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unhappycamper

(60,364 posts)
Sun Sep 14, 2014, 08:45 AM Sep 2014

Going To War With a Vengeance: A Cultural Essay

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Going-To-War-With-a-Vengea-by-John-Grant-Crime_Dialogue_Fiction_Forgiveness-140912-169.html

To do nothing is to send a message to the wrongdoer, and the general public, that the victim has no self-worth and will not marshal the internal resources necessary to reclaim his or her honor. Shattered dignity is not beyond repair, but no elevating and equalizing of dignity can occur without the personal satisfaction of revenge.
-Thane Rosenbaum, Payback: The Case For Revenge

The one who forgives, far from rallying around evil, decides instead not to imitate it, not to resemble it in any way, and without having expressly willed it, to negate it with the sole purity of silent love.
-Vladimir Jankelevitch, Forgiveness


Going To War With a Vengeance: A Cultural Essay
By John Grant
OpEdNews Op Eds 9/12/2014 at 11:39:29

Two months ago polls suggested the American public was weary of war. Then, a group of furious extremists nurtured out of the fertile chaos of our invasion/occupation of Iraq and led by former generals from Saddam Hussein' army went through Anbar Province in western Iraq like Patton went through Europe: Like crap through a goose. They were taking back what the US had taken from them by empowering Iraqi Shiites. Their secret was psychopathic violence -- massacres of men, women and children from hated ethnic or religious factions.

Soon, people from around the world were being recruited to join ISIS. Two brave US journalists were captured in Syria and sold to ISIS in western Iraq. Utilizing 21st century skills with video production, they flaunted their power by brutally beheading the two journalists.



Suddenly, US polls flipped and a majority of Americans now felt it was necessary to race willy-nilly back to war in Iraq. The likelihood that ISIS's goal with the beheading videos was to stir up this kind of fear and blind reaction in America didn't seem to matter. No one is quite sure what any of it really means. Following President Obama's war speech, Lawrence O'Donnell asked, "Exactly how many people do we have to kill to 'degrade and ultimately destroy' this movement called ISIS?" No one knows. More important, no one wants to lose face or appear weak. Being smart didn't seem to matter. Losing even more ground in addressing our huge domestic problems was a fool's concern.

Crime Fiction and Vengeance as Religion

As part of a personal study in the area of crime fiction, I've been reading a lot on the subject of vengeance. One of the classic avenging angels is Mike Hammer, Mickey Spillane's popular Cold War era private detective who followed Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade and Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe. They were real tough guys, but they were detectives. Mike Hammer is about vengeance, generally administrated on the final page with a couple slugs in the guts from his beloved .45 automatic.
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