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Shepherd
11-10-2009, 04:44 AM
Friends,
I have been disturbed by what happened at Ft. Hood and what it says about America. Perhaps it is a sign that the violence will get even worse. Or perhaps it could be a "tipping point" that wakes up more people, especially if we speak up about it.

I began writing about Ft. Hood yesterday, having been partly raised near there in Texas in a military family. I have been up since 2:30 a.m. writing again. Following and attached is a rough draft of what I will eventually submit for publication. I send it to you with a request that you criticize it before I begin submitting versions for publication. What would you add, change, or subtract to improve it? If you make comments within the text, please do so in capital letters, or in some way that I can clearly distinguish your words from mine. I eventually need a short version of some 600 words to submit to newspapers, as well as a longer version for magazines, so I especially need your help on what to cut. I genuinely welcome your comments. What would your own perspectives on this matter be?
Thanks for any help,
Shepherd

Oklahoma City, Columbine, Virginia Tech and Now Ft. Hood

Draft: Not for Publication, yet, Criticisms solicited, to [email protected]

By Shepherd Bliss, (1180 words)

Oklahoma City (1995--168 killed), Columbine High (1999--12 killed), Virginia Tech University (2007--32 killed), and now Ft. Hood (13 killed). What do these memorable places have in common?

They are each sites where Americans killed Americans in a society that visits such violence upon people far away in places like Iraq and Afghanistan and here at home. A connection exists among these places, which indicate a pattern. They are among the growing signs that we should attend to and analyze carefully, now, before additional warnings happen and perhaps even get worse.

They may indicate a trend that will heighten. Or responses to Ft. Hood could be what is described as a “tipping point” in the best-selling book of that title by Malcolm Gladwell. Others describe such a time as a “turning point.”

Where might terror strike next and who might be the perpetrator and victims? More students, soldiers, or another group? How is such domestic terrorism bred and what can we do to interrupt it?

At Oklahoma City it was an anti-government activist at a federal building who detonated the bombing. At Columbine it was two high school students who pulled triggers on other students and a teacher. At Virginia Tech it was a college student killing other college students. At Ft. Hood it was an Army physician killing five other psychotherapists and an additional eight people, and wounding some 31. It is too easy to just blame these individuals.

The American shoot-‘em-up approach to solving problems is not new, especially in Texas and the remaining Wild West. If we study these recent tragedies we could learn lessons from them so that other such incidents are less likely to happen.

Rather then merely indict the individuals that committed these heinous crimes, we could benefit from looking beyond that to consider our own responsibilities as citizens to reduce such violence and improve the social context that spawns it.

It is easier to demonize the killers, rather than try to understand why these desperate men felt driven to such violence that would likely take their own lives or lead to extreme punishment. Their anguish and agony must have been substantial.

Collective introspection and deep investigation would be helpful. Punishment of the perpetrator alone is unlikely to break the cycle of violence that Americans carry abroad and here at home. A careful study of patterns would be more helpful.

The recent violence at Ft. Hood and in the town of Killeen, where it is located, is not new. The area “has been beset by crime and violence since the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq began,” according to the Nov. 10 “New York Times.” “Reports of domestic abuse have grown by 75 percent since 2001,” it continues. Soldiers come home from combat and beat their wives, sometimes to death. 76 suicides by personnel assigned to Ft. Hood have occurred since 2003.

There is no one to blame other than Americans. We did it. Not Muslims, Arabs, or outside “terrorists.” Not enemies outside. “We have met the enemy, and it is us,” asserts a famous line from a Pogo cartoon from my childhood. It is time for us to reflect on the context that breeds such self-destructiveness.

“Have you heard of the horror at Ft. Hood?” another Sonoma State University professor called me the night of the shooting. Like me, she is part of a military family. Military family members tend to monitor such incidents and alert each other to tragedies. They hit closer to home for us. One of my SSU students emailed me that her best friend called from Ft. Hood during the attack and he could hear gunfire in the background. Since I was raised partly on a military base in Texas close to Ft. Hood, this strike was too close to home for comfort.

