Town of Braintree

2nd thread for another thought

Posted in: Braintree
liberals into a near-frenzied st

Jan 4, 2005
THERE'S one current idea that drives anti-war liberals into a near-frenzied state ?— the notion that you can't re ally call yourself a supporter of our armed forces in Iraq if you stand in opposition to their efforts there.
I received dozens of enraged e-mails over the past week after making a glancing reference to this ?— while citing a poll that indicated deep support for the mission in Iraq from those Americans currently in uniform.

I'm going to have to paraphrase what those angry e-mails said, because most of them featured profanities, SCREAMING CAPITAL LETTERS and totally! unnecessary! exclamation! points!

You're the one who doesn't support the troops, they all essentially said, because you think they should be sent into harm's way for an unjust, ill-conceived, ill-considered and pointless mission. We, who want the war ended, are the true supporters of the troops.

That line of argument sounds wonderfully humanitarian. Doubtless, most who use it believe they're expressing positive sentiments toward the U.S. military ?— and that they believe those who feel or think otherwise are indifferent to the difficulties facing armed Americans involved in a tough struggle in Iraq.
But there is something exquisitely condescending about the attitude that members of the military need Americans here at home to save them. Every person now serving in Iraq entered the service voluntarily and as an adult.

What we learned from the recent poll is that those who have served in Iraq are the most enthusiastic about our efforts there. They aren't seeking rescue by well-meaning stateside Americans.

No, it appears they are seeking to win this thing ?— and they are willing to risk a great deal to win.
For, difficult though it is for many people to understand, some ?— perhaps many ?— people enter military service because they see something noble, something elevating, something empowering, in putting it all on the line.
Achieving glory through martial means is an idea as old as civilization itself, from Achilles battling the Trojans to Shakespeare's Henry V telling his soldiers that all those in their beds back in England will think themselves accursed because they were not among the ''band of brothers'' attacking the French on St. Crispin's Day.
Americans in Iraq are in harm's way to make possible the transformation of that country from a totalitarian instability generator into a functioning free society. The nobility of that effort and the glory that will attach to all those who were involved in it seem self-evident to many of those who support the effort.

But those who have opposed the war from the outset seem to feel that the goal isn't noble, and that it would be best to figure out some kind of quick and cheap face-saving exit strategy at best or an appropriately humiliating defeat at worst.

They deny the nobility of the goal in Iraq, and therefore they also deny the attendant nobility and glory due those who are seeking to achieve the goal. If what our soldiers, sailors, Marines and Guardsmen are doing is pointless, or even injurious to American interests, how can glory redound from it?

That's why I say that those who say the war isn't worth fighting cannot justly say they also support the troops ?— because they are also saying their risk and sacrifice are pointless rather than glorious.



-By Anonymous



By By Anonymous
1.

sunami aid running into obstacle

Jan 4, 2005
The main airport at Indonesia's tsunami-battered Sumatra island was closed for much of the day Tuesday after a relief plane hit a herd of cows, hampering the world's still-fragile efforts to get aid to victims of the disaster.

In a startling tale of survival, an Indonesian man swept off the shore by last week's tsunami was found afloat on tree branches and debris, the second person to be found alive on the high seas days after the disaster, officials said Tuesday.

World leaders, meanwhile, headed to southern Asia to get a firsthand glimpse of the damage from the Dec. 26 earthquake and tsunami that killed at least 139,488 people. Secretary of State Colin Powell - who was in Thailand on Tuesday - pledged America's full support, and a donor conference was scheduled Thursday in Indonesia's capital.

Relief workers said they expect the death toll to soar by tens of thousands because surveys of the western coast of Sumatra, which was closest to the quake, show it was hit much harder than previously thought. Scores of villages were flattened, and in some areas few survivors have been seen.

-By Anonymous



By By Anonymous
the posts brought

to you by the one and only,guess who
it ryms with clownie
looks like a spam filter thread

the posts brought

Jan 5, 2005
to you by the one and only,guess who
it ryms with clownie



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