"If it's provable we can kill it."
Or, why a loving wife needs her arse severly slapping
Published on June 5, 2006 By EmperorofIceCream In Politics
Here I am, barely back two minutes, and already I have something to write about. As an aside, and before we get into the discussion, it quite astonishes me how happy I am to be able to do this once more - I really hadn't realized quite how much I missed this means of expression.

Anyway, on with the show.

(Link)

The link will take you to an article, published June 05 2006, in the English newspaper The Guardian. This article makes reference to recent events in Haditha, Iraq, in which members of the United States Marine Corps are alleged to have wantonly killed a number of Iraqis. An event that, among the bloggers of the Guardian's 'comment is free' section at least, is held to be on a par with the events that took place at Mai Lai, Vietnam.

You might wonder why an English newspaper would take an interest in what is fundamentally an American event. British troops were nowhere near Haditha and took no part in the events there, so why the interest on the part of an English newspaper?

Unless you, as an American, have travelled to Europe and spent some time there, I doubt very much that you can be aware of the obsessive interest that is paid to all things American, but in paricular American politics and policy, by the European media.

Europe as a whole occasionally gets a mention on Fox's 'Eighty Seconds Around The World' slot (Britain will infrequently merit a mention of its own). But in Britain particularly there's is not a newspaper that does not carry some mention of events in America, there is not a news show that does nor devote some of its airtime to America (the more prestigious shows such as Channel 4's 'News at 7' frequently devoting extensive amounts, twenty or thirty minutes out of a sixty minute block, to American politics - every day and every night, 365 days a year).

The slant taken by the Guardian (which was not something I was able to discern until I had left Britain and lived for some time here in America, having been a Guardian reader of many years standing while in Britain) is an even-handed negativity. It's editors demonstrate a refined derision for the current crop of American Republicans (who can blame them? Such a comedy of confusion, corruption, incompetence and honest but painfully obvious stupidity appears in politics once a century, if that often); and a refined contempt for Democrats - who are not quite socialist enough - even though the poor dears try really, really, really hard, and deserve all the support the European friends can give them.

Its expression in the Weltanschauung of the Guardian is really rather subtle, often being best expressed in the work of the paper's cartoonists (who are utterly brilliant and should be made Heroes of the Human Race for the true viciousness of their humor - directed as much at the politics of Britain as America - which is perfectly democratic and truly evenhanded because they despise all politicians with an absolute equality) and, to one steeped in the intellectual culture of the paper, as I was, utterly invisible.

During my time away from JU I participated in the forums recently created by the Guardian. These are referred to as 'comment is free' and were a means devised to actively engage readers with journalists and each other in debate about articles created by Guardian journalists and guests, Leader columns, op-ed pieces, and so on. What I encountered there proved to be illuminating.

Having lived here for three years, having driven an icecream truck through the housing projects of Cleveland for a season, having lived in the deepest depths of the 'hood in Richmond's South Side for two years, I know more about America than I did before I came here, and infinitely more than the average Eurodweeb blogging on the Guardian. Not only that but, while I wouldn't claim to think like some one born here, nor to fully understand how Americans in general think, I have begun to get a grip on what I can only call an American sensibility. Not for the little things: why, for example, bread is made with sugar; why you drive on the wrong side of the road while sitting on the wrong side of the car; why every brat in America has to be driven door to door from home to school and back again in those hideous yellow cattle trucks that are such a danger and inconvenience to anyone else on the road. Not the little things.

But the big things, like patriotism; sacrifice; duty. Not even a sensibility (which implies comprehension, understanding) but an appreciation for the absolute sincerity, the genuineness of feeling, with which these sentiments are held and expressed. Not so the Eurodweebs, who are convinced that all patriotism is either a deliberate fraud, or the consequence of an almost ineffable stupidity.

Which is why, to bring this slowly round to the point, I write on the Guardian as the Bald Avenger (despite my nomme du guerre's actual origin in the Wars of the Roses): Bald - because I've become aware of the wall of ignorant prejudice with which America is regarded in Europe, and have beaten my head hairless in attempting to combat it; and Avenger, because I no longer attempt to educate or illuminate but to thrash mercilessly those who present their ignorant opinionated nonsense as truth whenever I encounter them.

