A Young Marine Speaks Out
by Philip Martin
I'm sick and tired of this patriotic, nationalistic and fascist crap. I stood
through a memorial service today for a young Marine that was killed in
that area. So I wonder, why are we still there? Democracy is not forced upon
people at gunpoint. It's the result of forward thinking individuals who take the
initiative and risks to give their fellow countrymen a better way of life.
When I joined I took an oath. In that oath I swore to protect the Constitution
of the
"national security." I didn't join the military to be part of an Orwellian
("1984") war machine that is in an obligatory war against whoever the state
deems the enemy to be so that the populace can be controlled and riled up in a
pro-nationalistic frenzy to support any new and oppressive law that will be the
key to destroying the enemy. Example given – the Patriot Act. So aptly named,
and totally against all that the constitution stands for. President Bush used
the reactionary nature of our society to bring our country together and to
infuse into the national psyche a need to give up their little-used rights in
the hope to make our nation a little safer. The same scare tactics he used to
win elections. He drones on and on about how
weren't abroad. In our modern day emotive society this strategy (or strategery?)
works, or had worked, up until last month's elections.
My point in this: to show that
created states with fully capable and independent governments and not provinces
that were just a division of the federal government. These men believed that
working hard, thinking, inventing and using the free market would tie up so much
of normal life that imperialistic colonization and the fighting of wars
thousands of miles away for interests that are not our own would be avoided.
They believed this expansion of power could be left to the European nations, the
to a foreign country to fight a people who did not ask for us to be there, nor
did their leader do anything to warrant us being there, and dying would be
considered honorable and heroic. I don't believe it anymore. I don't believe
it's right for any American to go along with it anymore. Yes I know that we in
the military are bound by the UCMJ and somehow don't fall under the Constitution
(the very thing we're suppose to be defending) but sooner or later there is a
decision that every American soldier, marine, airmen and seamen makes to allow
themselves to be sent to a war that is against every fiber this country was
founded on. I know that when April rolls around I will be thinking long and hard
on that decision. Even though we in the military are just doing as we're told we
still have the moral and ethical obligation to choose to do as we're told, or to
say, "No, that isn't right." I believe that if more troopers like me and the
professional military, the officers and commanders, start standing upand saying
that they won't let themselves or their troops go to this illegal war people
will start standing up and realizing what the heck is going on over there.
The sad fact of the matter is that we are not fighting terrorists in
Notice I never once used the word homeland in any of this. I have a secondary
point I want to bring up now. Never once was the term homeland ever used to
describe the country of
I heard a lot during the memorial service about how the dead Marine did so much
good for others and how his helping others was like a little microcosm of
America helping because we have the power to do so. Well if we have the power to
help people why aren't we helping in
justification to be there. I guess we should wait around for the omnipotent W
Bush to decide who we should use our superpowerdom to help next. It's about time
to throw him and the rest of the fascists out. Moreover it's about time to start
educating Americans about their past and history, and letting them know that
imperialistic leaders are not what the founders of this great country wanted.
December 8, 2006
Philip Martin [send him mail:grimmythedog@
21-years-old
tracscribed from email from James Austin Moran II [mis@nysar.com]