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What's wrong with America today!!!

  Author:  61941  Category:(News) Created:(1/20/2004 11:40:00 AM)
This post has been Viewed (1183 times)

Sentimentality Has Replaced Martial Virtues and Clear Thinking

By Gene Edward Veith

DURING THE INVASION PHASE OF THE IRAQ WAR, Captain Zan Hornbuckle, a 29-year-old Army officer from Georgia, found himself and his 80 men surrounded by 300 Iraqi and Syrian fighters. Unable to obtain air orartillery support, Captain Hornbuckle and his unit, who were never before in combat, fought for eight hours. When the smoke cleared, 200 of the enemy were dead. Thanks to brilliant combat tactics and personal heroism throughout the unit, not a single American was killed. But who is the most well-known soldier of the Iraq war? Private Jessica Lynch, whose claim to fame is having been captured and rescued, stirring the hearts, as they say, of the whole country. Why aren't the exploits of Captain Zan and his men better known? Reporters were embedded with his unit, witnessed the victory, and wrote about it. And yet, the popular culture has ignored him and many, many like him whose feats matched the heroics of earlier wars in favor of a slip of a young lady who evokes sympathy rather than admiration. Nothing against Private Jessica, who has suffered for her country. The fact is, the reaction of Americans to the men and women stationed in Iraq is overwhelmingly one of sympathy, of weepy commiseration for their plight, for the danger they are in, for having to be away from their families, and for having to have lived through such horrible experiences. While theydeserve our concern for these sacrifices, what happened to our appreciation for the martial virtues, courage, toughness, victory, that the members of our military have been displaying every day? This is the point of an article by Jonathan Eig in The Wall Street Journal. Since the Vietnam War," he writes, "much of the country has tended to veneratesurvivors more than aggressors, the injured more thanthose who inflict injuries." In World WarI, Mr. Eig points out, Americans were stirred by theexploits of warriors like Corporal Alvin York, who single-handedly killed25 German and captured 132 more. In World War II, the whole country fetedLieutenant Audie Murphy for killing 240 of the enemy But today, we seldom honor soldiers for killing, for being warriors. Even our war movies tend to be antiwar. "When Hollywood makes a wa movie, observes Mr. Eig, "it often focuses on saving American lives, Savin Privat Ryan, Black Hawk Down, Behind Enemy Lines, not killing others." "We want to fight wars but we don't wantany of our people to die and we don't really want to hurt anybody else," says military historia John A Lynn. "So Private Lynch, who suffers, is a hero even if she doesn't do much. She suffered for us." Treating the members of our military as victims, rather than as warriors, allows politicians to say that they "support our troops," meaning that they want to bring them home. Is this because of the feminization of the culture, that while we can still produce macho fighters like Captain Hornbuckle, the culture as a whole only wants to nurture them? Has our culture become pacifist at heart, feeling so guilty at the violence of war that we cannot celebrate actions that violate our ethic of niceness? Our culture may have channeled all of its warlike values into sports. Here, at least, we still value toughness, strength, and aggression. In sports we still allow ourselves the thrill of victory. But sports are nothing more than play time. In reality, we draw back Perhaps our sensitivities are the sign of a refined and peace-loving civilization. But we had better make no mistake about it: Our enemies do not share our sensitivity. Those who want to kill us despise our niceness, and they see our squeamishness about casualties, both our own and those of our enemies, as a weakness. This in fact motivates terrorists, the conviction that if a few Americans are killed, or even if too many of our enemies are killed, we will feel a national tidal wave of compassion, guilt, and regret. Then we will call our soldiers home, where they will be safe, enjoying our self-righteousness as the terrorists enforce their will on those whom we have abandoned. This trust in American sentimentality, reinforced every time the terrorist read our editorial writers or listen to a Democratic presidential candidate, encourages them to set bombs and take potshots at our troops. In this case, the warriors really are turned into victims.

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Replies:      
Date: 1/20/2004 12:15:00 PM  From Authorid: 46530    I think that this post is quite correct. The media now portrays more of an emotional aspect to war and conflict. It isn't so much about the killing of the opposition (which is expected of the army after all), but of the human element, people captured and released, people from your own side that die. But valour and courage do not, in the end, go unrecognised. No doubt the people involved in the effort you describe have been noticed by the militray command, maybe promoted or even decorated within this framework. Today's reporting is more about celebrity, shock-tactics and those non-entities in shows like big brother, rather than politics and people that do matter to our evey day lives  
Date: 1/20/2004 1:27:00 PM  From Authorid: 62367    There is a lot of truth in this post; especially the soldier as victim scenario. A lot of this squemishness dates to Viet Nam. We have to get over this. There are many kinds of hero. The traditional military hero is one and need to be emphasized more. As for PVT. Lynch, much of her celebrity was caused by the Pentagon itself. Unfortunately, its taken space and news time away from other more worthy soldiers and their stories.  
Date: 1/20/2004 4:59:00 PM  From Authorid: 62074    Giving medals to people who kill..? that's like giving a medal to a kid who beats his dog with a stick...Zim Matrix660
Date: 1/21/2004 6:53:00 PM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 61941    Author 62074, I'm glad you feel the way you do, it helps me realize that I'm doing my job. Whicjh is protecting those freedoms you have displayed here. God Bless.  
Date: 1/22/2004 6:38:00 AM  From Authorid: 19613    I think the pacifist attitude that is predominate in western civilisation now, is what seperates us from people like Saddam and Bin Laden, etc. That does not mean, that there are not times to go to war, but that when we do, unlike our enemies, we realise how terrible a thing it is.  
Date: 3/19/2005 7:29:00 PM  From Authorid: 37843    Zim Matrix, do you realize that the people that get medals for killing are killing to keep this country and your sorry butt free?  

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