What annoys me most is not the rantings of the Eurodweebs (after all, I was once one of them - which is how I came to know which buttons to press in order to reduce them to screeching hysteria on the Guardian's talk board - which I do with regularity and considerable amusement) but the equally facile but far more pernicious treachery of those Americans who are the intellectual fellow-travellers of the Eurodweebs and their ilk.

I have been staggered, delighted, awed and amazed by America and her people, by everything they have done and everything they may yet accomplish in the future - as well as by the generosity of spirit with which I have been received here. What astonishes me is that though even I, with eyes and understanding still tainted by Eurodweebery, can see the good in America - many native-born Americans seem incapable of seeing the same thing.

While I lived in Ohio and ran the icecream truck I had occasion to gas up one day, at a station I often used on my way between one selling area and another. I'd fallen into the habit of brief conversations with one of the kids who ran the till for minimum wage. They were never very extensive or meaningful - but I valued them because they were one moment in the day when I was buying instead of selling, when I was served (politely) rather than having to deal with the boorishness and incivility of my clientele. During one such conversation, this young man having noticed my accent, that it was European, informed me casually that he hated America and wanted to go to Europe.

This was a clean-cut, all-American boy with a strong local accent who had evidently been born and raised here. To be born and raised here is a privilege and a blessing that most of the world wishes ardently it could share. This ignorant, pampered (what else can you call someone whose waste-disposal eats better than most of the world?) ingrate had no idea what he had said, nor how shocked and offended I was by his wilfull failure to see what immense wealth and opportunity he was heir to simply in virtue of bein born here. I had nothing to say (nothing civil), paid and left.

And finally, to the point.

"The marine unit involved in the killing of Iraqi civilians in Haditha last November had suffered a "total breakdown" in discipline and had drug and alcohol problems, according to the wife of one of the battalion's staff sergeants (italics added).
The allegations in Newsweek magazine contribute to an ever more disturbing portrait of embattled marines under high stress, some on their third tour of duty after ferocious door-to-door fighting in the Sunni insurgent strongholds of Falluja and Haditha."

Is this woman deranged? Has she forgotten, that no matter what the stress of the situation in which her husband and his comrades found themselves, no matter what that stress might have induced them to do, he is her husband and a serving member of her nation's armed forces?

How dare she stand in the face of the world and decry her husband and his comrades, making them out to be ill-disciplined and out of control, bringing contumely upon her nation - whether or not he and his comrades did that of which they are accused?

As a purely personal opinion (to which no one else need subscribe) I believe the greater the ferocity, the greater the cruelty, the greater the terror, that American soldiers inflict on the opposition in Iraq, then the fewer will be American casualties, the more willing the local 'authorities' will be to collaborate, and the sooner will the appearance of democracy be established in Iraq so that the troops can escape this grotesque political adventure of Bush and his idiot confraternity and be brought home. If all the Iraqis are dead there can be no more insurrection in Iraq, right? Mission end - Bush has his legacy - everyone goes home. History is written, after all, by victors - not the corpses of their enemies that they leave to rot in the sand.

But that's by the way (though it's the sort of comment that ties Eurodweebs in absolute knots and has them calling me a 'neocon redneck fascist asshole' lol).

The true point is the absolute treachery of a wife indicting her husband over something she did not witness, betraying her nation to the poisoned tongues of its fairweather friends and almost-enemies, and actively collaborating in the defamation of her country. She knows nothing of what was done and her part was to keep silence, since she couldn't find it in herself to defend either her man or her country.

This oracle goes still further -

"The wife of the unnamed staff sergeant claimed there had been a "total breakdown" in the unit's discipline after it was pulled out of Falluja in early 2005. "There were problems in Kilo company with drugs, alcohol, hazing [violent initiation games], you name it," she said. "I think it's more than possible that these guys were totally tweaked out on speed or something when they shot those civilians in Haditha."

