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stepnw1f Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 08:52 PM
Original message
As A Vietnam Veteran Who Saw Alot Of Death, I Have Things To Say (GRAPHIC)
Edited on Mon Jun-14-04 09:14 PM by stepnw1f
As A Vietnam Veteran Who Saw Alot Of Death, I Have Things To Say
Reply to: anon-33755019@craigslist.org
Date: 2004-06-14, 7:16PM EDT

I found this at Craig'slist and felt compelled to post it here.

http://boston.craigslist.org/pol/33755019.html


I worked at the US Army Mortuary Tan Son Nhut the year that the most American's were killed. (5,000+) I saw the results of our society trying to control another society for religious and political purposes and for the purpose of getting our hands on the huge offshore oil deposits nearby. I saw your uncle, your dad, your neighbor's dad's body blown to shit, burnt to a crisp or with a tiny little hole in his chest, never to rise off that embalming table again. I saw the massive walk-in refrigerators we kept the bodies in, full to the brim most days; hundreds at a time. Sometimes there were so many we had them stacked up outside until we could 'process' them. I smelled the stink of death and formaldehyde and can still smell it anytime I go in a supermarket and smell the meat department; the smell is very similiar. Next time you're in a supermarket think about it; this is the way our children smell now; our dead children, their dead children.

I saw the mass graves that we dug to bury all the innocent civilians we murdered. (2 million). I saw thousands of pictures of similiar war crimes as we have just seen a few of from Iraq as I sorted through the deceased American Soldier's personal properties. I saw heads they had cut off and locked in their footlockers; along with many other sick things cut off people's bodies. I saw pictures of American soldiers raping children and women and men, raping dead bodies even. Cutting ears, hands, feet, genitalia, even heads off of people, some of them probably alive still as the 'trophy' was taken. Trophy pictures, that's what the pictures at Abu Ghraib are and you'd better believe there are tens of thousands of these pictures from across Iraq that we haven't even seen. Pictures of American Soldiers doing horrible things to innocent people. That's what being given complete permission to kill people does to you. It destroys your humanity.

I saw pictures of G.I.'s standing over piles of dead children, piles of dead women, smiling and holding their body parts up as a trophy. This is happening in Iraq right now.

MORE------> http://boston.craigslist.org/pol/33755019.html
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Kanary Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 08:57 PM
Response to Original message
1. Powerful!
Please do me a favor.... if there's still edit time, pleeez, put a "Graphic Warning" on this.

As important as it is, not everyone is ready for this.

Thanks..... I would appreciate it.

Kanary
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Poiuyt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:00 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Powerful, indeed
War is not very glamorous, is it?
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Kanary Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:21 PM
Response to Reply #1
9. Thank you, stepnw1f!
Edited on Mon Jun-14-04 09:21 PM by Kanary
:hi: :toast: :hi:

Kanary
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stavka Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:29 PM
Response to Reply #1
15. Agree with its sentiment, and it is powerful - Doubt it's real.
I'm sure I'll get attacked for that....

I'll defend the factual problems I found...but let's move on.
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Media_Lies_Daily Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 10:42 PM
Response to Reply #15
21. Attacked, no. Questioned, yes. Let's hear your "factual problems".
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Matilda Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 02:26 AM
Response to Reply #15
36. I have read other accounts similar to this one,
and I don't doubt it's true.

Why do you think so many Vietnam Vets became alcoholics, drug
addicts, or just went nuts? They were mostly normal people who
were introduced into an abnormal situation, and when they got back,
they just couldn't handle their memories.
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merh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:46 PM
Response to Reply #1
18. The traumatized soldiers will be all too real...
I dated a guy who fought in the Gulf War, he had health and emotional problems when he came home and he wasn't over there that long, not compared to our guys now.

And Bush and Co. keep cutting the veterans benefits and closing VA hospitals. They are such cowards, heartless, cruel cowards.
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SpiralHawk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 08:59 PM
Response to Original message
2. Whoa - Talk about The Hammer
Edited on Mon Jun-14-04 09:00 PM by SpiralHawk
This guy has got a literary one, and he is bringing it down full force.

