RANGER AGAINST WAR: You're Free if We Say You Are <

Sunday, February 17, 2008

You're Free if We Say You Are

Every war when it comes, or before it comes,
is represented not as a war but as

an act of self-defense against a homicidal maniac


All the war-propaganda, all the screaming and lies and hatred,

comes invariably from people who are not fighting.

--George Orwell

They put a parking lot on a piece of land
When the supermarket used to stand.

Before that they put up a bowling alley

On the site that used to be the local palais

--Come Dancing, The Kinks

____________

We here at Ranger took the liberty of exercising our online liberties to avail ourself of the Free Dictionary online to come up with a meaning for the word "liberty." We figured if that is part of what we're fighting for, we ought to know precisely what it means in order to know if we are accomplishing it.

The French motto is liberty, equality, fraternity, and our nation was founded on the blessings of liberty, to ourselves and our posterity. The federal government is using their liberty to cover their posteriors, acting more in the posture of libertines. So is liberty absolute, a natural right inherent in democracies? If so, are liberties being bestowed upon the citizens of the newly elected democratic republic of Iraq?

We need to define liberty before we can decide if we have it, or if we can give it, and where its limitations lie. First:
  • The condition of being free from restriction or control.
There are approximately 350,000 American troops and armed contractors roaming freely around Iraq that are controlling actions of Iraqis at the neighborhood level. What the definition calls freedom from restriction or controls the U.S. military calls successful COIN.

In fact 28,500 Iraqi citizens, none of whom invited the U.S. to enter their country as armed guests are in U.S.-controlled prisons. These people have not been charged or tried in a civil court of law. They are enjoying liberty, Texas-style.
  • The right and power to act, believe, or express oneself in a manner of one's own choosing.
"Of one's own choosing" implies an internally-generated volition, not an external, state-imposed one. The entire Iraqi endeavor is not of the choosing of the indigenous citizenry. Everything that happens in Iraq is imposed at the whim and discretion of a foreign invading army.

This army is called the Coalition of the Willing, even though it is imposing its will upon the unwilling populous of another country. This willing has a separate meaning from un-coerced and intentional willing, one uprising from the within the population of Iraq itself. It is rather the imposed will of a superior external force upon that of a subjugated one.

My Army has no legitimate right to invade and impose its will upon any country unless that country aggressed upon the U.S. first. The U.S. has historically eschewed the first strike. If we are the only superpower in the world as we are led to believe, why do we need to transgress upon our own policy? Our might should be employed legally only.

  • The condition of being physically and legally free from confinement, servitude, or forced labor.
Obviously the aforementioned 28,500 Iraqis imprisoned by U.S. forces are not free, but what about the number of citizens held by the Iraqi national government itself? Iraq has become another dirty little third world prison state financed by hard-earned U.S. tax dollars.

How "physically free" are the two million+ Iraqis forced into physical exile status? These people are living marginalized lives so that George W. Bush can say that he saved them from Saddam.
Good deal for the al-Qaeda recruiters; better deal for U.S. military companies and contractors.
  • Freedom from unjust or undue governmental control.
Iraqis cannot move without passing through armed checkpoints, subject to being flex-cuffed, hooded and photographed and iris-scanned. The Sunnis fear the government-controlled army and police, and the Shiite government fears the newly armed Sunnis allied with U.S. forces.

The new liberty is based upon paranoia, fear and sectarian violence -- all against all, and all to U.S. benefit, for the governmental control exercised is imposed by the foreign army of occupation.
  • A right or immunity to engage in certain actions without control or interference.
What actions of the Iraqi government are out of the control of U.S. forces? Iraq is not a sovereign nation as long as a foreign army occupies its terrain.

You get the idea.

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8 Comments:

Blogger Farnsworth68 said...