This villainous slut (I hope her husband beats her senseless when he returns home and discovers her treachery) proceeds to vilify, not merely the personnel of Kilo Company but, by proxy, every man and woman under arms in the service of America. It is of absolutely no consequence whatsover whether Kilo Company did what it is accused of. The issue is why would any American provide this support to those who are only too eager to denigrate America at every turn? What is it in the American Weltanschauung that makes such refusal to support one's country (from the gas guy in Ohio to this demented slut) so pervasive that it goes almost unnoticed?

Americans, why don't you love your country any more? It's irrelevant whether or not you 'approve' of the Iraq war. For whatever reason your fellow-citizens fight and die in Iraq, and may do soon in Iran. In time of war, no matter the genesis of that war, there is an absolute duty upon the citizen to support no matter what the armed forces of the polity of which he is a part.

Europeans used to understand this. The English, in particular, used to understand this. It was irrelevant why we went to war with Hitler. We went to war with him and his nation and our aim, as a nation, as a people, was to remove him from the face of the earth. Justice did not matter. Right did not matter. Means did not matter. We were at war, and our enemy was not one to be sympathised with, the justice of his cause was an utter irrelevance: what mattered was his destruction - in which all were involved, from the least to the greatest - simply because he was our enemy.

Americans die in Iraq, killed by Iraqis. Since they kill our people (and yes, though I am not yet a citizen I have come to think of myself as an American) they are our enemies and they ought, for that reason alone, to be slaughtered out of hand at every opportunity. And while the soldiers of America are doing the good work of killing those who resist America (there is nothing to be ashamed of in admitting that this war began because Saddam Hussein ultimately proved resistant to the will of those who had raised him to power) it is the absolute duty of Americans to support unequivocally those doing the slaughtering - even if you can't bring yourself to support the machinations of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld et al, which brought about the war in the first place.

The two issues are completely separate: support for the soldier on the ground is not the same as support for those who sent him there in the first place. Disown the politician if you will - but do not disown the soldier who fights and dies in obedience to his (or her) duty.

From Eurodweeb to.... what, in three years? My wife calls me a born-again American patriot. I'm not sure it is patriotism, in the emotional, visceral sense that native born Americans feel that sentiment. I have always had a strong sense of civics, of civil obligation. I had, until I came here, begun to doubt its reality. Perhaps it's simply an awareness of what America has taught me in these last three years.

Some things are worthy - even if, at times, the agents of these worthy things do wrong.

Some things are worthy."

Comments (Page 1)
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on Jun 05, 2006
. appearance dot
on Jun 05, 2006
What more can be said? I wish I was erudite enough to add something to your well-crafted opinion. Wow, just wow... thanks for that illuminating article.
on Jun 05, 2006
To singrdave:

Thank you.
on Jun 06, 2006
I think it's education. The English, Germans, Japanese and all the others who managed to build up that useful patriotism in the first and second world wars could do so because their citizens had no concept of the right to an opinion. These days everyone, from the most intellectually infantile to the most brilliant is under the impression that they have the right to an opinion and the responsibility to voice it.

If you want to blame a decline on patriotism on anything, blame it on our ancestors who told us to think for ourselves rather than letting our 'betters' do the thinking.
on Jun 06, 2006
To cactoblasta:

I agree that everyone thinks they have the right to an opinion, and to air it, and while that can lead to all sorts of nonsense being current in the public sphere I don't think that it's necessarily a bad thing in itself. Contemporary democracy is nothing without free exchange of opinion and open debate.

America could (and would, if need arose) fight any number of what might be called 'classical' wars, in which large-scale forces are deployed against each other, and have no fear of losing - being able to apply a greater degree of force to a wider range of targets for a more extended period than anyone else can. But she hasn't fought such a conflict since the end of WW2. Instead they have all been small wars fought against enemies who used alternative guerilla tactics. Wars not able to be won by the application of overwhelming force because the targets of that force are too mobile, too intimately familiar with the terrain, to be pinned down and crushed.

the shadow of Vietnam has haunted every conflict America has been involved in since that first great military, social, and political debacle. I think it was then that America's confidence in herself, in her own rectitude, her ability and worth, were first shaken. And every miserable conflict America has taken part in has been of the same type; unwinnable wars fought in remote lands for seemingly no gain at all - and an ongoing loss of America's good name in the world.