Bravo for this Passionate and Pointed Rant -- may it be widely read and carefully considered.
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UTUSN Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:09 PM
Response to Original message
4. America Is Not Sick. Wingnuts ARE. n/t
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markses Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:17 PM
Response to Reply #4
6. Wrong. And part of the sickness.
America is sick.
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Kanary Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:26 PM
Response to Reply #6
11. You're sooo right, markses!
The fact that all this can be going on in our country, and there's hardly a peep from the population is a big clue.

Then, the fact that **** is still at 40-some %, and you have certified nutso society.

After WWII, there were expose's of the "German psyche", and wouldn't it be really great if we could do that for ourselves *before* it gets that bad for us.

We praise our founders on the one hand, and on the other we set about destroying everything they created. Now, how sick is that?

Kanary, flabberghasted...........
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Kanary Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:11 PM
Response to Original message
5. As a holdover from the Vietnam protests, I'm very affected by this
I can absolutely believe every word this vet has written (and I imagine it caused no small amount of pain to conjur up those words.)

I met some of these returning soldiers, and I heard/saw firsthand that "trophy" mentality. Yes, that is a byproduct of war, but something is really wrong that makes so *many* of these trophy hunters. I had soldiers ask me if I wanted to see their ear collection, etc. It is so repulsive to imagine what all is done in our name.

There is also so much pain in a person who has done these despictable things -- unless they're as sociopathic as the pResident, those images will haunt them the rest of their lives. As a society, we pay the price for that.

Thank you again for posting this.

But, again, please edit your title to reflect the graphic nature of the contents.

Kanary
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4MoreYearsOfHell Donating Member (943 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:18 PM
Response to Original message
7. Any Freepers lurking?
Then go ahead and sign up, you too can have your very own trophy collection!

Sick fucks...
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mopaul Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:24 PM
Response to Reply #7
10. my uncle brought a trophy home from the korean war
Edited on Mon Jun-14-04 09:24 PM by mopaul
i never saw it, only heard about it from my mother, who insisted it be put away before we came over. he brought back the skull of a korean soldier. i hear they were some mean bastards, but so were we.
he fashioned it into an ashtray. very nazi like. i'm glad i never saw the damned thing. i never really liked my uncle ---- anyway.
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lostnfound Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:27 PM
Response to Reply #10
12. Maybe you would have liked him if he hadn't been warped by war.
Who knows?
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mopaul Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:33 PM
Response to Reply #12
16. maybe
war does warp you. i've never been in one, so i can only relate obtusely. hell, i suppose i too could sink to that level under the right circumstances. that's what's so horrible about it all.

like in the move apocolypse now, the piles of children's arms. one gets used to it, after one's soul crashes and burns.
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DoctorWeird Donating Member (139 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 11:02 PM
Response to Reply #16
23. Definitely
I know several veterans, in fact all men I know that were of age at the time were sent to Iraq. Funny how being poor will do that to you. Anyway, not one willingly talked about his experience there within twenty years of his return. In a way I can understand why these men are so pro-war. You are killing, you are in danger of being killed. You have to hang on to any shred of hope you can. It's hard to get up every morning and kill people when you think they're innocent. But if you can tell yourself enough times that they ARE the enemy, it gets a hell of a lot easier.
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shanti Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 12:52 AM
Response to Reply #10
32. hmmm
Edited on Tue Jun-15-04 12:55 AM by seekthetruth
my father was a korean war vet, marines, and he has NEVER talked about his experiences there. my siblings and i have asked, but he's not talking...must've been some bad shyt.

and i now think he WAS warped by the experience. he lacked emotion, i'm sure you can figure out how that would affect his children. :-(
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mopaul Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:18 PM
Response to Original message
8. all wars have had these episodes, i'm sure
once you get started, you can do anything imaginable to the 'enemy'
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RUMMYisFROSTED Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:29 PM
Response to Reply #8
14. (aside)
Glad the trike is back!
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crossroads Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 12:50 AM
Response to Reply #8
31. Like your 'image'...
Good one... hehee...
:hi:
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graham67 Donating Member (732 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:28 PM
Response to Original message
13. This definitely caught my eye...
I saw pictures of G.I.'s standing over piles of dead children, piles of dead women, smiling and holding their body parts up as a trophy.

