essaysbysean.blogspot.com
Couch Potatoes
Interlude
Volunteering
Footnotes
COUCH POTATOES
No sir, when it
comes to North American folks, these days, I’m not very proud of my fellow
citizens.
Strange. Only a
few weeks ago I was seeing the silver lining in the cloud of the dark new U.S. presidency,
soon after the election results were in.
I thought: Wow,
Americans could now be like real citizens: they could be engaged. And yes, suddenly
folks were sending money to the American Civil Liberties Association, and
protesting with each other, and deliberating with each other.
I thought: Now
they could be like those folks in the Norman Rockwell paintings on the covers
of the old Saturday Evening Post,
rather than be year-round couch potatoes, only stirring off their couches
briefly, to cast their votes a few years in the future. Well sir, you can forget
that idea: My thin hope has drained away.
Now I can see the self-satisfied
elite dismissing potato farmers and factory workers—that is to say, would-be factory workers—as “bigots” for
voting for Trump. Can’t a worker be a bigot and
also feel a great crushing despair from seeing how “left wing” Bernie
Sanders can’t succeed, while a “right wing” Hilary Clinton can win the party
nomination? This while despairing that Hilary would come into power like the
rock song, Here comes the new boss, same as the old boss, we won’t
get fooled again? As I see it, it’s
perfectly OK to vote for Hilary as being your best choice, at the end of the
day, but can’t you also get out of
your bubble and ask what is making your fellow Americans despair so deeply? Or
is asking, and humbly listening, just too much engagement?
After the election
I was happy to see people were reading again. Certain books are back to selling
again, certain old documentaries are being rebroadcast, with people relating
them to the Trump presidency. It’s as if Americans, normally so isolationist in
both space and time, were at last taking an interest in history. Engaging their
ability to compare and contrast.
Just the other
day, in Larry King’s memoirs, I read of a Jewish photographer who wanted to
snap a picture of Hitler, back before the war. But the photographer flinched,
lost the shot, because Hitler looked right at him with such frightening hatred…
And now a few people are fancying “the Donald” to be another Hitler. Queerly,
this reminds me of the time of the Gulf War in Kuwait, when a few mothers told
me their children were afraid of WWIII starting up. This while it had already
been many years since any new schools were built with an air raid tower like mine
had. No doubt the kids got their fanciful ideas off of their parents. Sometimes
I think, “All is fanciful vanity.”
I can remember reading
a thick book, soon into the Iraq affair, back when American still didn’t have
the guts—as Iraqis would warn each other, before going for job interviews with the
Americans—to honestly call what they were doing an “occupation.” I read how the
“cost saving” measure of using armed male contractors, specifically the
Blackwater company, was singlehandedly undoing all the efforts of other Americans to “win the hearts and minds” of
Iraqis, efforts to get Iraqis to believe in democracy over traditional Arab
dictatorship. But Blackwater got away with it: I guess because regular Americans
don’t read books. Or aren’t engaged. As I recall, it was several years before the daily newspapers began to expose the harm
Blackwater was doing. And by then the Americans were pulling out.
I read an
excellent thin book, soon after the pull out, exposing American jaw-dropping
levels of incompetency, as bad as anything you’d see in the third world. This by
a writer who moved unarmed among the Iraqis, simply observing and asking
questions. Too bad I can’t find any congressional reports on Iraq. Why didn’t
Americans know about their own failures back then? Partly because visiting
congressmen repeated the history of Vietnam. In Nam, being a puffed up Ugly American meant meeting Saigon elite,
the officials and generals, but not caring enough to get to know ordinary
people out in the rice paddies. (Here’s a link to a news article, the Ugly American parts are lower down) I think at the very least the State Department should
have been on the ground in Iraq, if only in a valued
consultant capacity, if not bloody well put in charge! ... Folks at State know
social studies.
In theory, State understands
the challenge of building nations and democracy more than folks with guns or
the diplomats. After all, relying on the army and embassy hadn’t worked in
Saigon. There the efforts to “win the hearts and minds” were sadly ineffective.
How sadly? The communists could sneak ample troops and munitions into Saigon in
advance of their Tet Offensive—a shocking Pearl Harbor—without anyone informing
the elite … although common bar girls did warn working class American G.I.s.
Here’s where I despair:
Citizens of the U.S. can be heard being fanciful back during the Gulf War, before Iraq, and then being fanciful after the Trump election, but in
between, when it was truly important to apply practical “cold equations” for building
a nation… Nothing. I would hear more from a seashell.
Today my glass is
half empty as I lay depressed in bed. My conclusion? As long as it doesn’t
require them becoming informed, U.S. citizens eagerly crave a “sense
of security” from standing up close to shoot fish in a barrel. That’s the time
they’ll be fanciful, kidding themselves, pretending to be engaged—but they’ll never
engage for anything that requires any real bravery for making any real long
term effort.