It's Orwellian -- if not downright Lewis Carroll stuff ("Words mean what I say they mean" -- The Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland) trying to get the wingnuttery to agree on definitions.
Sadly, they've gotten way ahead of us in the "frame game". They have a dedicated corps of journeyman wordsmiths and a lapdog lickspittle media to support them.
Indeed, Orwell was right: Control the language and you control thought.
Keep up the good work. It seems as though a number of liberal veterans are either AWOL or MIA from Left Blogistan.
Or in the sad case of Lurch over at Main and Central, passed away.
-- The F Man

Sunday, February 17, 2008 at 7:14:00 PM GMT-5  
Blogger rangeragainstwar said...

farnsworth,

Like Justice Stevens, I never considered myself a liberal. Apparently, right (as in "correct") thought is now labeled liberal. We are down the rabbit hole, as you noted.

When you carry a rifle, words aren't that important. As you get older, you must use words to form your intent. Pulling a trigger is easier than forming meaningful thoughts and intention.

What I have learned is that there are problems that cannot be solved with with rifle fire. Thank you for the welcome encouragement. We will all miss Lurch.

Sunday, February 17, 2008 at 7:25:00 PM GMT-5  
Blogger Underground Carpenter said...

Clarification of Concepts is a great place to start any search for understanding. Great post!

Sunday, February 17, 2008 at 7:50:00 PM GMT-5  
Blogger rangeragainstwar said...

UC,

When I was a young guy learning how to write operations orders, definition of terms and assumptions were always listed before we even approached the concept of operation. The mission statement led to an examination of concepts that led to a concept of operation and commander's guidance. It's so simple that even an infantry captain can understand it.

These simple ideas seem lacking from national policy plans today, therefore the plans lack clarity.

Sunday, February 17, 2008 at 8:11:00 PM GMT-5  
Blogger The Minstrel Boy said...

Indeed, Orwell was right: Control the language and you control thought.

from my own experience farnsworth, i've found that to be completely true. when i was a kid, at our reservation schools it was an automatic, zero tolerance, 3 day suspension if you were overheard speaking apache. most of the time, the curriculum of the school was all about teaching us not to be apache.

later, when i served in vietnam i was always one of a handful of americans who had managed to learn the language of the country we were fighting in. it's even worse these days. the number of americans who can speak arabic, or pashtun or urdu, or any of the dominant language groups in the regions we seem to be constantly fighting in is shameful. that lack of basic knowledge of the people we are trying to help and having to fight shows a complete lack of preparation and is a huge sign of disrespect to just about everybody over there. one of the things you begin to learn when speaking, thinking, and operating in another language is that there are concepts, idioms, and levels of meaning that have to be experienced. in apache, there are single words that can take over a page of English to translate poorly. in vietnamese there are concepts of time and geography that are built into the language but do not translate to english well.

just by being able to speak their language well enough to do a simple thing like chat about the weather gave me access to whole aspects of the daily life and emotions of the vietnamese that were denied to my comrades who either wouldn't or could not learn the language as i did.

that we have been in iraq for five full years and are still fielding an army without at least two, uniformed american soldiers who speak the local dialect well enough to make small talk and chat is one of the main reasons we are getting our asses kicked. most of our troops can't even say we're getting our asses kicked in arabic.

seems to me, if you're going to stay long enough for the ass kicking the least you should have done before starting the fight is to make for goddamned sure you know how to holler "Uncle."

but then, i'm a documented attitude case. well fucking documented.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008 at 1:36:00 AM GMT-5  
Blogger Lisa said...

MB,

"Just by being able to speak their language well enough to do a simple thing like chat about the weather gave me access to whole aspects of the daily life and emotions of the vietnamese that were denied to my comrades who either wouldn't or could not learn the language..."

What a great statement. How much fear and violence could be avoided with that basic understanding? We are the ugly Americans, toting a big case of hubris wherever we go.

You would think MI could invest in a few Berlitz courses for the troops prior to such a major and unprovoked invasion.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008 at 10:25:00 AM GMT-5  
Blogger The Minstrel Boy said...

one of the funniest things i ever heard mort sahl say happened right after the fall of the shah. there was c.i.a. spokesperson who went on to say that they had an extreme shortage of farsi translators.

mort said "you're in deecee right? you need farsi? call a cab."

Tuesday, February 19, 2008 at 11:23:00 AM GMT-5  
Blogger Lisa said...

MB,

Thanks for this blast from the past. Absolutely hysterical.

Mort Sahl was spot-on, eh?!

Tuesday, February 19, 2008 at 5:02:00 PM GMT-5  

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