My Mom's SO was in Vietnam and part of his duty was the "daily body count". Not American bodies, I mean the Vietcong that were killed on any particular day. They lined them up and took pictures of them all. He kept every photograph that he took. There was entire box full of loose photographs of dead Vietnamese. I never got the impression that they were personal trophies...more like a reminder of what he had done.
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shanti Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 12:57 AM
Response to Reply #13
33. my best friend
a jamaican a.f. vietnam war vet, refuses to discuss his experience. this seems to be a theme. he has PTSD too, every so often awakens in a cold sweat, attacking an imaginary enemy.
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merh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:41 PM
Response to Original message
17. the soldiers coming home traumatized is so real ...
I dated a guy who fought in the Gulf War, he had health and emotional problems when he came home and he wasn't over there that long, not compared to our guys now.

And Bush and Co. keep cutting the veterans benefits and closing VA hospitals. They are such cowards, heartless, cruel cowards.

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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 09:49 PM
Response to Original message
19. HIGHWAY OF DEATH
THANKS OCTAFISH FOR THE REMINDER - 13 YEARS AGO!


HIGHWAY OF DEATH

Even if he worked for Saddam, there was no reason to do that to that poor man. Going by the size of the dent to the skull, the force of the hit to the back of the head probably separated the man's brain from the brain stem. That is not barbarian. These operatives of the BFEE are NAZIs.

In the US, most people have a quality of life pretty far removed from the level of violence experienced by the people of Iraq. It's not just today or this year or this administration. Iraq has been under a state of siege and economic sanction for more than 14 years. The human misery caused to the people of Iraq -- from Kurds to Chaldeans to Shia to Sunni -- is unbelievable. The human toll is in the tens of thousands per year from lack of food and medicine.

The only reason I knew this is while working on an unrelated matter, I had the good fortune of meeting a woman who was organizing relief workers to help stop the craziness. Her story has not been covered by the local papers for 13 years.

Here's another forgotten story. Poppy Bush, Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, Brent Scowcroft and Barry McCafferty don't wnat people to think too much about:

Photo Credit: © 1991 Kenneth Jarecke / Contact Press Images)


WAR CRIMES
A Report on United States War Crimes Against Iraq to the Commission of Inquiry for the International War Crimes Tribunal

by Ramsey Clark and Others

Incinerated body of an Iraqi soldier on the "Highway of Death," a name the press has given to the road from Mutlaa, Kuwait, to Basra, Iraq. U.S. planes immobilized the convoy by disabling vehicles at its front and rear, then bombing and straffing the resulting traffic jam for hours. More than 2,000 vehicles and tens of thousands of charred and dismembered bodies littered the sixty miles of highway. The clear rapid incineration of the human being suggests the use of napalm, phosphorus, or other incindiary bombs. These are anti-personnel weapons outlawed under the 1977 Geneva Protocols. This massive attack occurred after Saddam Hussein announced a complete troop withdrawl from Kuwait in compliance with UN Resolution 660. Such a massacre of withdrawing Iraqi soldiers violates the Geneva Convention of 1949, common article 3, which outlaws the killing of soldiers who "are out of combat." There are, in addition, strong indications that many of those killed were Palestinian and Kuwaiti civilians trying to escape the impending seige of Kuwait City and the return of Kuwaiti armed forces. No attempt was made by U.S. military command to distinguish between military personnel and civilians on the "highway of death." The whole intent of international law with regard to war is to prevent just this sort of indescriminate and excessive use of force.

