Isn’t it ironic

They all have the data, they all know for a long time whats going wrong. Its not the first time, its not the second, and all of it has happened before. They are young, and angry, and for many a good reason. By now even the weirdest insults become to be found to be true.

But it still seems the role of old farts like me to remember (and go unheeded) that all these troubles have been here before, and have been analyzed and studied in detail, and have found resolution, and lament all those experiences that were forgotten, and have to be learned anew.

But this is not another round of the 18. Brumaire of Louis Napoleon, this is more of a hamster wheel of generations we’re in. And sad as it sounds, forgetting past failures and achievements is probably the best way to come round and get out on the streets. Which is where we we should be right now.

 

 

Ouchie

Looks like Obama does not quite do what people had hoped for when they elected him. Looks like civil liberties aren’t that important if it comes to imaginary, pardon, intellectual property. Looks like privacy doesnt matter if you have a business to protect (against terrorists, I presume). And of course traitors must be punished.

Currently the news about this turn to the autocratic come in fast and from several agles, and I have little more to say that I am sorry, and surprised at the extend of this development.  Of course a move to the center was to be expected, considering the republican resurge. What leaves me puzzled is the strength of the republican tea movement and the extent to which basic civil liberties seem to have been eroded by now. Not a good sign.

What he said

“Three millions of people, armed in the holy cause of liberty, and in such a country as that which we possess, are invincible by any force which our enemy can send against us. Beside, sir, we shall not fight our battles alone. There is a just God who presides over the destinies of Nations, and who will raise up friends to fight our battles for us.”

Taliban?

“Our properties within our own territories [should not] be taxed or regulated by any power on earth but our own.”

Terrorists?

“Nevertheless, to the persecution and tyranny […] we will not tamely submit — appealing to Heaven for the justice of our cause, we determine to die or be free.”

Suicide Bombers?

Nope, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Warren, respectively. Different times, same words. And I think the British generals of the time would have understood this man in his rage too well:

What I don’t think people that aren’t in the military, and aren’t in conflict, understand is that the danger of these kinds of leaks.  I think that it’s irresponsible and could very well end up in loss of lives.

Oh and don’t take that as me saying the West should pull out of Afghanistan ASAP and leave the Taliban to beat veil their wives and shoot any infidels. I have no answer to this war, really.  Damned if you stay, damned if you leave.  I am happy not to be asked for advice here.  But what I note is what war does to language and minds: It makes even otherwise smart people think like terrorists:  (and that in the Washington Post): “It is your fault that those people died, you forced us to pull the trigger. We have to kill you, too, and you are yourself to blame.”  Oh land of the free.

As if the soldiers weren’t there on their own free will, as if the terrorists weren’t there by their own decision, as if weren’t the women, the children, the old those who suffer the most.

The future of military fiction

Yesterday we went to see „Avatar“ (no not this one),  James Camerons new gazillion-budget-show of aliens and the usual military vehicles and battles. A funny ethno-circus with characters drawn with a butchers knife and a black and white-view of the world that made my brain hurt. Proof again that a gripping story told well is all it needs to make a good movie, and that the most spectacular special effects can’t make a bad story fly.

The Wrath of the Red Baron

Cameron follows the “classic” SciFi style of depicting battles in the future basically as close-up melees between mechanized humans and aliens. As soon as the movie leaves its realistic looking spaceship,  it all boils down to a melee or even hand-to-hand combat.

Needless to say, “Avatar” here follows the lead of World War II fighterplane combat as seen in countless other movies like Star Wars or both Battlestar Galactica series. I assume the logic is that you need to sacrifice realism to enhance the viewing experience, as some rockets impacting out of nowhere – i.e. with a speed quicker than the human eye – would simply dissapoint viewers and feel unemotional. Or rather produce the wrong emotions: You only get the grief and the sadness of people dying, and not the heroism the public seems to long for.

This quest for heroism borders on the absurd if you see aliens riding on horses charging mechanized infantry armed with automatic weapons – a move so suicidal it was deemed a folly way before World War I, and despite the popular image of Polish Hussars in the September of ’39, never happened since.

“Whatever happens we have got / The Maxim Gun, and they have not”

Now even written military fiction in general is prone to produce ideas that seem absurd or comical at best a couple of years later like George Chesney’s “Battle of Dorking” (published in 1871) in which Great Britain succumbs to a Prussian invasion. A century later, the militia-inspiring “Vandenberg” depicts a bunch of guerillas in the US defeating a Soviet occupation force. On the more technical side, both “amateur” and professional soldiers have a long history of failing to grasp future developments. For every Jan Gottlieb Bloch who accurately depicted the horrors of trench warfare there are three writers like Loyzeau de Grandmasion or Douglas Haig, the former insisting in “moral factors” being able to overcome machine-gun fire, the latter insisting on the viability of cavalry charges in the face of entrenched infantry – in 1922. Modern prophets or warfare haven’t fared too well, either – take for example a look at MacNamaras “whizz kids” trying to get a grip on the war in Vietnam with tables and efficiency percentages, body kills and the first widespread use of computers, a tragedy repeated in the second Iraq invasion of 2004 to no avail. On the fictional side, we return to the introduction of this post – the absurd dogfights of Star Wars or the ironclad-style braodsides that are exchanged between spaceships in Star Trek.

In the following posts, I would like to examine some threads of military development and, by simply extrapolating them, identify some unchangable basics of warfare, if any of those can be found and described.

Obama ante portas

In other countries, people might feel flattered or exited. In other countries, maybe people wouldn’t care. In the US, parents are horrified at the prospect of their president talking to their children – lest he infects them with his socialist propaganda.

And that isn’t even a joke.

The whole language form a country which under Bush spent more money on government than most European countries – if you deduce the European expenditures for public health care (which is – of course – privatized in the US). That makes, per republican definition, the US a more socialist country than, lets say, Germany.

But of course the right wing always insinuates what they would do themselves if they were in power: indoctrinating children with spiritual mumbo-jumbo, ballooning the public finances, and redistributing private wealth. So the parents flock to protest and threaten to take their children out of school for that day: They didn’t choose this segregated school to have some black guy talking to their kids all of a sudden.

Not all that new then, but what impressed me was the fact that those people seem to be that terrified that they actually loose the ability to listen to what they actually are saying. Apart from the likening of President Obama to Hitler, Kim Yong Il and the devil himself (which is again a feat worth of socialist propaganda), my favourite quote of the day is from Chris Stigal:

“I wouldn’t let my next-door neighbour talk to my kid alone”

Ah, yes. I do hope all your neighbours read this.

Watched some more old West Wing episodes two days ago, and there are a lot of things to like and adore the USA for. Clearly Texas is not one of them.

P.S.: In case you wanted to know what President Obama wanted to say, here’s some info.