Memorial Day

On Memorial Day, we’re supposed to somberly reflect on men and women whose lives were ended by war, ended by fighting for you.
No one does that. Maybe they watch a John Wayne movie and eat disgusting hot dogs cooked over charcoal and chase them with cheap beer like Pabst. But that’s it. No thought given to anyone who was killed by live fire, no one who died in agony on a stretcher, no one who died later of wounds so gross you would throw up if you were there.
This Memorial Day, while Trump pisses on the graves of soldiers, freedom fighters, Marines, air crews and pilots, sailors and everyone else who answered the call to war, their memories will be kept only by people like you. Don’t turn your backs to them.
Remember what cost freedom has, and ask yourselves, “Did they really die for nothing? Was Bunker Hill, Gettysburg, the Somme, Peleliu, and the Ardennes all worthless after all?”

Then look around you, and watch the news, and you’ll have your answer.

“The Insanity Syndrome” Part Three (Conclusion)

Caution: adult themes, sexual references, adult language, violence, fear, smoking, racist language, triggers. Read with caution and enjoy the story. As always, thanks for stopping by!

“Insane”

Cara Nguyen was her name. She was the child of Vietnamese parents, but also a French grandfather, so there was some real history there. History can be pathetic, and she told me that she had no place. The French had abandoned the fight, the country and its people because the colonial period, profitable as it was, had ended. The Battle of Dien Bien Phu had lasted almost two months, and the French had their asses handed to them. Bad thing being that, for less than a century the French had colonized Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. The 3 made up “Indochina”, known officially or politically as French Indochina, and I remember hearing that name in some fuckin geography class. World War Two wasn’t very nice to the French, who lost control of the region to Japan, which, after it was defeated, ended up leaving a vacuum. When the French, who couldn’t even keep their own country safe from the Nazis, tried to get their former Eastern territories back, they found someone waiting for their ass. The Viet Minh, and they was vicious mothers. They could fight any which way they thought up, from guerrilla to more modern-equipped style once the Communist Chinese and Soviets found them so fascinating. The end of the “First Indochina War” resulted in the geographic line across a map, North and South Vietnam. And the United States had walked right into the second war, because no other fuckin reason than hysteria over communism. Now I look back and can’t see why it happened. Back then, I was sold on the fuckin Domino Effect, like if Vietnam went full-commie, next would come all of the South Pacific, on up to India and from there, instructors who gave lectures said, the whole world. That was to keep the troops gung-ho.

I didn’t know any of that shit. All I knew was that it didn’t matter. North or South, the gooks hated us. Didn’t want us there. But like Cara, some were stuck. She had no choice but to aid the South and American and allied troops. Others truly hated the government in the North, having lost family and friends to their indoctrination or just plain bad luck. Or death. Ain’t nothin like death to make you fear something.

I loved Cara. Our first kiss came one night when she was off-duty but in her office, having coffee and a cigarette. She looked at me, leaning against her doorframe, and said, “You visit me and every time you leave I get more frightened that it will be the last time I see you. You come for stitches, bites, burns and dehydration, we talk while I fix you, but I know it is I that you come for. You can get minor wounds treated anywhere, but you come here. I know that you love me, and I believe that you know how much I’ve loved you. But you are afraid to say it. So was I at first. I do love you, Lee. I always will. I do not want you to say it back if it scares you. I know anyway. You made a promise to me. You will keep it, yes?”

She got up and walked to me, and she looked into my eyes and said, “Sometimes people are hurt. They carry their wounds, the ones no one ever sees, but I see yours, and you see mine. We don’t know what is in each of our pasts, but it is what makes our love so special.”

And she kissed me, and I held her, and kissed her back, and she held me back. Soon, breathless, we kept kissing then stopping to look at each other, and we both had tears running down our faces. That just made the moments stretch into a place where time had no meaning, where we could go back any time we wanted. Back then I didn’t even know such things were possible. I left that night after we had been in each other’s arms and talked until 04:30. Her shift was starting soon and she wanted to bathe and get changed. If I had known then what was in store for me, how long it would be before I saw her, or even if I would see her again, I wouldn’t have left.

The Last of the Ghost

I got a mission relay from a courier, a lieutenant who called me “sir”. I didn’t like the reason he did that when I read it, when I sat at a Cafe from the French days, where I could get real coffee, a real breakfast like back home, and even shower in the back room while my uniform was cleaned.

I opened the thick manila envelope and first took out the papers. Oh, the news just kept getting worse. By now I thought I’d seen everything. I’d been through Tet 1 and 2, had slit the carotid arteries of countless men, held their mouths shut while they bled to death, shot hundreds, assassinated officers, taken on entire platoon-size NVA groups with nothing but what I could carry with me, and been shot, stabbed, burned by friendly fire (some wahoo who panicked and tossed a Willie Pete too close and while I was screaming and burning, I broke his neck) and I’d had malaria, jungle rot, lice, rat bites, and whatever one it was that made you shit pretty much always. I’d been hit with frags from grenades, had an eardrum rupture, several bones broken. Cara didn’t worry for no reason.

She leaned over me and kissed me, and her tears fell on my face.