"It has never happened in history that a nation that has won a war has been held accountable for atrocities committed in preparing for and waging that war. We intend to make this one different. What took place was the use of technological material to destroy a defenseless country. From 125,000 to 300,000 people were killed... We recognize our role in history is to bring the transgressors to justice." Ramsey Clark

Next » Preface

SOURCE:

http://deoxy.org/wc/warcrime.htm



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GoneOffShore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 10:27 PM
Response to Original message
20. Sunday Times Letter
that spoke about the difference between the treatment that German POW's received at the hands of the Americans and the Russians.
The writer told of being bought dinner in a restaurant in 1962 by a party of Germans who were prisoners of American forces during WW2. They said that they were glad that Amercans had captured them because they were treated humanely, unlike their compatriots, captured by the Russians, who routinely tortured their captives.
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Media_Lies_Daily Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 11:01 PM
Response to Original message
22. When I was in the military from the late '70s to the early '80s...
...I served with quite a few Marines that were Vietnam vets. They were all damaged goods to some extent, some much more than others.

Most had bad dreams and tended to punch people in their sleep, usually their wives or girlfriends.

Some were strangers to their familes when they got home, and some were prone to violence at the drop of a hat.

Most had drinking and/or drug problems, and most tended to take orders with a grain of salt (officers included).

If they were married when they left home, most failed to stay married when they returned.

Agent Orange and post-traumatic stress round out what they lived with every day after they returned home.

Several told me that the military was the safest place for them.

A few told me stories that no one will ever hear...and they were as depraved as any Stephen King novel.

Most needed help and never got it.

And the guys I knew were the lucky ones. They came back home able to walk and talk...58,000 returned in flag-draped coffins. About 200,000 ended up in VA hospitals missing limbs or having limbs they no longer controlled, and in some cases, some left large portions of their brains in that small Southeast Asian country.
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NMDemDist2 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 11:33 PM
Response to Reply #22
24. one of the great loves of my life was a VietNam vet
and he was a very broken man thanks to the war

I remember seeing Kerry in an early campaign win (Iowa i think) and when they released the "balloon drop" there was a loud noise and I saw JK jump

I knew right then he earned every one of his medals
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elf Donating Member (805 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 11:51 PM
Response to Original message
25. I'm crying
I just lost my lifelong dream.
We always wanted to live in this country,
when we where successful in Germany we brought our company to the NY stock market and went public.(1996-Telecommunication)And moved to the US

In the past years we payed more than 40MILL.$!!!!!!Taxes and always felt good about it, because when we are members of a society we have to pay taxes!!! Simple as that!
We've got our Green Card and have to wait 5 more years to apply for citizenship.

The last few weeks, we are looking out for European Real Estate, to move, because our dream dies............maybe there is a slight chance and I hope we are stable enough to wait, who will be elected!

BTW, we employed 1200 Americans.............!!!!!!

I'm very sad tonight!
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elf Donating Member (805 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-04 11:56 PM
Response to Reply #25
26. Finally It hapened when I read this
As A Vietnam Veteran Who Saw Alot Of Death, I Have Things To Say (GRAPHIC)

Edited on Mon Jun-14-04 10:14 PM by stepnw1f
As A Vietnam Veteran Who Saw Alot Of Death, I Have Things To Say
Reply to: anon-33755019@craigslist.org
Date: 2004-06-14, 7:16PM EDT

I found this at Craig'slist and felt compelled to post it here.

http://boston.craigslist.org/pol/33755019.html


I worked at the US Army Mortuary Tan Son Nhut the year that the most American's were killed. (5,000+) I saw the results of our society trying to control another society for religious and political purposes and for the purpose of getting our hands on the huge offshore oil deposits nearby. I saw your uncle, your dad, your neighbor's dad's body blown to shit, burnt to a crisp or with a tiny little hole in his chest, never to rise off that embalming table again. I saw the massive walk-in refrigerators we kept the bodies in, full to the brim most days; hundreds at a time. Sometimes there were so many we had them stacked up outside until we could 'process' them. I smelled the stink of death and formaldehyde and can still smell it anytime I go in a supermarket and smell the meat department; the smell is very similiar. Next time you're in a supermarket think about it; this is the way our children smell now; our dead children, their dead children.

