by argyle » Tue 15 Sep 2009, 07:38:33
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('WyoDutch', '[')i]America has a love affair with war. Any hour of the day, the media is propagandizing with everything from the D-Day landings to PFC Herman Hero kicking down the door of a mud hut somewhere in the third world. America can afford this love affair because it comes at no risk to the average sofa spud. (My nearest neighbors are perfect examples. During the attacks on Baghdad in the opening days of our glorious campaign to rid Iraq of WMDs, my neighbors breathlessly exclaimed about how they "... love to watch the war on tv"... but they were so relieved that "their son was on a (Mormon) mission to Canada and not involved in the fighting.")
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If we had any national backbone... we'd enact some risk-sharing. As soon as any American troop is in a combat situation for 30 days, a 10% war surtax, with a $2,000 minimum, kicks in. At the same time, universal military service (women included) goes into effect. No exclusions, no deferments. If little Johnny or Joanie has to pick up cigarette butts for 2 years... Well, that's the cost of "freedom".
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Yep... just ask the average American to participate in our perpetual wars and there will be a stampede for the exit strategies.
I support this.. I also believe that many Europeans are so opposed to war because many of their parents/grandparents actually experienced a war in their midst..
Americans have generally little experience what it really means when a battle/war is fought in their village/town, what it is like to be a refugee because one's home is burnt down, bombed out, or crops destroyed and has nowhere to go or risks being shot, raped,.. What it is like to be oppressed/pacified where you can be picked up off the streets randomly, mutulated, tortured, and/or executed,.. and where the offenders of those crimes don't fall under any law..
Although they did sacrifice a lot during WWII and I certainly don't want to downplay this, but they (families) have not experienced it in the same way Europeans/Iraqi's/Afghans/.... did. Their soldiers went of to fight on some distant battlefields, but for others, that battlefield are ppls homes, fields, cities, etc.. where all their loved ones are, out in the crossfire and harms way.. The general public has no idea how ugly a war really is (even with today's technology)..
There is a line in "The Patriot" that condenses it pretty good..
"Mark my words... this war will be fought not on the frontier or some distant battlefield, but amongst us. Among our homes. Our children will learn of it with their own eyes."
"People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people."