But this time I had one truly fucked-up mission. The General knew this. He began his brief with an apology and he was no bleeding heart type. It read:

I’m sorry, Sergeant Geldmacher, I know this isn’t what you want. I hereby promote you to the rank of bird Colonel. You will receive the official commission when you return, but the subdued rank insignia you will immediately use. This is necessary to complete your mission and, I hope, to live long enough for me to see your face again. See next page for mission brief. Good luck, Colonel.

The General

That shook me. I ordered fresh coffee from Yvette, and I would need Charles to alter my uniform. He was on his way, she said, and delivered eggs easy with bacon and French bread, lightly toasted. “How do you need alterations, Lee?” I dumped the rank insignia and subdued patches onto the table. She chastised me in French and English, asking me not to do that lest I attract a VC bullet. I apologized but did say, “I’m scared, Yvette. First time since I got here, I’m scared to death.”

“Should moi not congratulate my good friend? This is big, non?”

“Christ, don’t congratulate me,” I said. “This has a price tag I don’t know if I can pay. They’re sending me straight to the dragon.”

“Mon dieu! Surely not!”

“Yes. Yvette, I’ve known you and Charles for how long now?”

She said, “Eat, mon ami. Even a ghost needs strength, non?”

“Seriously, how long?”

“You came here after you were wounded. That was Tet, non? Now it is Summer of 1971. Too long to fight, even for ghosts. But never have I seen my ghost like this. Do not let Charles see you thus, for you are his hero. Long have we been here, too much has been seen. My husband needs a hero. I beg you, Colonel, do not take away what sustains him. I will get fresh camo uniform your size, startch and iron like a colonel should be. Charles will be very happy to place patches and remove tags. My husband is sentimental. It will be proud moment. You will see. As for dragon, beware. You losing focus like this is no good. All that I know is, le dragon is real. As you are now, he will eat you.”

She leaned close and said, “After Kent State many soldiers were hurt in their heart. You know this, non? There are many who go about on false missions and do nothing but protect in sand bags and call air strike. Like doing something, yes? They are betrayed. They want to go home. These soldiers are in trouble. My sources have all of their positions known by NVA who will kill them all. Then they will use propaganda to show American people how cowardly their soldiers are. Your country is divided. Your president is madman. The North knows this. Knows that it will win. They know about Kent State shooting. They shall never let it go as a political tool. If you go to dragon, you must eat and take water and be in focus, mon ami. Otherwise you never come back. Charles has map. You look at your derelict platoons. You go get them and kick asses to go with you. Alone, you will die.”

I had forgotten that Charles and Yvette were great sources of intelligence. They knew things military intelligence never did.

“The Dragon” referred to a group of villages by the Ho Chi Minh trail on the Cambodian border. I had permission to cross that border but Nixon had been bombing both Laos and Cambodia off and on anyway, and we did have troops in both doing some really dirty shit, but the goals weren’t clear and the losses too high. Those were winding down as pressure at home forced him to back off. I never thought much about Johnson as a CiC, but Nixon was a fuckup. I hated everything he said and did. This war had indeed been unwinnable from Day One, just like the General had told me.

Seemed like a lifetime ago now.

And the Dragon was a cult. A real one. The word was they was cannibals, worshipped some ancient diety, a dragon no less, killed anyone who came within 50 kilometers of them. That was the extent of their reach because the jungle surrounding them was pristine, primary growth and had triple canopy. Not even Sopwith Camels (what we called single engine recon planes) had found its exact location. A special forces unit had.

Of a ten man unit, two came back alive. But they weren’t close to being sane. They were already back in the World.

But Army Intel knew little about it. And it was so remote that I wondered why I or any unit had ever been sent there. It would turn out that American POWs were suspected of being held there. I knew already that no American or other friendlies could be alive in a place like that.

There was only one way in, according to the Green Beret survivors: on foot, you were a dead man. Air drops were impossible because of the canopy, choppers could get you no closer than 400 klicks, and you’d still be going in on foot.

But a Navy PBR could put me within one klick if they muffled the Detroit engines. Some boats could not. If mine couldn’t, everyone on board would die.

That fear was put to rest when the boat captain welcomed me aboard. He was a brute, skin cracked and dark from too much sun, muscles huge and everywhere and a rough voice that couldn’t make me believe he was so smart. He said, “I know where that is, Colonel. And I can get you close, but it’s between Saigon and Phnom Penh. The jungle by the river goes north and west and it’s thicker ‘n’ the hair between a mama-san’s legs. But you get out where I say, go the path I’ll draw on your map, you’ll get the drop on em. Whatcha packin, anyways?”

I had my -16, the grenade launcher, making it heavy. It was really M-209. I really couldn’t pack much with all the ammo it would need. I had two canteens, a machete, some frags, 2 C-rations and insect repellent. And my fuckin uniform that stayed soaked the whole time. He said, “Hell. Hell. They gave you the wrong load out. Hell, you go in there with that, they’ll play with you like a cat with a chipmunk.” Not only that but it’s too heavy. You won’t never make it. Hell. Colonel, they done sent you on a suicide mission. I’ve heard of a place. They say part of it’s in a huge tree. They got tunnels, and rope bridges up in the air. You’ll be dead before you get close. We’re probably bein watched now because this part of the river’s their outer territory. They won’t fire on us because they want to stay hidden. But Colonel, you’re already a dead man.”

He begged me, “Colonel, let me take you back. Okay? You can say anything you want. Tell em you got lost or something. I can drop you near Saigon and you walk in, hell, you already look like shit. Tell em you couldn’t get close.”

