© Media Freedom International Org
Incentivize victimhood, fraudulent accounting of income/collateral and gaming the system, and guess what you get? A nation of liars and thieves.Memorial Day is traditionally a day to speak of sacrifices made in combat. Like much of the rest of life in America, it has largely become artificial, a hurried "celebration" of frenzied Memorial Day marketing that is quickly forgotten the next day.
Instead of participating in this rote (and thus insincere) "thank you for your sacrifice" pantomime, perhaps we should ask what else has been sacrificed in America without our acknowledgement. Perhaps we should look at the sacrifices that need to be made but which are cast aside in our mad rush to secure "what we deserve."
The unvarnished reality is that most Americans have no idea what service members experienced in Iraq and Afghanistan, and they don't want to know. When 4,488 white crosses were erected on a hillside to remind us of all those who made the ultimate sacrifice in Iraq, people didn't like it, labeling it "unpatriotic."
© Nobody Ask Me Blogspot
That is not the real reason, of course; what is more patriotic than keeping those who served and sacrificed fresh in our awareness?
One reason those 4,000 crosses make us uncomfortable is that they remind us of being conned by our civilian leadership into "wars of choice."Another is that the reality of war and its long aftermath are not sufficiently "uplifting" for a brittle nation that prefers the distractions of "reality" TV to an acknowledgement of our problems and the sacrifices made and yet to be made.
Longtime readers know that one of my embedded concerns is the disconnect between the civilian populace and the U.S. Armed Forces. This disconnect starts with raw numbers:
THANK YOU TO THE 0.45% of the population who served in the Global War on Terror (2001 to present).
Personnel are costly, not just in civilian life but in the Armed Forces, too, and so the Pentagon has "downsized" the Armed Forces to a smaller but more professional force. This reflects not just budgetary realities but the evolution of modern warfare.
But it's not just that fewer serve because fewer are needed; the number of civilians who want to know and want to acknowledge the experience of those who serve is dwindling everywhere, from Congress to the media to the living rooms of the nation.
Comment: The War on Terrorโข continues..
If you are a person of Middle Eastern upbringing and genetic make-up and living in the Middle East, happen to own a gun, which you transport with yourself in your vehicle, you qualify as a terrorist. Of course you'll be dead and unable to defend your name or circumstances.
Maybe I am mistaken, but I do not recall anything last year about "The militant group [Al-CIAda] seized control of several [Yemeni] towns in the south". It must be something I missed, or it's absolute propaganda.
As a reminder they touch on Anwar al-Awlaki, with the usual stereotype name calling "radical militant cleric". A reminder that even your neighbor may be a terrorist?
A quote from the Anwar link: "..some of his tribe's youth
have[had] gone barbecuing under the moonlight. A drone missile hit their congregation killing Abdulrahman and several other teenagers."