Destroying the Country to Save It
Destroying the Country to Save It
In early 1968, the Vietnam War, which had supposedly been going well for years (according to happytalk media reports) suddenly and unequivocally went pear-shaped. Viet Cong forces attacked and captured several government buildings and assassinated 43 officials in the city of Bến Tre as part of the Tet Offensive, a major escalation that Hanoi hoped would inspire a popular uprising. Ten days later, U.S. forces recaptured the city, but at great cost, with hundreds dead, thousands of homes destroyed and tens of thousands made homeless. Peter Arnett of the Associated Press quoted a U.S. Army officer as saying that “we had to destroy the town to save it,” a soundbite that went viral (for its time) and contributed to the public's growing disgust with the war effort.In recent years, however, one of our two major parties has taken up the effort to bring this tactic home. The GOP has set itself up as America's savior in the war against their imagined version of socialism, but defending against this bogeyman requires such a range of suffering that one wonders if the victory is worth the cost. If we must ruin the country to save it, what do we have to look forward to when victory is finally achieved?Consider these offensive efforts on the ideological battleground:At least 23 states, led by Republican governors, have rejected enhanced unemployment benefits intended to help workers weather the pandemic economy. Led by the rallying whine of “Nobody Wants to Work,” as taped to the doors and drive-thru speakers of low-paying businesses across the country, the excuse is that we have to impoverish the country to save it. And by “save it,” I mean drive low-wage “essential” workers back into the rat race, because Karen wants her burger and she wants it now. Never mind that you have kids who are still home from school or immunocompromised elders that you have to care for or, just maybe, are taking the opportunity to look for a better job than the one where unvaccinated anti-maskers breathe in your face. Bow down before the ones you serve!
Image by Gordon Johnson, courtesy of Pixabay.com.
Sources:
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About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.