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My Son and War
Painfully typed in from the American Legion Magazine, Vol, 156, No. 1, pp. 30-31 | January 2004 | Frank Schaeffer

Posted on 03/06/2004 9:06:29 AM PST by sauropod

I read this article in the laundromat yesterday. I found it to be a powerful indictment on "Military Families Speak Out." It is not online at the American Legion Magazine Web site, so i typed it in. 'Pod

My Son and War: A once-skeptical father shares his perspective on military parenthood.

By Frank Schaeffer

I write novels for a living and never served in the military. My two older children did the expected: Georgetown and New York University. Our kind - higher-education-worshipping denizens of the North Shore, north of Boston - rarely enlist these days. In 1999, my youngest son, John, was the only senior graduating from his exclusive private high school to join the military. As I write, he is in the Middle East on his second deployment as a U.S. Marine.

After reading an opinion piece I wrote for The Washington Post - about the wrenching adjustment I made from ambivalence toward our military to proud support for my Marine - Gen. James L. Jones (then commandant of the Marine Corps, now chief of NATO), wrote to me, "There has been a 'disconnect' between the men and women who defend our nation and those who are the beneficiaries of that service." The "disconnect" to which Jones refers is illustrated by the contrast between most parents of military personnel and Americans who will not even allow their children's high schools to give their names and addresses to recruiters.

Under the No Child Left Behind Act, schools are required to give the names of graduating students to recruiters. Some parents find it unbearable that their children might be asked to even consider serving. In a New York Times article, Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, says, "Students have a right to not be bothered by agressive military recruiters." School-board members in the San Francisco area said they were working to thwart the "dangerous" law.

Apparently some parents, failing to thwart the recruiter and their child's choice to serve, never reconcile themselves with their feelings about military service. An antiwar organization called "Military Families Speak Out" was formed in 2002 by parents and relatives of servicemembers. Speak Out claims to represent military parents against our liberation of Iraq. The Group's Web site is linked ot a grab bag of anti-globalization and pacifist groups. Speak Out exploits an emotional antiwar tactic: it prints letters on its Web site from frightened parents and children of soldiers pleading with the president to let their mommies, daddies, sons or daughters come home.

What are the factors contributing to the existence of groups like Speak Out? Fear is an obvious reason. But a number of other underlying factors exist. Class is one; the rise of anti-military and anti-traditional-male, politically correct ideology is another.

At one time, our military was drawn from a true cross section of society. Even the Ivy League contributed its fair share - until my generation came along. We were the "60s generation." Some of us served. Many, including me, did not. Vietnam was our excuse. I say excuse because since that war ended, the upper classes - especially the most educated - never regained any sense of moral obligation to serve, let alone the desire to see their children volunteer.

Harvard's memorial wall tells the story. It has many names form World War I and World War II on it, a few from Korea, a handful from Vietnam and none since. Now it's rare to find members of Congress who voluntarily served, much less their children.

The absence of the educated and wealthy elite from our military exacerbates the sense that something un-American and unfair is going on when "my kid" gets sent to war and "rich kids" do not. A country where fairly shared sacrifice is the norm might be less apt to breed groups like Speak Out.

What of the second factor, the rise of anti-military and anti-traditional-male ideology? Before my generation took its turn at the raising and education of children, oversolicitous, hand-wringing "soccer moms" wailing "Be careful!" were nowhere in sight. Winston Churchill and Gen. George Patton were heroes, and no one use the word "sensitivity" except when describing a rash to their doctor.

Patton would not recognize most of today's pool of potential male recruits. I say "male recruits" because while females serve and serve well, it is the role of boys in our culture that best represents our elite's change in attitude about service and, more fundamentally, about the traditional warror role of young men. I believe this shift has something to do with the climate that produces a type of military parent who wants the military to do anything but fight wars.

What kind of boy would be drafted into Patton's army today? Today's 17-year-old potential recruit - let's call him Gabriel (fictitious name) - is an obese, Ritalin-oppressed young man, soft as a Twinkie. The post-'60s, anti-traditional-male and anti-military views of our educated elite have played a role in shaping Gabriel. He only knows about what were once called "boyhood" or "manly" experiences via grotesque video games and other electronic adentures he vicariously undertakes from a snack-littered couch. If he ever got punched at school, the other kid was suspended for violence. If his teacher spanked him, she was fired or maybe jailed. If Gabriel ever read "Huckleberry Finn," he related to the robust protagonist the way a chubby goldfish trapped in a small glass bowl might gape incredulously at a 600-pound Blue Fin slicing his way through the open ocean.

