On Memorial Day this year, many veterans marched in local
parades and remembered what it was like to be in the military. A number of Veterans For Peace members saw this
picture in the May 24 edition of the Juneau Empire and made the comments that
follow it.
Alaska Army National Guard
Staff Sergeant Michael Manson helps kids climb on a HumVee and handle a M249
Saw gun mounted to the roof during the Southeast Alaska Outdoor Safety Expo
sponsored by Juneau Rotary in the Centennial Hall on Saturday. Juneau Empire May
24, 2009
__________
Dear Editor:
On Sunday morning (May 24, the day before Memorial Day), the Empire did a great
service to our community by publishing a photograph of a National Guardsman, a
Humvee, an M249 machine gun, and a group of children, converging at the
so-called "Outdoor Safety Expo" sponsored by the Juneau Rotary on
Saturday, May 23.
A cynical attempt to manipulate and militarize children is the only conceivable
purpose for the National Guard to show up to display fancy killing machines,
and to encourage little kids to play with them. The M249 is a
"light" machine gun; its only purpose is to maim and kill human
beings. What in God's name did that display have to do with outdoor
safety?
Shame on the National Guard, and shame on the Juneau Rotary for sponsoring this
dishonorable atrocity.
Phil Smith, President
Veterans for Peace, Chapter 100 Juneau, Alaska
__________
Sadly though, it probably
doesn't occur to Staff Sergeant Manson that he
might well be grooming potential poster kids for the back door draft and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, if they're lucky enough
to come home
Gene Marx
Naval Flight
Officer 1969-76, Gulf of Tonkin 1971-72
__________
The disconnect of that National Guard guy from the
fundamentals of simple humanity is apparent. That a grown man would expose what
appear to be four and five-year-olds to the workings of a lethal weapon and
think it fun and cute is sad. It speaks to the pervasive militarism that
produced that young man and his distorted notions of what is and is not
appropriate play for very young children.
Woody Powell
USAF Korea 1952-53, K9 Corps.
__________
What an amazing photograph. Those kids are now marked
by some infantile fantasy that shooting this gun would be fun and that if they
join the Army they will get to do that. They have no concept of death, or that
this gun deals death, or that they and their victims will pay a terrible price
for their desires.
Paul Cox
USMC Infantry 1968-1972, Vietnam
1969-70
_________
I'd like to see Sergeant Michael Manson sitting behind the
machine gun instead of helping children sit there... and then I'd like to shoot
a few hundred rounds from another machine gun at his bullet screen, while the
kids watch safely from someplace nearby.
Maybe then he would think twice before glorifying the act of sitting behind a
machine gun to kids, without teaching the true ramifications of being an army
gunner. The children wouldn't EVER want to be there again. Shame on the
National Guard for allowing this activity with our children.
And this was at a "Safety Expo"?
Ward Reilly
U.S. Army Infantry and ex-gunner 1971-74
__________
I have worked in schools for the last 27 years, and have
witnessed an ever-increasing military presence, and acceptance of it by public
school officials.
The thorns that I have reap'd
Are of the tree I planted,
They have torn me, and I bleed.
I should have known what fruit
would spring from such a seed.
Lord Byron
Budda said something to the effect: The world is made up of
our thoughts. What thoughts will the children leave with after seeing,
touching, and being told about this article of death - except not being told of
its true purpose?
Jerry Steele
Army, Vietnam 1971-72. 101st Airborne,
and 1st Cav. Division.
__________
These young children look at most
to be 4 year olds, the NG's are doing what their bosses told them just like in
Abu Ghraib, Bagram and Guantanamo.
George McAnanama
US Army (MPC) 1966-68 Korea
__________
"Training for U.S. military imperialists of the 21st century starts
early."
John C. Reiger
U.S. Army Security Agency (ASA) 1959-62
__________
Kids this age still play with their friends,
sometimes with toy guns, but seeing children look in awe at the real
thing...makes something designed only to kill appear common, almost
friendly, like a favorite toy.
Joe Attamante
USMC 1966-68 (drafted)
__________
So many opportunities for
"personal growth." Like a job in a depression -- now, that's a great
opportunity. Can't get work, hey, join the imperial centurians and go hunt down
and kill kids out there on the fringes of empire in some place like Afghanistan where kids just like you can't find a job
either and have the opportunity for "personal growth" offered to them
by some mullah & madrassa that does the work of our Army Experience Center
or your local festival featuring cool Humvees and SAWs. Seems the world is full
of opportunities for personal growth these days. Kurt
Vonnegut summed it up best: And so it goes.
John Grant
Army Security Agency 1965-69, Vietnam 1966-67
__________
That a national guardsman
would attempt to "seduce" children this young is symptomatic of a
society in deterioration.
Robert Poteat USN, 1950-53
__________
Some actions, which can occur even during times of peace,
could easily be considered war crimes.
Perpetuating the culture of war is one of them. War is a sickness of our
society that will not be cured until we stop glorifying it, until we stop
sanitizing it, until we stop pretending it’s a game, and until we stop
indoctrinating impressionable young people.
Kim Carlyle, President
Veterans For Peace Chapter 099 Western North Carolina
U.S.
Army. 1966-69. Served in Alabama and Germany
###
Ferner is the author of “Inside the Red Zone,” a book
about his trips to Iraq,
and President of Veterans For Peace.
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