I saw the mass graves that we dug to bury all the innocent civilians we murdered. (2 million). I saw thousands of pictures of similiar war crimes as we have just seen a few of from Iraq as I sorted through the deceased American Soldier's personal properties. I saw heads they had cut off and locked in their footlockers; along with many other sick things cut off people's bodies. I saw pictures of American soldiers raping children and women and men, raping dead bodies even. Cutting ears, hands, feet, genitalia, even heads off of people, some of them probably alive still as the 'trophy' was taken. Trophy pictures, that's what the pictures at Abu Ghraib are and you'd better believe there are tens of thousands of these pictures from across Iraq that we haven't even seen. Pictures of American Soldiers doing horrible things to innocent people. That's what being given complete permission to kill people does to you. It destroys your humanity.

I saw pictures of G.I.'s standing over piles of dead children, piles of dead women, smiling and holding their body parts up as a trophy. This is happening in Iraq right now.

MORE------> http://boston.craigslist.org/pol/33755019.html

- Dostoevsky depressed me, yet I still read on...


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crossroads Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 12:46 AM
Response to Reply #25
29. As an American, please let me say I am sorry... as we Americans...
have also lost our dreams... when this pResident was $elected by the $upreme Court... 4 years ago...
It was never our fault... blame our leaders... <sigh> We too are sad.
It is more important than ever to spread the word --- we must take our country back! I pray you and your family can stay -- because we have a change of regime.
:eyes:
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vetwife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 12:20 AM
Response to Original message
27. Perspective from the wife of a VN Vet and Veteran advocate
Edited on Tue Jun-15-04 12:33 AM by vetwife
I read the article and found it moving and graphic and as the wife of a Combat vet who served with the 101st in Vietnam, a young idealistic talented boy of 18, talented ,handsome, and came home a broken man of shattered dreams who felt betrayed by the lies of his government that communism was on America's doorstep.

The article was just the tip of the iceberg of what the combat veteran and his family endures daily. I have seen my husband dive under a table over a dish being dropped. I have seen a rumble of thunder cause a flashback and wreck a night or weekend. I have found nights are not a friend to the veteran as that is when they are so guarded and tense. I have spent countless hours at a hospital waiting for a shot to be given to my husband as he vomits from the excruitiang pain of a migrane from exposure to Agent Orange and Trauma. I have seen him share a hospital room with another vet at a VA and to sit on a bed and just look out into nowhere. The 1000 yard stare. I have seen pain so intese in his eyes that only God knows what he is thinking about or remembering because he doesn't talk about those days in the jungle.

I have seen him struggle to remember phone numbers or even his way home from the store. Not from the meds but from the trauma. I have waited what seemed like an eternity for a prescription for mood swings to arrive as he ran low or to be put on hold at a VA trying to order his prescriptions. In our early part of our marriage, more than once I was grabbed around the throat until he could awake from a twilight fugue state and then tears would flow to think that he could have hurt me.

I have seen him walk out into the woods as I worried if he would come back. I have seen him not go into crowds, as he didn't seem comfortable. Forget the 4t of July., Too remininecent of tracers that once filled his world. I have seen him struggle to sleep as nightime is not a friend to the combat veteran.


I have seen him shake as he held a glass of tea. I have seen him so restless that the only place he could feel safe was surrounded by other veterans at a VA mental ward. I have driven hundreds of miles in the middle of the night to get him to a facility for pain. I have seen him try to work to collapse as he couldn't remember things.
I have lied next to him trying to calm the fear that lay dormant within and held him as the rage he controlled found him enough peace to close his eyes and rest for just a minute or so. I have rubbed his legs as he felt they were on fire. Effect of Survival Guilt. I have seen a week ruined as this war rages and the choppers fly over our home and he takes to his bed. He hates war and feels there is no Glory in it.

I have lied next to him as he whispered "Send up smoke" and for a non veteran, that meant get a chopper in here or medivac to set up a LZ. Only to remember that was years ago not now.

I have taken phone calls from veterans all over the United States, some now no longer with us begging me to help. I am grateful that I started a small veterans organization so I could do what I could. As a crisis consultant and former 911 operator I have talked to veterans in crisis at three in the morning, some with loaded weapons in their hands. I have seen so much suffering from war.

