Abolish Memorial Day
When memory goes, what is there to memorialize?
We might as well get rid of Memorial Day, for all the good it does us. Originally “Decoration Day,” the last Monday in May has been the designated time for us to remember the war dead and honor their sacrifice – while, perhaps, taking in the lessons of the many conflicts that have marked our history as a free nation. In line with the modern trend of universal trivialization, however, the holiday has been paganized to mark the beginning of summer, when we get out the barbecue grill and have the neighbors over for hamburgers and beer. As for contemplating the meaning of the day in the context of our current and recent wars, that is left to those few pundits who pay attention to foreign policy issues, or else to writers of paeans to the “Greatest Generation” – World War II being the only modern war our panegyrists deign to recall, since it is relatively untouched by the ravages of historical revisionism.
Indeed, as far as our wars are concerned, the very concept of historical memory has vanished from the post-9/11 world. It seems the earth was born anew on September 11, 2001, and only ragged remnants of our mystified past – mostly from World War II and the Civil War – survived the purge. In the new version our victories are exaggerated and glorified, while our defeats – e.g. Vietnam, Korea, our nasty little covert wars in Central and South America – are not even mentioned, let alone considered in depth.
The abolition of historical memory is one of the worst aspects of modernity: it is certainly the most depressing. For the modern man, it’s an effort to recall what happened last week, never mind the last century. The news cycle spins madly and ever-faster, and the result is that we are lost in the blur of Now: for all intents and purposes, we are a people without a history, who recall past events – if we remember them at all – as one would summon a vague and confusing dream.
The Vietnam war was the last major conflict that caused us to reconsider our foreign policy of global intervention for any length of time, and at this point it has been thoroughly buried in the public imagination. For a brief moment the so-called Vietnam Syndrome was bemoaned by the political class, who complained it prevented them from indulging their desire to intervene anywhere and everywhere at will. And the memory of that futile crusade did have a restraining effect for some years – until the passage of time, the collapse of Communism, and – finally – the 9/11 terrorist attacks wiped the slate clean.
Never mind remembering the lessons of Vietnam – we’ve repressed even the bitter lessons of our most recent “past” conflict, the disastrous invasion and occupation of Iraq. No sooner had we fallen into that quicksand then we promptly forgot who pushed us in – which is why the authors of that disaster continue to function as foreign policy mavens and political seers whose reputations are considered sterling. The neocon clique, and any number of politicians of both parties who fulsomely supported that war, today act as if they have nothing to apologize for, and nothing to regret: far from being repentant, they are, if anything, proud of their advocacy, secure in the knowledge that “everyone” believed Iraq possessed “weapons of mass destruction,” and smug in the certainty that no one of any consequence has anything to gain by raising the subject.
Who really remembers the Kosovo war – that is, the war as it unfolded? We were told as many as a hundred-thousand Kosovars were being exterminated, and yet at war’s end we found a few thousand – Serbs and Kosovars in equal number – had been murdered. The trial of a man named Ratko has the War Party mythologizing that conflict, as is its wont: unfortunately for them, the kangaroo court known as the Hague Tribunal has been adjourned in that case, perhaps permanently, on account of the prosecution’s withholding of evidence. That’s par for the course: withholding evidence, suppressing truth, editing the historical record has been their modus operandi from the start, but apparently the judges had an attack of conscience in this case, and it looks like the NATO-crats won’t get their show trial after all.
Who really remembers the Korean war? Not even writers whose major interest is foreign policy are capable of recalling it as it was actually fought. Rachel Maddow, MSNBC anchor and liberal voice, recently wrote an entire book based on the premise that Republicans are primarily responsible for “the unmooring of American military power” from either constitutional or political restraints – forgetting (if she ever knew) it was Harry Truman who set that precedent when he sent US troops to Korea without bothering to ask Congress first.
