And we have some truly fertile ground here. I can't say I'm saddened by the responses to my posts though. To some degree, I'm encouraged. I fully expected those who profess to know what freedom is to provide the humus layer of shouted-down speech and simplistic notions of right and wrong. Those arguments defeat themselves and make my points for me. There's nothing disturbingly unsettling about such predictability.
What I'm encouraged by, is the near universal acknowledgment that our veterans were pawns in a rich man's game, that war is little more than greed through violence and that man does not want war. Now, if only those of you who seem to know this intimately, could shake the shackles of conformity and live these ideals for the other 364 days that Chelsea invokes, perhaps we could make a real difference in society?
It's a challenge, I know. It seems a tall order to expect humans to behave in a manner that is consistent with what they know deep down inside. I mean, we all know that our 'way of life' was handed to us on the backs of billions impoverished and millions murdered by our guns and bombs, but hey, if we can get a double latte at the drive through, well, we'll raise a vente to them on Remembrance Day and get back to work, right?
Or do we really care? Can we demonstrate this belief, so buried underground, in everything we do each day? Can we never take a day off and live these ideals at the checkout counter, the voting booth and on the street beside our fellow men? What a sacrifice that would be, and how we might honour those who truly gave so much!
Just think how much you would have to give up to reject the imperialism and violence that gives you what you take for granted? A day without spending? A vote with your heart?