Thursday, December 6, 2012

Damn the man!!!!!



This semester was great. I learned that if I apply myself and don’t drink and miss class I’m a good student. History and Technology was one of the best classes I have taken in a long time. I really enjoyed the open discussion, the flow of ideas and the different perspectives. I have to admit that at first I was very hesitant to sympathize with the Japanese. I was not taught to sympathize with the enemy and that is what I was always taught they were. It easier to accept the tragedy if they are dehumanized and I feel that is what American history has done to the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Now that I have a new perspective on the events that occurred I feel sorrow. It is painful to think that all that intelligence was wasted on destruction and not progress. Hopefully mankind will not destroy itself, but sadly I feel that it is in our nature to do so.  
countdown to destruction from youtube

Friday, November 16, 2012

Strangelove: Fact or Fiction?


 
As we were watching Dr. Strangelove I started to reflect on my military experience. I found that some of the issues that Kubrick was making a joke out of are really the way the military works. For example, the communication is very slow moving up and down the chain of command and gets extremely distorted as it moves. I was reminded of an exercise one of my elementary instructors performed on my class. She took student one into the hall way and told him a secret, when she came back into the class she sent the next student out, the first student was suppose- to tell the secret, come back to the class and send the next student out and so on.  I was last to go, after I was told the secret I had to come back in and announce what was told to me. What I said had nothing to do with the initial message. One would think that if an elementary class can figure out “the more people involved the more distorted the information,” then you would surely think the military has a grasp on this. Sadly they don’t.
The military should restructure based on what I call, “common sense.”  There are too many things that a guy in an office thinks are great ideas, but if he would leave his office and come to the battle field he might see how ridiculous some ideas are like wearing a reflective belt across the body in a combat-zone.  Commanders say it is for safety so other Soldiers can see you. They must not realize the enemy can see the Soldier too--again common sense.  This skit sums up the reflective belt compliments of www.youtube.com and Action Figure Therapy.
 
 
 

 
 



Saturday, November 3, 2012

The United States and JesseYoungs Vs.George W. Bush

 


In class we watched the first segment to The Untold History of the United States. The very same day when I got home I got the book from Amazon. I started reading and found I couldn’t put this book down.  Chapter 13: “The Bush-Cheney Debacle” has enraged me. I am a veteran of the Iraq war. I joined the Army with the sense of duty, honor and defending the Constitution. I lost a year of my life, my health, my family and most importantly my dog, so Bush and his buddies could make money. I found it interesting that 142 different countries want to bring Bush up on war crimes.
I need a good Pro Bono Lawyer! I would like to sue Mr. George W. Bush for a whole list of grievances. To name a few of these  grievances :Lying to the American people about Iraq and the justification for war, stripping rights of American citizens, price gouging military logistics, breach of the Geneva Convention, emotional stress, and pain and suffering.
In conclusion, Bush was and is the worst president in American history and I blame him for the pain and suffering of many people around the world. I’m glad you can sleep at night Mr. Bush. I look forward to the day that I can kick you in the balls.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

The Stats Don't Lie!!!!!

 
 
Robert McNamara was a very well educated Statesman and a patriot. During his military years and years as Secretary of Defense he had an extraordinary ability to quantify everything through statistics. When faced with tough decisions he would turn to the numbers and charts. His critics would say that he was evil for looking at people as numbers, but this was his method. His ability to draw on math to make calculated decisions without incorporating human emotions does seem cold, but rational. I support what McNamara did for the United States.
In his later years, which always seems to be the case, McNamara reflected on the decisions he had made for the defense of our country and felt he had to explain is rational for vindication. After I watched the Fog of War, I felt that he was not a cold man. I concluded that he was a brilliant mathematician that had a talent for saving American lives.   
   



Sunday, October 14, 2012

The Hiroshima Suckfest!!!!!

 
As I stated in class on Wednesday, “the book Hiroshima made me very angry.” There is no doubt in my mind that it was a well written piece of literature, from the enemy’s perspective. What angered me about the book was the sense of guilt that it made me feel and the feeling of sympathy for the Japanese civilians of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. As I read about the suffering of the people, the censorship of the American and Japanese governments I felt bad. This feeling of guilt and sympathy quickly subsided and I grew angry at myself. They were not victims they were the aggressors, I have stated that before. If I were looking to feel bad I would think about the families of the 2,402 Americans killed on December 7, 1941 when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. The Japanese should not be pitied for the bombings. We were at war, people die. That is war!
 


Friday, October 5, 2012

Mission First!!!


