The article I wrote recently about Sgt. 1st Class Jeff Kwiecien just got published on here "Faces of Defense" on defense.gov. Jeff is a great guy. I'm glad the story got republished.
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)
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Saturday, December 5, 2015
Μολων Λαβε: The Tattoo and the Myth
When I re-enlisted in the Army in 2007, I saw several soldiers with Μολων Λαβε tattoos and Μολων Λαβε stickers on their pickup trucks. I can read Ancient Greek so I looked up the phrase and found it attributed to Leonidas of the Spartans, the leader of the 300 defenders of Thermopylae.
According to one version of the battle, when Xerxes, King of Persia demanded the surrender of the vastly outnumbered Spartans (100,000+ Persians against 300 Spartans), Leonidas answered "Μολων Λαβε" or "Come and take them." The phrase has come to be seen as the inspiration for the sentiment "I won't give up my guns until you pry my cold, dead hands from them."
I am currently taking a course in Ancient Greek in which we are reading the Histories of Herodotus. Right now we are reading the account of the Battle for Thermopylae. Herodotus wrote about 50 years after the battle and does not mention the exchange between Xerxes and Leonidas. I asked the professor. The only account directly mentioning Μολων Λαβε is in Plutarch written more than 500 years after the battle and centuries after Greece was conquered by Rome.
So the historicity of the account is in some question. And Sparta was a state ruled by tyranny in which the majority of the people were slaves. There was nothing like the 2nd Amendment in Sparta. If Leonidas said these words, he said them as a man who represented a warrior class, an upper class caste of warrior, nothing like armed common people. Since the only mention of the phrase is five centuries after the battle, it could well be a myth.
Leonidas would roll over in his honored grave to think his words would be used as a rallying cry for rebels and anti-government conspiracy theorists. Leonidas was the government, just as every soldier in every army, especially the "well regulated militia" our founders envisioned in the Second Amendment to the Constitution.
Μολων Λαβε, on a pickup truck next to a rebel flag means the owner of the truck is an ιδιοτης, an idiot, which means a person having his own ideas apart from his community and therefore is a fool.
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For Greek Geeks: The two words in the phrase Μολων Λαβε are verbs. The aorist participle Μολων can be translated "having come or coming" and Λαβε is the imperative singular "Take."
Inflected languages can say much with few words and this phrase is a beautiful example of that. You can parse it yourself in context here.
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
How to Lose an Empire
When you hear Conservatives bemoaning America's loss of power, prestige and leadership, the blame will be somewhere other than in themselves.
The problem is in full view on every Republican debate and and from the top down in the most recent Bush administration. NOT the previous Bush administration.
The reason the Roman Empire fell will be the same reason we eventually collapse. Rome went from city to state to ruler of the known world with an Army in which every citizen served. To be a senator, to be a noble, meant fighting for Rome. From the founding of America until the end of the first Bush administration, American leaders were men who served their country. Some were great soldiers, some just showed up, but everyone served unless, like Franklin Delano Roosevelt, they could not even walk.
The beginning of the end for Rome was when the nobility stopped serving in the Army. Further deterioration came when the Army went from being mostly Roman to mostly Gauls and Goths and others. Later the Army was really a mercenary Army. The Empire split. The Empire dissolved.
Among the more than 20 candidates of both parties, all of the actual veterans have either dropped out or are barred from the debate: Rick Perry is gone. Jim Webb, the only actual combat veteran, is gone. Lindsey Graham and Jim Gilmore were barred from the "kids table" debate on the eve of Veteran's Day.
At the center of the debate stage are Donald Trump with five deferments and Ben Carson with three. They actually dodged the draft and let someone else serve in their place. John Kasich also avoided the draft. The rest of the candidates simply chose not to serve.
When the leading citizens of the a country avoid military service and the poor and minorities and immigrants are overrepresented in the Army, then the reason for decline is clear. Draft dodgers like Rush Limbaugh can make up a thousand other reasons for America's decline, but Rome fell when its leading citizens acted just like America's leaders now.
Monday, November 30, 2015
Terrorism and Gun Violence on Both Sides of the Ocean
A good friend who has been traveling to America on business for more than a decade left Brussels, Belgium, for her current trip to America just days after the Paris shootings while Brussels was still on lock down for a possible second attack.
Part of her trip to America is to visit her brother in Colorado Springs for Thanksgiving. So she was there yesterday when a gunman shot eleven people in a Planned Parenthood clinic. She will be returning to Pennsylvania before going back to Europe. I hope nothing like this happens in here in Pennsylvania.
But it could.
Because Fundamentalists of every kind share a common belief that they are right and everybody else is both wrong and can be killed for The Cause.