I don’t blame Rachel: history is a forgotten discipline, practiced selectively when it is invoked at all. These days it is best not to contemplate the past too much, or too intently, because comparison with the present is bound to depress us. An ice-cream cone bought for a Memorial Day picnic used to cost a dime: today nothing costs a dime, not even alms to a beggar.
To recall past wars is to recall their folly, and no one wants to be reminded of their moral and cognitive shortcomings: so we resort to mythology that valorizes the victors and paints the defeated in various shades of black – and when that’s not possible, amnesia is our last resort.
So I say: let’s rid ourselves of Memorial Day, and at least be honest with ourselves in this one instance. Let’s acknowledge we’d much rather forget our history of mass murder, and rename the last Monday in May in honor of some pagan holiday – because Memorial Day is an oxymoron in a nation of amnesiacs.
NOTES IN THE MARGIN
There are always exceptions to the rule in any dark age, some who recall and preserve valuable knowledge that has been lost or reconfigured into its exact opposite: in our era of eternal warfare, surely the readers and supporters of Antiwar.com fit into that category. The polemic above is obviously not aimed in their direction.
I do, however, want to aim another sort of polemic in their vicinity, and remind them of our current fundraising campaign, which is now lumbering into its third week. While every fundraiser seems interminable and difficult, this one is definitely below average – not by much, but still below par to a disheartening degree. As the chief repository of historical memory when it comes to the folly of America’s wars, Antiwar.com is serving a special audience – one that presumably doesn’t have to be lectured on the importance of opposing our foreign policy of endless intervention, and needn’t be reminded of history’s grim lessons.
Except that you do need to be reminded – or else we here at Antiwar.com wouldn’t have to resort to hectoring you for nearly a month in order to keep our heads above water.
The good news is we’ve managed to raise $31,000 from a small group of supporters. The bad news is that we’re having trouble matching that with small contributions. I don’t like this constant dunning any more than you do, but it is absolutely necessary for us to continue our work. So please help me put an end to my hectoring and make your tax-deductible contribution to Antiwar.com today.
Read more by Justin Raimondo
- Edward Snowden vs. the Sovietization of America – June 18th, 2013
- A Note to My Readers – June 16th, 2013
- Datagate and the Death of American Liberalism – June 13th, 2013
- Smear Brigade Goes After Snowden – June 11th, 2013
- Edward Snowden, American Hero – June 9th, 2013





musings
May 27th, 2012 at 9:40 pm
Just before the slightly bizarre memorial ceremony/entertainment at the capital on Sunday, broadcast on PBS, one of the sponsors, Lockheed Martin, stated that they were "honoring" those who fought in "WWII, the Cold War and the War on Terror". What a marketing phrase: no lost wars there. No, not for Lockheed Martin, whose mission is always accomplished if they can sell what they sell. And no end in sight. The American soldier is now a member of a warrior caste.
We've all been brave in our day, most of us, in different ways. Our fathers fought at Normandy and in the islands of the Pacific. But we didn't belong to a warrior caste. That wasn't what they allegedly fought for. Nazis wanted to be a warrior caste. Militarism belonged to Germans imbued with Prussian attitudes, to Latin American dictators, to posturing Soviet premiers on parade. Not anymore, baby. Human flesh: it's what's for dinner. Charred to perfection by our master chefs at Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, etc.
What would happen to those corporations if there was no "long war" on the horizon? Why, they'd either shrivel up and die or go to work for some other country which could pay them to kill us directly. Crazy dystopias don't seem far-fetched. It used to be people projected their ideal societies. There isn't much of that going around lately. I wonder why?
jimbobla
May 27th, 2012 at 10:02 pm
I disagree that "history is a forgotten discipline". The supposed "news" organizations practice it every day. It is CNN and Fox's imperative to get their take on what is happening today out there for consumption. This is the first draft of future history. This is one of the reasons for their existence.
liberranter
May 28th, 2012 at 12:22 am
In practice, it's no longer Memorial Day, but "Worship The Troops Day 1." I add the "1" here because almost every federal holiday with an even remotely military connection to it has become "Worship the Troops Day." Independence Day, Veterans Day, and President's Day (this a holiday that most definitely shouldn't exist) have, in the last few years, devolved into paeans to armed military power and the flesh-and-blood robots who exercise it.