However, I also think that this crisis of confidence is not unique to America but is something that has permeated the West since the end of WW2 and the passing of the Old European Empires and the end of the colonial period. America has her own angst with its own sources. Europe has its ennui, its cynicism, its disdain for patriotism and its inability to conceive of itself as anything other than a loose alliance of trading partners with delusions of military glory. The sources are different, the expression is different but the end result, the malaise, is the same. In the case of Europe you can see its effects in the spinelessness of the response to militant Islam.

I found myself ashamed of my British origins when Jack Straw, then Foreign Minister under that pernicious insect Blair, assured Muslims in Britain that their 'feelings' would be respected - the same Muslims who had the previous day paraded down the streets of London carrying placards inciting the murder of all those who did not condemn the publication of the Muhammad cartoons.

I am not interested in the feelings of any section of society: white, black, yellow; christian or muslim or jew. I am interested in whether they obey the law or not, and I expect all persons and groups who break it to be punished (not 'rehabilitated' - punished). I'm also interested in government that is self-confident, that upholds the core values of the society it represents, whose will it ought to express. Multiculturalism, with all its craven accommodation of the alien and the stranger, is a phenomenon of cultures that have lost faith in themselves - even here, in America, a nation born out of a multiplicity of cultures. Nowadays there are such abominations as the 'African' American - instead of Americans whose skin is black and whose ancestry is African. The same could be said of any American who prefaces his nationality with another. Such tribalism might have had its uses in the early days of America, serving to illustrate that despite origins and ethnicity, a citizen of America was fundamentally American and not, say, Irish or Polish.

Tribalism of that kind could flourish precisely because there was another identification, with citizenhood and the Constitution, which gave to such tribalism an overarching framework that allowed it to exist with the idea of America as something to which loyalty ought to be given first.

In this time of effette multicultral faggotry and national self-doubt there can be no room for such tribalism anymore. Now primacy must be given to the American in a 'polish' or 'german' or 'african' American: because the two hundred or so years of America's existence have demonstrated that to secure unity among many who are different it's not origins that must be stressed but the framework of law which defines the polity - not merely the rights of citizens but the obligations of citizens must be emphasized and fulfilled.

How odd that it should have been JFK who laid the foundations of Johnson's 'Great Society' and its bloated welfarism - when it was he who had said "Ask not what your country can do for you - but what you can do for your country."

The young man I spoke to in Ohio had no faith in America. He had no faith in her elected government - neither in its honesty nor in its ability, and none whatsoever in her politicians (and looking at them who could blame him?) But he either did not know or had forgotten how much America has achieved - the establishment of a Republic on the basis of law, not wealth or caste; the defeat of first Fascism and then Communism, the two great ideological opponents of Democracy. The creation of a society in which opportunity does actually abound for those willing to take it up and to work hard. And too many other things beside for me to name here.

Too much has been forgotten, lost, and distorted in the rise of multiculturalism and with it sympathy for the stranger before faith in our own. I don't give a damn how many died at Wounded Knee - every death was necessary in the expansion of the American polity - and had you asked those responsible for those killings if they were justified I doubt they would have said anything but "Yes". that expansion helped produce this nation, was necessary to its existence, and is not a moral category to which judgments of 'right' and 'wrong' can be applied. It simply was, like any other force of nature that destroys what stands in its path.

Such a view isn't taught in American schools. Instead educationalists obsess over the most culturally sensitive way in which to convince kids that evil white men made America by killing noble red men, with the implication that the America they created is in itself evil because of the manner of its coming into being.

Fiddlesticks. The descendants of every slaughtered Indian ought to give thanks for that slaughter and be honoured by it - since their ancestors played a foundational role in the creation of America, and they now live to reap the benefits of that creation. And if they find they have no benefits then it's not the 'evil white men' who are at fault but they themselves, for having insufficient spine to adapt and become American, rather than languishing in drunken, self-pitying misery as 'native' Americans.