I have seen broken minds and bodies and shattered dreams and I love the Veteran as the warrior and the war are not the same. The men who make war and the warriors are not the same. I have gone to Washington on more than one occasion to fight for veterans benefits.
I love my husbnd, because he is so loving and a man of honor and a good husband and Father who deals with a war long ago past but never really over. I honor him. I feel for the Soldier coming home today as their benefits are down to nothing and what are thye fighting for. Halliburton and Lockheed Martin. How much blood has to be spilled for wars that make warmongers rich? My husband and I oppose this war as we know what the young soldier with dreams will face if not now but in years to come. His war will never be over. He and his family will fight the horrors daily.

To all veterans Welcome Home
To my husband...You will never know how much you are loved and You are my Hero, not for the war you fought but for the war you fight daily as a survivor.

http://groups.msn.com/UnitedVeteransofAmerica/whatsnew

http://groups.msn.com/UnitedVeteransofAmerica/yourwebpage1.msnw
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shanti Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 01:01 AM
Response to Reply #27
34. what a moving tribute to your hubby, vetwife
Edited on Tue Jun-15-04 01:02 AM by seekthetruth
you deserve a big hug! :hug:
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vetwife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 01:35 AM
Response to Reply #34
35. thank you Seekthetruth....I'll take that hug and
pass that feeling of hope to every vet in your honor for thinking of us all out here enduring !
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OneBlueSky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 12:33 AM
Response to Original message
28. in this day and age, you seldom see the truth in print anymore . . .
but, if you've been on the planet for awhile, you know it when you see it . . . what this guy is saying is indeed the truth, raw and unvarnished, and something that joe and jane sixpack don't want to hear . . . but hear it they must, again and again and again, if ever we are to rise above the insanity and build a global civilization . . . which is our only option for survival . . .
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Disturbed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 12:50 AM
Response to Original message
30. War is an awful thing yet...
we still have young people all over the world volunteering to participate in them.

Chris Hedges has been a war reporter for the past 15 years, most recently for The New York Times. His book, (War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning ), is one of the most striking analyses and critiques of what happens to people and societies as they go to war to be published in many years. Writing with a clarity and tone reminiscent of Albert Camus, Hedges unravels the myths and dysfunctional nationalism that grip nations heading to war; the intoxicating effect of these causes and rhetoric; and the terrible costs that soldiers, victims and societies pay -- when the realities of war -- not the rhetoric -- are experienced. He spoke to TomPaine.com's Steven Rosenfeld.

TomPaine.com: When a country prepares for war and goes to war, there are changes in that country’s politics and culture. You write that a myth emerges -- a seductive myth as leaders spin out a cause. You write that a patriotism, a "thinly veiled form of self-worship appears." What do you mean by this myth, this cause, this patriotism and what you then say is an intoxicating result?

Chris Hedges: Well myth is always part of the way we understand war within a society. It’s always there. But I think in a peacetime society we are at least open to other ways of looking at war. Just as patriotism is always part of the society. In wartime, the myth becomes ascendant. Patriotism, national self-glorification infects everything, including culture. That’s why you would go to symphony events and people wave flags and play the "Star Spangled Banner." In essence, it’s the destruction of culture, which is always a prerequisite in wartime. Wartime always begins with the destruction of your own culture. Once you enter a conflict, or at the inception of a conflict, you are given a language by which you speak. The state gives you a language to speak and you can’t speak outside that language or it becomes very difficult. There is no communication outside of the clichés and the jingos, "The War on Terror," "Showdown With Iraq," "The Axis of Evil," all of this stuff. So that whatever disquiet we feel, we no longer have the words in which to express it. The myth predominates. The myth, which is a lie, of course, built around glory, heroism, heroic self-sacrifice, the nobility of the nation. And it is a kind of intoxication. People lose individual conscience for this huge communal enterprise.

TP.c: You write there are different war myths -- myths that fuel conflicts. What type of myth do you see animating the discussion today in the United States as it looks at Iraq?