Unlike teachers of the World War II era, too many of Gabriel's instructors see no virtue in martial skills, let alone military service. His teacher is most likely a politically correct, speech-code-sensitivity-enforcing do-gooder trained to make sure Gabriel does his best to behave like the girls in his class. Gabriel's teacher has commanded Gabriel to have "high self-esteem," for what reason or for what acoomplishment he's never been told. "Force never solves anything," he or she has told Gabriel. If Gabriel's teacher ever mentions the military, it is with a shudder and perhaps a condescending smirk.

The smirk was momentarily replaced by a howl of terrified dismay when 19 hijackers killed 3,000 Americans one bright morning. Suddenly Gabriel's teacher's progressive tolerance of everybody and everything - except traditional males - evaporated. Gabriel, his teacher, and maybe even Gabriel's parents looked around, as if waking from a dream, and fervently hoped there were a few good men and women selfless and strong enough to shoulder an 80-pound pack and sling on an M-16 to defend the rest of us.

There were. Not all young men and women are "Gabriel," and even some who once were, volunteered to be mentally and physically "readjusted" by their drill instructors from "nasty civilians" into America's finest warriors.

We went to war in Afghanistan and Iraq. The military performed brilliantly. But the war was not over in 15 minutes. It wasn't cut to the pace of a TV commercial. Disney had not supplied a happy ending. Our elites did not like to see our military force used. Our war was fought on the ground, not with cruise missiles. Our attention wandered. Some military parents grew impatient. When where their children coming home? What the hell was this word "sacrifice" supposed to mean?

How far will Speak Out go in bedding down with the rabble of America-haters that inflict themselves on the rest of us through the worldwide peace movement? Would the founders of Speak Out have walked out on the Columbia University associate professor [Nicholas DiGenova] who, according to The New York Times, told thousands of students and faculty at a "peace teach-in" in March that he would like to see the United States suffer "a million Mogadishus"? Maybe members of Speak Out don't go that far. But, as the parents of military men and women, they sure have some strange bedfellows.

Like myself, most military parents honor the fact that our children took an oath to serve. Most of us are more patient than members of the chattering classes who write editorials about how our American policy is failing in the Middle East. Most of us know that even if it does fail, we must still try to transform the breeding grounds of hopelessness, terror and oppression into places where freedom and human rights are given a chance. Most military parents know that World War II lasted almost five years. Germany took 20 years to reconstruct. We still have troops in Korea, Japan and Germany. We know that the Middle East is a complex mess and that the chaotic "crescent of instability," stretching from the horn of Africa through the Middle East and all the way to Indonesia, cannot be allowed to continue breeding violent anti-American terrorists.

My Marine has my absolute support, even though I feel sick at the thought that he could be hurt, or worse. I pray my way through each day and many lonely nights. He is engaged in a noble undertaking. I think most military parents feel as I do, though maybe the press doesn't quote us as often as it trumpets the fears of a few oversolicitous hand-wringing military "soccer moms" (and dads) wailing "Be careful!" as their sons and daughters try to defend us. I hope such parents come to understand that they are putting our children at risk by making us look weak and divided to terrorists who already dismiss us as soft.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Philosophy; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: antiwar; banglist; frankschaeffer; gabriel; militaryfamilies; speakout
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To: billbears
"I will be the first to sign up, even at my age, and defend this nation of states from foreign invaders. However I would not sign up to go to war to 'spread democracy'"

Sorry, not to question your motives or patriotism, intent, or deeply held beliefs;
But that statement sounds an AWFUL lot like what we heard in '68 and thereabouts...
"Oh, I'd fight Hitler alright, but not a bunch of Asian agrarian reformers....etc.

It don't wash.

201 posted on 03/07/2004 10:01:54 AM PST by norton
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To: sauropod
"Still not buying it. I may not personally served in the military, but I know quite a few who did and still do, and further, have been working for a Service in a civilian capacity for 16 years now on weapons systems for you guys to use."

Well that sums it all up - YOU DON'T HAVE A CLUE AS TO HOW SOME OF US FEEL ABOUT THIS SUDDEN RUSH OF PATRIOTISM. It doesn't matter who you know, or where you did your service at - YOU STILL DIDN'T get ordered to some sh*thole to fight for those who shunned you after you came home. I am not being arrogant, just honest and if you cannot appreciate it for what it is, then just shut up and open your ears for once. You must've not been around during the late 60's and early 70's. Either that or you were just off in some little cosmic egg of your own making. As far as your work goes, I worked on weapons systems for 20 years, and they have a 85% works as advertised rate. So that isn't too bad. But you still don't get the bigger picture ... its about those who still put down the military. So if I pissed on your parade, sorry bout that, but thats life. Like I've been told "Get over it."

202 posted on 03/07/2004 11:49:47 AM PST by Colt .45 (Cold War, Vietnam Era, Desert Storm Veteran - Pride in my Southern Ancestry!)
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To: norton
It don't wash.

