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Untruthfulness and Consequences

By Andrew Borene, AlterNet. Posted May 27, 2005.


A continued refusal to honestly show the real human cost of the war will only alienate the troops from the American people and civilian leadership.
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Editor's Note: Andrew Borene served in the U.S. Marine Corps as a First Lieutenant during Operation Iraqi Freedom. In 2000, Borene deferred his matriculation at the University of Minnesota Law School and enlisted in the Marine Corps. He graduated with honors from the Marine Basic Officer Course in Quantico, Virginia, and participated in the first 100 days of the war, coordinating military personnel from multiple agencies and nations during major combat operations. He is now pursuing a J.D. degree at the University of Minnesota Law School.

From what I recall learning in a class at Quantico, during W.W.II the White House communications team made it a point to include images in the newsreels of dead Marines on the beaches of the Pacific. They wanted to remind the American people of the sacrifice they were making, and what was on the line. They refused to let the public forget exactly what it was their sons and brothers and fathers were doing overseas.

Anyone who does a little reading will learn the Nazis, the Japanese and the Russians denied honest disclosure of war casualty numbers and misled their own people about the costs of combat. That's hardly the kind of war policy model the U.S., the world's last, best hope for democracy, should be following.

The current majority in Washington is doing everything it can to avert the public's attention from Iraq and Afghanistan. They don't want to ask for real sacrifice in support of the global war on terror, much less spending to support the troops. They are more than happy to maintain the perception that the biggest issues in America are Social Security reform, Tom DeLay's ethics investigation and judicial filibusters.

The kind of examples they set for future leaders to emulate are guys who skipped out on military service and served as tie-wearing, pamphlet-passing, college cheerleaders for the conflict in Vietnam. The hypocrisy of senior citizen draft dodgers talking tough about national security and combat should be exposed in a time of war. Instead, we promote them to the highest levels of American diplomacy.

All of this perpetuates a growing "chickenhawk culture" in which young Americans with the most to offer in uniform feel quite comfortable taking civilian jobs or going to graduate school without so much as a thought about taking care of the young soldiers, Marines, airmen and sailors who are fighting a very real and growing war.

A continued refusal to honestly show the real human cost of the war will only alienate the troops from the American people and civilian leadership. This is hardly what we need at a time when North Korea actually has nuclear weapons, Iran seems hell-bent on obtaining them, and Russia is busy crushing any semblance of freedom within its borders.

Last I checked, the reason we all were willing to fight for America was a commitment to Constitutional freedom and the principles of government by the people. We must not be afraid to show the truth to the American people. If we support the war, then we will accept the casualties and get behind the effort. And if we don't, then in our free society we had better be prepared for a real national debate about what exactly our leadership is doing with the lives of our troops.

To learn more about the experiences of Iraq war veterans, visit OperationTruth.org.

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Last hope for Democracy
Posted by: paschn@comcast.net on May 27, 2005 7:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
hey there you fine American warrior fighting to give the world democracy! you followed a lying pig into a nazi like invasion into a country slightly bigger than Texas with a population about 2 times that state's,....you fine boys have tortured,...murdered and gassed all in the name of teaching Democracy in the name of a draft dodging, lying, corporate lackey. YOU INVADED THEM,....BASED ON HIS LIES!! Just what the hell have you sacrificed? Your virtue? your courage to say no to a lying despot? Definately....Are you defending our freedom? The fact you still believe you are shows what amoral acts you're capable of, all in the name of the new Nazi Party.

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» RE: Last hope for Democracy Posted by: naryaquid
» RE: Last hope for Democracy Posted by: bschuhle
» RE: Last hope for Democracy Posted by: Jean Jearman
» RE: We can do it! Posted by: Iamnotafruittree
» RE: We can do it! Posted by: brasilaron
» RE: Last hope for Democracy Posted by: Marty McFly
» RE: Last hope for Democracy Posted by: royrogers
» RE: Last hope for Democracy Posted by: beatpunk
War(riors)
Posted by: nakis on May 27, 2005 9:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First off, the baby killer thing, I read, is an urban legend. Became popular for those who oppose peace activists.

You really can't categorize soldiers. They're are all kinds. Some are in the armed forces because they get to kill people legally. Some join out of patriotic duty. Most as a chance to get out of poverty. Any number of combinations of these and many others.
To say they are blameless is not quite right. To say they are guilty one and all is not quite right either. Their philosophies are the philosophies of humanity. Only their job involves taking lives under orders.

Regardless of what you think of the men and women of our armed forces, look to the chickenhawks. Look to the neocons who "create reality" and write history with the blood of innocents.
If they could wage their war on humanity while telling us the truth about it they would. But they know it wouldn't work. That everyone has at least some compassion that they lack and wouldn't stand to go along with their plan. So they lie, deceive, withhold information and lie all about everything they've done or failed to do. And since our men and women in uniform want to believe these lies (and are trained/brainwashed to believe them) the neocons spread them with glee.

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» RE: War(riors) Posted by: Steve
HUA!
Posted by: apodapa on May 27, 2005 1:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is the kind of discussion this country needs to have on CNN. Better late than never. I agree with the writer. As a vet of the seventies drink all you can drink Army, but the son of a Korean War vet, brother of a Vietnam Vet, and countless cousins and uncles who also served, I can't shout loud enough the praise in which the writer of this article deserves. It blows my mind that military men and women, veterans, and famlies of veterans, support the real Chicken George and his cabinet of cowards. HUA!

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THE SILENT PRESS © [PART THREE IN AN UNINTEDED SERIES]
Posted by: Betsy L. Angert on May 27, 2005 2:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dear Andrew Borene . . .

The distilling of information distresses me too. I am saddened by this imposition. During our current conflicts, [Afghanistan, Iraq, and the War against terrorism] the Dover Test seems to take precedence.

I am delighted to learn that the contrary was true in earlier wars. Imagine a government that “wanted to remind the American people of the sacrifice they were making, and what was on the line. They refused to let the public forget exactly what it was their sons and brothers and fathers were doing overseas.”

This was a great and interesting read. I offer my own. Earlier I wrote a number of posts on the same subject. If you choose to read these, even view the photographs, I would welcome your thoughts. By the way, I also referred to Operation Truth, as well as other sources for photographs and more. Another suggested Delawareonline.com. It too was a great resource.
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS, TENTATIVELY! ©
STILL TENTATIVE SUPPORT; PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE FALLEN ©
THE SILENT PRESS © [PART THREE IN AN UNINTEDED SERIES]

Be-Think Betsy L. Angert

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Democracy's champion
Posted by: HughS on May 27, 2005 2:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"...the U.S., the world's last, best hope for democracy, should be following." Does the EU have no democracies (and others such as ourselves in New Zealand?)

Such hubris! Most new democracies prefer to follow other examples than the American hanging-chad corporate plutocracy with its craven media devoted to keeping the voting public in an opium cloud of unreality.

What deadly adventures your illusion induced hubris leads you into!

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» RE: Democracy's champion Posted by: royrogers
» RE: Democracy's champion Posted by: Diecash1
Uh...
Posted by: HeidiLockwood on May 27, 2005 10:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think the dude was being facetious with the "last best hope" bit.
Yet there are plenty folks out there who would say that and meant it, and for them, your points would be well taken.

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Happy Memorial Day!
Posted by: Marty McFly on May 30, 2005 6:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To our brave men and women in the US Armed Forces:
Thank you!

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