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Wandering around the GD board this morning, I ran across a link to an older thread which was locked at some point. In that thread two things were brought out, one that Kucinich had made a comment about why he would not select General Wesley Clark as a running mate, and two my own thoughts about military training.
Now I read a different thread where a poster I personally think highly of suggests that Kucinich's remark was a "dig" at Clark. Kucinich's statement was this- "General Clark has served his country well, but I'm not looking to confirm the primacy of the Pentagon," Kucinich said. "I have a fundamentally different view."
I honestly cannot say I percieve this as a "dig" at General Clark (whom I also admire and respect a great deal. Enough so that it breaks my heart to have to choose between him and Kucinich.), nor would I percieve the reverse as a "dig" at Kucinich. It's a statement of simple fact, imho. Something else I always keep uppermost in my mind when Congressman Kucinich makes a statement like that, he's an open-minded man, and I believe if General Clark advances the positions I fully expect him to advance, Congressman Kucinich may well revise his opinion of the man. Going further than that, I've no idea whether Congressman Kucinich has ever met General Clark or not. If he had he might already have a different perspective on the man, as I do after having met him and seeing him in action on a regular basis.
I'm not certain I think my candidates statement was wise, or even really accurate, however he like the rest of us is entitled to form an opinion even without having all pertinent facts at hand. I suspect this is likely the reason for his reluctance to endorse General Clark as good leadership material in a Federal Government capacity. I personally think he's in error on that score, but perhaps time and some exposure to the General will alter his perspective. I hope it does, as I personally have the impression that General Clark is closer to the Kucinich platform than any other, based on my experience in the past.
In the locked thread, a question was posed to me that I'd like to answer now.
I mentioned having been in the military, and that I believe military trainign is a vast "brainwashing excercise". I still believe that. In response to that assertion, another poster asked me "If you've been in the military, how is that you are not brainwashed?". My answer to that question- I AM brainwashed to a certain degree. There are aspects of the military that I simply DON'T and essentially CAN'T bring myself to question because of my training. I was taught not to question those things. I had the added influence of living with a WWII Veteran for the first 6 years of my life, followed by being adopted by a career enlisted man. After that, I married a career soldier. I have military blood, and military thinking as a base foundation.
I understand military methods from a foot-soldiers perspective, a bit less so on the Officer side of the coin, but for the most part, I understand that side as well. I understand it enough to know how to make my objections known without getting into trouble for insubordination. I understand it enough to know when and how to stand up to a high ranking Officer and when to shut my mouth and bide my time. I understand it enough to know how good Commanders think and how bad Commanders think. General Clark is a first rate, exceptionally GOOD Commander. I've seen that with my own eyes.
This is why I haven't been able to blame those who voted in favor of the war resolution. Military Intelligence is one of those things most military personnel won't question, at least the enlisted foot-soldiers won't. We're trained to rely on the intelligence experts without question. We HAVE to be able to rely on them since they can't divulge anything to those without a security clearance, and since every action taken by foot-soldiers (I include Mech and other such support divisions- perhaps I should switch to field-soldiers) is defined by intelligence information, we have to have a very potent level of trust in those individuals.
Yes, I AM brainwashed, and so are thousands upon thousands of other military and ex-military people. That fact is a great part of what makes me so angry about the deception leading to the Iraq invasion. Military members trust in the intelligence community has been shot to hell and nobody seems to be aware of that. How is the field-soldier ordered to take control of an airport supposed to trust the intelligence he's being fed now? He can't if he wants to survive, and all because the worthless scum on the Hill had to lie, fabricate and embellish to justify the orders they handed down.
Given all of the above, is it so difficult to comprehend that an intelligent, thinking and caring man such as Congressman Kucinich might have developed some serious reservations about trusting a high-ranking Officer and someone who has been directly touched by the Intelligence community? I can't see how.
I may not share his reservations for this particular Officer, but I most assuredly understand them and consider them to be valid.
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