I didn’t say anything but my mouth had gone dry. The guy on the left sixty had a bottle. I asked for it. He grinned and passed me the bourbon. Not being used to liquor, I coughed and he grinned wider. But as soon as it started getting into my bloodstream, I was taking gulps. “Easy, Colonel,” the gunner said. “I got more, but you’ll dehydrate you drink any more. The headache won’t help you think clear, either.” He handed me some aspirin in a small tin. Anacin. I took two and he said, “Keep it. You’re gonna need it.”

On my map, which was covered in bullshit symbols from some REMF (rear echelon motherfucker) dick head.

The captain drew the approximate position of the tree camp. He marked where others had told him were minefields, and said the tunnel network went clean under the mines. He had escorted some half-assed special forces unit and waited on the other side of the river. One guy made it back. He said where the mines were but the booby traps, tunnel outlets, and gun nests he never saw. He did not see the camp but at least one of his men had, he could hear the guy screaming as they tortured him.

“What the fuck do I do now?” I asked. The captain said, “Look at it this way, Colonel. You’re supposed to die in there. You’re packing too heavy but not one single rocket, no field dressins or scoped rifle, not even a Springfield with a starlight scope? Colonel, you gotta be a bad mother to draw a mission like this, but you should know better than this bullshit. I ain’t tryin to fuck with you, sir. I just don’t wanna see another fuckin suicide mission, I seen too many, and that’s what you have yourself here. Sometimes they do that. Back home it is a really big deal and they all fighting. Even the fuckin hippies. Veterans throwed all their medals over some fence I heard. Even they protestin. So Nixon is gonna step up the pull-out. Even you can go home soon. All you gotta do is not do this mission. Think of it, sir. You never have to worry bout nothin again. Take a desk job. Retire a full colonel. Then you mow your lawn on Saturday, watch the game on Sunday, sleep all day Monday, and the rest a the week sit around the park starin at hippie bitches.”

Then I got an idea. There were rumors of guys who had no fight left in them who would go out on search-and-destroy missions but only go so far, dig in and call air strikes on fake targets. Yvette had said it was a fact. They would expend ammo themselves too, coming back in without their frags even. I asked, “Captain, can you expand these coordinates a bit for me, to where you think this place extends? Allowing for a spread wider than anyone could of seen?”

He smiled wider than I ever saw anyone smile over there. “Colonel, that guy who made it out? He was insane. I’m not sure if any of this is exactly right. And I can guess but you’re still gonna have to get to your first marker just to spot. I’d rather ya didn’t do that.”

“I ain’t stepping one stink ass boot on that beach. And I think it’s out of range for Arty. Hell, I’m calling in the 52s for this. Wanna watch a real show?”

“Smartest goddamn officer I ever met,” he laughed. “You’re gonna fuck a lotta shit up. Roads, the Trail, lots a shit. Sir, that place ain’t no hamlet. It’s a goddamn kingdom. Tell em drop HE, nape and willie Pete. Burn the fucking jungle down.”

“Let’s see that happen, shall we?”

The -60 gunner was in awe. “Two officers…”

I chuckled. On the radio I gave my codename, “Kingpin calling Bowler,” and got an immediate response, “Kingpin, this is Bowler Actual, read you.”

“Bowler, mission aborted, repeat, mission aborted. Am back at the transport, enemy strength and location as follows: two to four divisions, possibly more, coordinates exact unknown, but no village, repeat, no village. Underground bunkers, troops bivouac in trees and under thatch, mine fields surrounding perimeter to three klicks, tunnels beyond, gun positions include long range heavy artillery, heavy machine gun nests, mortar crews, infantry deployed inside perimeter. Snipers for certain. Recommended action as follows: carpet bomb entire region With Whiskey Papa, Napalm, Hotel Echo. Recommend fighter escort to accompany as there is high confidence for Sierra Alpha Mike emplacement under thick canopy. Repeat if you read, Bowler Actual.”

They had it perfect, everything down to their expanded and fuckin huge area of attack the way they read off coordinates. “Bowler Actual, be advised I am hit. Repeat, I am wounded. Will come home when safe. This is Kingpin signing off.”

“Fuckin crazy, man? Wounded? Why?” The captain asked.

“To keep you fuckin heroes who saved my ass from bein’ asked questions. I owe ya that much.”

The captain was silent. The sun was setting. “I gotta rig the blankets for blackout,” he said. “I got a Russian pistol off a NVA in a sampan. Hell. Got a full magazine, too. Was gonna keep it as a — never mind. Doc! Get back here and bring your supplies for a Foxtrot Oscar.”

The medical corpsman was their forward dual 50 cal gunner. Never made sense to me, until one day I thought, well, fuck, the whole boat ain’t but thirty by ten, ain’t no place safe!

“Problem, Skipper?”

“Nah. Son, I want you to take my commie gun and shoot the Colonel with it. Not fatally, you crazy fuck.”

“Sure thing, Skipper. Good timing too, just got some morphine last resupply.”

“THAT WON’T BE NECESSARY!” I screamed.

“I get it, sir, but that ain’t all I’m gonna do. You want it should look like the real thing, right?”

I nodded.

