Cleaning out the old notebook again…
A week after a U.S. soldier murdered 16 Afghan men, women and children, it’s mostly become a non-story among people I talk with. The news stories I see have taken a tone that seems to be looking for a way to excuse what happened, asking what could have “caused him to snap” or speculating about brain injuries from previous combat.
Honestly, I’m a little tired of people looking for excuses. What if this had been an Afghan soldier and he was in this country for some military reason — training, perhaps — and he had taken a weapon to a few homes near where he was based and murdered 16 Americans. Do you think we would all be looking for things to blame it on then? Would we be wondering about how his previous injuries or post-traumatic stress disorder or whatever had made him “snap”?
No, we would have a country full of angry people who were ready to kill Afghans and and were ready to blame all Muslims for what had happened. Why can’t we understand how serious it is when we send soldiers into other countries and they do bad things?
Every time there have been instances of U.S. soldiers committing such atrocities, it seems that there are similar justifications. When are we going to learn that when you train people to kill and then dehumanize the people they’re fighting, this is what we’re going to get? And when are we going to learn that the sooner we get out of these countries we’ve invaded, the sooner we’ll quit making new enemies?
Arrival of better financial days makes me value my painful past
‘What if I asked you to marry me right now, without knowing more?’
Inner alarm is louder every day; big changes must come to my life
Correcting an old error: there’s no such thing as ‘We the People’
Goodbye, Anne (2009-2019)
Dear Donald Trump: Want a deal? You can buy my transcripts cheap
Few people want to admit it, but our society rewards conformity
Without growth on similar paths, two people drift apart, love dies