Thursday, December 22, 2011

When Johnny Comes Marching Home...

From Committe of Safety and Outpost of Freedom:

When Johnny Comes Marching Home...








Gary Hunt

Outpost-of-Freedom

December 22, 2011







The well known song, :When Johnny Comes Marching Home Again", a song of

praise and gratitude that gained popularity in this country during the

Civil War, derived from an Irish anti-war song ("Johnny I Hardly Knew

Ye") from about 1820. At the end of both World Wars, the song came back

to us as our victorious soldiers returned from Europe, and in the

Second, Asia.



If we look at the emergence of the multitude of wars since the end of

World War II, we find that those words of pride and gratitude have lost

their meaning, or, at least, have not found a place in our hearts, as

they once did.







On December 18, 2011, "the last American Soldiers" left Iraq, after nine

years of combat; 4,500 American lives lost (not included the tens of

thousands who have been disfigured mentally, physically, or both);

$800,000,000,000 dollars spent, and, according to 86% of the people, the

goals of the "war" have been accomplished. Of course, those goals have

been constantly changing since our first incursion into the country

(ignoring, of course, the first Gulf War back in 1991). I find myself

at a loss to understand just what the goals really were.







Though the capture and execution of Saddam Hussein might be considered a

goal, it was denied as an objective, at the beginning. We never found

the weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) that were touted as the initial

purpose, along with the claims that Hussein was buddy-buddy with Osama

bin Laden -- a wholly unsupportable pretext. But, heck, we have to have

some reason to peddle our success.



However, rather than signing "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" in every

city, town and village, as was done in the past, it will only be sung in

secure military installations, as troops arrive from the third, fourth

or fifth tour of duty -- and with the inherent mental dysfunction that

has been ascribed to such service.







Soon, perhaps, we can expect the same for those who have given their

lives, "fighting for our freedoms", in Afghanistan. And, most

assuredly, we will be blessed with a list of goals accomplished in that

land of American corpses, as well. It is become blatantly obvious that

"getting bin Laden" is not the ruse for that war, though it was the only

pretext given to us after the events of September 11, 2001.







Let's venture back even further, to just a few years after World War II,

when we entered Korea to stop communist aggression (in a Korean civil

war). I still remember relatives coming home to no fanfare, with heads

down and simply a desire to hide from the evils of what they had

experienced. Essentially, Johnny had to sneak in the back door. Yet,

with only an armistice, after half a century, we still have soldiers on

duty securing the border of a foreign country, absent a surrender.

Fifty years of Johnny sneaking back to our own country, through the

garden gate rather than Main Street.







Just more than a decade later, returnees from Vietnam not only had to

sneak in the back door, they had to withstand abuse and ridicule for a

war that was lost. With so very few exceptions, the only "Welcome Home"

greetings were from one veteran to another, at least until not too long

ago.







Unlike Korea, where the war was not lost, only temporarily discontinued,

Vietnam was an unequivocal loss, though through no fault of those

soldiers who fought and suffered that "war". Still, there never have

been real accolades on behalf of those millions who served there.







Perhaps we should look a bit more closely as our soldiers return home

after any conflict. If the outpouring of gratitude and praise is

unprovoked, and from the heart, then the action they were involved in

is, without question, one of national necessity -- at least in the eyes

of our citizens. However, when the expression of gratitude and pride is

non-existent, or at best, well orchestrated by government and press, we

should, perhaps, begin to question just what and why that event

warranted our involvement, in the first place.







Let me leave you with one additional thought. The recent headlines

regarding the last troops to leave Iraq are absent an essential truth.

They should read, "the last combat troops", since we have left our

legacy in Iraq, just as the British did in the Seventeenth and

Eighteenth Centuries, the largest United States Military Air Base

outside of the United States (Latitude 30?56'12.39"N, Longitude

46?5'31.99"E, though if you look this up on Google Earth you will find

that they are using February 2002 imagery, and the runways and much of

the beginning of construction can be clearly seen). Now, just how are

they going to man this massive and expensive installation without

troops?







This can be found on line at

http://www.outpost-of-freedom.com/blog/?p=615











Gary Hunt

Outpost of Freedom







The past is infinitely important. However, it pales in importance to the

future.

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