Dick Whitman
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 1, 2009
- Messages
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Thought-provoking piece in (on? at?) Salon.com, inspired by the subtle disapproval the writer felt when he elected not to donate to "the troops" at a local convenience store:
http://www.salon.com/2013/08/25/no_thanks_i_wont_support_the_troops/
Such troop worship is trite and tiresome, but that’s not its primary danger. A nation that continuously publicizes appeals to “support our troops” is explicitly asking its citizens not to think. It is the ideal slogan for suppressing the practice of democracy, presented to us in the guise of democratic preservation.
He also hits on something that we have discussed on here before, which is the NFL's co-opting of the armed forces, particularly at the Super Bowl:
No televised sporting event escapes celebration of the troops. Networks treat viewers to stars and stripes covering entire football fields, complementing the small-but-always-visible flags the studio hosts sport on their lapels. The national anthem is often accompanied by fighter jets and cannon blasts. Displays of hypermasculine prowess frame the reciprocal virtues of courage and devotion embedded in American war mythology.
I would recommend to everyone here last year's novel "Billy Lynne's' Long Halftime Walk," which depicts brilliantly what a group of soldiers deal with after being lionized by the public.
http://www.salon.com/2013/08/25/no_thanks_i_wont_support_the_troops/
Such troop worship is trite and tiresome, but that’s not its primary danger. A nation that continuously publicizes appeals to “support our troops” is explicitly asking its citizens not to think. It is the ideal slogan for suppressing the practice of democracy, presented to us in the guise of democratic preservation.
He also hits on something that we have discussed on here before, which is the NFL's co-opting of the armed forces, particularly at the Super Bowl:
No televised sporting event escapes celebration of the troops. Networks treat viewers to stars and stripes covering entire football fields, complementing the small-but-always-visible flags the studio hosts sport on their lapels. The national anthem is often accompanied by fighter jets and cannon blasts. Displays of hypermasculine prowess frame the reciprocal virtues of courage and devotion embedded in American war mythology.
I would recommend to everyone here last year's novel "Billy Lynne's' Long Halftime Walk," which depicts brilliantly what a group of soldiers deal with after being lionized by the public.