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The right to ventriloquize the dead...

Christopher Hitchens, writing in Slate, discusses Cindy Sheehan, and not in glowing terms. Money graf (but you should read the whole thing):

Finally, I think one must deny to anyone the right to ventriloquize the dead. Casey Sheehan joined up as a responsible adult volunteer. Are we so sure that he would have wanted to see his mother acquiring "a knack for P.R." and announcing that he was killed in a war for a Jewish cabal? This is just as objectionable, on logical as well as moral grounds, as the old pro-war argument that the dead "must not have died in vain." I distrust anyone who claims to speak for the fallen, and I distrust even more the hysterical noncombatants who exploit the grief of those who have to bury them.

I'm from a military family, I don't really think I'd have that problem... but I was prepared, nonetheless.

The few times I was ever sent to places where people might conceivably wish me harm... I left instructions for the family, left with my soldier father to be opened in the event of "The Visit".

In the event I have been captured or killed:

1. Please don't talk to the press.
2. If you must: Remember I was a soldier, and a volunteer. I went
willingly, eyes wide open.
3. I believed in the mission - even if you may not.
4. Do not put words in my mouth that I cannot refute: I forbid you that, above all else. Say what you will of your own opinion, but beyond 2 & 3, do not presume to speak for me. My actions say all that is needful.
5. Lastly, please don't be mad at me - I really *did* mean to zig, but apparently I should have zagged.

There was lots more sentimental stuff, depending on what my point in life was, but that was all that's applicable here.

Yeah, I really did think about picayune stuff like that, and tried to make people laugh from the grave. Hell, why not? It's not like I could have screwed up anything more than I already had by failing to zag, right?

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Two different bloggers that I find insightful have posted links to the same article in Slate by Christopher Hitchens on the protests of Ms. Cindy Sheehan. The key passage from that article: Finally, I think one must deny to anyone... Read More

Two different bloggers that I find insightful have posted links to the same article in Slate by Christopher Hitchens on the protests of Ms. Cindy Sheehan. The key passage from that article: Finally, I think one must deny to anyone... Read More

8 Comments

Knowing that Casey Sheehan enlisted five months *after* the Iraq war began...I think he would have shared your sentiments...
 
[gruff cop voice] Now son, I'm going to have to write you up for failure to zag. Didn't you see the signs? "NO ZIGGING ALLOWED"? They aren't decorations you know.[gruff cop voice]
 
Dad had the same letter from me, and he had one that he wrote to his Dad (RADM-USN)... The funeral was to be steeped in the warrior traditions of the family (the nobility of service... No greater man... Service to God, Corps, and Country... etc...) And the wake was to be a Scott-ish barn-burner...
 
John, this indirectly touches on my objection when the Bush campaign ran ads early in the Presidential race last year showing a dead fireman being carried away from the rubble of the World Trade Center. It was a way of "ventriloquizing the dead". The situations are not identical, but the underlying methods of gaining credibility by using the dead are very similar. I believe the anti-war crowd that is using the situation with Ms. Sheehan are just as wrong as the Bush campaign was.
 
But Jack, No one said that the fireman believed this or that or had this or that political opinion - it was a strong and valid reminder of what happened on 9/11 - I don't think the two are at all related.
 
I had a similar list left with my NOK just in case. I doubt if Casey did, as he was still too young. I didn't start until my late 20s. Up to then, I just used to tell my soldier dad, that the Navy would give them the facts and that I loved what I was doing.
 
Absolutely, Master Chief. Let no one think I was snarking Casey. The only reason I had "The Letters" was because of what happened while my Dad was in Vietnam, got wounded, and the telegram arrived. I carried that lesson forward with me when I went off to wars and rumors of wars.
 
Beth, please read my response to your comment on my weblog. What I had to say turned into somethings so long I couldn't leave it here as a comment. Best regards, -Jack