By the way, my television will remain off tomorrow, as it seems to become more and more difficult with each passing year to watch ANYTHING ON ANY CHANNEL worth watching that isn't chock full of warrior worship.
Phil Giraldi
May 28th, 2012 at 3:52 am
Today's Washington Post featured three full page ads from Lockheed, Boeing, and Northrop Grumman honoring their sources of income. Vietnam was far from a good war, but as an army vet from that era, I am appalled by the nonsense going on today. We were in our late teens and early twenties and most of us felt we were doing our duty in a war that nobody understood. All we wanted to do was finish up our tours and return home. We would have been embarassed if anyone called us a hero or warrior. As for understanding history, we all knew that politicians begin wars for little or no reason and then send other people's kids off to do the fighting. Nothing glorious in any of that. War is only a romantic adventure for scriptwriters in Hollywood. Honor the dead by all means but stop pretending that anyone is dying to make the world a better place.
Valerianus
May 28th, 2012 at 4:25 am
"Memorial Day is an oxymoron in a nation of amnesiacs. "
Too true! Thanks for a new tagline for Facebook, Justin.
Valerianus
May 28th, 2012 at 4:32 am
What was meant is that the targets of the Official Propaganda version of history have forgotten history as a discipline. Those with Ph.D.s in History who hold the few coveted sinecures as professional historians are the products of a rather lengthy process of weeding out independent thinkers and anyone else who cannot be counted on to regurgitate the Official Propaganda without hesitating or blushing.
Valerianus
May 28th, 2012 at 4:34 am
"But we didn't belong to a warrior caste."
It is rather obvious that "we" did desire to have a warrior caste after World War II.
richard vajs
May 28th, 2012 at 5:41 am
Occasionally, such as last Friday, a stranger thanks me "for my service" as a veteran of the VietNam War. I politely thank them for their comment but want so badly to scream out, "We lost that evil exercise, you moron and we deserved to lose!". Still, I think we originally might have had some good intentions in Viet Nam – unlike these crappy Muslim-killing ventures prodded on by Fascist Israelis that we are involved in now. There was and will be no honor, no point, no innocence, no saving virtues at all associated with Iraq or Afghanistan – only vileness.
JohnDowser
May 28th, 2012 at 6:14 am
Any disappearance of history will go hand in hand with the disappearance of a future. Since we are naturally projecting with great effort and fallibility the future based on profound understandings of our past: of how actions have consequences especially on longer terms.
It also works the other way around. Having some viable vision for the future and the ability to formulate workable, achievable long-term aims will help to understand and view the past in a more constructive light. But nowadays entities cannot think beyond the next election campaign or shareholder meeting. Which leaves us with endless trial balloons and pie in the sky projections to fill in the market slots.
To plan a future, to understand the past: they go hand in hand. Humans are essentially time beings evolving now into noon shadows?
swamiji666
May 28th, 2012 at 6:32 am
Your best article ever Justin, thank you.
Rob Payne
May 28th, 2012 at 6:45 am
Speaking of forgotten history how about the American genocide of Native Americans? Instead of doing away with Memorial Day why not change it from remembering our disgusting wars and recall instead that we live in a stolen land and the people that lived here before our arrival? Let’s recall that from the earliest times American Colonials liked to kill and that this is a great American tradition for we still enjoy killing. Americans have always been a violent bunch. Of course most will say that this is ridiculous but it bears noting that when we aren’t engaged in killing people in faraway lands we enjoy killing each other. Indeed we began by murdering Native Americans to steal their land then we attacked our neighbors after which we had a bloody civil war where we killed each other and after we tired of that particular pastime we began to attack other nations overseas. That’s America in a nutshell.
