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Stop Begging Obama and Get Mad
By Chris Hedges
The right-wing accusations against Barack Obama are true. He is a
socialist, although he practices socialism for corporations. He is squandering
the country’s future with deficits that can never be repaid. He has
retained and even bolstered our surveillance state to spy on Americans. He is
forcing us to buy into a health care system that will enrich corporations and
expand the abuse of our for-profit medical care. He will not stanch
unemployment. He will not end our wars. He will not rebuild the nation. He is
a tool of the corporate state.
The right wing is not wrong. It is not the problem. We are the problem. If
we do not tap into the justifiable anger sweeping across the nation, if we do
not militantly push back against corporate fraud and imperial wars that we
cannot win or afford, the political vacuum we have created will be filled with
right-wing lunatics and proto-fascists. The goons will inherit power not
because they are astute, but because we are weak and inept.
Violence is a dark undercurrent of American history. It is exacerbated by
war and economic decline. Violence is spreading outward from the killing
fields in Iraq and Afghanistan to slowly tear apart individuals, families and
communities. There is no immunity. The longer the wars continue, the longer
the members of our working class are transformed by corporate overlords into
serfs, the more violence will dominate the landscape. The slide into chaos and
a police state will become inevitable.
The soldiers and Marines who return from Iraq and Afghanistan are often
traumatized and then shipped back a few months later to be traumatized again.
This was less frequent in Vietnam. Veterans, when they get out, search for the
usual escape routes of alienation, addictions and medication. But there is
also the escape route of violence. We risk creating a homegrown Freikorps, the
demobilized German soldiers from World War I who violently tore down the
edifice of the Weimar Republic and helped open the way to Nazism.
The Afghanistan and Iraq wars have unloaded hundreds of thousands of
combat troops, suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder or major
depression, back into society. According to a joint Veterans Affairs
Department-University of San Francisco study published in July, 418,000 of the
roughly 1.9 million service members who have fought in or supported the wars
suffer from PTSD. As of August 2008, the latest data available, about a
quarter-million military veterans were imprisoned on any given day—about
9.4 percent of the total daily imprisoned population, according to the
National GAINS Center Forum on Combat Veterans, Trauma and the Justice System.
There are 223,000 veterans in jail or prison cells on an average day, and an
unknown number among the 4 million Americans on probation. They don’t
have much to look forward to upon release. And if any of these incarcerated
vets do not have PTSD when they are arrested, our corrections system will
probably rectify the deficiency. Throw in the cocktail of unemployment,
powerlessness, depression, alienation, anger, alcohol and drugs and you create
thousands, if not tens of thousands, who will seek out violence the way an
addict seeks out a bag of heroin.
War and conflict have marked most of my adult life. I know what prolonged
exposure to industrial slaughter does to you. I know what it is to confront
memories, buried deep within the subconscious, which jerk you awake at night,
your heart racing and your body covered in sweat. I know what it is like to
lie, unable to sleep, your heart pounding, trying to remember what it was that
caused such terror. I know how it feels to be overcome by the vivid images of
violence that make you wonder if the dream or the darkness around you is real.
I know what it feels like to stumble through the day carrying a shock and
horror, an awful cement-like despair, which you cannot shed. And I know how
after a few nights like this you are left numb and exhausted, unable to
connect with anyone around you, even those you love the most. I know how you
drink or medicate yourself into a coma so you do not have to remember your
dreams. And I know that great divide that opens between you and the rest of
the world, especially the civilian world, which cannot imagine your pain and
your hatred. I know how easily this hatred is directed toward those in that
world.
There are minefields of stimulants for those who return from war. Smells,
sounds, bridges, the whoosh of a helicopter, thrust you back to Iraq or
another zone of slaughter, back to a time of terror and blood, back to the
darkest regions of your heart, regions you wish did not exist. Life, on some
days, is a simple battle to stay upright, to cope with memories and trauma
that are unexplainable, probably unimaginable, to those seated across from you
at the breakfast table. Families will watch these veterans fall silent, see
the thousand-yard stare, and know they have again lost these men and women.
