Taking yesterday’s
caravan down memory lane got me thinking about music from the end of the
sixties; especially about anti-war stuff.
John Fogarty’s “Fortunate
Son” has probably always been true, but it seems painfully relevant in the
post-9/11 world, when Congress-at-the-trough is so eager to send our military
to war to defend corporate interests. In Vietnam, it was a conscripted
military; now it’s volunteer. But the bulk of the ranks are filled with people
who are not the sons and daughters of politicians.
(Props to Senator Tammy
Duckworth, R-Ill., who lost both legs flying a Black Hawk helicopter in combat
in Iraq, and to the sons of Vice President Mike Pence and Senator Tim Kaine,
D-Va., who are both USMC officers. They are the very rare exceptions.)
(By the way, if you
look at the rosters of those who served in Vietnam—or, you know, take a stroll
along the Vietnam Memorial on the Mall and look at the names in that black
granite—you’ll see Hernandez, Sotos, Echevarria, Calderon…all those “somebody
else’s babies” that scumbags like congressmoron Steve King (representing the
heartland Iowa Fourth District, which would collapse if its Latinos left the
area) warn are going to ruin the nation.)
Then there’s Pete
Seeger’s “Big Muddy”. Man—this one is so viscerally painful, I can’t even
listen to it. It brings to my mind’s eye not only the idiocy of Vietnam, but every
battle fought in World War I in France and Belgium after September 1914. The
classic definition of insanity: doing the same thing over and over, expecting
different results.
And, yeah—that was Vietnam,
too. With some variations, just doing the same old shit over and over, pouring
more blood and treasure into a different sinkhole.
Don’t even get me
started on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. And now Syria. Just don’t.
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