swamiji666
May 28th, 2012 at 6:46 am
There were no good intentions for the Vietnam war. 1st, there was never a south Vietnam, it was just made up for propaganda purposes. 2nd the Pentagon wanted a war in Vietnam badly and were no confident that JFK would give it to them becase he had stopped 6 wars in his 3 years as POSTUS. Finally, in an documented exchange between Air Force General Curtis[Dr. Strangelove} LeMay concerning war in Vietnam LeMay told JFK that if JFK didn't start a war there "it will be the end of his Presidency" not so veiled threat. The exchange was early in 1963. Jackie Kennedy's comment after retrieving JFK skull, "they've kill him".
461X0
May 28th, 2012 at 6:55 am
Gainesville Fl has thousands of markers for each US afghan/ Iraq war dead along 8th Ave put up by Vets for Peace. I feel guilty
John_Muhammad
May 28th, 2012 at 6:56 am
In the spirit of Justin's article, I propose that Memorial Day be renamed to reflect more accurately what it has become: Memory Hole Day.
musings
May 28th, 2012 at 7:36 am
But you'll have to admit that most Americans were happy to put war behind them after WWII – in spite of the unpleasant surprises in store for those who served in Korea (if memory serves, the draft was still in place).
I don't like the idea of a draft nor the concept that going overseas for your government is service that all Americans should be thankful for no matter what the reason for the orders. But in our era of professional soldiering (even for the lowliest recruits), we are in the mode of empire in the most obvious way. It HAS changed. Peace is not the goal. Happy prosperous families is no the goal.
musings
May 28th, 2012 at 7:44 am
Plus, most of the troops going to Vietnam were draftees.
I have a niece in her mid thirties who has gone of Afghanistan four times. She is married to an EMT (which is how they met) and her father says she craves excitement. But I look at her now, ending that period of service, and wondering where she is headed. They did not have children during this time, which is probably a good thing. Does she represent a whole generation of kids born in the 1970's? Or is she an anomaly? Is her looking at this superficially part of the way we are raising people – not to be too critical of the arbitrary choices of our leaders to put us in harm's way? Does she really believe you can fight terror the way it has been done? Does she feel it was a success or a waste of some good years? Will she just go back to saving people in highway accidents (a very necessary and important job)?
musings
May 28th, 2012 at 7:59 am
I was drawn to study the Native American issues by some genealogy, and what I came up with (how it affected my own family in the period between the Mayflower and the Revolution) was that originally the Indians were used as surrogates (as least as to my family) by three great powers fighting both in Europe and in the New World: England, France and Holland. Spain didn't play a part in the places I know about from these histories. But massacres were not just Indian driven – they had to do with very high level power politics in the reigns of Anne and Louis XIV and in the Dutch Republic. Hostages were taken, reprisals were made, boundaries shifted. The Indians were not just innocently caught in the middle, they were also pushing it and using the Europeans to help them with their own long-term enemies. This is the crucible of New England/New York/Quebec.
Other periods – Jacksonian expansion and the Trail of Tears, plus Sherman's and Sheridan's application of techniques learned in fighting the South (using grids to wipe out or remove Indians inside of their arbitrary boundaries), plus the destruction of the buffalo to facilitate railroad connections – all of that was to come, and by then, with increased industrialization, the Indians really were screwed.
I see that in New England at least, they persist in tribal areas, now anchored by casinos which give them a small share in the revenues, whereas before they may have been anchored by something else.
Their biggest burden is the white man's diet, which causes diabetes, and the white man's liquor, which many cannot metabolize too well.
There are actually a lot more native Americans coming in: they call them Mexicans and "illegals" but they come from the world the Spanish found already civilized and populous. Our forefathers here found a hunter-gatherer society, the Spanish found fully functioning agriculturalists who knew how to work precious metals but mostly used stone tools. And no, they did not worship Spaniards on horseback as gods, they thought these clever men had figured out how to ride on deer.