Hedges: Well I think the myth is remarkably similar from war zone to war zone. At least, as it pertains to how the nation that prosecutes a war looks at itself. We become the embodiment of light and goodness. We become the defenders of civilization, of all that is decent. We are more noble than others. We are braver than others. We are kinder and more compassionate than others -- that the enemy at our gate is perfidious, dark, somewhat inhuman. We turn them into two-dimensional figures. I think that’s part of the process of linguistically dehumanizing them. And in wartime, we always turn the other into an object, and often, quite literally, in the form of a corpse.

TP.c: Where are we in the United States, now, in this progression?

Hedges: Well, we’ve come frightenly far in this process. And this has been a long progression. It began at the end of the Vietnam war. The defeat in Vietnam made us a better nation and a better people. We were forced to step outside our own borders and see how other people saw us. We were forced to accept very unpleasant truths about ourselves -- our own capacity for evil. I think that that process, especially during the Reagan years, or at least that state, began to disintegrate. War once again became fun: Grenada; Panama, culminating in the Persian Gulf War. So that we’re now at a process -- Freud argues that all of life, both for the individual and within human society, is a battle between Eros, or love, and Thanatos, or the death instinct. And that one of these instincts is always ascendant, at one time or another. I think after the Vietnam war, because of the terrible costs that we paid, because of the tragedy that Vietnam was, Eros was ascendant. I think after the Persian Gulf war, where we fell in love with war -- and what is war, war is death -- Thanatos is ascendant. It will, unfortunately, take that grim harvest of dead, that ultimately those that are intoxicated with war must always swallow, for us to wake up again.

TP.c: When you say the rush to war is like a drug, how is it addictive? What void does it fill? What needs are fulfilled by this kind of rhetoric and this kind of myth-making, and this kind of political discourse, that are not otherwise accomplished in a peacetime political environment?

Hedges: Well, I think war is probably the supreme drug. War -- first of all, it is a narcotic. You can easily become addicted to it. And that’s why it’s often so hard for people who spend prolonged times in combat to return to peacetime society. There’s a huge alienation, a huge disconnection, often a longing to go back to the subculture of war. War has a very dark beauty, a kind of fascination with the grotesque. The Bible called it "the lust of the eye" and warned believers against it. War has a rush. It has a hallucinogenic quality. It has that sort of stoned-out sense of -- that zombie-like quality that comes with not enough sleep, sort of being shelled too long. I think, in many ways, there is no drug, or there are no combination of drugs that are as potent as war, and one could argue as addictive. It certainly is as addictive as any narcotic.

TomPaine.com: For people who haven’t read your reports in The New York Times, or don’t know what actually goes behind the reporting that’s gone into them, where have you been that has brought you on this course to write about this topic?

Chris Hedges: Well, I went to Seminary -- I didn’t go to journalism school. So this stretches way back to my own education, my own theological education, my study of ethics. I went to war, not because I was a gun nut, or wanted adventure, although to be honest, that was part of it. I did have a longing for that kind of epic battle that could define my life. I grew up reading everything on the Holocaust and on the Spanish Civil War, but I went as an idealist. I went to Latin America in the early ‘80s when most of these countries were ruled by pretty heinous military dictatorships. And I thought this was as close as I was going to come in my lifetime to fighting fascism. I wanted that. Unfortunately, I didn’t understand what war was. And I got caught up in the subculture, and to be honest, the addiction that war was. And I ended up over the next 15 years traveling from war zone to war zone to war zone with that fraternity of dysfunctional war correspondents who became my friends -- some of whom were killed, including my closest friend who was killed in Sierra Leone in May of 2000. So I got sucked into the kind of whirlpool that war is -- into the death instinct.

TP.c: For people here, in the states, who have never been in a war zone, can you just talk about some of the situations you put yourself into and what you saw about war that is completely counterpoint to the rhetoric about the cause.