When I opened my emails, a member of the Veterans Writing Group that I have been a part of for 15 years had sent me links to articles. From Friday to Sunday I mainly read and clipped many articles, while continuing my regular life. I was especially struck by the heroism of civilian Sgt. Kimberly Munley, who took the shooter down, even as she went down with four bullets in her body. Go, girl, go!

It was not until Sunday night that I really felt the horror. I became numb, immobilized, depressed.

Fortunately, earlier that day I was able to send off emails to my Sonoma State University students putting Ft. Hood on the lesson plan for my “War and Peace” class. There is a tendency to deny such matters, but I want to help my students gently get beyond denial to express their feelings, develop opinions, and engage in critical thinking. Their responses were to be attentive and think deeply about the implications of Ft. Hood and what is says about us as a nation.

“It takes a little while before the grieving starts,” the last quotation in a Nov. 8 Press Democrat article sent me down. The words are those of Col. Bill Rabena, who runs the new post-Ft. Hood massacre Spiritual Fitness Center. It offers counseling, soothing music, a religious library and meditation space, among other services, to help survivors cope with psychological trauma.

While I was in the Army during the l960s and the American Wars in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos we did not have such centers. So I have felt mainly alone during the some 40 years after my discharge and having to de-militarize myself and deal with my own trauma from being raised military and then serving.

The Veterans Writing Group, other vets groups, and the helpful Vets Center in Rohnert Park, as well as individual counseling have all helped me over the years. But I am still recovering and easily triggered, especially by loud sounds.

We need to work to enhance the safety of our students, soldiers, and citizens as a whole, or future similar incidents are likely to consume more lives. Public places—such as schools, government buildings, and even military bases—have become less safe during this 21st century.

Perhaps Ft. Hood can awaken us to the pain and suffering of our military personnel and the lives that they touch overseas and in their families. On the other hand, a Nov. 16 “Newsweek” column on the new book “American Homicide” by Ohio State professor of history and criminology Randolph Roth concludes “that gun and ammunition sales are up nearly 50 percent from a year ago.” What does that say about our future?

Now is a time to grieve our national losses at Ft. Hood and work to minimize such losses in the future. Such collective grief can inform and educate us.

(Shepherd Bliss is a former Army officer and member of the Veterans Writing Group (Veterans of War, Veterans of Peace (https://www.vowvop.org)). He currently teaches part-time at Sonoma State University, has owned Kokopelli Farm in Sebastopol since l992, and has contributed to over two dozen books. He can be reached at [email protected])

Clancy
11-10-2009, 07:53 AM
Friends,
I have been disturbed by what happened at Ft. Hood and what it says about America. Perhaps it is a sign that the violence will get even worse. Or perhaps it could be a "tipping point" that wakes up more people, especially if we speak up about it...

Great writing as usual.

I'm disturbed too. On average, 276 people are shot every day in America, approximately 85 of them die. Every day.

I agree that Ft Hood was horrific, but since that day last week, another 1146 people have been wounded and another 510 people have been killed with guns in this hyper-violent nation;
Nidal Malak Hasan | gun reform | Barack Obama | Bernard Lagan (https://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/americas-gun-outrage-276-people-killed-or-wounded-a-day-20091109-i4gj.html?autostart=1)
and that ongoing carnage is largely overlooked while our media and war machine makes hay off the Ft. Hood shooting.

If that's not surrealistic enough, consider that the Ft Hood shooter bought the guns he used at "Guns Galore" in Killeen, Texas.

handy
11-11-2009, 08:14 AM
Aahh, veteran's day. The annual reminder of the shame and stupidity of my youth. Well written, Shepherd. Here is another take on the horror that is Fort Hood.



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Foreign-Policy Blowback at Ft. Hood

by Jacob G. Hornberger


Amidst all the debate over whether the Ft. Hood killer is a terrorist, murderer, enemy combatant, traitor, sleeper agent, or insane person, there is one glaring fact staring America in the face: what happened at Ft. Hood is more blowback from U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, specifically the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. Even at this early stage of the investigation, the evidence is virtually conclusive that the accused killer, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, was motivated to kill U.S. soldiers at Ft. Hood by deep anger and rage arising from the things that the U.S. government has been doing to people in the Middle East for many years.

Oh, I can already hear the interventionists exclaiming, “You’re a justifier! You’re justifying what he did!”

