
Another Memorial Day: boasts, insults, “self-defense strikes,” and cheap clichés from the “Secretary of War” who blabbers about dead boys “delivered from the battlefield into the loving arms of their Lord and Savior.” Save us. And perhaps we might reconsider the war to end all wars, which did not – the “endless desolation” and the trenches with skulls on the sides where “he who had a corpse to stand on was lucky”. Pat Parker: “A society that devours its youth deserves (un)questioning loyalty.”
“Happy Memorial Day to everyone,” our utterly inappropriate idiot President babbled, “including Democrats, who have no respect for our military and all the tremendous success it has had over the past year,” because clearly the best way to honor the dead is not to acknowledge their sacrifice, but to denigrate the ruined half of the country they died defending. Also at Arlington National Cemetery, there is an endlessly hollow phrase, “Wherever the American soldier (falls), he does so for the fate of a nation unlike any other – there has never been one like you.” Also, Private Bon Spears, 18,000 Williams, over 20,000 Johns, and other names, but “not many” Donalds, fell. Hah.
Adding to the eloquence of the day with a much-needed “monster truck rally vibe” was Hegseth’s best friend, inexplicably inexperienced rock star Kid Rock. Because “Tokyo Flower was not available” it was to choose By the Pentagon to honor the ultimate sacrifices of American service members in a hood, Fedora, gold chain and sunglasses, he looks like “a creature you’d expect to hiss at you from the depths of a wet trash can” and sings, “We remember the sacrifice and service of so many who are not with us today… It’s a special day. We’re thinking of them… Keep rocking the babies in the free world.”
Then there was the bombastic, vulgar, Christo-Fascist, Pete Hegseth urge We “remember that our republic was forged and bought with blood, American blood,” he clearly only stated according to his pronouns. Ever the silly clown he was, he declared “the sacred names of ages past the thirteen spirits of Epic Fury (who) answered the call when it mattered most (and) gave their last full measure of devotion,” even as he to fail Theirs is in Iranian He hits In Yemen: “They stood against the darkness of the world wearing the armor of truth (and) they rushed to the brink of the abyss so that we could walk in freedom and prosperity (and) God Almighty blessed our warriors.” Jesus is crying.
It remains unclear how many of the up to 22 million dead, military and civilian, and more than 20 million wounded, the “butcher’s bill” of World War I, were blessed by God Almighty, especially in the deserted trenches of the Western Front filled with mud, rats, mud, blood, water and disease. Perhaps the best example of “the unimaginable loss of the war” and “the unintended loss of an entire generation” is the Battle of Verdun, where the French, attacked by German forces, claimed ““They will not pass” The slogan that ultimately led to the deaths of over 700,000 people on both sides – and ultimately, massive “piles of bones”.
For many, the horrors of the “greatest fire the world has ever seen” are still vividFrom them emerged incendiary literature, both prose and poetry. Wilfred Owen It is sweet and delicious Summarizes the bitter, bloody The tone that so often prevailed among the victims of the “gutters, the choked, and the drowned”—the ignorant “Warriors of Hegseth.” “Bent double, like old beggars under sacks/Knees, coughing like goblins,” cursing, gargling, limping shoeless through the sludge, “stained with blood…deaf even to shouts/Gas shells falling softly behind them,” they reject, “the old lie: It’s sweet and fairPro Patria Mori.”
Siegfried Sassoon lived the distinguished life of a British country man. writing Poetry and fox hunting, until the beginning of World War I, when he served as an officer in the Royal Welch Fusiliers in France. He was awarded the Military Cross, was later wounded in action, and refused to fight any longer in protest against the “senseless massacre”. On June 15, 1917, he wrote:Advertisement Soldier“As” an act of deliberate defiance of military authority, because I believe war is being deliberately prolonged by those with the power to end it. “I am a soldier, convinced that I am acting on behalf of the soldiers.”
“I have seen and endured the suffering of troops, and I can no longer be a party to prolonging that suffering to achieve goals that I believe are evil and unjust,” he wrote. He explained that he was protesting “against the political errors and hypocrisy to which fighting men are sacrificed…against the deception which is practiced upon them. I also think it may help to destroy the cruel complacency with which the majority of those at home look upon the continuation of suffering which they do not share, and which they have not enough imagination to realize.”
His letter was read before the House of Commons and printed London Times. He was expected to be put on military trial. Instead, he was declared “mentally defective” and sent to Craiglockhart War Hospital, where Dr. William Rivers was tasked with recovering Sassoon’s “mind” and returning him to the trenches. The story of their real-life encounter, where Rivers came to diagnose “war trauma” and share Sassoon’s perspective, is powerfully told in Pat Parker’s historical novel. renewalthe first in a trilogy about the psychological carnage of war. “The great white god was dethroned. We assumed that we were the measure of all things,” Rivers says. “(But) nothing justifies this. Nothing, nothing.”
Siegfried Sassoon 1918 Suicide in the trenches He mourns “a simple soldier boy/ Smiling at life in empty joy” until he goes to war: “In the trenches of winter, cowardly and gloomy/ With crumbs and lice and short of rum/ Shot a bullet through his brain./ No one ever spoke of him again./ Oh crowds with smug faces and blazing eyes/ Who cheer when soldier boys pass by,/ Sneaking home and praying you’ll never know/ Hell where youth and laughter go.” So many of these young men lie in a cemetery near Ypres, where one inscription stands out in a sea of tombstones bearing the words “For King and Country.” It was written on the epitaph of his father, Arthur Young, a diplomat wiser than any empty Hegseth: “S“Sacrifice the fallacy that war can end war.”
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