Why I skipped Veterans’ Day

I skipped a Veterans’ Day post, as I find it difficult to imagine what I could say in tribute to the troops that hasn’t been said by others.  But this from ThinkProgress has provoked me:

The speaker is Tennessee State Representative Womick, yes speaking on Veterans’ Day.

Womick is following in a long tradition. As California Attorney General Earle Warren (yes, the one who was later Chief Justice) put it when he advocated internment of Japanese Americans during World War II:

The Japanese situation as it exists in this state today may well be the Achilles heel of the entire civilian defense effort.

Japanese Americans went on to fight courageously for the United States in World War II, including many whose families were interned.  The Japanese American 442nd Regimental Combat Team was highly decorated regiment, including 21 Medal of Honor recipients.

Womick’s sentiments are not uniquely American.  Bashar al Assad feels the same way about protesters against his regime (as Qaddafi did), though admittedly torturing and killing them is worse than expelling them from the U.S. Army or interning them.

Worse, but only in degree. The underlying sentiment is the same: distrust of people because of who they are, no matter what they do (or do not do).  This is gross intolerance, and it is far more pervasive today than we like to admit.

I’m sure Mr. Womick gives a rousing Veterans’ Day speech.  I was glad not to post it.

PS:  As luck(?) would have it, someone sent me this today:

If you think this funny, you are on the wrong website.

I repeat: gross intolerance, far more pervasive today than we like to admit. Here is the antidote:

In case there is doubt, I am referring to the first minute or two of this clip, not the endorsement of Barack Obama in the last minute or so.

Tags : , , ,
Tweet