Liberty, Military Service, and Objectivism
Posted by xthinker88 9 years, 7 months ago to Government
"This is my inaugural blog post as the Liberty Pirate and it is Veteran’s Day 2015. I am an Army infantry veteran. And those that know that fact about me are likely to thank me “for my service” today. I am likely to say, “you’re welcome”. And that is the polite thing to do. However, it might come as a shock to know I did not serve you in any way. Furthermore, had I lost my life, it would not have been a sacrifice on your behalf."
BTW - this is my new blog. www.thelibertypirate.com. And this is the inaugural post. Hope to have more up this weekend and then 1-2 per week.
BTW - this is my new blog. www.thelibertypirate.com. And this is the inaugural post. Hope to have more up this weekend and then 1-2 per week.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
I agree that the draft is an abomination.
Jan
I think the sloppiness is intentional because of the situation I did not address - one where the nation sends its soldiers to a war where they are not defending the liberty of the nation. It is in the state's best interests to keep these terms sloppy and emotional lest it end up with a set of free citizens who make value judgments every time the state wants to go to war. This type of sloppy language allows them to indoctrinate people into being willing to risk their lives for values which, if they were to sit back and reflect rationally, they would not value higher than their own life.
clarity of sight and thought!!! . I always get hung up on the
statement, "I would rather die fighting than live as a slave."
I tend to agree, yet living as a slave offers a chance
for escape. . our economy and regulatory cage is a form of
slavery, IMHO, and we are obliged to seek a way to escape
or else we're settling in as slaves for the long haul.
that is the condition which I would rather die fighting
than accept. -- j
.
Hmmm...may try, "I am a Satanist." sometime (amongst my liberal friends) just to watch them laugh when I explain.
I wish I spoke Spanish as eloquently as you do English.
Jan
An Objectivist is not an uncaring island, and when he does something in his own self interest, he usually tries to make sure that undeserved harm doesn't come to others in the process. It's pretty hard to take a stand for honorable principles and not benefit others, whether they realize it or not.
As a veteran myself, Navy, I find that you expressed what I have felt for many years. I thank you for that and thanks, not for your service, but for words to my thoughts.
Sacrifice is part of life, those who believe they can go without doing so usually depend on someone elses sacrifice, therefore they exploit it. It´s sad that people should have to go off to war, in foreign lands, and sent by others who; believe or not; aren´t the Commander In Chief or any visible figure that will take the fall should things get ugly. Usually, we end up in quarrels that aren´t even ours to begin with, "in the name of Liberty and Justice for All". It used to be "in the Name of God", but after Five Hundred Years we finally put a lid on that (well, most of us anyway).
I cherish Ayn Rand and her vission on things. Especially her attack on mediocrity, which we all share here I suppose. Yet I go further by saying that, appart from an Absolute Truth; there is also an Absolute Evil. And that evil resides in us all, it´s not an entity onto its own. It´s a conflict within that can clearly distort our premises, should we lack a "Moral Compass".
Morality, so to speak; is a rare thing altogether. One might argue that it´s also relative, and depends on our upbringing and culture. For an Islamic Fundamentalist, a suicide bombing is the highest level of dignity in serving Alah. For a Nipon Citizen, suicide is also something similar in order to conserve honor. Yet I believe there is a Higher Moral than that, which goes beyond our own selves.
To me, a Righteous Person is one that builds something; that develops a true contribution to the chain of events that is mankind. Therefore, one could say Einstein, Mozart, da Vinci, Jesus, Aristotle, etc are Moral Beings. Yet Morality can too be misleading, and used to destroy. Those are the other kind of geniuses, such as Hitler, Franco, Constantine, etc.
In conclusion, it is imperative to always think. The more, the better. If you ask me "am I an Objectivist" I´d probably say "I am a Satanist", in the ethymological sense of the word Satan, which doesn´t mean Demon, but Opposer. And, today; the maximum ast of Satantry is to be a Peacefull Man. (sorry for all the mispelled words, I´m bilingual yet I seldom write in english nowadays)
You did not personally do that to me.
To blame some individual, I have Nixon, who with a photo of his smiling face, wrote, "Congratulations, you have been inducted into the armed services."
I did not believe in the domino theory reasoning behind the Vietnam War and neither did my father, who tried to enlist right after Pearly Harbor. The government thought he was more valuable doing something else, which included the production of the Corsair fighter plane.
I was born at the wrong time. 9/.11 was Pearl Harbor enough for me. But I was too old.
In any case its a heck of a lot of people to piss off at once.
A shameful process that continues still, although less overtly. For example Janet Napolitano as head of Homeland Security labelling vets as future domestic terrorists waiting for the right provocation. Disgusting and enraging to all vets, regardless of age.
I also did not think of my service as a sacrifice.
I also think this unthinking patriotism is a response to how Vietnam Vets were treated.
It is also a way to keep up the political support for the Military, which is republican welfare system.