“Smart man. Best you start with these. He was holding dried plant stems with short thorns. “Close your eyes sir.” And he whipped them all up and down and side to side over my face, neck and the backs of my hands. “Not bad,” he said. “Drew blood, some nice deep ones. Like you had to beat it outta some hot zone. Next, you got snake bit.” He dug into an OD green satchel and I swear, he pulled out the biggest snake head I’ve seen. “It’s okay, sir. All bleached, sterilized and clean. Sink this job in and they gonna wonder how ya lived.” He got me right through the right arm of the uniform and damn near the place a Willie Pete had burned into me. To this day, that shit hurt me worse than anything I had ever fuckin been hurt by. No bullets, burns, broken bones or my old man’s bullwhip hurt like white phosphorus did. Then the Doc said, “now roll up the sleeve. I gotta make the X cuts with your machete. It’ll hurt.”

That didn’t bother me.

“Now the bullet. We gotta be quick so they don’t see the flare.”

The bullet resistant blankets had been rigged. But we needed distance. “Too close and there’s gonna be powder burns. But also we don’t want the bullet to go through. Surgeon gotta see that it’s a Commie round.” He thought for a minute, had me up in the bow, while he stood where I couldn’t even see him. Then came the zing of the bullet. It came before I heard the shot.

I collapsed. He had taken careful aim but we were on the water. The boat took a small wave, from what I never knew. I passed out.

The boat wasn’t moving when I woke up. “Colonel, I had to use the morphine.” Doc said. I was below, and I felt like I was in hell, it was so fuckin hot. My face burned from the scratches, the fang marks and cuts burned, and the pain of the gunshot was screaming somewhere in my gut. He held a canteen to my mouth and I drank, but got dizzy. “I got you kinda stable Colonel, but you’re in trouble. I hit something by mistake and I hope to God it ain’t yer liver. You got a fever so I can only give you a bit more morphine so when ya need it, nod. I’m gonna stay with ya, okay? In a minute we get under way. Captain disposed of the gun but had trouble restarting the motors. By the way, that jungle is a hell. The bombers keep coming. It’s the Phantoms and Skyhawks that drop the Willie Pete and most Nape, but the 52s come with incendiary and high explosive bombs. Those you can feel clean out here. I want ya stay awake so I can keep a eye on ya. Stay wake now. I got plasma and penicillin goin into ya but I’ve see yer dropping BP and that ain’t good. Keep drinking water. Ready for more?”

I don’t know what happened next. I was out for six months, deep in a coma. I weighed 80 pounds when I came back. I couldn’t even talk. In a display on a table next to my bed were ten Purple Heart medals, two Silver Stars, and a Medal of Honor. I had new rank insignia too. A single star: Brigadier General. How the fuck did that happen?

Because nobody enlists, starts out as a E-nothing, and gets to a one-star general without years at West Point.

Four months. Retraining the body, baby steps. I felt silly and I felt weak. Then one day I suddenly had the mental clarity to ask where I was. I was shocked and heartbroken at the answer. Walter Reed Army Hospital. I was long outta Vietnam. Cara, I thought. I wondered where she was, if she was alive. She must hate me. I didn’t keep my promise.

Never before did I feel anything like the pain in my chest. I cried in my private room. All the time. Two nurses saw it. They both worked different shifts, and they both wrote extensively on my chart.

It was already 1972. Nixon was running for reelection, but the protests continued. The NOW movement was added to the antiwar demonstrations. Bra burning was becoming a big thing. I watched Cronkite and wondered what had happened while I was gone. I’d missed the moon landings. I’d missed so much. Good things had been done but the country was oblivious. There was too much hurt, too much anger. I knew one thing.

I would never return to Oklahoma. Too much pain lay back there in that fuckin place, where it all began.

A general? Shit. They had plans for me. A ghost must be kept busy, under supervision. Never allowed the latitude to talk. I wondered why I had gone through so much when my own country hated me so much for doing it. The General had told me I’d be saving lives. I did, too. But the cost was what was left of my sanity. I wound up calling in bombers because I was sent on a suicide mission. The first base I had ever been to had been halfway destroyed by sappers and mortars. What had I–what had we — accomplished?

I had arrived in country an enraged animal ready to kill anything that moved. My old man had initiated my insanity. The war had finished the process.

One day a supervising doctor stopped by. It was time I knew. He sat down on a wooden chair, crossed his legs, put on glasses and opened a thick file. My medical records, the complete edition. “General Geldmacher, you have some significant scars from before the war. I have your records here. You never sought treatment. Why?”

“Cause one day I wanted to kill my father. I did try.”

“Yes, I see. That’s part of what got you to Vietnam. But the injuries since are what concern me. White phosphorus. Fragmentation grenades. Gunshot wounds. So many we can’t count them. Snake bites. A medium range gunshot from a Russian Makarov. That nearly did you in. We had reports of initial treatment on a Navy PBR, followed by a two-day stay in Saigon, then to Okinawa, then Germany. You were deep in a coma and although we were finally able to fix the problem, a simple procedure known as a bowel resection, you took lots of blood. You had an active bleeder that the first surgeons couldn’t find. That means that your brain was not getting the blood it needed, and my biggest worry right now is whether it left damage behind. I am calling in our finest neurologist and neurological team. You’re having visible trouble with basic light exercises and you seem to cry often. While I know some of what you went through out there, I can’t know what it was like, what the aftereffects are. So your malnutrition and lack of will to participate in rehabilitation I do understand to a point. General, you were a great soldier. I wager you have become a great man. My job is to watch you walk out of here healthy, whole and with renewed life. I will not give up on you. Is that clear, Sir?”

