishing life in this vale of
tears, feel hatred well up within them and confuse it for honor,
bravery, courage, and valor.

Why? Nationalism is one answer. To be at war is to feel at one with
something much larger than oneself, to be a part of a grand historical
project. They have absorbed the civic religion from childhood – Boston
tea, cherry trees, log cabins, Chevrolet – but it mostly has no living
presence in their minds until the state pushes the war button, and
then all the nationalist emotions well up within them.

Nationalism is usually associated with attachment to a particular set
of state managers that you think can somehow lead the country in a
particular direction of which you approve. So the nationalism of the
Iraq war was mostly a Republican Party phenomenon. All Democrats are
suspected as being insufficiently loyal, of feeling sympathy for The
Enemy, or defending such ideas as civil liberty at a time when the
nation needs unity more than ever.

You could tell a Republican nationalist during this last war because
the words peace and liberty were always said with a sneer, as if they
didn't matter at all. Even the Constitution came in for a pounding
from these people. Bush did all he could to consolidate
decision-making power unto himself, and even strongly suggested that
he was acting on God's orders as Commander in Chief, and his religious
constitutionalist supporters went right along with it. They were
willing to break as many eggs as necessary to make the war omelet.
I've got an archive of a thousand hate mails to prove it.

But nationalism is not the only basis for bourgeois support for war.
Long-time war correspondent Chris Hedges, in his great book War Is a
Force that Gives Us Meaning (First Anchor, 2003) argues that war
operates as a kind of canvas on which every member of the middle and
working class can paint his or her own picture. Whatever personal
frustrations exist in your life, however powerless you feel, war works
as a kind of narcotic. It provides a means for people to feel
temporarily powerful and important, as if they are part of some big
episode in history. War then becomes for people a kind of lurching
attempt to taste immortality. War gives their lives meaning.

Hedges doesn't go this far but if you know something about the
sociology of religion, you can recognize what he is speaking of: the
sacraments. In Christian theology they are derived from periodic
ceremonies in the Jewish tradition that cultivate the favor of God,
who grants our lives transcendent importance. We receive sacraments as
a means of gaining propitiation for our sins, an eternal blessing on
worldly choices, or the very means of eternal life.

War is the devil's sacrament. It promises to bind us not with God but
with the nation state. It grants not life but death. It provides not
liberty but slavery. It lives not on truth but on lies, and these lies
are themselves said to be worthy of defense. It exalts evil and puts
down the good. It is promiscuous in encouraging an orgy of sin, not
self-restraint and thought. It is irrational and bloody and vicious
and appalling. And it claims to be the highest achievement of man.

It is worse than mass insanity. It is mass wallowing in evil.

And then it is over. People oddly forget what took place. The rose
wilts and the thorns grow but people go on with their lives. War no
longer inspires. War news becomes uninteresting. All those arguments
with friends and family – what were they about anyway? All that
killing and expense and death – let's just avert our eyes from it all.
Maybe in a few years, once the war is out of the news forever and the
country we smashed recovers some modicum of civilization, we can
revisit the event and proclaim it glorious. But for now, let's just
say it never happened.

That seems to be just about where people stand these days with the
Iraq War. Iraq is a mess, hundreds of thousands are killed and maimed,
billions of dollars are missing, the debt is astronomical, and the
world seethes in hatred toward the conquering empire. And what does
the warmongering middle class have to say for itself? Pretty much what
you might expect: nothing.

People have long accused the great liberal tradition of a dogmatic
attachment to peace. It would appear that this is precisely what is
necessary in order to preserve the freedom necessary for all of us to
find true meaning in our lives.

Do we reject war and all its works? We do reject them.

May 6, 2005

Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] is
president of the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor
of LewRockwell.com and author of Speaking of Liberty.

Copyright © 2005 LewRockwell.com

Source: http://www.lewrockwell.com/rockwell/glory-of-war.html




------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Has someone you know been affected by illness or disease?
Network for Good is THE place to support health awareness efforts!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/OCfFmA/UOnJAA/E2hLAA/BRUplB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

***************************************************************************
Berdikusi dg Santun & Elegan, dg Semangat Persahabatan. Menuju Indonesia yg 
Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. www.ppi-india.org
***************************************************************************
__________________________________________________________________________
Mohon Perhatian:

1. Harap tdk. memposting/reply yg menyinggung SARA (kecuali sbg otokritik)
2. Pesan yg akan direply harap dihapus, kecuali yg akan dikomentari.
3. Lihat arsip sebelumnya, www.ppi-india.da.ru; 
4. Satu email perhari: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
5. No-email/web only: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
6. kembali menerima email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ppiindia/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Kirim email ke