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Nov-15-2009 22:43printcomments

The Propaganda of War

What we should remember most of all on November 11 every year is the terrible waste of life that wars bring, and our failure to avoid them.

Salem-News.com
Photo courtesy: neveryetmelted.com

(GOLD RIVER, B.C.) - Last week throughout many of the Commonwealth countries, the United States, France and Belgium, the day November 11 was celebrated.

Remembrance Day in Canada, Veterans Day in the United States and Armistice Day in France, it marked the anniversary of the signing of the armistice that ended the major fighting in World War One officially on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918.

It was a war that took around ten million lives, including over 60,000 Canadians and 116,000 US. The last Canadian to die was Pte. G.I. Prince who was shot at 10:58 a.m. The last US soldier was Pvt. Henry Gunther, shot at 11:01 a.m. They were shot six hours after the powers had agreed to stop fighting.

In Canada and the US this day has been set aside to remember those who lost their lives in the wars of the Twentieth Century, those who made other sacrifices in war, and are now doing so in our new wars of the Twenty-first Century.

Unfortunately this day of remembrance is also used to promote war by justifying past wars when it frames the motivation for the sacrifices in terms of defence of freedom and liberty, democracy, and a way of life.

Such promotion is pure propaganda. The First World War was billed as the war to end all wars. In reality it hardly slowed the carnage at all. The Twentieth Century, sometimes referred to as the bloody century, started off with wars in South Africa, the Philippines, China and Manchuria, just to name a few hot spots.

Song by Sting about the wasted lives of young men in WWI

The pace hardly let up, and at the end of the First World War the Allies invaded the Soviet Union to fight the Bolsheviks with the last troops not pulling out until 1925.

Between civil wars and a Japanese invasion, China was basically in a state of war during most of the century until Mao drove out Chiang Kai-shek in 1949, and hostilities were suspended in Korea.

The Second World War, an extension of the First on a much bigger scale, brought even more deaths and destruction. And, as we know all too well, it did not bring an end to war either.

Of all of the wars of the past century, only the Second World War in Europe against Hitler came even close to being about the eradication of evil and all of the other things we are always told we are fighting for. And, had those been the only issues there is doubt that the war would have been fought at all.

The First World War was certainly about none of those, a stupid blunder by all parties and the shame of every country that took part. Many of the wars of the century that did have elements of freedom involved were the usual cases of colonized people fighting to be free from the very western powers whose propaganda prominently features freedom as a major component.

Sting - Children's crusade:

Young men, soldiers, nineteen fourteen
Marching through countries they'd never seen
Virgins with rifles, a game of charades
All for a Children's Crusade

Pawns in the game are not victims of chance
Strewn on the fields of Belgium and France
Poppies for young men, death's bitter trade
All of those young lives betrayed

The children of England would never be slaves
They're trapped on the wire and dying in waves
The flower of England face down in the mud
And stained in the blood of a whole generation

We also hear about wars as protecting our way of life, which in many ways may be true, particularly if one is rich and sucking the blood of the less fortunate. One should ask, why is it that we have a way of life that requires wars? Could it be that there is something that we are doing that creates so much hostility?

Perhaps we should think about this, too, when we stop to reflect on all of those who have been destroyed by war. It is important to remember those whose lives have been wasted in war. But, it is also important not to let the propaganda turn that waste into something that it is not with silly praises about liberty and democracy and how all this bloodshed preserves our freedom.

The truth is, had we avoided many past wars, and also the ones we are now foolishly fighting, we might have a better place today instead of having squandered so many lives and resources to serve the profit and egos of a few.

What we should remember most of all on November 11 every year is the terrible waste of life that wars bring, and our failure to avoid them. We should remember that it is a day about death and deprivation, about physical and mental maiming, and about those who for whatever cause or reason, good, bad, or just foolish, were there to bear the burden.

In Canada the slogan of the day is "Lest We Forget." It is hardly enough. The Canadian War Amps have a slogan "Never Again."

It is better, and perhaps we would do well to merge them both to give the message "Lest We Forget, Never Again."

**********************************************

Jerry West grew up on a farm in Fresno County, California, and served with the US Marine Corps from 1965 to 1970 including 19 months in Vietnam with the Third Marine Division, and three years at MCAS Iwakuni where he became an anti-war organizer in 1970. He earned an Honors Degree in History at the University of California, Berkeley, and did two years of graduate study there. While in university he worked seasonally in fire and law enforcement with the US Forest Service.

After university he worked for a number of years in the international tour industry in operations and management before moving to a remote village on the west coast of Vancouver Island where he is currently the editor and publisher of The Record newspaper serving the Nootka Sound region. He is a Past President of the Northern California Land Trust, and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.

You can email Jerry West, Salem-News.com Writer, at: newsroom@salem-news.com




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G 2/3; November 16, 2009 4:25 am (Pacific time)

I felt it was more of a sacrifice to your immediate brothers in arms, who for what ever reasons enlisted or were drafted,trained to believe a weaker government striving for democracy needed our being there to garauntee their freedom,shown the film "Why Vietnam", narrated by Johnson himself and after landing in the war zone found ourselves willing to die in many cases to save or reach a wounded Marine,so nationalism played little influence after the first contact. I thought you wrote a fine piece and daily pray for peace in me and peace in the world, one day there has to be in spite of the a-holes running the show now. Semper Fi.

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Sean Flynn was a photojournalist in Vietnam, taken captive in 1970 in Cambodia and never seen again.

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