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sacrifice
by sextus empiricus
+2 Reply

Let me try to explain to Hitch, whom I usually admire, why it is said by "liberal" critics of the war that the American people have not been asked to sacrifice for the war effort. It's fairly simple: our shared treasury is a distant abstraction for most people, especially considering that in these days of Bushian tax cuts and deficits, there's no real money in it anyway. So Americans don't really see the war as costing them, personally, anything. (Maybe it will cost our grandkids something, but most of us aren't reflective enough to notice or care about that.)

Moreover, when our soldiers and civil servants, including Halliburton mercenaries, are killed doing their jobs over there, their families and friends suffer far more than we who have only lost fellow citizens. A universal draft would require quite a bit more sacrifice on the part of the American populace, and it would occasion more concern on the part of the populace for the soldiers taking their turns risking their lives. We would know more of them personally.

Finally, the volunteers in Iraq of whom Hitch thinks we should be proud are either private-industry mercenaries (who have not really brought a whole lot of credit to our nation) or, by and large, people who joined the Army hoping to learn how to use a computer on an engine of some kind and then to get a civilian job. Our service people are, on the whole, doing bravely what we have asked (and in "stop-loss" cases, shanghaied) them to do, and they deserve our respect and support. But I think that at this point the best kind of support and honor we could give them would involve pressuring the Iraqis to settle their medieval disagreements by threatening to pull our troopers out of the whole sordid mess by a "date certain."

Re: sacrifice
by MacAdvisor
I am not sure that charging something to our children and grandchildren to pay counts as *our* sacrificing something. I, unlike, Sextus Empiricus, think Hitchens is a nutter of the first order and have all but given up reading him, but this is something people of good will can disagree on. SE makes his typical thoughtful and cogent points (Frankly, I enjoy reading SE help Hitchens out more the Hitchens). Despite my lack of general enthusiasm for Hitchens, I strongly support reading and the general distribution of books. My advice to Hitchens would be to not open with something controversial and stupid (Americans at large have really sacrificed for a war they aren't paying for, but only charging) when trying to promote a good cause. Stick to the worthiness of the cause.

I also think the cost of transporting books via standard mail is going to well exceed the value of the books. Even International Media Rate to Iraq is not cheap. I am also not sanguine the books will actually reach the destination. May I suggest the good folks at Slate work with the nice people at Amazon or Borders to collect the books within the US, so we can send the books via inexpensive US Media Mail, to a central point where the books can be put into containers and shipped over there to the University. This is a good cause that Slate could spearhead. Might even get some publicity out it.
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