Isn’t that what they said after the 9/11 attacks, when we libertarians pointed out that those attacks were motivated by the deep anger and rage that had boiled over in the Middle East because of what the U.S. government had been doing to people there?

“You’re a justifier,” the interventionists cried. “You’re justifying what they did.”

In fact, isn’t that what they said after Timothy McVeigh’s terrorist attack on the federal building in Oklahoma City, when we libertarians pointed out that he had been motivated by deep anger and rage arising from the federal massacre of U.S. citizens at Waco, including innocent women and children?

“You’re a justifier,” they said. “You’re justifying what McVeigh did.”

The reason the interventionists go off on this “You’re a justifier” tirade is that the last thing they want to be confronted with is the wrongdoing of the U.S. government and its responsibility for the blowback – the retaliatory consequences – from such wrongdoing.

Think back to the 1993 terrorist strike on the World Trade Center. The following is an excerpt from a statement made by convicted terrorist Ramzi Yousef to the federal judge at Yousef’s sentencing hearing. As you read what he said, see if you detect anger and rage within this man:

“You keep talking also about collective punishment and killing innocent people to force governments to change their policies; you call this terrorism when someone would kill innocent people or civilians in order to force the government to change its policies. Well, when you were the first one who invented this terrorism.... And now you have invented new ways to kill innocent people. You have so-called economic embargo which kills nobody other than children and elderly people.... You are the ones who invented terrorism and using it every day. You are butchers, liars, and hypocrites.”

That terrorist attack at the World Trade Center took place in 1993. That was after the Persian Gulf War, when the Pentagon knowingly and intentionally destroyed the water-and-sewage facilities in Iraq with the specific intent of spreading infectious illnesses among the Iraqi people. It was also the second year of the brutal sanctions that were contributing to the deaths of Iraqi children, many from infectious illnesses.

That was what Yousef was referring to when he mentioned the “embargo which kills nobody but children and elderly people.” That’s just one of the things that the U.S. government was doing to people in the Middle East that were causing people’s anger and rage to reach a boiling point.

Here at The Future of Freedom Foundation, we repeatedly warned – prior to 9/11 – that unless the U.S. government ceased and desisted from its wrongful conduct in the Middle East, the United States would be hit with another terrorist attack. We were repeatedly pointing out that the anger and rage were going to reach another boiling point, just like they had in 1993, and culminate in a terrorist attack on American soil.

Of course, one might say, “But the Pentagon, the president, and the CIA probably weren’t reading your essays prior to 9/11 and so they wouldn’t have known about such warnings.”

Fair enough. But surely many of them were familiar with the works of Chalmers Johnson, professor emeritus at the University of California, San Diego, who served as a consultant for the CIA from 1967–1973. In his book Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire, Johnson made the same point – that U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East was inevitably going to lead to retaliatory terrorist blowback on American soil. His book was published in March 2000, more than a year before the 9/11 attacks.


Did the U.S. government learn anything at all after the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center? Did it change its interventionist foreign policy? Did it stop doing bad things to people in the Middle East?

On the contrary, it not only continued its interventionist policies that had precipitated the 1993 retaliatory blowback on the World Trade Center, it expanded upon them for the next several years, until the anger and rage in the Middle East once again reached a boiling point that erupted in full force on 9/11.

For example, consider the brutal sanctions that were contributing to the deaths of countless Iraqi children that had filled Ramzi Yousef and many other people in the Middle East with anger and rage. Those sanctions continued … and continued … and continued, with the death toll mounting year after year after year – along with rising anger and rage.

Click here for a compilation of articles that provide an excellent summary of the nature and consequences of the sanctions on Iraq.

By the mid-1990s the death toll for Iraqi children from the sanctions had reached the hundreds of thousands.

What was the response of U.S. officials to this rising death toll? Nothing but callous indifference. They simply didn’t care. In 1996 U.S. Ambassador to the UN Madeleine Albright expressed the official position of Washington when she responded to a question put to her by “Sixty Minutes” regarding the half-a-million children who had died as a result of the sanctions: She said that such a price was “worth it.” By “it” she meant U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, specifically the attempt to oust Saddam Hussein from power and replace him with a U.S.-approved ruler.

In other words, U.S. officials were willing to trade the lives of any number of Iraqi children, no matter how high such a number might reach, to achieve the U.S. foreign policy goal of “regime change.”

The brutal sanctions continued throughout the 1990s and in to the 2000s, amidst a growing outcry all over the world, not to mention the rising anger and rage within people in the Middle East. In order to cover its wrongdoing, the U.S. got the UN to enact the infamous oil-for-food program, a crooked, corrupt, bureaucratic, socialistic government program that was nothing more than a charade to cover up the rising death toll and the callous indifference to the horror.

In 2000, in a crisis of conscience, two high UN officials, Hans van Sponeck and Denis Halliday, even resigned their posts in protest to what was being described as genocide. “As a UN official, I should not be expected to be silent to that which I recognise as a true human tragedy that needs to be ended,” von Sponeck stated. "How long the civilian population, which is totally innocent on all this, should be exposed to such punishment for something that they have never done?" he asked.

Those brutal sanctions continued all way up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Unfortunately, that wasn’t all that the U.S. government did after the Berlin Wall collapsed, when people were questioning the necessity of an enormous Cold War military and military-industrial complex. The U.S. government also did such things as station troops on Islamic holy lands, knowing full well the adverse effect this would have on the sensitivities of Muslims. It also enforced the brutal no-fly zones over Iraq, which were used as the excuse to kill more Iraqis – zones which, by the way, had never been approved by either Congress or the UN. And on top of all this death, destruction, and humiliation, was the never-ending unconditional financial and military foreign aid given to the Israeli government.

I ask you: What better formula for boiling anger and rage among people in the Middle East than that?

Did anything change after the 9/11 attacks? Did the U.S. government learn any lessons from those attacks? Did it abandon any of its interventionist policies?

On the contrary, it not only continued the policies that had given rise to the anger and rage, it used the attacks to expand the interventionist policies.

First and foremost, the 9/11 attacks were used as the excuse to effect regime change not only in Iraq but also in Afghanistan.

In other words, what 11 years of brutal and deadly sanctions had failed to achieve in Iraq – regime change – was quickly achieved with a military invasion and occupation.

The U.S. government had provided Afghanistan with millions of dollars in foreign aid immediately prior to the 9/11 attacks, with full knowledge that Osama bin Laden was based in Afghanistan. But when the Taliban refused to comply with President Bush’s unconditional and non-negotiable demand to turn bin Laden over to the United States without the production of any evidence, the U.S. resorted to invasion and occupation to oust the Taliban from power and replace them with a U.S.-approved ruler, in the process killing countless Afghanis who had absolutely nothing to do with the 9/11 attacks.

Compare the deadly and disastrous consequences from the military approach used to try to capture bin Laden to the criminal-justice approach that was used to capture Ramzi Yousef. Yousef today is residing in a U.S. federal penitentiary as a result of the sentence he received by a federal judge who treated terrorism as the federal crime it is. Also, no one was killed by U.S. bombs in Pakistan, where Yousef was ultimately arrested.


Compounding the invasions and long-term occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan has been the callous indifference to the loss of innocent life in those two countries. Year after year, U.S. officials have professed to be killing and destroying out of love for the Iraqi and Afghani people. Sure, we’re killing you but it’s all for your own good because in the long run, you will have democracy and so it will all be worth it, U.S. officials have exclaimed. Don’t fret about losing your mother or father, or your bride, or your sister, or your friend. In the long run, you will thank us because you will find that democracy will be worth it.

What could be more wrongful, more immoral than that – the intentional killing of human beings in order to achieve a political-welfare goal? And keep in mind that there has never been an upward limit on the number of Afghanis and Iraqis who could be killed to achieve “democracy.” Any number of deaths, no matter how high, would be considered “worth it.”

Longtime supporters of The Future of Freedom Foundation know that ever since our inception in 1989, we have led the way in opposition to a pro-empire, pro-interventionist foreign policy. In fact, one of earliest books was The Failure of America’s Foreign Wars, followed later by Liberty, Security, and the War on Terrorism, published after 9/11, followed by innumerable essays since then.

Since 9/11, we have consistently opposed both the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, arguing fervently that not only were these two wars illegal (no declaration of war, as required by the U.S. Constitution) but that they were nothing more than a continuation of the policies that had produced the boiling anger and rage that had erupted in 1993 and then again on 9/11.

We must never lose sight of the fact that in Iraq, it is the U.S. government that is the aggressor – the invader – the occupier. It is the U.S. government that started this war. It is the Iraqis who are the defenders, the victims of what the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal called a “war of aggression.”


We should also never lose sight of the fact that while Afghanistan bore a tangential relationship to 9/11, the decision to treat the attack as a military problem rather than a criminal-justice one has been an unmitigated disaster. By killing countless Afghanis who had nothing to do with 9/11, the U.S. government has simultaneously swelled the ranks of people whose anger and rage have propelled them into the ranks of those who seek retaliation, including it now seems beyond any doubt, the alleged Ft. Hood killer, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan.

Are we here at The Future of Freedom Foundation surprised by the Ft. Hood killings? Why would we be? In fact, what surprises us is that we haven’t seen more of this type of thing. How can it be otherwise?

I’m going to repeat what we’ve been saying since before 9/11: the U.S. government needs to get out of the Middle East and Afghanistan. Pull the troops out now. There is no other genuine way to support them. Stop the killing. End the occupations. The U.S. military and the CIA have had eight years to do all the killing, torturing, humiliating, and destroying they want. Now it is time to bring it to an end. Enough is enough.

And I’m going to repeat our predictions of what Americans should expect should the U.S. government continue its pro-empire, pro-interventionist foreign policy in the Middle East and Afghanistan: Americans should prepare themselves to reap the full bounty of what their government’s foreign policy is sowing. An evil seed will produce an evil tree that will bear evil fruit. As the anger and rage arising from the U.S. government’s foreign policy periodically boils over, everyone should prepare himself for more acts of terrorism, murder, treason, war, insanity or whatever other label you wish to put on the retaliatory killing, not to mention the monetary disaster that looms ahead from all of the out-of-control spending to finance this imperialist and interventionist madness.

November 11, 2009

Jacob Hornberger [send him mail] is founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation.

Copyright © 2009 Future of Freedom Foundation

Hot Compost
11-12-2009, 06:31 AM
where's the article on the horror 1000 or 1,000,000 times larger, the American assault on civilians in Iraq & Afghanistan ?

American troops kill civilians & spread Depleted Uranium (America's nuclear waste) in those lands on a regular basis.

Responsibility for the incident at Fort Hood lies at the feet of Pelosi & Obama - and their Repub. counterparts.

the people voted to stop the war in 2006. Pelosi didn't listen.

the people voted again to stop the war in 2008. Obama has not yet listened.

it is elected reps such as Pelosi & Obama that know the horrors of the wars they are sending young people to fight in.

most of the US troops started out as young people looking for jobs - not a moral transgression, in and of itself. they have minimal knowledge of history, given that their history education was provided by American public schools.

WHO created the crucible that is Fort Hood - the combination of -
* new recruits, some idealistic, some looking for 'first blood'
* battle weary American soldiers
* the Army Psychologist who did the shooting
* officers who know the whole thing is a scam related to the presence of 110 billion barrels of oil in Iraq (@$80 a barrel, that's $8.8 trillion worth of oil)
* Israeli support for massive US troop presence in the Mid-East
* thousands of troops with varying degrees of PTSD & other disorders, heavily armed, residing at Fort Hood

WE DID. America did, those of us who tolerated Pelosi and got suckered into supporting Obama, blinded by "hope".

Fort Hood = Lord of the Flies, writ large. it's 100% predictable in a situation like that that someone is going to grab a gun and start shooting.

Karinako
11-12-2009, 06:38 AM
Dear Sir:

You article on the Ft. Hood situation is brilliant. It has helped me better understand the American role in these various, dreadful occurrences. It is thorough and concise in a way I haven't seen before. I am including it in a film "Snippets" by which I mean to educate my sons, nearly 3,000 miles away in Frederick, Maryland. I think it should spell out an approach which I hope they will choose to follow. Thank you so much for having written this piece.