Tell that to the men that founded this nation. 'Moral' wars of spreading 'democracy' wouldn't wash in their eyes

203 posted on 03/07/2004 11:53:30 AM PST by billbears (Deo Vindice.)
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To: Burkeman1
"To oppose this war is to be Patriotic! To support it is to be a sycophant of government and tyranny!"

Hey stupid! You can be as patriotic as you wish, just don't be downing others for their beliefs unless you have legitimate proof. My father and grandfather served in WW2, and I have a Great Uncle who served in WW1. Sometimes it means having to go off and fight for something, an ideal, that allows us to live as we do. You haven't, because you don't feel that there is any validity to what the government said. Okay! Your choice. But don't put the others down who support the President, I have been over there and feel he did the right thing.

You wouldn't know sycophancy and tyranny if it slapped you upside the head. You sound like a sycophant of the left, one of those little lemmings who all blindy follow the "peace" thing. But its you lot who haven't paid attention to history. You cold and shallow people who cannot win because you are afraid to risk. But you are the first to open your big fat mouths when others have to go off and do it for you. Just remember this boyo, what your father, and grandfather did counts only for their generation, what have you given for your freedom lately?

204 posted on 03/07/2004 12:04:16 PM PST by Colt .45 (Cold War, Vietnam Era, Desert Storm Veteran - Pride in my Southern Ancestry!)
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To: Burkeman1
"Really- most who saw combat don't talk about it much. And they don't glorify it."

You don't have to glorify combat to know you've done something good, even if doing it was horrible. One of my friends, when I was a teenager, had been in the first wave to hit the beach at Iwo Jima. He had some truly horrible tales to tell, but he knew the consequences of NOT keeping Japanese soldiers off our shores was worth any sacrifice he and his buddies had to make. He made sure I did not glorify war and battle. He also made sure I knew that there are worse things than war. Real men talk about the things young men need to know. They don't whine about them.
205 posted on 03/07/2004 12:08:14 PM PST by Old Student (WRM, MSgt, USAF (Ret.))
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To: billbears
'Moral' wars of spreading 'democracy' wouldn't wash in their eyes

I don't know about that. Seems Madison and Jefferson had little problems with the idea when they were President.

Think of it as an updated version of their Manifest Destiny.

206 posted on 03/07/2004 12:35:38 PM PST by optimistically_conservative (If consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds, John F. Kerry’s mind must be freaking enormous. T.B.)
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To: optimistically_conservative
Ah the ever ready military man? Our founders would be aghast at even your standing military presence.
207 posted on 03/07/2004 2:12:27 PM PST by Burkeman1
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To: Colt .45
Very well put!
208 posted on 03/07/2004 2:22:32 PM PST by Valin (America is the land mine between barbarism and civilization.)
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To: Colt .45
I was not "around" in the 60's and early '70s. Too young.

wrt your earlier post, your attitude was basically "thanks but no thanks" to patriots.

This is not some "sudden rush" of patriotism. Generally, people on FR have tremendous respect for those who served in active duty. I include myself in that number.

Some of us here have, in defending guys like you publically, had stuff thrown at us (bottles, various pieces of oranges, etc., threatened with arrest (a USSS White House security person did this during the reign of His Slickness), physically threatened by the ANSWER pukes, etc. During the reign of His Slickness, Don and Teri Adams were beaten up by Teamster union goons because they were insisting on the rule of law. Some hellholes were right here in THIS country.

Just because you may have served in the military does not give you the right to p*ss on what the rest of us are doing. If you want to go polish your halo, go ahead, but don't expect me to be there to help you, not with your attitude.

209 posted on 03/07/2004 2:26:02 PM PST by sauropod (I intend to have Red Kerry choke on his past.)
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To: Colt .45
What is your name?
210 posted on 03/07/2004 2:27:50 PM PST by Burkeman1
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To: Burkeman1
Ah the ever ready military man?

Interesting how quickly your hypocrisy can be revealed. First from accusations of "chickenhawk" now to what, "ever ready military man"? What's amusing to me is that you, as a member of the militia, were expected to be the defense against me, a member of the standing army, should it be necessary. Forgive my smirk.

Our founders would be aghast at even your standing military presence.

Actually, they would be aghast at your ignorance after writing so elequently about it in Federalist No. 8, 24-28, particularly 29 and Anti-Federalist 24 and 25.

Personally, I think Hamilton would be quite pleased.

211 posted on 03/07/2004 3:06:35 PM PST by optimistically_conservative (If consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds, John F. Kerry’s mind must be freaking enormous. T.B.)
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To: sauropod
Thanks for the ping. What an excellent article.
212 posted on 03/07/2004 3:24:40 PM PST by Trteamer ( (Eat Meat, Wear Fur, Own Guns, FReep Leftists, Drive an SUV, Drill A.N.W.R., Drill the Gulf, Vote)
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To: sauropod
"Just because you may have served in the military does not give you the right to p*ss on what the rest of us are doing. If you want to go polish your halo, go ahead, but don't expect me to be there to help you, not with your attitude."

