As one of the comments to this hit piece asks: "Where the heck does the Globe find these people????
The author of this garbage is Stephen Kinzer. Stephen Kinzer is a visiting fellow at the Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University. Follow him on Twitter @stephenkinzer.
His basic argument is that veterans are nothing but unemployable metal cases addicted to drugs and are a scourge to this nation. However, he wants Billions more for social spending to looters and takers, and the military gets in the way of that, so he wants take military and their families down even more pegs. It is cold comfort to him (apparently) that Obama has decimated our military.
See the top story on Drudge right now, linked to Military Times. Our military morale is beyond broken.
Here is the offense cartoon the Boston Globe ran at the top of this piece:
And there is liberal hatred and arrogance in a nutshell.
Apparently, we need more "Community Organizers", not military heroes.
They are still more if a hero and have more courage than you will ever have douchebag (author)
“Placing soldiers and veterans on this kind of pedestal is a relatively new phenomenon.”
Oh.
Seriously?
It must suck to be this guy.
No appreciation for monuments, memorials, tributes, remembrances, epic poems, great literature. etc.
“Ignorance Is Strength.”
I don’t pretend any such thing
What I know with certainty is that the stench emanating from Boston should be eliminated
:: One reason Americans have come to view soldiers as our only protectors is that we have accepted the idea that our country is under permanent threat from fanatics who want to kill us and destroy our way of life. ::
Wrong, Mr. Kinzer! We have raised bar for our military because your journalist-predecessors, figuratively and literally, spit on the soldiers that returned from SE Asia. They were called “baby-killers”, “monsters” and “mercenaries of death”.
Even your demi-god Jon Cary was hailed by the press as “a hero” for throwing away (someone else’s) war medals.
Deal with the blow-back your previous generation created (@$$-HOLE).
He should support bringing back the draft.
‘One reason Americans have come to view soldiers as our only protectors is that we have accepted the idea that our country is under permanent threat from fanatics who want to kill us and destroy our way of life’
For the foreseeable future, we are under attack by the fanatics he describes. They behead Americans. No one beheaded Americans during any of the other mentioned threats. This ‘journalist’ sounds like he is nostalgic for the Viet Nam War era, when Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines were denigrated, spit on, etc. So happy for him he doesn’t have to show gratitude to our Military......they will still put themselves in harm’s way to protect his sorry a**.
"Making all veterans heroes and endlessly lavishing great praise on them is designed as a distraction from the consequence of a deeply flawed foreign policy. Constantly we hear veterans being thanked for their services, for protecting our liberties and the constitution. Nothing could be further from the truth."
Speaking as a retired veteran who remembers when people didn’t give a hoot about people in uniform I will say it’s very refreshing to see how our military people are treated today.
However, I do also cringe at the way the word hero is thrown around today. While I agree that anyone who puts on America’s uniform and agrees to go in harms way to defend our country and way of life is very honorable, I personally reserve hero for a select few.
Perhaps that is because I have met true heros during my military career. I will outline two of them, Ron Christmas retired from the Marine Corps a Lt General. He was the company commander of Hotel company, 2/5 during it’s assault on Hue City in Vietnam. This man took a grenade during that battle and won the Navy Cross for his actions in it (second highest award to the medal of honor). I remember seeing him PT with his troops and motivate them years after that terrible injury. The scar that goes down his face and his shrivelled up leg were no impediments as he urged his troops on by leading them on a run. I met Richard Pittman when I was a young NCO. At the time he was the only Medal of Honor winner still on active duty in the Marine Corps. No one would look at this humble unassuming man and think that he was a real life Rambo, charging into well emplaced enemy positions with an M-60 machine gun and taking them out.
These are just two of the men I have met that I would truly call heros. There are many out there, but I would agree with the author that not everyone that puts on the uniform deserves to be called a hero. I would reserve that honor for a select few.
They named the government workers and government-subsidized segments of the “Poverty Industry”; they are trying to put a positive spin on the Kenyan Pirate’s disastrous presidency by framing the failure in the context of a dearth of such “workers” (and funding for them).
At this point, “community organizer” is code for unskilled minority dedicated to transferring “white wealth” to non-whites (with no accountability).
On Pearl Harbor Day, the Boston Globe prints this?
“At sports stadiums, many games now include a ceremony at which a uniformed honor guard marches in formation bearing ceremonial weapons.”
Just another step in total state idolatry. All hail the savior state. More fitting for totalitarian regimes.
Perhaps soldiers are just average people, but who would you rather have living next door - one of them or the cupcake who wrote this essay?
Although it was honorable to serve in the US military in the past, I don’t think that you can make that statement today without accepting the totalitarian goals of the Federal government.
The only honorable reason to go into the military today is to learn the necessary skills and then go out to fight the emerging totalitarian federal government.
To the left Gwyneth Paltrow would be considered a hero or Heroin.
As if 9/11 never happened.
http://watson.brown.edu/people/visiting/kinzer
Biography
Stephen Kinzer is an award-winning foreign correspondent whose articles and books have led the Washington Post to place him "among the best in popular foreign policy storytelling."
Kinzer spent more than 20 years working for the New York Times, most of it as a foreign correspondent. He was the Times bureau chief in Nicaragua during the 1980s, and in Germany during the early 1990s. In 1996 he was named chief of the newly opened Times bureau in Istanbul. Later he was appointed national culture correspondent, based in Chicago.
Since leaving the Times, Kinzer has taught journalism, political science, and international relations at Northwestern University and Boston University. He has written books about Central America, Rwanda, Turkey, and Iran, as well as others that trace the history of American foreign policy. He contributes to the New York Review of Books and writes a world affairs column for the Guardian.
No one outside their circles admires Leftist scribblers and college professors, so they have to write junk such as this to make themselves feel better about there incredibly small lives. When they die, no one mourns them, and another worthless dweeb takes their slot in the Joyless Factory.
His resume is exactly what I would have expected: