|
Edited on Sun Sep-24-06 10:39 PM by patrice
In 1968 I was 19 and pregnant with my first child, my son. His Dad, my husband of less than one year, was newly out of the Air Force and hired by IBM. We were in the process of learning age old lessons: how to be married to one another and how to be parents to this little baby, and how to live in the cradle-to-grave corporate world, while others, you and those like you, were in the process of learning a brand new lesson for our generation: how to be expendable government resources.
My initial motivation, in response to the build-up and Invasion of Iraq, was mostly about innocent Iraqis in their homes experiencing sudden Death and Destruction from an arbitrary war. Now I think more and more about troops at this time of war, partly because so many of our family have had service in Iraq, but partly also because I am concerned about victims of power in general. That is, in fact, why I feel bad for Iraqis and now I have come to understand how the Iraqis are not the only victims of power in this and other situaitons.
Of course, if you respect Life, you can't say one form of Death and Destruction is less or more than another, but one can think about the difference between immediate physical Death and Destruction and a type of Death and Destruction that one lives with one's entire life, buried in one's mind and heart, every second of every day in every experience. An ultimate depersonalization, being turned into an expendable object by lies and ir-responsible mistakes, but not just as an in-animate depersonalized object, but one that depersonalizes others in order to survive. I think of the things that hurt me to remember about myself and imagine multiplying that pain thousands of times over and over again.
The Ugly necessity of killing all of your dreams (patriotic and otherwise) in order to become what you hate, so that you can survive against what you hate is something that happened to part of my generation in a place called Viet Nam. It's happening again to my Delta Force nephew, Aaron, and a whole lot of other people who didn't have lots of options in their lives.
I cannot say thank you for something I so strongly did not want. I most especially will not say thank you for a lie. But I can say how, similar to the poor who work for less than a Just wage and, thus, make it possible for our economic system to function and, hopefully also **because** of the special place that they occupy in that system, may teach it how to become a Just economic system, ALL of us owe you and all Veterans a special debt.
You didn't make it possible for us to survive. The Invasion of Iraq is not making it possible for us to survive. But because Veterans are what they are, they have unique lessons to teach the rest of us about Justice.
I hope to see our debts to others recognized for what they Really are, and for my Dad who was always concerned about "the little guy", I hope to be a part of bringing that about in any small way that I can.
|