Do We Have the Will to Fight?
That's on Mark Steyn's mind:
We've spent the last 40 years creating generations of Americans who do not think being American is worth much, so perhaps we shouldn't be surprised we've got millions and millions of alleged countrymen who will neither fight for this country's survival nor get out of the way of those who will.
Update:
Here's a perfect chance to call an act of terrorism exactly that.
The Left Wing Media and the Democrats won't have the guts to do it. Will the Republicans? Will the President?
Hugh Hewitt has much more.
So even the most powerful military in the world is subject to broader cultural constraints. When Kathryn Lopez's e-mailer sneers that "your contribution to this war is limited solely to your ability to exercise the skillset provided by your liberal arts education," he's accidentally put his finger on the great imponderable: whether the skill set provided by the typical American, British and European education these last 30 years is now one of the biggest obstacles to civilizational self-preservation. A nation that psychologically outsources war to a small career soldiery risks losing its ability even to grasp concepts like "the enemy": The professionalization of war is also the ghettoization of war. As John Podhoretz wondered in the New York Post the other day: "What if liberal democracies have now evolved to a point where they can no longer wage war effectively because they have achieved a level of humanitarian concern for others that dwarfs any really cold-eyed pursuit of their own national interests?"
That's a good question. If you watch the grisly U.S. network coverage of any global sporting event, you've no doubt who your team's meant to be: If there are plucky Belgian hurdlers or Fijian shotputters in the Olympics, you never hear a word of them on ABC and NBC; it's all heartwarming soft-focus profiles of athletes from Indiana and Nebraska. The American media have no problem being ferociously jingoistic when it comes to the two-man luge. Yet, when it's a war, there is no "our" team, not on American TV. Like snotty French ice-dancing judges, the media watch the U.S. skate across the rink and then hand out a succession of snippy 4.3s -- for lack of Miranda rights in Fallujah, insufficient menu options at Gitmo.
We've spent the last 40 years creating generations of Americans who do not think being American is worth much, so perhaps we shouldn't be surprised we've got millions and millions of alleged countrymen who will neither fight for this country's survival nor get out of the way of those who will.
Update:
Here's a perfect chance to call an act of terrorism exactly that.
The Left Wing Media and the Democrats won't have the guts to do it. Will the Republicans? Will the President?
Hugh Hewitt has much more.
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