Sincerely,

Karan Henley Haugh

busyb555
11-12-2009, 09:34 PM
You missed one major aspect of the shooting at Ft Hood, this guy had a long interactive history with violent Muslims who did what they are taught and led to do. Kill the infidel. The rest is just bull shit you heard, none excuses him and I hope Obama realizes his Muslim roots are distorting his judgement. I agree that Pelosi and the rest of the left are nutz.



Friends,
I have been disturbed by what happened at Ft. Hood and what it says about America. Perhaps it is a sign that the violence will get even worse. Or perhaps it could be a "tipping point" that wakes up more people, especially if we speak up about it.

I began writing about Ft. Hood yesterday, having been partly raised near there in Texas in a military family. I have been up since 2:30 a.m. writing again. Following and attached is a rough draft of what I will eventually submit for publication. I send it to you with a request that you criticize it before I begin submitting versions for publication. What would you add, change, or subtract to improve it? If you make comments within the text, please do so in capital letters, or in some way that I can clearly distinguish your words from mine. I eventually need a short version of some 600 words to submit to newspapers, as well as a longer version for magazines, so I especially need your help on what to cut. I genuinely welcome your comments. What would your own perspectives on this matter be?
Thanks for any help,
Shepherd

Oklahoma City, Columbine, Virginia Tech and Now Ft. Hood

Draft: Not for Publication, yet, Criticisms solicited, to [email protected]

By Shepherd Bliss, (1180 words)

Oklahoma City (1995--168 killed), Columbine High (1999--12 killed), Virginia Tech University (2007--32 killed), and now Ft. Hood (13 killed). What do these memorable places have in common?

They are each sites where Americans killed Americans in a society that visits such violence upon people far away in places like Iraq and Afghanistan and here at home. A connection exists among these places, which indicate a pattern. They are among the growing signs that we should attend to and analyze carefully, now, before additional warnings happen and perhaps even get worse.

They may indicate a trend that will heighten. Or responses to Ft. Hood could be what is described as a “tipping point” in the best-selling book of that title by Malcolm Gladwell. Others describe such a time as a “turning point.”

Where might terror strike next and who might be the perpetrator and victims? More students, soldiers, or another group? How is such domestic terrorism bred and what can we do to interrupt it?

At Oklahoma City it was an anti-government activist at a federal building who detonated the bombing. At Columbine it was two high school students who pulled triggers on other students and a teacher. At Virginia Tech it was a college student killing other college students. At Ft. Hood it was an Army physician killing five other psychotherapists and an additional eight people, and wounding some 31. It is too easy to just blame these individuals.

The American shoot-‘em-up approach to solving problems is not new, especially in Texas and the remaining Wild West. If we study these recent tragedies we could learn lessons from them so that other such incidents are less likely to happen.

Rather then merely indict the individuals that committed these heinous crimes, we could benefit from looking beyond that to consider our own responsibilities as citizens to reduce such violence and improve the social context that spawns it.

It is easier to demonize the killers, rather than try to understand why these desperate men felt driven to such violence that would likely take their own lives or lead to extreme punishment. Their anguish and agony must have been substantial.

Collective introspection and deep investigation would be helpful. Punishment of the perpetrator alone is unlikely to break the cycle of violence that Americans carry abroad and here at home. A careful study of patterns would be more helpful.

The recent violence at Ft. Hood and in the town of Killeen, where it is located, is not new. The area “has been beset by crime and violence since the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq began,” according to the Nov. 10 “New York Times.” “Reports of domestic abuse have grown by 75 percent since 2001,” it continues. Soldiers come home from combat and beat their wives, sometimes to death. 76 suicides by personnel assigned to Ft. Hood have occurred since 2003.

There is no one to blame other than Americans. We did it. Not Muslims, Arabs, or outside “terrorists.” Not enemies outside. “We have met the enemy, and it is us,” asserts a famous line from a Pogo cartoon from my childhood. It is time for us to reflect on the context that breeds such self-destructiveness.

“Have you heard of the horror at Ft. Hood?” another Sonoma State University professor called me the night of the shooting. Like me, she is part of a military family. Military family members tend to monitor such incidents and alert each other to tragedies. They hit closer to home for us. One of my SSU students emailed me that her best friend called from Ft. Hood during the attack and he could hear gunfire in the background. Since I was raised partly on a military base in Texas close to Ft. Hood, this strike was too close to home for comfort.