A week passed. I went to 78 pounds. I guess I was giving up.

The one thing I cared about in my whole life was lost to me forever. Why the fuck would I want to live? I didn’t even want to kill anymore. Every good reason to live and every bad reason to live, all were nullified. I wanted to fuckin die right in that bed.

I went to critical care when I fell unconscious. They couldn’t bring me back. I flatlined for five minutes before they got me breathing.

Then I awoke in a recovery room. A tube kept me breathing. I winked in and out for quick times of hearing nurses talking, then blackness again.

I don’t know how long it took. Long, I can say, but how long, I have no clue. I registered sunlight coming in through steel venetian blinds. A flower in a vase beside me on a table. A red rose. A get well card from someone. I was very alert, very clear-headed, and monster hunger begged for a hamburger. I’d had more than my share of Beans and Motherfuckers. It occurred to me that I hadn’t eaten since before I was shot.

Now it was 1973. The war was over. I was down, a nurse said, to 50 pounds. Any more and I would die. I asked for hamburgers and she was ecstatic, but said no solids yet. I could have soup, broth, pudding, ice cream. Stuff like that.

That night my neurologist came in. The lights were low, and she wasn’t really visible. She said, “You did not keep your promise, so I will keep it for you. But I’m surprised to find such a great man like this. You are lucky they finally called me.”

Cara!” I cried. “Is it really you? Tell me it’s not a dream!”

She came closer, hands in her lab coat pockets. I saw tears glistening on her face even in the low lighting.

“No dream, Lee. I’m a U.S. Army surgeon now. Also citizen. And Lee, I looked and looked for you. Now I find you here like this. Tell me my love: for whom do you cry at night? I have seen your full record. You cry. Why?”

“For us. I thought you might be dead and I was broken. My heart and my soul.”

“So tell me, broken general, will you fight back and will you still marry me?”

“When I get out of here.”

“Then,” she said, “you must work harder. I will see you every day for your therapy update. I’m head of neurology here. I look to be a major soon. We were meant to find each other again and God gets his way. You were tough, Ghost. Now maybe you can be tough again for me. I love you. I never stopped loving you. I was so happy even though to see you like this on my operating table made me cry. I did good work to save you. Now I need you to save me. You were not alone in your sadness.”

That’s when I knew I was going to live.

Healing

The years went by so fast. Cara is still with me, but I’m retired. She’s still a doc, still at Walter Reed. Papers have been written about her and she’s written a few herself. We never had kids because of our careers, but more because of my violent life. I just didn’t want children. Mental illness obviously ran in my family, giving Cara the idea to write a case history on my family. She titled it “The Insanity Syndrome” and addressed DNA and hereditary mental disorders.

She has not aged. Still willowy, delicate, her long black hair without a streak of gray while mine has turned into a shock of snowy white. But our love, our passion for each other never faded. We still get into sweaty, moaning tangles, and hold hands in the park, give each other gifts for birthdays, Christmas, Easter, and Valentine’s Day. She loves to grow flowers, spend time in the garden, listen to 70s rock, dance in the living room. So full of sunshine and love. I never thought, back then, that I could be happy. But I am.

I told her once that I didn’t deserve her. She said it was the other way around. I was a “virgin” until our wedding night and she was hardly that. It was nothing to me. I just plain loved her at first sight.

I told her sex had nothing to do with it. I was insane for the longest time, bloodthirsty and evil. She was everything good that humanity could create. I’d loved the kill. Feeling a heart stop beating against the point of my bayonet or that cursed knife. The blade I bought for killing. I guess I lost it when I was hauled out of that PBR. Everything had been left behind. I told Cara how much I had loved it. I said, “I was an animal.

“You are still the man I fell in love with. The animal is always inside us all. What matters is not how we have lived before, it is how we learn from it, who we become. You are no longer a ghost. You are a good man who has had the world thrown onto his shoulders and lived to tell the story. You think yourself unworthy. You are the strongest and wisest man I could ever have hoped to marry. I never felt loved until I met you. I knew we would be together forever. You alone never cared about my past. What I had to do to go to France and medical school. Never asked a question. Never became insecure. No other man could I ever love. We do deserve our happiness.”

Yesterday we went to the Vietnam War Memorial wall. As always, I wore my uniform. I’ve seen names on it, every year, that made me cry. Every year, I spot names of guys I knew, although for very short times as I moved around. And I remember. They were just guys who did the best they could under conditions that drove some to desperation. There were suicides. Self-inflicted wounds. Some guys went away forever. Over 58,000 of them. Yesterday was Memorial Day. There was a good turnout there. There are, it seems, still patriots. Cara stayed behind me. I broke down crying. The PBR captain’s name was up there. Cara was beside me in an instant, supporting me and hugging me. I forced myself to stand steady, at attention, and rendered the man who had saved me from certain death a lingering salute. Then I sobbed, “Why? Such a brave, good man. Why?”

Cara did a rubbing for me. I sobbed softly until a black woman my age said, “Excuse me, General. How did you know my husband?”

