Y'know, there hasn't
been a time in my life here there hasn't been war.
Sad part is,
I guess, it's all been the same goddamned war.
When I was a kid,
we'd sit in classes, listening to the news, streaming video to
laptops, watching it on holotanks. I'd go home and my uncle would
be watching it, or reading aloud some article in the newspaper to me,
about this or that engagement and how the theatre of combat in
such-and-such system was now unwinnable. All that bullshit.
It
startles me, in the end, to remember how… unreal it all felt.
Back
home, the war was so far away.
Back home, the war was something we
heard about, and everybody expressed their plastic patriotism,
saccharine support for troops from planets whose names we'd never
heard of before, and whose names would fade into obscurity, out of
mind and forgotten, when it came to the question of what fast-food
joint we'd eat at, where we'd buy gas for the car today, what
movie we were going to see, how big Becky's ass looked in that
skirt today, and whether or not that skanky slutty secretary at
Hubby's office was trying to steal somebody's husband.
All in
all, it feels strange to look back on it, and realize that the people
back home think of the war, in general, with the same amount of
concern that they'd devote to the plotline and character
development of some cookie-cutter sitcom.
I used to be the same
way.
Except my passions were more along the
let's-rabble-rouse-and-change-the-world path. Like the "hey, lets
do whatever we have to, to cause havoc and mayhem!" type
path.
Looking back on it, I used to think I was going to change
the world. That I was single-handedly going to topple the United
Nations and reform our political structure and society. I used to
think that maybe, there was a better way to go about the whole war
effort. Fuck, I used to say, "Throw the fucking SPARTANs out there
to end this before we have a fucking draft! Not another Nam!" Like
I knew anything about it. Not another Nam, that was a real classy
thing to say, in the social circles I used to run with.
Looking
back on it, I realize how much of a fucking kid I was.
So I made
some mistakes, and landed myself here.
And it's a whole
different world out here.
Back home, we used to hear "collateral
damage" and "died a hero saving his unit" and "valiantly gave
their lives for the war effort". Flash a picture of an artistically
dead soldier, being carried by grim-faced fellows, fire in their eyes
saying that they'll make the enemy pay for taking their
blood-brother from them. How an injured soldier saved his entire unit
by making a last ditch attempt to stall the Covenant…
Here, it's
more like, "Fuckit, better you than me pal." Its more like,
"FUCK, I didn't know the human body could bleed that much and
survive!" Its more like, "Holy shit, plasma doesn't do that on
TV!"
Its more like, "I never knew that burning flesh smelled
like that."
Its more like, "Why's my arm lying on the
ground beside me?"
There is nothing artistic about war. And all
those pictures of the units that tug at your heartstrings? Yeah,
those are posed. Those are arranged. Fuck, I wonder how the hell they
get some of those pictures, who they pay to doctor them up and how
that motherfucker sleeps at night.
First time I saw a guy in my
unit bite it, I threw up all over my boots. Barely managed to get my
helmet off before I did it. I was puking, and crying, and in between
breaths I was praying to God I got off planet alive. One guy pissed
himself. And another guy, because he couldn't take the heat, blew
his brains out as soon as we got back on board the ship.
I watch
news feeds, sometimes – stream them from my computer, just like I
did when I was a kid in school.
I see these bright eyed young
guys, OCS 90-day wonders. They rave on and on, about how well we're
doing, how we expect to be routing the Covenant any day now. How
enlisted casualties are at an all-time minimum, and that the stories
families have been leaking, of never getting a body returned home,
are all anti-UN propaganda.
I wonder how much they paid those
actors to dress up in uniforms and say all that shit. Propaganda
annoys me even more now that I'm in the service.
The other day,
I had to leave two of my boys on planet. I had to leave them behind
to die, because the Covenant started glassing the surface, we had to
bail out, and their asses got lost en route back to the LZ.
It was
them or us.
Needless to say, their families aren't getting
bodies back. Hell, in all the time I've been in the service, I
think I've attended somewhere around ninety-six funerals.
I
think at four, we had the body.
Today, on this editorial-type
show, where people can voice their opinions, I streamed the episode,
and I still haven't been able to make it all the way through.
I
see these fucking civilians on the show, talking, running their
mouths about the war. It was this whole point-counter-point thing.
They had these pro-war activists there. I can't remember their
names.
But the anti-war activists, one of the guys… his name was
Lance Simonson.
Lance Simonson used to arrange Anarchist rallies.
Used to always be at my heels to do this speech or that, or just to
show up and endorse him. A real fuckin leech, who never understood
what it meant to really fight for a cause.
He sat up there, and
argued against the war. For this reason or that reason… I can't
even remember exactly why.
And the pro-war guy wasn't any
better. When responding to soldier reports of needless cruelty in the
services, to complaints that their tour of duty was being extended
due to "stop-loss" (it's the nice way to replace a draft), to
not being allowed home to see their families, to being treated as if
they were expendable… He cited media sources that paint the war to
be a total cake walk.
… Stupid should hurt.