When I opened my emails, a member of the Veterans Writing Group that I have been a part of for 15 years had sent me links to articles. From Friday to Sunday I mainly read and clipped many articles, while continuing my regular life. I was especially struck by the heroism of civilian Sgt. Kimberly Munley, who took the shooter down, even as she went down with four bullets in her body. Go, girl, go!

It was not until Sunday night that I really felt the horror. I became numb, immobilized, depressed.

Fortunately, earlier that day I was able to send off emails to my Sonoma State University students putting Ft. Hood on the lesson plan for my “War and Peace” class. There is a tendency to deny such matters, but I want to help my students gently get beyond denial to express their feelings, develop opinions, and engage in critical thinking. Their responses were to be attentive and think deeply about the implications of Ft. Hood and what is says about us as a nation.

“It takes a little while before the grieving starts,” the last quotation in a Nov. 8 Press Democrat article sent me down. The words are those of Col. Bill Rabena, who runs the new post-Ft. Hood massacre Spiritual Fitness Center. It offers counseling, soothing music, a religious library and meditation space, among other services, to help survivors cope with psychological trauma.

While I was in the Army during the l960s and the American Wars in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos we did not have such centers. So I have felt mainly alone during the some 40 years after my discharge and having to de-militarize myself and deal with my own trauma from being raised military and then serving.

The Veterans Writing Group, other vets groups, and the helpful Vets Center in Rohnert Park, as well as individual counseling have all helped me over the years. But I am still recovering and easily triggered, especially by loud sounds.

We need to work to enhance the safety of our students, soldiers, and citizens as a whole, or future similar incidents are likely to consume more lives. Public places—such as schools, government buildings, and even military bases—have become less safe during this 21st century.

Perhaps Ft. Hood can awaken us to the pain and suffering of our military personnel and the lives that they touch overseas and in their families. On the other hand, a Nov. 16 “Newsweek” column on the new book “American Homicide” by Ohio State professor of history and criminology Randolph Roth concludes “that gun and ammunition sales are up nearly 50 percent from a year ago.” What does that say about our future?

Now is a time to grieve our national losses at Ft. Hood and work to minimize such losses in the future. Such collective grief can inform and educate us.

(Shepherd Bliss is a former Army officer and member of the Veterans Writing Group (Veterans of War, Veterans of Peace (https://www.vowvop.org)). He currently teaches part-time at Sonoma State University, has owned Kokopelli Farm in Sebastopol since l992, and has contributed to over two dozen books. He can be reached at [email protected])

Clancy
11-12-2009, 09:43 PM
Why such wall to wall media hype over 13 gunshot victims, when every single day another 276 Americans are shot, right here in America, presumably by a whole mess of christians?
Nidal Malak Hasan | gun reform | Barack Obama | Bernard Lagan (https://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/americas-gun-outrage-276-people-killed-or-wounded-a-day-20091109-i4gj.html?autostart=1)
Imagine your response if muslims somehow shot 276 Americans tomorrow. Why aren't you having that response today and every day?



You missed one major aspect of the shooting at Ft Hood, this guy had a long interactive history with violent Muslims who did what they are taught and led to do. Kill the infidel. The rest is just bull shit you heard, none excuses him and I hope Obama realizes his Muslim roots are distorting his judgement. I agree that Pelosi and the rest of the left are nutz.

Hot Compost
11-13-2009, 05:56 AM
my car radio is set to 560 KSFO, which is the largest conservative radio station in the Bay Area. i don't do much driving, and i do like to catch the flavor of the right-wing propaganda.

i happened to run an errand the afternoon of the shooting.

It took less than an hour for Sean Hannity and his fellow Mighty Wurlitzer-ers to break out their beloved "be very afraid of radical Islam" mantra. even before it was clear what had happened, when they thought there more multiple people attacking the un-armed soldiers (there was only one, in this case), when they thought the pyschiatrist that did the shooting was dead (he lived).

Literally, before the dust settled, the Mighty Wurlitzer was off and running.

it was impressive, but not in a good way.