Hedges: Well, the cause is... is always a lie. If people understood, or individuals or societies understood in sensory way what war was, they’d never do it. War is organized industrial slaughter. The good example is the Vietnam War. It began as a mythic war against communism and this kind of stuff, and -- especially when the middle class began finding their sons coming home in body bags -- people began to look at war in a very different light. It no longer was mythic. It became sensory war, i.e. we began to see war without that film, that mythic film that I think colors our vision of all violent conflicts. And then the war became impossible to prosecute. So the cause, the myth, the notion of glory -- those are lies. They’re always lies. And nations need them. Emperiums need them especially in order to get a populace to support a war. But they’re untrue.

TP.c: So, you’d be sent into the field to cover different conflicts, what would you see that would be fundamentally at odds with this -- what you’re describing as the lie?

Hedges: Well, it takes anyone in combat about 30 seconds to realize that they’ve been lied to. War, combat is nothing like it’s presented -- not only by the entertainment industry, by Hollywood, but by the press, by writers such as Cornelius Ryan or Stephen Ambrose, who just died. These are myth-makers.The press is guilty of this. The press in wartime is always part of the problem. But when you get into combat, it’s venal. It’s dirty. It’s confusing. It’s humiliating, because you feel powerless. The noise is deafening. But, most importantly, you feel fear in a way that you’ve probably never felt fear before. And anyone who spends a lot of time in combat struggles always with this terrible, terrible fear -- this deep, instinctual desire for self-preservation. And there are always times when fear rules you. In wartime, you learn you’re not the person you want to be -- or think you were. You don’t dash out under fire to save your wounded comrade. Occasionally, this happens, but most of the time you’re terrified. And that’s very, very sobering. And it’s a huge wake-up call. It shows you that the images that you’ve been fed, both about war, and that you have created for yourself, are wrong.

TP.c: Well, what do you think reporters can or should be doing that’s different?

Hedges: Well, I think the big thing is you can’t accept the language the state gives you. I mean, this is not a war in any conventional sense -- I’m talking about the "War on Terror" -- nor is it a war on terror. I think we have to dissect the clichés. Clichés are the enemy of bad writing, but also the enemy of clear thought, as George Orwell wrote. I think that’s the first thing, we have to not speak in the language in which the state gives us. Secondly, I think we have to ask the hard questions. And I think The New York Times hasn’t been bad on this. I think the Times has been pretty good, by looking at "what is it?" There was an editorial, I think in yesterday’s Times, that said, "You know, there is no hard intelligence that he has anything that he’s going to use against us, and before we go to war you have to show us." That is the proper response, and I laud the paper for printing that editorial.

TP.c: What’s so interesting is, it doesn’t get much stronger than that. Yet, on the other hand, what you write about in the book, is that a lot of people in the country who aren’t privy to details at that level, or aren’t as politically tuned in -- they want to believe that this cause is good. They trust what the president says. And there’s an appeal, as you say, in society’s march toward war that fills certain needs.

Hedges: Well, I think that’s the problem. There’s a lot that we just don’t really feel like seeing because we’re having too much fun exulting in our own military prowess and our ability to mold and shape the world in ways that we want. There is a kind of suspension of self-criticism, both as a nation and as a person that takes place in wartime. And that’s part of what removes the anxiety of normal daily living. We’re no longer required to make moral choice. Moral choice has been made for us by the state. And to question the decisions of the state is to be branded, not only a traitor, but to be pushed outside that kind of communal entity within a society that war always creates. And that’s a very difficult, lonely and painful experience. So most people, not necessarily because they’re bad people in any way, but most people find it emotionally far more convenient, but also far more pleasurable just to go along. The problem is, under poor leadership, or wandering into a war where we shouldn’t be, we can find ourselves in heaps of trouble.

http://www.tompaine.com/feature.cfm/ID/6657

"The myth, which is a lie, of course, built around glory, heroism, heroic self-sacrifice, the nobility of the nation. And it is a kind of intoxication." Chris Hedges








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SpiralHawk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-15-04 06:08 AM
Response to Reply #30
37. "War is organized industrial slaughter."
What's good for BushCo is good for BushCo and its mercenary cronies.
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