John Fordham
May 28th, 2012 at 8:27 am
Thanks Justin. I am reminded of what Murray Rothbard said, to the effect that there were only two just wars fought by Americans: The War for Independence from Britain, and The War for Southern Independence. And I'm not completely sure even about them. The first one was won, and the second was lost. And it goes without saying that now we have much less freedom than the early Americans had under King George.
Abolish Memorial Day « Attack the System
May 28th, 2012 at 8:46 am
[...] By Justin Raimondo [...]
worthy
May 28th, 2012 at 9:43 am
Indeed!
Would contemporary Americans have half the liberties they had under the British before the so-called Revolution, how undergoverned they would feel! Security as the be all and end all trumped freedom decisively in the New Deal; and everything since has only tightened the State's hold.
Surely, Raimondo is speaking tongue in cheek when he writes: "our history as a free nation." The apparatus of the State is free; its citizens are leashed. It's the security of the prison.
[btw, in a rare lapse Raimondo misuses the word fulsomely.]
Jamal
May 28th, 2012 at 10:03 am
Change it to a day to remember people who have sacrificed to contribute to the welfare of our society. No soldier in modern history would be included in that group of course.
Guest
May 28th, 2012 at 10:50 am
Justin:
"and only ragged remnants of our mystified past – mostly from World War II and the Civil War – survived the purge"
What does the "mystified" in "mystified past" mean?
J M Sterling
May 28th, 2012 at 10:51 am
Memorial Day is supposed to remind us of the war dead and their sacrifice. We should have learned from Vietnam, but, alas we didn't. So now we are stuck in a quagmire in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Rob Payne
May 28th, 2012 at 1:03 pm
Actually Native Americans have been making a comeback populaton-wise though most are unaware of this. The main thrust of the genocide was greed driven as Americans pushed west in search of wealth. Whatever the politics of the colonial days the majority of the land grab took place after the revolution. Israel represents a similar land grab where the existence of the Palestinians is also denied. Places like the Gaza Strip are the Israeli version of the Indian reservations. The fact is brown people are not considered to be people at all by whites so displacing them is not seen as the crime that it actually is and is important to the denial that we live with.
Michael Meo
May 28th, 2012 at 1:11 pm
Our author ought to distinguish "modernity" from "postmodernity": the first defined as going from the turn of the 20th century until about 1980; and the second extending now for the last 30 years.
Strider55
May 28th, 2012 at 2:03 pm
All true, but virtually no one knew that at the time. For example, it wasn't until long after the fall of Saigon that the facts about the Gulf of Tonkin incident were revealed. Having no other information sources other than the TV networks and wire services, Americans swallowed the "domino theory" whole and were convinced the Soviets would march through California if they weren't driven out of the RVN. One wonders how much longer the war would have gone on had the generals realized the negative effect the TV footage from the front was having on their propaganda efforts.
byrd_bahls22
May 28th, 2012 at 2:04 pm
Good points, Justin. We can honor those who have passed away by trying to prevent future wars. Many soldiers march off to battle with illusions, and hope, only to wonder what they are doing in a foreign land killing people who haven't done a damn thing to them.
musings
May 28th, 2012 at 4:29 pm
Although I have often accepted the analogy of the Israelis with the settlers of the West (and it is probably no mere coincidence that in their first "pioneering" in Israel, Hollywood was cranking out Westerns with the same theme, some written by idealistic Zionists), I do not accept that whites automatically look down on brown people. There are many shades of white, and Americans who are white aren't the only such people on earth. There is no universal bad treatment of so-called brown people. Nor are all prejudices confined to whites. I have seen so-called reverse racism in some contexts. I have personally experienced a few insults which show that racial insensitivity is not merely confined to whites. It's a new day, and new problems arise in it. There are no safe places where everybody is enlightened and tolerant, it is instead a constant struggle. When the struggle is not happening (as in Israel), people rightly feel that things are getting worse, because that is how it works: you ignore the problems at your peril.
