Ray, points well taken!  The military is ultra-democratic in a sense.  If you're good, you move up.  If you f--k up, you f--k up, and you don't move anywhere!  But the military is an organization of a certain kind - simple and hierarchical.  Not everyone fits.  I've known ever so many kids who would simply have been misfits in that kind of system, me included.  When I was in university, I tried to join the military in order to pay for my education.  The board I went before asked me if I read Time Magazine.  I, being a kid from the far backwoods, asked "What's that?"  There was a collective "harrrumphhh"!  We never did get to my flat feet.

Ed Weick
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 3:36 PM
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Ten simple rules

Karen and Ed,
 
I would remind you all that the military is the only truly equal opportunity employer in the nation and admits all religions, cultures and only discriminates against Gays and that is beginning to be questioned.   It might be good for the rest of society to question how children from trailer parks and Louisiana bayous can become generals as often as Ivy League school graduates.   It may very well be that the most democratic institution in America is the military.   Like the arts, the military is performance oriented and not build upon the European aristocratic model.    Prejudice against the military is unseemly and we should not carry that prejudice over into creating the kind of anger carried by the police.    We pay the military poorly but train them well and demand much from them.   They, more than any other Americans, can truly speak to the values of equality and equal opportunity.   As they say in the Army,  A  "F...k up is a F....k up" no matter where you were born.    And no one wants to follow a fool simply because he was born with a silver spoon.    They may have loved Bush but Iraq will change that quickly.   The words from the hinterland is that there is a lot of anger and hostility out there.   I smell a change coming.   It seems that the Yale Drama school is the only place producing serious work these days while the other departments are working the legacy routine.    Legacy doesn't mean anything in the theater unless you can produce.
 
Ray Evans Harrell
 
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 11:56 AM
Subject: RE: [Futurework] Ten simple rules

Ed, when I read this piece earlier it struck me as you mention, that Kaplan was writing about these events as if he had created them into being.  He glorifies the soldier as the epitome of the modern democratic ambassador, a highly trained, deadly working representative of the superpower.

 Hemingway had such an effect, did he not, on a generation of men and women and war?

Meanwhile, more retired military fill former diplomat-only posts around the globe and increasingly, multinational corporations with ties to the military industrial technology complex.  

Have we undermined public education so much or lost all confidence in it that we only trust the military to train our leaders? 

KWC

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Ed Weick
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 7:08 AM
To: futurework
Subject: [Futurework] Ten simple rules

 

The current issue of Atlantic contains an article by Robert Kaplan entitled "Supremacy by Stealth". I’ve read most of it, but it's the kind of article that I find difficult to finish. It sets out ten rules that America, as the new Rome, should use to govern the world and make it safe for freedom and democracy, American style.

I first encountered Mr. Kaplan a few years ago in an article entitled "The Coming Anarchy", also in Atlantic. The message there, seeming entirely credible at the time, was that the world was going to hell in a handbasket. The message in the current article is anything but credible. It’s that, yes, the world could go to hell in a handbasket, but it won’t because America is there to prevent it from doing so. And it can even be fixed up if America but follows Mr. Kaplan’s ten simple rules.

It must, for example, produce more Joppolos, the central figure in John Hersey’s second world war novel "A Bell for Adano". Apparently, Mr. Joppolo knew exactly how to win the trust of the townspeople he had to deal with. As Iraq and Afghanistan have demonstrated, it would be nice to have people like that, but they don’t come around very often. And, by being "light and lethal", you can accomplish great things, like helping the Bolivian government track down and kill Che Guevara in 1967. (Sorry, Mr. Kaplan, but some of us still remember Che as the eternal revolutionary and a force for liberating the oppressed. I for one do not see tracking him down and killing him as a good thing. It's a bit like the Romans bragging about tracking down and killing Christ!)  Or, like the British, and the Romans before them, by speaking Victorian and thinking pagan you can try to persuade people of the wisdom of your ways, but, if you can’t accomplish that, you do have other means.

What Mr. Kaplan suggests is that American forces have already followed his ten simple rules, though perhaps not consistently enough. He says they have done a very good job at times, as when they trained Salvadorian counterinsurgency forces, but he doesn’t then mention is that these forces became government death squads and killing machines that brutalized the countryside and cost thousands of people there lives.

The image that Mr. Kaplan presents in his ten points is a clean, tidy and efficient one that, like B52 bombers, flies high above the messy, dirty world of his earlier article. Sorry, Mr. Kaplan, it just doesn’t figure.

Ed Weick

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