Wednesday, March 24, 2004

Not about heroes

Last night I headed over to A-squared again, this time to see/hear a dramatic reading of a two-person play entitled "Not About Heroes", which portrays the friendship between Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen, two of the best of the generation of British poets who were cavalierly tossed into the meatgrinder of WWI trench warfare by pigheaded generals who considered the deaths of a hundred thousand men here or a hundred thousand there to be an everyday, blase occurence. It's a powerful play, closely based on the poems and letters of the two men, and it leaves questions lingering in one's mind.

Sassoon's war poems were read and acknowledged largely because he had demonstrated downright suicidal courage under fire, thus pre-emptively absolving himself of the charge of cowardice. Owen died in one of the very last actions of the war, trying to accomplish the same thing.

Does a person need to be a military veteran, or even a military hero, in order to be considered competent to judge the desirability of war and peace?

And how can a society where decisionmakers are completely insulated from the immediate results of their decisions expect to have any rational decisions made on its behalf?

1 comment:

Felix said...

Trebor @ 8:42PM | 2004-03-25| permalink

Read "Starship Troopers" - Heinlein. Then read "The Forever War" - Haldeman. Haldeman thought a rebuttle was in order. Both address this issue. ~ Trebor

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Pablo @ 1:05PM | 2004-03-26| permalink

Contrary to popular belief, the peace churches (Quaker, Mennonite, and Dunkard) and other pacifists share a great deal of respect for soldiers and other members of the military because they have careers which may potentially require a great deal of self-sacrifice. Likewise, soldiers and other members of the miliary share a great deal of respect for the peace churches and other pacifists because they are the ones trying to keep them from having to put their lives on the line.

It's usually the people in the middle, neither the ones putting their lives on the line nor the ones with a strong moral message of peace and nonviolence, who show lack of appreciation for either of the two.

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Trebor @ 2:48AM | 2004-03-27| permalink

Next to war, there's nothing more frustrating to a soldier than to stand idle while tyrants rule. Peace without justice is slavery. ~ Trebor

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Felix @ 6:20PM | 2004-03-29| permalink

What about being pressed into military service for foolish, harmful, or dishonest reasons?

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