 

On August 6, 1945 the crew of a B-29 bomber the Enola Gay had a mission to accomplish and they executed it with professionalism, courage and precision. At 8:15 in the morning, Hiroshima time their mission introduced the world to nuclear weapons and the devastating power they unleash.  As airmen, the crew was flying thousands of feet over the target they were tasked to destroy, which removed the “personal element” of killing the enemy. In Lt. Col. Dave Grossman’s book On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society, he describes how distance from your enemy plays a role in coping mentally with what you have done. According to Grossman’s theory, the further you are from seeing the enemy die, the less personal the act is, the easier it is to cope.
 
 

On May 11, 1955, This is Your Life, a live broadcasted television program, introduced the co-pilot of the Enola Gay Robert L. Lewis to a survivor from Hiroshima, Kiyoshi Tanimoto. Lewis was an emotional wreck, the comfort of distance was removed and it is apparent when you view the show that he is horrified by what he participated in. Lewis’ emotional statement, “My God, what have we done?” demonstrates the amount of remorse that man was living with. I would never have agreed to go on that show. I hope Lewis gained some sense of comfort from that experience.   

 
youtube.com
 
 

Monday, September 24, 2012

War is Hell!!!

 
 
In John Hersey’s Hiroshima he starts out being very specific to the location and the actions of the six main characters on the morning of August 6. The story continues with what the characters experienced the day of the bombings and what they lost after the bombing. The story “humanizes” the Japanese and gives the reader a sense of sympathy for what the people endured.
After I read Hiroshima I did feel bad, briefly for the Japanese and what they went through, but that subsided quickly when I remembered that they were our enemy and they attacked the United States first. People can make the argument that the citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were innocent civilians; in war there is no such thing. If they pay taxes and support the warring government they are directly or indirectly supporting their nation’s war effort. Carl Von Clausewitz the author of On War describes how in order to defeat an enemy you need to break their will to fight. This is ultimately achieved by bombing cities and destroying infrastructure, while causing mass casualties.  


Sunday, September 23, 2012

Justified!!

 
Harry Truman had a very tough decision to make when deploying the nuclear weapons on Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Truman made the right decision to use these weapons on Japan for two reasons. First, the Japanese declared war and attacked the United States without provocation. Second, the Japanese culture and mentality does not allow them to surrender; the act is considered a disgrace. To the Japanese, honor is everything and they would rather die than be dishonored. With this mindset, if the allies had invaded the Island of Japan, there would have been ally casualties. The United States had a weapon and chose to use it, thus ending the war.
In the very beginning of Our Cities Must Fight there is a page with the words, “The enemy will have no trouble winning the next war. Too many Americans will desert their cities at the first sign of danger.” I completely agree with this statement. The short movie discusses what Americans should do in the case of an attack. Americans would have to develop a sense of “Social Responsibility,” which unfortunately Americans do not possess.  
I have no comment for Duck and Cover. The idea of surviving an atomic blast by ducking and covering is absurd.
This film was more accurate about an atomic attack.
 
 

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Was 9/11 a Conspiracy?


Image compliments of Google Images
 
After reading the New York Times article in class and discussing it, I was not surprised by what the article was saying: “The Bush Administration had warnings months in advance of the attacks on 9/11.” To defend President Bush, the information that we know the President was getting was vague and did not specify locations and times. The CIA brief only said that Al-Qaeda was planning an attack that would have “dramatic consequences.” We have to take into consideration the amount of information of this nature the President gets daily. If the President were to act on all the threats the United States receives every day, our society would be in a constant state of Marshall Law.
There is a small group of people out there called "Truthers." These people have a strong belief that the events of September 11, 2001 were staged by the United States government to implement new laws that would restrict our freedoms (The Patriot Act) and justify the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan (the War on Terror). They do present a very strong case for their argument and the actions taken by the government after the attacks do raise serious questions. One of the most popular documentaries by a group of Truthers is called, Loose Change, which can be found on Youtube.com.
 
 
 

I would like to think that the government had nothing to do with the attacks and the attacks were committed by a group of terrorists that object to the American way of life. The suspicious aspects of my personality tell me that there is more to the story than what we are told.


Wednesday, September 5, 2012

The Nuclear Playground

 
05SEP12
A Child Is Crying and Atomic Attack made me curious about the movie I had missed, Original Child Bomb, so I did a search on Youtube and found this:



After watching this clip and thinking about the material we covered in class I had an epiphany: the individuals that are responsible for making wars and developing these weapons are like small children and the world is their play ground. These people, “War Mongers,” develop a weapon (toy) and they look for an excuse to play with their toy (deploy the new weapon) anywhere they can on their playground. As with a child, the War Mongers have no regard for the consequences of their actions. It is almost as if at the War College, Field Grade Officers that “advise” the President and Congress only learn to take into account the short-term results without considering the long-term effects.