There is no such thing as a 'native' American (except in the sense of one born within the American Republic, as opposed to one whose ancestors were born on land which is now America). But the insistence on respecting such fatuous, artificial divisions is also a symptom of the malaise I spoke about, a society's lack of faith in itself and its achievements - something that can only be cured by the conscious effort of every American to hold on to the greatness of his or her country.
on Jun 06, 2006
I agree that everyone thinks they have the right to an opinion, and to air it, and while that can lead to all sorts of nonsense being current in the public sphere I don't think that it's necessarily a bad thing in itself. Contemporary democracy is nothing without free exchange of opinion and open debate.


Oh I don't consider it a bad thing. I'm one of those people who doesn't have much love for patriotism. I agree with whichever dead king said that patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel. Patriotism is a curse that blinds people to the pleasures of others.

I just don't think patriotism can survive amongst educated people. The more educated someone is, the more trained they are to question. The more someone questions, the less they like the answers. Either they eventually reach an acceptance with the answers or they continue to rage against the machine. Neither is the stuff of patriotism. Patriotism is in my view born of a kind of unthinking confidence and love. It's not in any way an intellectual thing.

Let's take Haditha for example. A patriot would have seen that happen and accepted that the government would do the right thing. Someone who's overly educated would ask questions - who, what, where, why, how? Now they may end up agreeing with the true patriot - America usually does do what's right for it - but the fact that they question at all is symptomatic of their lack of confidence and faith.

Of course this Socratic training helps the anti-patriot, who has the emotional desire to disbelieve without questioning. The anti-patriots have grown powerful in recent years as a result of their sheer intransigence and the wonders of modern communications, but they've always been with us. It's only in the last century or so that the elite has encouraged thinking amongst the lower classes and thus given their thoughts space in the national media and legitimacy in the eyes of the whole, but they're no new phenomenon.

For patriotism to reemerge the state must find some way to dissuade the populace from asking questions. I don't think it'll be too hard - the distractions the world dreams up these days are fantastic, and far better than bread and circuses - but I think it'll be a requirement before we see the return of world war patriotism.

Of course a great and powerful enemy would work just as well, but there aren't any these days so that's not likely.
on Jun 06, 2006
Great article Emp.

I went to University right after my time in the Air Force. I was out of the service a week before classes started.

I went to University an uber patriot (this was when the 1st Gulf War was in full swing).

Imagine my disgust when after no more than a few weeks I realized most of the professors and students thought being patriotic "beneath them." It was a characteristic of the unwashed masses as far as they were concerned.

It is considered the "enlightened" view in academia to hate America, or to talk bad about her. Or at least it was when I was there.

I found it intolerable in most classes but especially in politics (where the prof made us watch hours of liberal comedians, reporters, etc) and Sociology.

I spent a lot of time arguing the profs points, so much in fact many thought I was "pre law"hahahhahaha...but in the end, on the tests, I regurgitated the "enlightened" garbage back onto paper to get an A in the class.

SO I was FORCED to learn their opinion, while they were obliged to dismiss mine. So much for always "seeking and questioning" which is the mantra of people who really never do it outside their comfort zone.

I found that to be the case in college. They were right and "enlightened" and unless you agreed with them you were wrong and uneducated.

So now many Americans believe that way too.

There was a gal on here Geryle who spouted liberal college speak as if it were gospel.

I walked away with a few of those liberal notions myself. But not long out in real life I saw them for the lies they are.

I love America. Would die for her. Would support my husband and children in doing the same. Why? Because we have something special. Something worth fighting for, worth dying for. It may not be as old and "sophisticated" as other countries, but its mine and I love her, warts and all.
on Jun 06, 2006
Bursts into song...

And I'm proud to be an American, where at least I know I'm freee...
And I wont forget the men who died, that gave that right to meeee
And I'd gladly stand up next to you and defend her still todayyyy
'Cus there aint no doubt I love this lannnnd
God bless the USAAAAAAAAAAAA!


Damn it, you gotta quit listening to Lee Greenwood try some Toby Keith.


