[Ron]

To isolate a sex for blame of anything is to reduce it to simplistic
forms for the sheer
purpose of self justification of ones own prejudices.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of MarshaV
Sent: Wednesday, October 03, 2007 12:05 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MD] War Stories


Hi Arlo,

Thank you for writing.  It is so hard for me to make sense out of war.
If I think about it too much I get crazy.  I don't understand men.  One
kind of tyranny traded for another kind of tyranny.  All rationalized
into a neat little package.

Collateral damage has a mother too.

Marsha


At 10:32 AM 10/3/2007, you wrote:
>Hi Marsha,
>
>Someone once told me, "a soldier is not a hero because of what he does,

>he is a hero because of what he risks".
>
>I said this to a Marine friend of mine, and he looked at me really 
>seriously and said "you'd be surprised how many people, civilians and 
>soldiers, don't understand that".
>
>In a song called Red Army Blues (by The Waterboys) the lyrics open
with...
>
>When I left my home and my family
>my mother said to me
>Son, it's not how many Germans you kill that counts It's how many 
>people you set free.
>
>When we look closely, many times, at the unbridled patriotic 
>masturbation of the modern political dialogue, we can see this subtle 
>yet profound misunderstanding. And as such we are moving back to the 
>pre-WWI idea of "war". This is, as is seen in the following Pirsig 
>quote, simply systemic of the overall retreat to Victorianism Pirsig 
>talks about later.
>
>"The Victorian social system and the Victorian morality that led into 
>World War I had portrayed war as an adventurous conflict between noble 
>individuals engaged in the idealistic service of their country:
>a kind of extended knighthood. Victorians loved exquisitely painted 
>heroic battle scenes in their drawing rooms, with dashing cavalrymen 
>riding toward the enemy with sabers drawn, or a horse returning 
>riderless with the title, "Bad News." Death was acknowledged by an 
>occasional soldier in the arms of his comrades looking palely toward
heaven.
>
>World War I wasn't like that. The Gatling gun removed the nobility, the

>heroism. The Victorian painters had never shown a battlefield of mud 
>and shell holes and barbed wire and half a million rotting corpses-some

>staring toward heaven, some staring into the mud, some without faces to

>stare in any direction. That many had been murdered in one battle 
>alone." (LILA)
>
>I am convinced the modern war will not end until a draft is instated, 
>and all exceptions to it abolished. Too few are sacrificing too much 
>for too little. And we are maintaining that disequilibrium by the 
>deceitful rhetoric of political ideologues and politicians.
>
>
>Arlo
>
>
>
>
>At 04:32 AM 10/3/2007, you wrote:
>
> >Greetings,
> >
> >I think Ken Burn's documentary should be followed by a 12-hour
> >documentary of sobbing mothers.  Rational, my left foot!!!   What
> >fathers might call rational, mothers may call psychotic.  Justify it 
> >as you might, rationality is a myth.
> >
> >Marsha
>
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