I couldn’t hide the tears, didn’t even want to. With her were two grown men, also not young. Their sons. I told her, “He saved my life. I’ll always be grateful. I never forget him. Never. He was a great, brave, wise man. I loved him even though the mission was short. I almost died that time.” Then I shook, uncontrolled, a prisoner of tears. And she hugged me, that kind lady, and she said, whispering in my ear, “You’re the ghost he wrote about. He said the whole crew worried about you and how he hoped and prayed that you would make it. He said if you lived, then that mission was his best and proudest of the war. Now you can cry today, because you found him where you didn’t want to, and that makes you a good man. You can’t cry for someone you didn’t love, not how you’re crying now. I believe he knows you made it home. I believe the good lord let him see you and your…”

“Wife, Cara. She refuses to age but we met over there.” I understood her caution. She didn’t know if Cara was my wife or daughter.

“Well she is a lovely lady. You’re blessed. Now I’m going to give you my number. Every year we will meet right here. He wouldn’t want you to grieve. Next time we praise God for him giving me such wonderful boys, and giving you the chance to live. Are you alright, now?”

“Yes. Ma’am. And thank you,” I whispered back.

“Honey, I know my husband hated that war. But he did some good when he was there. And that’s what made him keep going. And maybe you’ll be thinking it’s unfair, he didn’t come home to us. But don’t forget what I said. Saving you would be his proudest thing. You take care, General. Live your life. Be good. Be happy. Do it for you, for your wife, and do it for us.”

She touched me deeply. But both troubled and inspired, I’ll never forget that visit.

I stopped using names like “gook” and “spook” years ago. Hell, decades ago. But then, I was destined to lose my anger anyway. That’s why the judge sent me to the fuckin Nam. He knew. Somehow, he just knew.

“The Insanity Syndrome” a short story for Memorial Day, Part One

Caution! Adult themes, violence and language. Contains triggers!

Part One

Disorder in the Court

I was a total fuckup. In high school, in my senior year — 1967 — I don’t belive one day passed when I didn’t have to visit the principal’s office. My old man would get a phone call, and he’d be waiting when I got home. Fucker actually had a bullwhip, a family “heirloom” from the wild west, or so he said. He bragged about it and and would show off his skill with it every year at the county fair, all dressed up like fucking Roy Rogers. Nobody knew he used it on me to keep his skills sharp, and I wasn’t never gonna tell. That would have been humiliating.

Oh, yeah, my mother. I forgot. She was already dead. Her body was found outside of town in some ditch. Someone had cut her into Christmas ribbons. I heard from an ambulance driver they took her away in burlap sacks. Only way they knew it was her was a locket with a picture of me on her lap. My father was suspected but in that county at that time, men never got arrested for beating or killing women. Cause all the fuckers on their old tractors or in business suits at the First National or State Farm had a past. They just did.

It was the most fucked-up town you can imagine. I had zero friends because my old man had beaten me into a state of constant fear over being hurt. Of course, other guys sensed this, and regularly beat the shit outta me after school or whenever I went to the old shopping center to cool off or warm up. My old man never did have heat or a air conditioner. Truth was, he was raised worse than he raised me and in World War Two was a POW held by the Japanese right after the first islands were taken. Never fired a shot that whole war, but when I was little, my mom told me he just wasn’t right in the head when he came back. They’d tortured him pretty good, too. Scars from head to toe. The fake cowboy who was crazy and sure as hell cut her up, he was the reason I believed in the devil.

So in the Autumn of 1967, while the school football team was beating nobody but themselves and even the cheerleaders got booed because none of them could remember who to cheer for and were all hideous with pimples making them look like Roman’s Frozen Pizza pies, and still wouldn’t put out, I spent my time driving over to St. Keep and paying off a mean ass hunting knife. It was like a Bowie but longer and bigger, and by October when the team was already 0-6, and the leaves were beautiful gold and red and orange, I had it paid off and took it with.

All afternoon that day I had been letting my anger build. I got to the field after the game and I knew I’d find the Gringley Brothers there with the rest of my bully tormentors. All I had to do was walk up to them as they leaned or sat on the splintery wood bleachers and serve myself up like a slab of bacon. They went for the trap. I stabbed Terry Adams’s side and I felt the blade slice into a rib. He fell down and cried and screamed and everyone else dragged him off to Craig’s beat up 59 Ford.

By the time I got home, the news had spread, the streets empty, little kids usually out playing after homework were inside behind closed drapes. My old man was at the end of the front walk, leaning on the mailbox, a .45 hanging in his free hand at his side. Never forget that moment. It pissed me off. I screamed “So now you’re gonna shoot me? Best be fast, Pops!” and I moved too fast for the bastard to think. I slashed his throat then, on the rebounding swing, sank the blade deep into his left shoulder.

The police were already turning down the street from Elm. They called for backup and an ambulance. I guess both ambulances were gonna be used that day, minutes apart.

Now one of the coppers, I never liked. He had his nightstick out before the car stopped and he clocked me bad. I woke up in a cell with Doc Dawson giving me some kinda shot.