jrs
May 28th, 2012 at 4:58 pm
Yes, let's celebrate the discovery of antibiotics or something instead.
jrs
May 28th, 2012 at 5:29 pm
For the vast wage slaving majority, it's a break from ever more hectic schedules in a an ever tougher economy. Their lives, the economy they must struggle in, is noones real priority among the powerful in Washington, but their labor can be milked for taxes, maybe half of it going to the war machine. And that's what they are for. The polls show the majority doesn't want these wars anymore, the wars continue. So they get a day off, in a land with little leisure (our surplus capacity builds armaments nothing else). Why they might even have time to read a book, and why it could even be a history book! Really it's the only time some of them would ever have to do such a thing, as if that really makes up for a lifetime of propaganda.__For the unemployed it's just another day off in an endless string, a break from job hunting. The economy consists of banksters and war spoils, not them. __For the soildiers, it's another day when many of them who have finally returned are broken completely mentally and sometimes physically as well, and that is those who haven't killed themselves, or themselves become viscious psychopaths encouraged in the craze of war.__Yea change the name, call it Start of Summer Day, or Barbeque Day, or Read a Book day, but please not memorial day
Ben_C
May 28th, 2012 at 8:16 pm
We might as well get rid of Memorial Day, for all the good it does us.
I'm going to do a little Politics 101: when trying to sell an "idea" or policy agenda, incorporating the abolition of one of the most popular holidays is generally not wise.
In line with the modern trend of universal trivialization, however, the holiday has been paganized to mark the beginning of summer, when we get out the barbecue grill and have the neighbors over for hamburgers and beer.
Don't forget a few days at the beach…but why exactly is this a "bad" thing?
As for contemplating the meaning of the day in the context of our current and recent wars, that is left to those few pundits who pay attention to foreign policy issues, or else to writers of paeans to the “Greatest Generation” – World War II being the only modern war our panegyrists deign to recall, since it is relatively untouched by the ravages of historical revisionism.
Some spin it this way, others spin it another way. I think the day allows for competing "historical revisionism" to come to the surface… So what is the problem again?
Justin Raimondo
May 28th, 2012 at 9:11 pm
What I meant is that our past is mythologized:that instead of "just the facts" what we get is a narrative, a story in which — invariably — the Americans are characterized as heroic and the "enemy" is demonized.
Justin Raimondo
May 28th, 2012 at 9:13 pm
I don't buy it. "post-modern" is a bit too pretentious: it implies that we are at the apex of human civilization and there is nowhere "higher" to go. But what comes after "post-modern"?
Mark
May 29th, 2012 at 2:00 am
I'm stealing that
Mark
May 29th, 2012 at 2:00 am
I'm stealing that
mark
May 29th, 2012 at 2:05 am
Reality is not "spin", all opinions (spin) are bit equal. The truth will set you free, spin will enslave you in velvet chains.
Mark
May 29th, 2012 at 2:07 am
Since when did soldiers, sailors become "Warriors"? I've seen this descriptor start to pop up relentlessly this year. CBS News is doing a story on "Women Warriors". Is that really how we wish to project the United States to the world?
Mark
May 29th, 2012 at 4:45 am
oops, all opinions are NOT equal…DOH! Don't while not under the influence of caffeine
Peaceful_Idiot
May 29th, 2012 at 11:52 am
haha yeah right. A soldier was on my local TV news last night raising money for something memorial day related and he started waxing poetically about how Memorial Day is a "more important holiday – patriotically speaking" than the 4th of July.
Jamal
May 29th, 2012 at 1:05 pm
In authoritarian states holidays glorifying state mandated wars are certainly more important than holidays glorifying rebellion.
Bob
May 29th, 2012 at 8:19 pm
On what planet does it take tens of thousands of dollars, every quarter, to run a freaking political website? Almost all of your "news" is just links to other websites! I'm sorry, but your claims of desperately needing money are a crock. In typical "right of Ayn Rand" form, you're exploiting those that are foolish enough to align with you.
