Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Monday, August 10, 2020
America's Future: Combat Medic in Training
Monday, August 3, 2020
Academy Class Ranking Does Not Predict Success, or Morality
Class ranking at the academies do not predict success in the military or in life. This weekend I was thinking that morally class ranking can predict the reverse. The current Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, was first in his class at West Point and under his watch we have betrayed the Kurds and he betrayed his own staff during the impeachment hearings. Pompeo went on to Harvard Law School before entering politics. He is a brilliant man with the morals of a maggot.
At the other end of that academic ladder are John McCain and George Armstrong Custer. McCain was 894th of 899 in the class of 1958 at the US Naval Academy. Custer was last in the class of 1861 at West Point.
McCain became a Naval Aviator and a symbol of endurance and courage as a Prisoner of War during the Vietnam War. He famously refused to leave his comrades and endured three more years of confinement and torture for a total of six years as a prisoner. He became a moral beacon when the reputation of the American military was the lowest it has ever been, before or since.
McCain died two years ago in August of 2018, unmourned by the draft-dodging coward in the White House.
In April of 2018, Mike Pompeo was named Secretary of State. On his path to the nomination, there was a controversy about his service. He served in West Germany near the end of the Cold War from 1986 to 1991. He never served in the Gulf War, though Try Gowdy and other Republican liars said that he did. Pompeo left the Army a captain and went to law school.
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Every soldier knows the best way to be promoted is to serve during a war--the military expands the number of leadership slots, and some of the slots become vacant in every battle.
The military is very focused on procedure in peace. In war balls and bravado rule the promotion list. No other officer who ever served in the US military has risen faster than George Armstrong Custer.
In 1861, Custer graduated last in his class at West Point Military Academy. He was 22 years old. Within two months he commanded a cavalry troop at the First Battle of Bull Run in Virginia. His bravery in battle impressed senior officers and Custer got promoted so fast he was a Brevet Brigadier General within two years, promoted just a week before the Battle of Gettysburg. He commanded a cavalry brigade at Gettysburg that kept southern cavalry from supporting Major General George Pickett's ill-fated charge, helping to ensure the defeat of Pickett and General Robert E. Lee's army at that great turning point of the war.
A month later Custer was wounded at the Battle of Culpepper Courthouse. He recovered, returned to the fight and was promoted to Brevet Major General in 1864.
By the end of the Civil War in 1865, George Custer was one of the officers with General U.S. Grant accepting the surrender of Lee at Appomattox Court House.
After the war, Custer became known for defeat at the Battle of Little Bighorn, making a huge tactical error that led to he and his command being wiped out. Hubris, said the ancient Greeks, will lead those who rise the highest to fall the farthest. He was a Major General at age 26 and dead at 36.
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
Satire: Good for Your War, Not Mine
Catch-22, whether the original book, the movie or the recent Hulu series, is a satire of Army Aviation in World War II. The author, Joseph Heller, was a bombardier in B-25 Mitchell Bombers flying missions in southern Europe.
When I defended the book in a facebook discussion, my friend Joe Steed mentioned that his father, Bernie Steed, flew B-25 Bombers and on a few missions had a bombardier named Joseph Heller. The led to writing about Bernie Steed's service in the 488th Bombardment Squadron. Joe told me that Bernie had no idea that Heller wrote a book. Bernie read a few chapters and decided the book was not for him.
I just did the same with David Abrams book "Fobbit." It turns out I can read and enjoy a satire of a war before I was born, but I did not like reading a satire of a war I was in. I should have known. When I visited the Bastogne War Memorial there was an M4 Sherman Tank outside the museum painted by an anti-war group. I had also seen Soviet tanks painted with peace signs. 'That's okay,' I remember thinking, 'But I don't want to see an M60A1 Patton tank painted with that shit.' It's okay to deface other tanks, not my tank.
Sunday, July 26, 2020
"Father Soldier Son" a Documentary of the Long Aftermath of War
This week my son Nigel and I watched a documentary titled “Father Soldier Son.” The movie follows Sergeant First Class Brian Eisch on a combat deployment to Afghanistan and the tragedy his life became over the decade that followed. When I watched the movie, I remembered reading about Eisch getting wounded. I read about the deployment the First Battalion-87th Infantry in the New York Times in 2010-11.
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
When Walking I Don't Get Angry: Cycling is Different
Today I saw the surgeon who put my arm back together with plates and screws and considerable skill. Tomorrow I begin a more sadistic physical therapy with pulleys to get more range of motion from my shattered elbow.
Three times during the visit, the doc said I should ride. I have enough range of motion in my arm to ride.
But during my three-mile walk home from the visit I had another moment of the making the contrast between bicycling and walking as exercise. More than half the time I ride, someone in a vehicle--most often a plus-sized redneck in a pickup truck--will swerve at me or just pass too close. Occasionally he will yell faggot (women never do these things, only men). A few times I have been hit with bottles and cans or got a "rollin' coal" cloud of smoke from a diesel pickup.
And I get angry.
Only rarely can I do anything about it. Once more than 15 years ago I got the license plate of a guy who threw tacks in the road because he hated us so much much.
I have walked in hundreds of miles since surgery and no one has swerved at me, thrown tacks in the road, spit, called me a faggot, or any of the other things that have happened to me only in America and mostly on rural roads.
So now I am really thinking about how much I want to ride. I live in a rural area with lots of pickup trucks. Do I want to return to getting pissed off at the pathetic cowards who think bicyclists don't belong on "their" roads?
It's a question I never asked before. I love cycling so much that I thought the anger was part of riding. But knowing that I can walk and challenge myself makes the world look different. What is inner peace worth? I will be asking myself that.
Monday, July 20, 2020
Slow Walk Up My Fastest Descent
Friday, July 17, 2020
Genocide and Torture: Two Sides of Silence
I am reading a book titled "Silence" by John Biguenet. The book leads me through the pop culture, history and meaning of silence. Until March of this year, many of us spent hours in the uninterrupted noise of airports. The only relief from the announcements and crowds is in the airport lounges for business class passengers. They have silence at a considerable cost.
Some of us seek silence through meditation practice and by inhabiting quiet spaces. Biguenet tells us the history of silent reading. Then he introduces us to the Unspeakable.
The Holocaust survivor Theodor Adorno said in 1949 that after the Holocaust no one should write poetry. The Holocaust and other genocides silence millions. The Armenian Genocide silenced more than million voice. The Holocaust silenced six million. The starvation of millions in Ukraine by Stalin, the Stalinist purges, and millions killed by Mao and Pol Pot followed by slaughter in Rwanda and Yugoslavia forced silence by death.
Biguenet then says torture is the opposite of genocide. A person tortured chooses to be silent. The torture is supposed to break that silence through agony.
Genocide survivors write and speak to give voice to the millions who were silenced. Those who are tortured choose silence at a great cost, possibly at the cost of their lives.
Both genocide and torture are horrible, but for opposite reasons from the perspective of silence.
Silence is part of a series of books called Object Lessons. Short books about specific things like Phone Booths, Drones, Silence, The Wheelchair, The High Heel, Traffic and fifty other titles. My next book is about The Bookshelf.
"Blindness" by Jose Saramago--terrifying look at society falling apart
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Tasks, Conditions and Standards is how we learn to do everything in the Army. If you are assigned to be the machine gunner in a rifle squad...
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On 10 November 2003 the crew of Chinook helicopter Yankee 2-6 made this landing on a cliff in Afghanistan. Artist Larry Selman i...
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C.S. Lewis , best known for The Chronicles of Narnia served in World War I in the British Army. He was a citizen of Northern Ireland an...