So murderous Muslim Fundamentalists attack the most civilized city on the planet, and a lone Fundamentalist, reportedly armed with the same weapon, the AK47, shoots eleven people on the day after Thanksgiving. Because whatever kind of nut-job Fundamentalist he is, the faux God he has made up in his head told him that killing innocent people is the right thing to do.
Sunday, November 29, 2015
Who Fights Our Wars? Flight Medic Leaving For Fifth Deployment
Nearly 100 years ago, young American men were leaving farms
across America, joining every branch of the military to fight in World War
One. One in three Americans lived on a
farm during the first decades of the 20th Century so just about
every squad of soldiers had farmer.
Today fewer than two in 100 Americans live on farms, but one
of those Americans with a small family farm is headed for his fifth
deployment. Sgt. 1st Class
Jeff Kwiecien, a flight medic with nearly 20 years of service, will be leaving
for Southwest Asia later this year. He
is deploying with Detachment 1, Charlie Company, 2-104th General
Support Aviation Battalion where he will serve as Non-Commissioned Officer in
Charge (NCOIC) of the unit.
On 4.5 acres in mid-state Pennsylvania, Kwiecien and his
family raise chickens, ducks and guinea hens.
He is considering adding goats and bees along with the flock of nearly
50 birds, but those plans are on hold until after deployment. Raising poultry for eggs and for the table is
one of several hobbies Kwiecien has, including making medical apparel, rock
climbing and playing the drums.
Kwiecien joined the Army in 1996, serving on active duty for
six years. He joined the Army National
Guard in 2003. In 19 years of service he
has deployed to Bosnia, Saudi Arabia and twice to Iraq, most recently with the
56th Stryker Brigade in 2009.
He has served on active duty with the Guard since returning from
deployment in 2010.
In a phone interview while he was on a weekend pass,
Kwiecien talked about his view of life before going on another deployment.
I am a product of….
Years of failure. I
am very persistent. I think that
persistence has paid off because after 19 years and many failures I feel like
I’ve learned a lot, and like Thomas Edison who figured all the ways not to make
a lightbulb, I move on and stick with the things that work. It’s better to try and fail than to never
give your dream a shot.
Several years ago,
Kwiecien went to a weekend-long evaluation for a National Guard Special Forces
Unit in Maryland. He got through the
first weekend and was told he could come back for the second round of
evaluations. In between he got promoted
and by taking the promotion took himself out of the program. Although he did not make it into the Special
Forces, he does not regret the attempt.
Relaxation is…
The search for serenity. Finding the situation or the place
that is completely calming. My big plan
after deployment is to go to Zion national Park in Utah with my family. Getting
away from civilization and being one with nature. Rock climbing and hiking are
things I really look forward to on visits to national parks.
You can have the best
idea…
But execution makes a good idea real. A good plan put into
motion today and refined as needed is better than a great plan that hasn’t been
started. Hesitation and indecision kill
good plans and good ideas.
There is drama…
There’s always drama it’s nothing new and it’s never going
away. I tell my soldiers keep your private life private and your professional
life professional and I won’t need to be involved in your private life.
The best lesson I
ever had…
My dad told me when I was graduating from high school and we
were looking at colleges that people should always have a skill in addition to
higher education. When he returns from deployment, Kwiecien will be starting a business
making medical clothing for first responders.
Kwiecien at work:
Thursday, November 19, 2015
Wikipedia Loves Weapons, Not Soldiers
This week I had a meeting with a "Wikipedian in Residence" at a history of science museum. I was asking her about how to put people on Wikipedia. Specifically, I wanted to write about National Guard First Sergeants and Sergeant's Majors and I thought it would be possible to create Wikipedia pages about some of the top sergeants I would write about.
Not possible.
My friend the Wikipedian went through the rules for creating a page about a person, and it is not possible to create a page about an enlisted soldier, or any soldier below the rank of Major General unless they have received the Medal of Honor or the Distinguished Service Cross.
I understand they have to have rules, but there is no weapon or vehicle that does not have a page. Also, in the context of the entire world of who gets on Wikipedia, it is very clear soldiers are not all Heroes.
Because the real heroes of our culture can and do have Wikipedia pages:
- Every professional athlete in any sport
- Every actor who has ever appeared in a movie
- Every porn star
- Every televangelist
- Every serial killer
The culture may use the word "hero" to refer to the guy who lives down the street and goes to war every few years, but our real heroes get fame and money. A first sergeant who spends a year in the desert making sure his men are ready to fight and hopefully get home, that guy does not does not meet the athlete/movie star/porn star/televangelist/serial killer threshold required to be the subject of a Wikipedia page.
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
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