essaysbysean.blogspot.com
Despite a certain
classic poem, featured in my previous post, I don’t expect very many people to
know about mercenaries, of course not. But I sure wish everyone would know
about “journalist ethics.” Maybe most people get it, I can’t exactly judge….
Meanwhile, before I cover media, I must say:
I get a strong
impression that most leftists —and eco freaks, longhairs, sandal-wearing
vegetarians, commie-pinkos and—you know, the whole nine yards—I think they can’t
judge whether the rest of us, in or out of uniform, know whether war is
glorious or not, or judge whether soldiers/sailors/air crew are arrogant or not…
I would tell
leftists that at one level, our servicemen and women are humble: My dad, who
served in WWII, referred to his medals as his “gongs.” (Clanking like bell)
While mercenary
troops might need to believe in glory, to do what they do, risking their warm
blood for cold cash, free men can effectively oppose them, and Nazis, and
Communists—the whole eight meters—without too much belief in glory. Here’s what
George Orwell said (How unlike an Islamic state) about the British people:
QUOTE
No politician
could ever rise to power by promising them conquests or military “glory,” no
Hymn of Hate has ever had any appeal to them. In the last war the songs which
the soldiers made up and sung of their own accord were not vengeful but
humorous and mock-defeatist. The only enemy they ever named was the
Sergeant-Major.
One thing that has
always shown that the English ruling class is morally sound is that in time of
war they are ready to get themselves killed. Several dukes, earls and whatnot
were killed in the recent campaign in Flanders. This could not happen if these
people were the cynical scoundrels they are sometimes made out to be.
UNQUOTE
(When Orwell said
“Flanders” he meant the WWII retreat to Dunkirk: He was writing during the
Battle of Britain.)
Things haven’t
changed since my dad’s war. I read that when the common Argentine soldiers were
standing in the cold windy Falklands, with more shells, more bullets, more weapons
and more men than the British would send against them by sea, they nevertheless
knew they had lost as soon as they heard the British were going to fight. This,
I read, was partly because they knew that in Britain the upper class, even the royal family, believes in military service. The implication being: Britain
had effective armed forces.
The Junta of Argentine
colonels, replacing their community’s strength and fairness with corruption and
weakness, ruling at the price of weakening the backbone of the common man, faced
the classic dilemma: choosing a strong democracy or a weak anything else, a
dilemma at least as old as Confucius.
The sage was well respected
in ancient times. Back when China was a number of small kingdoms, Confucius traveled
around to various courts as a consultant. Each king wanted Confucius to use his
wisdom to strengthen the state’s agricultural and military might. As for defence, Confucius
always advised each king he would be unconquerable
if he gave his people a fair deal: The very peasants of the fields would rise
up to fight. History is clear: No king ever took his advice.
The old Chinese
states are still with us today: States like Kuwait where the rich young men, in
exile in London, were notoriously going out to discos every night rather than
enlisting for Desert Shield to take back their country from Iraq.
Or States like South Vietnam, where, of
course, the army officers would come from the educated class. In the Vietnam
War, by the time the Americans had lost several generals the Army of the
Republic of Vietnam had lost no senior officers at all, no majors or colonels,
let alone any generals. Fighting “for their country,” the South Vietnamese went
from one enemy contact per 100 patrols, to one per 200 patrols. The U.S?
One contact per 38 patrols. This according to Senator Robert Kennedy, at the
height of the Vietnam War, shortly before he was assassinated…
When reading the
history of that war, our sympathies are with the South Vietnamese, of course,
not the communists, but we must admit the South Vietnamese, in contrast with
the North’s motivated “people’s army,” may
have deserved what the Carthaginians
deserved: National defeat. The Vietnam years may have been an agony for us, but
they weren’t a total waste because at least we learned something about whether
people will fight or not if they don’t have a fair democracy—right?
Well. A fair and ethical
democracy needs an ethical media. Everybody knows that.
Being ethical
means: If a reporter has a science degree, and if there’s a “needless” outbreak
of measles at Disneyland then of course the Center For Disease Control should
be quoted. And then, even if the reporter privately thinks, “May the anti-vaxxers
rot in hell!” the anti-vaxxers (ant-vaccination) will also be quoted. The
reporter will show faith in free speech.
Putting it another
way: Journalists are taught to have balance
as part of their ethos, in order to avoid
editorializing. For example, suppose a river is to be dammed for
irrigation, and the reporter heartily agrees with all the government experts,
and with all the farmers, who think the dam should be built. Nevertheless, the
reporter should seek out someone who disagrees, perhaps a university soil
expert (such as my roommate who could tell you a thing or two about salt leaching up
after such dams) and present both sides, and then allow an informed public to
decide.
As for the
intersection of media ethics and soldiers, recently I read yet another US newspaper
article implying the Iraqi army will finally become effective, real soon,
because the Iraqis will be receiving more
training from the U.S. army. When I observe the poor news reporter has not been
able to ethically “balance” his article, because he or she has been unable to
find anyone to quote who disagrees that for the Iraqi army training is the issue, then I have to
wonder if Vietnam, for Americans, somehow never happened—such a waste… Such a waste.
…Sometimes, late
at night, I reflect that, like the British, we don’t need to glorify war, but
we do need to be appreciative of our land, sea and air armed forces, of civilians
in the Peace Corps, and of local citizens willing to volunteer and participate.
Because if we don’t deserve them, we won’t have them.
From my “couch,”
(rocking chair) by my “entertainment center,” (cathode tube TV) I say, “Let’s
not be like the leftists.” When we watch TV shows glorifying war, the Soprano crime
family, young rebels, or some galactic space mercenaries, then let’s heartily enjoy
our fantasy… yet still keep our sense of reality.
Here’s a poem fragment
about non-arrogant soldiers.
They are somewhere “east of Suez.” I imagine
them temporarily sheltering on the lee side of a hill, sheltering not from less
rain but from less bullets.
“The ‘Eathen”
by Rudyard Kipling
And now the hugely
bullets, come pecking through the dust,
An’ no one wants
to face ’em, but every beggar must;
So like a man in
irons, which isn’t glad to go,
They move ’em off
by companies, uncommon stiff and slow.
Here’s the link for the whole poem; this verse is at line 55
Sean Crawford
Calgary
March
2015
Footnotes:
~Orwell’s essay, The Lion and the Unicorn, has one of my
favorite opening lines: “As I write this, highly civilized human beings are flying
overhead, trying to kill me.” Here is a link to a lengthy Part One of his
essay.
~ For my reasoning
on TV violence, using the lens of Terminator 2: Judgment Day, see my essay of July 2013, Morality, Boys and Hollywood.
~My university,
even after the fall of the Berlin wall, still had a weekly Marxist-Leninist
study group, (They’d get angry if you simply called them “communists,” as they
wanted nothing to do with Moscow’s party line, you know, the
Stalinist-Khrushchevists) but I was attending another campus group at the same
time: I regret missing out on a bit of history.
A couple posts
back I mentioned some Mainland Chinese causing trouble at Harvard, at the model
United Nations. To the communists, both here (as I remember well) and over in
China, if the non-communist side is disrupted and prevented from speaking, then
that is “free speech.” The Americans, complained one Chinese person, don’t
believe in free speech. Here’s a link to that quote.
~Here’s a less
scary glimpse of the horror of communism, less scary because it documents an easing of conditions: the Khrushchev
Thaw.
~Incidentally, most
of the hits for my old November 2012 essay on Media Ethics (One of my top ten posts, by hit count) are from
Mainland China. Maybe Chinese student-journalists are preparing for China to
thaw during our lifetime… do you think so?
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