Hey Uncle Sam
Put your name at the top of his list
And the Statue of Liberty
Started shakin' her fist
And the eagle will fly
Man, it's gonna be hell
When you hear Mother Freedom
Start ringin' her bell
And it feels like the whole wide world is raining down on you
Brought to you Courtesy of the Red White and Blue


Or this one:


Justice is the one thing you should always find
You got to saddle up your boys
You got to draw a hard line
When the gun smoke settles well sing a victory tune
Well all meet back at the local saloon
Well raise up our glasses against evil forces
Singing whiskey for my men, beer for my horses

We got too many gangsters doing dirty deeds
Weve got too much corruption, too much crime in the streets
Its time the long arm of the law put a few more in the ground
Send em all to their maker and hell settle em down
You can bet hell set em down cause
on Jun 06, 2006
As to songs... here's my own favourite patriotic ditty...

Lloyd George knew my father
Father knew Lloyd George

Lloyd George knew my FAaaaaaatherrrrrr

FAaaaaaaaather knew Lloyd George

(repeat infinitely, to the tune of Onward Christian Soldiers)
on Jun 06, 2006
To cactoblasta, and others making similar points -

I still fail to see why tha act of questioning should be seen as anti-patriotic. There's a sense in which the honest citizen ought to subject everything his government does to questioning - because everything done is done in his name.

Patriotism should never be blind, especially in a democracy and still more so in a Republic founded on the idea that it is the will of the people that rules. Citizens, even citizen-soldiers (perhaps especially them) ought to look at what is done in their name with a critical eye. That does not mean that a citizen-soldier has the right to question and disobey his Officers' commands - merely that, should the citizen-soldier survive, he will return with a critical assessment of his government's objectives in whatever conflict he has returned from, it's conduct of that conflict, whether or not it achieved its stated aims and so on.

It's through the ballot box that the citizen-soldier expresses that judgment - not on the battlefield.

you can be a soldier, a patriot - and still ask difficult questions as part of the proper democratic channels for such things.

It's not the asking of questions that imperils patriotism, but the belief that there are only negative questions that have only negative answers.
on Jun 06, 2006
To little-whip:

V^^^^^^V and thank you - but then, you know God loves lions tooooo (family joke).
on Jun 06, 2006
[quote[I still fail to see why tha act of questioning should be seen as anti-patriotic. There's a sense in which the honest citizen ought to subject everything his government does to questioning - because everything done is done in his name.

Of course. But the kind of patriotism that existed in the glory days of the world wars wasn't a questioning patriotism. People honestly believed, despite the utter ridiculousness of the propaganda. It's clear from personal accounts of the times that people actually believed, and in great numbers, that Jews were a lesser race, or that all the races of the world were inferior to the Japanese. Their belief was unquestioning, which was advantageous because that kind of faith rarely stands up to interrogation.

It's that kind of patriotic fervour that I think is dead to the questioning world. Compared to that level of faith, what you suggest is just a pale imitation.

But maybe we just have different ideas of what patriotism is.

Oh, and speaking of patriotic songs, it still turns me patriot to hear that godawful song, "I am, you are, we are Australian". I blame Qantas and their insidious advertising.
on Jun 06, 2006
#14 by EmperorofIceCream
Tue, June 06, 2006 10:33 AM


It's not the asking of questions that imperils patriotism, but the belief that there are only negative questions that have only negative answers.


Here! Here!! MM jumps to feet and breaks out in wild applause!
on Jun 06, 2006
Excellent article. Is it featured? If it's not, it should be.

I agree about the wife. I can't imagine what kind of wench would do something like that.
on Jun 06, 2006
To cactoblasta:

As I said originally, I don't understand the American sense of patriotism in the visceral way that many Americans appear to experience it. And I'm not entirely sure that this visceral commitment is a good thing. Being English, I take a less emotive and more intellectual approach - so that my patriotism relates to law, the Constitution, the duties and rights of citizens, rather than to any sense of 'my country, right or wrong'. But whatever approach is taken, it remains true that in time of war, and independently of any agreement or otherwise with the cause of war, the citizen has an absolute obligation to support the armed forces of his country in their struggle.
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