But Mousie, thou art no thy lane,
In proving foresight may be vain:
The best laid schemes o' mice an' men
Gang aft agley,
An' lea'e us nought but grief an' pain,
For promis'd joy!
-Robert Burns, To a Mouse
History was supposed to have
ended nineteen years ago with the collapse of the Soviet empire, when the "endpoint of man's ideological evolution" ushered in the emergence of the last man in the form of Empire Lite and the benevolent neoliberal superpower. But even post-history needs a little revisionism.
Today we find ourselves after the turning point, still standing on a precipice of our own machinations, and history still miraculously chugging along. On a day when we are told to pause for a moment during our picnics and BBQ's to remember the sacrifices made to make those feasts possible, we are nudged to in turn reflect on how we, too, have been a part of this history.
What sacrifices has the average American made during the past two decades to advance the cause of the Good Empire? It seems only yesterday we were told to go about our business and leave the
infinite justice to the pros. All that was needed was half of our taxes, so the more profits, the merrier. Some heeded the call to stand down; others sought success in the rapidly emerging
disaster capitalism complex. Still others reached into their collective memory and realized a time-honored duty to follow the wise generals into that Immemorial Theatre so that family and friends would not have to.
And now where do we, those who can of course, stand? We stand on the fruited plains, in a graveyard, side by side with our Decider-in-Chief, staring at rows upon rows of the stewards of the end of history:
"Today, we gather to honor those who gave everything to preserve our way of life. The men and women we honor here served for liberty. They sacrificed for liberty. And in countless acts of courage, they died for liberty. From faraway lands, they were returned to cemeteries like this one, where broken hearts received their broken bodies -- they found peace beneath the white headstones in the land they fought to defend. It is a solemn reminder of the cost of freedom that the number of headstones in a place such as this grows with every new Memorial Day. " The soil of Arlington and other sites is filled with liberty's defenders. It is nourished by their heroism. It is watered by the silent tears of the mothers and fathers, and husbands and wives, and sons and daughters they left behind."
Why does a man gain respect after he is dead? Shouldn't that respect be paid to the living instead? For those
soldiers still of flesh and blood, and the families of the fallen, the insults to injury keep piling up. As Bush noted, peace is to be found under the alabaster. For the rest of us, we are told to stay standing down, with our heads down to the ground.
Our fearless leader is now threatening to veto a Senate-passed bill that funds the Iraqi and Afghanistan wars into 2009 and carries no "benchmarks" or "timetables" for withdrawal. A withdrawal-tied supplemental has failed in the House of Representatives due to 132 registered "present" votes by a bloc of Republicans apparently in a similar position to the Democrats of yesteryear--attempting not to be against the troops but limiting the blank check of the military industrial complex and preventing the ramrodding of other unrelated measures through a careless legislative process.
Democrats themselves still relish playing the zero-sum game of presenting bills that have no realistic chance of gaining compromise and thus painting their opponents in a negative light. The one area where this strategy truly works is with the revamping of the
G.I. Bill to increase college benefits in tandem with rising costs of private education, at a cost of 50 billion dollars over the next 10 years, a mere drop in the bucket compared to the trillion dollar war we are still paying off on our global
credit card bill. The problem: students can't re-enlist to fight wars that have no end in sight.
So I have a few proposals this Memorial Day:
We should honor the fallen not only today, but every day, with a commitment to dismantling this bloated complex otherwise known as Empire.
We should honor the innocent lives lost with a commitment never to use pre-emptive strikes in absence of a threat, never to use weapons that cause massive collateral damage (cluster bombs, nuclear earth penetrators, unaccountable contractors on top of Bradley fighting vehicles).
And we should start making sacrifices--not just of our mental space as we politely hold back our Iraq fatigue today--but of our precious time-as-money as well. See if we can't help a veteran--it may be as simple as leading a homeless person to a shelter or buying him a lunch--after all, a third of the homeless are
veterans:
"About 154,000 veterans (male and female) are homeless on any given night and perhaps twice as many experience homelessness at some point during the course of a year. Many other veterans are considered near homeless or at risk because of their poverty, lack of support from family and friends, and dismal living conditions in cheap hotels or in overcrowded or substandard housing." (Veterans Administration)
We can also enlist so those vets can be schooled in ivory towers and not in the streets: those of us formerly unqualified, the conscientious objectors, flamboyant homosexuals, bar brawlers, the disabled, convicted felons, former residents of Guantanamo, and of course senior citizens. Because we understand the cause just as well as anyone.
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