There you go again - being ignorant. I am not pissing on what you are trying to do, just grounding you in reality! You seem to think that I am out trying to make myself out to be the real patriot or something. Well, I did what I did because I grew up as a part of the President Kennedy generation - "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country." I did it out of a sense of duty - "Duty is the most sublime word in our language. Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more. You should never wish to do less." -R.E. LEE

But you should remember that there are many who served during the time when it was not popular, and who were spat upon and reviled by the more "enlightened" (sarcasm) college students, and some of the WW2 generation (they came home heroes and not the villains), and we are not so willing to just blindly accept all the adulation. You see, you have never felt betrayed by the country you fought to protect. We were the scapegoats for failed governmental policies and the loss of a war. Now you expect us just to blindly accept all this praise as genuine. Well it may be, but you are the one who needs to have the reality check and understand where we are coming from. We (myself and too many others) have seen too many supposed "good deals" turn bad when adversity sets in. We watched as our fellow American citizens treated us like unwanted ba*tard step-children. No sir, we were good enough to serve, but not good enough to be integrated back into American society as acceptable citizens. Our stories?! No one cared enough to listen, so we stopped trying to tell them. We came back to "no banners and no bands". We arrived home to derision and disgrace for serving honorably. Didn't matter whether you were in combat or not, if you wore a uniform, you were a pariah. And it took years for it to die down, but every once in a while it rears its ugly head. As far as the stuff you've had thrown at you for "defending us" - welcome to my world! Think how you felt about those, then magnify that 10 fold and just perhaps you will get a glimpse of how we feel.

As far as polishing my halo, heh-heh-heh sonny, I don't have one. So obviously I don't need any help polishing what I don't have.

As Doc Holiday said to the Marshal in "Tombstone" - "Forgive me if I don't shake hands."

213 posted on 03/07/2004 4:05:19 PM PST by Colt .45 (Cold War, Vietnam Era, Desert Storm Veteran - Pride in my Southern Ancestry!)
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To: Ragtime Cowgirl
Bump!
214 posted on 03/07/2004 4:27:22 PM PST by windchime (Podesta about Bush: "He's got four years to try to undo all the stuff we've done." (TIME-1/22/01))
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To: Colt .45
I think our conversation is over.
215 posted on 03/07/2004 4:41:22 PM PST by sauropod (I intend to have Red Kerry choke on his past.)
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To: optimistically_conservative; Burkeman1
First from accusations of "chickenhawk" now to what, "ever ready military man"?

Burkeman1, I see that you think that you have great insight, but you sure blew this one!!!

optimistically_conservative, thank you for your service and as a member of the militia, I have my eye on you!

;<)

216 posted on 03/07/2004 5:26:00 PM PST by Eaker ("Do I feel your pain?? Hell, I caused your pain!!!!" - Tom Eaker, 2004)
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To: Eaker
thank you for your service and as a member of the militia, I have my eye on you!

I keep that in mind and try not to let you down!

217 posted on 03/07/2004 5:45:04 PM PST by optimistically_conservative (If consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds, John F. Kerry’s mind must be freaking enormous. T.B.)
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To: Rocky Mountain High
Wake up bone-head! We're facing a guerrilla army of islamic wackos who will gladly kill you and your sons.

People like him live in a carefully cultivated state of denial that a real necessity for armed violence is even possible.

If he ever really woke up, the shock would probably kill him.

218 posted on 03/08/2004 1:15:34 AM PST by fire_eye (Socialism is the opiate of academia.)
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To: Lurker

THANK YOU.

219 posted on 03/08/2004 7:45:54 AM PST by beachn4fun (DemocRATS and Liberals are funny.....Haaa......haaaa.......haaaa......haaaa........haaaaa........)
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To: oh8eleven; Burkeman1
We don't want you, your sons or anyone like you. Semper Fi...

Thank GOD we have people like you, oh8eleven, and not so many like Burleman1. Can you imagine what would happen if war came to our shores and we had to depend on people like Burkeman1 to defend the homeland and the women and children? For me, it is too scary to imagine. Who does he want to defend his wife and child should terror coming knocking at his door? Will he? Or is he going to hope there are a "few good men" left to come do it for him?

Thank you for your courage to do those things which others refuse to do.

220 posted on 03/08/2004 7:56:59 AM PST by beachn4fun (DemocRATS and Liberals are funny.....Haaa......haaaa.......haaaa......haaaa........haaaaa........)
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