Crossville Chronicle, Crossville, TN

Columns

March 25, 2008

LION AND THE LAMB: Welcome home, Vietnam veterans

How many generations of brave and honorable warriors have we prayed for, waited for and promised never to forget? Vowing never to forget is civilization’s recurring broken promise. The truth is that they are forgotten. Flags are lowered. Parades and bands fade away. The wars disappear into the history books and into the land between fantasy and national memory. Only those who fought, and the civilians most deeply affected, long remember.

Those who stay home sometimes need a reality check when they reach too far in proclaiming the meaning of war and why we fight. It has ever been thus. We promise our veterans much to fight for us, and we have too often given too little in return. The cold and hungry rebels of the American Revolution who left bloody footprints in the freezing mud are eulogized as our first generation of heroes. President Lincoln said at Gettysburg, “The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here.” The doughboys of World War I fought “the war to end wars.” Those who fought World War II are now called the “greatest generation.” Korea is forgotten, and so one day will be the long, black memorial wall of names in D.C. of those who fell in Vietnam. To our national shame, too many Vietnam veterans were spat upon as baby killers and blamed for the shortcomings of our politicians. Protesters vilified them from the safety of noisy crowds and with lying, hindsight wisdom.

Our servicemen and servicewomen are commonly viewed as the cream of American youth. They step forward to protect our way of life and die in the shadow of the flag in righteous battles for liberty, burned to death in airplanes, drowned in the sinking engine rooms of battleships, and blown to bits charging machine gun nests. Others, who were frightened out of their wits and who had no idea why they were there, or what they were to die for, were also heroes. They were merely less idealistic and probably more concerned with survival than about waving the flag and leading a charge. War and nobility are not synonymous. Why so? What makes us think it is?

Our social development lags far behind in matters of peace. The war lovers of our nation talk about World War III. That should alarm us. Most of us have escaped the direct effects of the wars in the far deserts. It will be different if World War III erupts between the West (mostly Christian) and the Middle East (too much fundamentalist Muslim). If they strike us again and we are desperately threatened, our war lovers may rain nuclear hell down on Muslims, good and bad, saying that violence is the only thing they understand. They indeed are not noted for Nobel Peace Prizes or for many inventions other than the roadside Improvised Explosive Device (IED). Their large social contributions include enslaving women and sullying Islam. But the fallout from our ultimate weapons would affect the whole world. The radicals won’t care. We should.

We are all members of this generation and responsible for how it shall be remembered. Prayers are not enough. God is not a Muslim god, nor a Christian god, nor a Jewish god. Nor is God necessarily on the side of those with the biggest battalions, as some philosophers have said. If God has any interest at all it must be on the side of reason. Making reason work is in our hands. This year’s election is not one to be kissed off. If there are statesmen and stateswomen among the candidates we must chose them and trust them to keep us from adding millions of forgotten war dead to those we promised never to forget.

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Columns
  • veteran GARY'S WORLD: Thank our veterans this weekend A tremendous opportunity presents itself in our community this weekend — an opportunity to honor those who served in the Vietnam War. Personally, after attending last year's first Welcome Home celebration, I wouldn't want to miss this. It was an emotional event for both Vietnam veterans and ordinary citizens. It was a great way to commemorate Vietnam Veterans Day in Tennessee, March 29.

    March 27, 2009 1 Photo

  • antique RANDOM THOUGHTS: "Antiques Roadshow" comes to Tennessee If you are one of the 10 million who watch each episode of the “Antiques Roadshow” mark your calendar. The three upcoming Mondays, March 30, April 6 and April 13, were all taped in Chattanooga last July.

    March 24, 2009 1 Photo

  • LION AND THE LAMB: An open letter to Sharon Baier I was happy to read your well-written article, printed in last week's Chronicle. It makes a strong case, in the story of Al and Jennifer, that "To make money, you have to spend money." That misguided couple thought that they ought to cut down on their purchase of supplies, to save money. They did so, week after week, until they lost their business.

    March 24, 2009

  • WE THE PEOPLE: Veterans storm the Hill When young men and women risk their lives and sacrifice both physical and mental health for their country, a grateful country should at least provide them with shelter, food, and health care. But there is a lot of hypocrisy between what some windbag says on Veterans Day and what the country actually does for veterans.

    March 24, 2009

  • child crying THEREFORE I AM: Kids stress out parents? Well, duh! This just in: According to an expert, children can add stress and strain to a marriage. In other news, further expert studies have indicated that the sky is in fact blue, Paris Hilton is a tad spoiled, peanut butter and chocolate taste great together, and the Middle East has issues. Thank goodness we have experts to tell us these things.

    March 23, 2009 1 Photo

  • shackles INSIDE THE FIRST AMENDMENT: With shekels come shackles When President Obama launched his faith-based initiative at the National Prayer Breakfast on Feb. 5, he promised not only to sustain the Bush administration’s signature domestic program — but to expand it.

    March 19, 2009 1 Photo

  • loneranger THEREFORE I AM: Jim Croce and I will keep you safe and sound My philosophy of life is simple: When in doubt, follow the advice of a dead folk-rock star. I always found Jim Croce to be particularly handy in this capacity. Don’t tug on Superman’s cape. Don’t spit into the wind. Don’t pull the mask off that old Lone Ranger, and regardless of how badly you may want to, do not, under any circumstances, mess around with Jim.

    March 16, 2009 1 Photo

  • STUMPTALK: Stimulating a war on prosperity and freedom Near Bush’s sunset, Treasury Secretary Paulson and Fed chairman Bernanke terrified the nation with “the sky’s falling and America is doomed” unless the government steps in with new regulations, institutional takeovers and massive lending.

    March 16, 2009

  • WE THE PEOPLE: Thoughts on bringing a recession to heel Responding to the recent full-throated baying of conservative “economic watchdogs,” I slogged into the swamp of their icon Adam Smith’s murky tome, “The Wealth of Nations,” to see if they had finally treed anything of value.

    March 10, 2009

  • LION AND THE LAMB: Reality Dim blue of early morning shines into the living room

    while you flip through television channels.

    March 10, 2009

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