Also, this article was just brain diarrhea, Was there supposed to be a point here, or are you just raging because of too much nationalism in furniture store commercials? What's the point of always namedropping Rachel Maddow, like she's some sort of liberal standard-bearer? She's just a talking head on a network founded by war profiteers. She self-censors like a pro, because everyone who has ever appeared on MSNBC and started seriously talking about corporate power and wealth inequality were kicked out on their asses.
I remember reading Justin back when this column was "wartime diary" and he talked about angry Serbs chasing after reporters from the US. Add a little CATO Koch money, and this is what the "libertarian" wing of the anti-war movement becomes. Pathetic.
Bob
May 29th, 2012 at 8:21 pm
You think those lil Tim McVeighs are fun now, wait a few months after they've realized that there's no jobs for them and nobody gives a crap, once they're discharged.
HELLO CIVIL WAR 2
musings
June 1st, 2012 at 10:24 am
It's too bad they didn't take this into consideration when they enlisted, though perhaps some of them did. Apart from government jobs with preferences for veterans, what do you think businesses are going to do about unemployed veterans? Either they weigh their qualifications against other equal candidates and give a preference out of some personal sense of affiliation or duty, or the veteran has to compete like everyone else in a job market where most states have more than 10% unemployment, even the world's fifth largest economy, California. If they have to train for something, if they have post-war traumas, it won't be easy. It wasn't (in spite of the extensive mythology) easy for WWII vets either, who originally faced a recession and a glut of competing demobbed workers, before the plants could start cranking out peacetime appliances and such. My dad spent a lot of time in construction in the West, even though he had a college education and wanted to be an engineer. It took him a long time to extricate himself from these necessities of the post-war economy. The Tim McVeigh's are sickos, but they don't act because of lack of job prospects.
JA1
June 1st, 2012 at 10:42 am
memorial day is a time to remember how worthless, pointless america and americans are.
R.K.
June 2nd, 2012 at 10:24 am
And the American Indians (I won't use the politically correct term "Native Americans" ) never engaged in atrocities with each other or on the settlers? They just spent their days sitting around peacefully, never attacking each other or killing each other? They never engaged in slavery? Never did anything wrong?
The U.S. Declaration of Independence says the following:
"He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions."
But please, let the political correctness and worship of American Indians go on. Certainly wouldn't want any facts to get in the way of that.
Jake
June 3rd, 2012 at 8:55 am
What a lot of crap. I wouldn't know where to begin a reaction so I'l go back to the original point of eliminating Memorial Day. Some of you need to get away from your TV sets on occasion. In the small towns of America the day is still Decoration Day–the culmination of a week's work cleaning up and replanting the local cemetery, all graves, not just veterans. Neighbors visit and, yes, have each other over for barbecues and beer (they actually know each other in small towns). Veterans are honored with small flags on their graves but the intent is to honor the veteran and his service, not the war. All of this probably seems pretty innocent if you're a NYC sophistocate and, of course, it no doubt seems pointless to honor service if you've never given any.
Dennis Revell
June 4th, 2012 at 11:32 am
"free nation"?
Where on Earth did you get that idea, Justin?
Gilbert Jacobi
June 5th, 2012 at 12:41 pm
For some time now I have been tiring of Antiwar.com's inversion of the doctrine of American exceptionalism, to the effect that there never has been a villain as odious as America, but their trashing of Memorial Day and our dead – on Memorial Day – has finally convinced me to stop taking them seriously. Ostensibly a complaint about Americans' forgetting of the historical meaning of the holiday, what the article reveals is that Raimondo and his self-righteous band of soldier-haters want to forget that there ever are Americans who pay the price for our wars. Only foreign victims are of any interest – and fund-raising utility, to this lot – the hit piece on Memorial day actually finishes with a smarmily flattering pitch to donors to keep up the good work of blackening the names of the fallen.