A few days passed while my head thundered and Earl Fegler just smelled worse by the minute, finally pissing me off to the point I swung on the old bastard. He hit me about as hard with his fist as as Mean Officer Keene had with his stick. I damn near passed out but held on and grabbed smelly old drunk Earl. By the balls, I grabbed him, squeezed and twisted as hard as I could. His rolling round on the filthy concrete and throwing up brought an officer in, lazily picking his teeth. Probably had lunch at Aunt Laurie’s Kitchen. The fish had bones, the red meat was tough, the ham was veined with white fat and somehow, even her milkshakes had hard lumpy shit. Toothpicks were free, but the dentist charged mortgage rates for payments. “What’s wrong with Earl?” he asked and I said he probably caught a whiff of his armpits. “Boy, when the judge gets holda you tomorrow, he ain’t gonna take none a your smart mouth. I advise you quit fighting and smart-eleckin. And by the way, old Earl got a good one in ‘fore ya dropped his stinkin ass. You got a hell of a shiner comin. I ain’t gonna give ya no ice, neither. You ain’t shit, boy. But for what it’s worth, I’m on your side. That boy ya stabbed, he had it comin. He’s rotten as all git-out. And you ain’t killed him or yer old man. The throat is a scratch. Should hear him cryin at the hospital. Confessed to killin yer mama, beatin ya till ya bled and everything right down to the first time he beat off; he didn’t care long as we kept you away from him. I get ya, boy. I told yer defense to have you take yer shirt off in court. Goddamn I ain’t never seen shit like what the Doc showed me while you was out. I got kids. They don’t wanna stab me. Know why? I ain’t never lifted a hand to em. Never crossed my mind to. I jest tell em how things’re supposed to work. I hug em and set em on my lap and tell em I love em, always will. I expect em to do great things and get outta this county one day. And I know they will. What kinda man does that shit? Your papa deserved it.”

The monolog over, he said, “You ain’t a bad kid, ya know. You jest had enough. If I’d a known, I’d a locked yer pa up and took you in myself. Good luck tomorrow. Just remember do what that lawyer fella says, call the judge His Honor, you’ll be okay. And no smart-mouth, ya hear me? Dont. Oh. Forgot. Yer pa, ya got him good in that shoulder. Had surgery even. If he were left-handed, well, I guess he ain’t no more. I’d say fine job, ya know, but I swore a oath to uphold the law. Night, kid.”

That was the first time any man had ever made an effort to help me learn about life. Lookin back, I believe he saved my life.

The courtroom was full when I was led in and remained handcuffed. The “lawyer” had not even come to the jail to prepare me. I didn’t like him on sight. Cheap suit, half Windsor knot, garrish ruby-studded tie clip, matching cuff links and the breath of a coffee addict. At the sound of the door in back opening he whispered, “I’ve got a plan. Stick with what I say and you’ll be fine. No prison time at all. Trust me. You going to do that?” I nodded. He said, “Excellent.”

“All rise” came a deep voice. The judge came in and my heart skipped a beat. Fuck, Judge Heiman. I’m screwed.

But it wasn’t like that. The opening by the SA was weak. The opening by ruby-boy was terrific. He went into my past, the recent confession by dear old dad, my history of being bullied, and said I had built up so much anger that I couldn’t hold it back anymore. He told the jury that a trained psychiatrist was prepared to testify to that effect, and that my scars would prove I’d been through hell.

And in two days, it was over. The last hanging judge considered the guilty verdict an affront to decency and said he almost declared a mistrial. On reflection, he’d come up with something better.

I had flunked second grade, so while still in the first semester of my senior year, I was going to turn 18 before Christmas. Judge Heiman knew. He said, “The convicted will stand for sentencing.” I stood. My knees almost gave out.

“Franklin Lee Geldmacher, you have anything you’d like to say before sentence is declared?” I shook my head.

“Mr. Geldmacher, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, esteemed counsel: we have heard shocking testimony from you and from a veteran police officer as to your past, and while the laws of this state make no allowance for leniency based upon such a horrifying history, I want to make one thing clear.

“Your violent behavior must be punished, but I take no joy from sending such a young man to his death. I believe that you are sincere, honest and that you have been broken in body and spirit. I have thought about my decision constantly. I am sure that it will affect myself and most people present years from now.

“Franklin Lee Geldmacher: it is the decision of this court that upon your release from the town jail on the date of your eighteenth birthday that you will go straight into the military service of your choice: the United States Army or the United States Marines. You will not be permitted to serve in any other branch. You will likely be serving in Vietnam, and as that conflict escalates, it will become more unlikely that you will ever return. However, with your instincts and the will to fight against all things that you consider evil, I will check on your progress when I can, and pray for your safe return. May good fortune and the Good Lord favor you. Mr. Geldmacher, I am deeply sorry for what you have been through — and for what you are about to. This court is adjourned.”

There was a hysterical outburst, but I couldn’t make out who it came from. The judge banged his gavel and yelled, “Order! This court stands adjourned and any further disorder will see those responsible immediately imprisoned! Clear the room!”

I looked at the ruby lawyer and said, “Go fuck yourself,” and he filled his soft leather briefcase and beat it while I was being led back to my cell, where I would be alone for the next month. I was allowed to read Life and the LA Times and they scared me at first.

Then, sitting up one frigid late November night, I had a comforting thought: I was born for this. I was meant for it. Every shitty day of my life had led me here.

And, live or die, I’d give it everything I had.

Watch for Part Two!