Such a dreadful
pity.
INTERLUDE
At least I can still
feel respect for any Yankee who votes, even if he votes “wrong.”
As for election
day, one of my little joys in life is going to vote at a school or a hall, and,
once there, enjoy seeing all my plain fellow-citizens with enough “get up and
go” to get off the couch and vote. Too bad some computer nerds, the potatoes
who like couches for video gaming, are proposing to wire every home so you can
vote from your couch. I’m moving to a cabin in Alaska if that ever happens…
Which brings me to my Free Fall post:
VOLUNTEERING
Free Fall Prompt- we self-chosen few
Ah, we band of
brothers, we few, we who shall count ourselves blessed… or something like that,
was what Shakespeare said, just before the Battle of Agincourt.
And I must admit,
one of my joys in life has been to be among small bands of volunteers.
As an older teenager,
when most were twiddling their thumbs at game arcades, warm and dry and small,
my few were in the military reserves digging trenches in the rain and charging across
no man’s land. If you’ve ever played soccer in the rain, then you know the joy.
You know.
My first “blessed
few” were in junior-high (middle) school. The rules had been abruptly changed; suddenly
nobody needed a second language to go to university anymore. “Hurray!” said all
the smart academic kids, and they dropped French like a hot potato, like a
chore, like a sandbag they had just carried for years across a long field.
Then we
self-chosen twelve, six of us in each of only two classes, carried on.
We went to a
French restaurant together. We were treated as kindred learners by our
teachers, as respected soldiers to be led from in front of us, not as a chain
gang to be pushed from behind. Not as sullen kids with a teenage pout. Is it
mere coincidence that most of us (including me) were also on the school track
and field team?
Now I am with
those who tackle the dread of public speaking, once a week. Now I am with those
who tackle the chore and burden of writing, without any editor to set a
deadline, without a piano teacher telling us to practice every day. We meet
weekly to venture into unknown territory, with no assurance of any destination.
Call it free fall. Like free climb, only without the security of a peak to
serve as a compass.
How can I not give
and share respect and affection, for we few? Easier to watch DVDs and play
video games and tread with oblivious headphones. Easier, but not the same.
In adult life,
there will always be a place on the team, a spot in the squad, space for an
easel on the riverbank. You can look at art, or you can make it. Play computer
games, or program them, be a leader, or a led. I’m not a leader, not me, but I
know whom I want to be among as I follow.
I want to be with
volunteers, for they have strength for their burdens. A joy of life. A joi de vivre.
Sean Crawford
During a March
Calgary snowfall
In the middle of
history
2017
~I've noted before that if a U.S. school is not directly allowed to teach Vietnam, and lessons of that war (to apply to, say, the war on drugs) then they can do an end run by teaching the book The Ugly American. Lesson plans are available.
~It was the Tet Offensive, with enemy bodies at the very walls of the U.S. embassy, that caused highly respected Americans, such as TV journalist Walter Cronkite, to suspect the Pentagon-Embassy view that we were “winning the war” as being a dirty falsehood.
~My French class also went to a French radio station, where we said merci at getting a free record. I guess I could link to a good French song, like an Edith Piaf piece, but no: Here’s a link to a nice music video about Shakespeare’s Battle of Agincourt, over in France, sung by Amy to the tune of ‘As tears go by’ by Marianne Faithful.
~It was the Tet Offensive, with enemy bodies at the very walls of the U.S. embassy, that caused highly respected Americans, such as TV journalist Walter Cronkite, to suspect the Pentagon-Embassy view that we were “winning the war” as being a dirty falsehood.
~From Larry King: “The
photographer saw Hitler in the street and focused the camera just as Hitler
turned to look straight at him. The look in Hitler’s eyes made the photographer
flinch and he was unable to snap the photo. A second later he recovered and he
took the picture as Hitler turned away. The photographer never forgot the
feeling.” Truth Be Told, page 157-58,
2012 edition.
~Thick book: Fiasco: the American Military Adventure in
Iraq, 2003 to … by even-handed military reporter Thomas E. Ricks, a
finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
~Thin book: Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside
Iraq’s Green Zone by Rajiv Chandrasekaran
~ Even at the
height of their Iraq War Effort the average U.S. citizen could offer merely a
sound bite to describe democracy. What sort of arrogance made the American
people believe they could be so uninformed about democracy, during War Time,
and yet be able to teach it to another country? A War Effort is not rocket science. Back during my dad’s
war, even less literate citizens could go see a documentary on Why We Fight. (Made largely with actual
Nazi film footage)
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