They hope somehow they will come back. Some won’t. Those who cannot
cope, even by using Zoloft or Paxil, blow their brains out with drugs, alcohol
or a gun. More Vietnam veterans died from suicide in the years after the war
than during the conflict itself. But it would be a mistake to blame this on
Vietnam. War does this to you. It destroys part of you. You live maimed. If
you are not able to live maimed, you check out.
But what happens in a society where everything conspires to check you out
even when you make the herculean effort to integrate into the world of malls,
celebrity gossip and too many brands of cereal on a supermarket shelf? What
happens when the corporate state says that you can die in its wars but at home
you are human refuse, that there is no job, no way to pay your medical bills
or your mortgage, no hope? Then you retreat into your private hell of rage,
terror and alienation. You do not return from the world of war. You yearn for
its sleek and powerful weapons, its speed and noise, its ability to abolish
the lines between sanity and madness. You long for the alluring,
hallucinogenic landscapes of combat. You miss the psychedelic visions of
carnage and suffering, the smells, sounds, shrieks, explosions and destruction
that jolt you back to the present, which make you aware in ways you never were
before. The thrill of violence, the God-like power that comes when you can
take a human life with impunity, is matched against the pathetic existence of
waiting for an unemployment check. You look to rejoin the fraternity of
killers. Here. There. It no longer matters.
There is a yawning indifference at home about what is happening in Iraq
and Afghanistan. The hollow language of heroism and glory, used by the war
makers and often aped by those in the media, allows the nation to feel good
about war, about “service.” But it is also a way of muzzling the
voices that attempt to tell us the truth about war. And when these men and
women do find the moral courage to speak, they often find that many fellow
Americans turn away in disgust or attack them for shattering the myth. The
myth of war is too enjoyable, and too profitable, to be punctured by reality.
And so these veterans nurse their fantasies of power. They begin to hate those
who sent them as much as they hate those they fought. Some cannot distinguish
one from the other.
As I stared into the faces of the men from A Gathering of Eagles on
Saturday at a protest calling for the closure of the Army Experience Center in
Philadelphia, I recognized these emotions. These men had arrived on black
motorcycles. They were wearing leather jackets. They had lined up, most
holding large American flags, to greet the protesters, some of whom were also
veterans. They chanted “Traitors!” at the seven people who were
arrested for refusing the police order to leave the premises. They sought
vindication from a system that had, although they could not admit it, betrayed
them. They yearned to be powerful, if only for a moment, if only by breaking
through the police line and knocking some God-hating communist faggot to the
ground. They wanted the war to come home.
It is we who are guilty, guilty for sending these young men and women to
wars that did not have to be fought. It is we who are guilty for turning away
from the truth of war to wallow in a self-aggrandizing myth, guilty because we
create and decorate killers and when they come home maimed and broken we
discard them. It is we who are guilty for failing to defy a Democratic Party
that since 1994 has betrayed the working class by destroying our manufacturing
base, slashing funds to assist the poor and cravenly doing the bidding of
corporations. It is we who are guilty for refusing to mass on Washington and
demand single-payer, not-for-profit health care for all Americans. It is we
who are guilty for supporting Democrats while they funnel billions in taxpayer
dollars to sustain speculative Wall Street interests. The rage of the confused
and angry right-wing marchers, the ones fired up by trash-talking talk show
hosts, the ones liberals belittle and maybe even laugh at, should be our rage.
And if it is not our rage soon, if we continue to humiliate and debase
ourselves by begging Obama to be Obama, we will see our open society
dismantled not because of the shrewdness of the far right, but because of our
moral cowardice.
Chris Hedges spent two decades covering wars in Latin America, Africa,
Europe and the Middle East and is the author of “War Is a Force that
Gives Us Meaning.” His latest book is “Empire of Illusion: The End
of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle.” His weekly column appears
Mondays on Truthdig.
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