The other side of the story.
That kind of courage, which is conspicuous in danger and enterprise, if devoid of justice, is absolutely undeserving of the name of valor. It should rather be considered as a brutal fierceness outraging every principle of humanity. –
Cicero, The Offices, Book I Chapter XIX
As a sniper with the Navy SEALs in Iraq, Chris Kyle was shot twice and wounded on several other occasions. He is credited with 160 confirmed kills. He received several commendations. Of his fierceness there is no reasonable doubt. Whether his exploits display courage is an entirely separate question.
American Sniper: The Autobiography of the Most Lethal Sniper in U.S. Military History, the ghost-written memoir for which Kyle claims primary authorship, offers convincing testimony that Kyle not only failed to display genuine courage in Iraq, but was incapable of recognizing it when it was exhibited by desperate patriots seeking to evict the armed foreigners who had invaded and occupied their country.
The insurgents who fought the American invasion (and the few “allied” troops representing governments that had been bribed or brow-beaten into collaborating in that crime) were sub-human “savages” and “cowards,” according to Kyle.
“Savage, despicable evil,” writes Kyle. “That’s what we were fighting in Iraq…. People ask me all the time, `How many people have you killed?’... The number is not important to me. I only wish I had killed more. Not for bragging rights, but because I believe the world is a better place without savages out there taking American lives.”
None of the American military personnel whose lives were wasted in Iraq had to die there, because none of them had any legitimate reason to be there. From Kyle’s perspective, however, only incorrigibly “evil” people would object once their country had been designated the target of one of Washington’s frequent outbursts of murderous humanitarianism.
I Admire the courage of young men sent to do a dirty job. I DO - *ACTIVELY* - support the troops (Our Boy is one of them!) while opposing the war!
ReplyDeleteTHIS however makes me sick.
THIS is the excessively-self-esteemed, video-game culture now grown to ... what?
Adulthood? Not really very "adult." Nor can I call it "Manhood"...
I guess this: "THIS is the excessively-self-esteemed, video-game culture now grown to 'LEGAL-adulthood' will have to suffice...
We're going to pay a very heavy price for producing and entire generation of sociopaths...
We're going to pay a very heavy price for producing and entire generation of sociopaths...
ReplyDeleteIndeed. Where is your son stationed?
What he & other like him fail to understand if they did the same thing here, the reactions would be the same. We would do anything to stop them.
ReplyDeleteDD is right for the past 15 years all these kids have been playing Call of Duty, Splinter Cell, etc. With the advance of graphics and programming the reality of the gaming is almost real and distorts their perception and how they process this is real world events.
We would do anything to stop them.
ReplyDeleteJust like in the Late Unpleasantness. The often quoted affair when a Yankee asks the Confederate soldier why he was fighting, he replied "Because you are down here."
He's a Navy Lt. (up for Lt.Commander) deployed to Bahrain but currently in Kuwait. They move around the region a bit in the job he's deployed to do... His "permanent" DS is in San-Dog...
ReplyDelete