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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMemorial Day Eclipsed by the Impending Trump Parade
Memorial Day has been somewhat upstaged this year, both by the Army (understandably) and Donald Trump (narcissistically). Thats because three weeks later, on June 14, the Army will celebrate the 250th anniversary of its establishment by the Continental Congress in 1775, in order to fend off the British. And its also because June 14 will be Trumps birthday, so hes ordered the festivities expanded to include a tank-and-armored-vehicle parade down Constitution Avenue to celebrate his power.
Initially, before Trumps re-election, the festivities were to be chiefly confined to the National Mall. There were to beare still to be, in factsoldiers dressed in the garb and carrying the weapons used in all of the nations wars, beginning with the Revolution and concluding with Im not sure what. (Afghanistan? Syria? Yemen? Will there be someone carrying a drone?) Some of those wars were clearly what we call good warsthe Civil War and World War II most particularly. (Of course, Pete Hegseth or somebody like him might decide that we need to celebrate the traitors of the Confederacy, too.)
As to our other wars, theres the War of 1812, where Trumpians avant la lettre tried unsuccessfully to take over Canada; the Mexican War, of which one young officer who fought in it (Ulysses S. Grant) later wrote, I was bitterly opposed to the measure, and to this day regard the war which resulted as one of the most unjust ever waged by a stronger against a weaker nation; the various 18th- and 19th-century wars to dispossess the native tribes of their land and sovereignty; the Spanish-American war of conquest over Cuba and the Philippines, the latter being followed by the Armys bloody suppression of the Philippine independence movementwars opposed by such anti-imperialists as Mark Twain and Samuel Gompers; World War I, which was accompanied by the domestic suppression of critical publications and arrests of the critics; the Korean War, under the nominal aegis of the United Nations, through which the spread of the totalitarian Kim regime was halted; the Vietnam War against communist and nationalist forces, which killed not just more than 55,000 American soldiers but also between two and three million Vietnamese; its Nixon-Kissinger expansion into Cambodia, which led to the Khmer Rouges extermination campaigns; the Gulf War; the intended-to-be-brief-but-ended-up-nearly-eternal Afghanistan war; and the pointless Iraq War, a neocon miscalculation of catastrophic consequences, which made Iran into a major Middle Eastern power and gave rise to ISIS.
Initially, before Trumps re-election, the festivities were to be chiefly confined to the National Mall. There were to beare still to be, in factsoldiers dressed in the garb and carrying the weapons used in all of the nations wars, beginning with the Revolution and concluding with Im not sure what. (Afghanistan? Syria? Yemen? Will there be someone carrying a drone?) Some of those wars were clearly what we call good warsthe Civil War and World War II most particularly. (Of course, Pete Hegseth or somebody like him might decide that we need to celebrate the traitors of the Confederacy, too.)
As to our other wars, theres the War of 1812, where Trumpians avant la lettre tried unsuccessfully to take over Canada; the Mexican War, of which one young officer who fought in it (Ulysses S. Grant) later wrote, I was bitterly opposed to the measure, and to this day regard the war which resulted as one of the most unjust ever waged by a stronger against a weaker nation; the various 18th- and 19th-century wars to dispossess the native tribes of their land and sovereignty; the Spanish-American war of conquest over Cuba and the Philippines, the latter being followed by the Armys bloody suppression of the Philippine independence movementwars opposed by such anti-imperialists as Mark Twain and Samuel Gompers; World War I, which was accompanied by the domestic suppression of critical publications and arrests of the critics; the Korean War, under the nominal aegis of the United Nations, through which the spread of the totalitarian Kim regime was halted; the Vietnam War against communist and nationalist forces, which killed not just more than 55,000 American soldiers but also between two and three million Vietnamese; its Nixon-Kissinger expansion into Cambodia, which led to the Khmer Rouges extermination campaigns; the Gulf War; the intended-to-be-brief-but-ended-up-nearly-eternal Afghanistan war; and the pointless Iraq War, a neocon miscalculation of catastrophic consequences, which made Iran into a major Middle Eastern power and gave rise to ISIS.
https://prospect.org/politics/2025-05-26-memorial-day-eclipsed-by-impending-trump-parade/
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Memorial Day Eclipsed by the Impending Trump Parade (Original Post)
justaprogressive
May 26
OP
someone on here once said ,war is a racket and somone once said war is futile .
AllaN01Bear
May 26
#1
AllaN01Bear
(25,382 posts)1. someone on here once said ,war is a racket and somone once said war is futile .
Celerity
(50,144 posts)2. War is the health of the state.
Randolph Bourne