ALL FUCKED-UP

And when he gets to Heaven,

to Saint Peter he will tell,

“One more soldier reporting sir,

I’ve done my time in Hell.”

***

Don’t believe, or even pretend to, that everything is going well. Because the truth is, nothing is going well.

Nothing is.

***

In World War Two, there were two acronyms, “FUBAR” and “SNAFU”, which meant the same thing: “fucked up beyond all recognition” and “situation normal, all fucked up”.

By the late 1960s, the soldiers and marines in Vietnam had altered the wording and the meaning. It was somehow worse by then, and the shortened “All fucked-up” was used to convey that a troop was dead.

It could alternately be used to describe one who was severely wounded, usually a casualty with his face shot away, missing a limb or having head wounds so obviously serious that if the man lived through transportation and surgery, he was still a dead man.

Mostly, though, it just meant dead.

Back home, nobody but the families of those fighting the war or those who served, then rotated back to the States, knew this expression, and war correspondents who did know it couldn’t print it or repeat it. Yet far too many men and women in the service went over to answer the draft or a call to aid, and they, and far too many civilians, ended up being “all fucked-up”.

On the home front, two general factions emerged to march in political protests. One was the Antiwar movement, generally but erroneously associated with hippies, when in reality the movement was mixed with hippies, college students and faculty, moms and dads not unlike TV parents, and even clergy.

The second hated those protesters with a mix of bile and venom. They too carried signs, but they were often filmed in parades with convertible automobiles, god-knows-who sitting on the deck lid, feet on backseats, with hat, tie and the constant waving at the crowd. Most had nothing more to do with politics than being in the Kiwanis, Lions or Jaycees.

Misguided by White House hype, full of the terror of communism and the lingering hatred of Asians from WW II and Korea, they did their fair share of twisting the minds of teens with guilt until they volunteered. Or were forced to outwardly oppose the war.

The change did not happen in any fast or dramatic manner. It was gradual at first. But as the evening news showed the casualties of the war for the first time without heavily edited newsreels for theaters, folks began to think that perhaps this wasn’t such a great idea after all. And when a POW being “interviewed” blnked his eyes in morse code and spelled “torture” things became less bearable.

That interview took place courtesy of a Japanese crew. It was 1966. And Jerry Denton was a U.S. Navy admiral.

At the time, a wider public wasn’t aware of it. Like so many things about the war, no one was always getting informed of some events later.

But that was a different time, a different generation. You’d have thought, from old movies, that some brave commandos would have been sent to kick commie ass and rescue an admiral. You’d have been wrong, too. Admiral Denton, who would one day become a senator, spent the better part of a decade faced with some of the most vile acts human beings can imagine.

Men and women in Vietnam and Thailand had to live with what they saw and had to do: a tanker crew (armor) burning kids out of the Bush because they were Victor Charlie and laid booby traps for infantry; watching a villa get torched while the residents cried; having to watch close buddies die in the grass calling to God or Mommy. Nurses and doctors had never seen or smelled what faced them coming in from the Hueys. Bowels completely sprung from the body, bandaged to it like a huge child hid beneath; faces missing, no sound ever to come from it again; septic infections already spreading from wounds caused by VC booby spikes coated in dung… they who survive to this day cannot, and never could have, recovered from those kinds of sights, smells, the sounds of screaming and weeping.

***

On Memorial Day we’re supposed to honor the soldiers, marines, seamen, pilots…who never came back alive.

The ones who got All Fucked-Up.

But it has never been that way, has it?

A stupid, disrespectful parade in a one-traffic-light town where the main street is completely dark at night. The mayor smiles and waves and thinks nobody knows that he dates high school girls. The pastor gives a benediction which means absolutely nothing. The high school girls plot revenge on the mayor; their ex-boyfriends plot revenge on the girls for letting that bloated, disgusting old man get between their legs; and nobody ever thinks about the dead who did not run from serving their country, but answered the call and paid the ultimate price for it.

They used to mean something. They used to stand for something.

The surviving veterans see this in complete comprehension and awareness of a petty, ungrateful community who will soon be firing up grills and cracking open bottles of Pabst and Budweiser.

A wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns: depending on the serving president, it could be an act of the most severe disrespect (Donald Trump) or the highest and most emotional regard (Clinton, the Bushes, Obama, Biden, Carter).

In the bleachers a crowd watches and laughs at the guards, the elite of the elites. The guards order silence. The crowd quiets but does not understand. “Respect” and “honor” are mere words without meaning.

Blogs are posted. Editorial pieces written. John Wayne marathons on AMC and others. Except John Wayne never served. We’re All Fucked-Up. Steaks at 40 bucks a pop (not kidding) will sizzle over charcoal while community swimming pools open for the season. They all might as well go piss all over Arlington National Cemetery. But hell: they do that every day. Just by the stupidity in their lives, the pettiness, the hatred, the shooting of mass civilians in stores with guns that should be illegal…

The Supreme Court has been bought and paid for. What used to be the republican party is trying to bring on the Fourth Reich. Global warming is unchecked, out of control and facilitated by a greed, a lack of restrictions and renewed zeal by petroleum conglomerates to keep finding new sites to drill.

The war in Ukraine has made even infamous neutralities-Finland, Sweden, for two examples-begin to take NATO membership far more seriously. I warned months ago that Finland was in jeopardy; but I’m glad that I was not the only one to see it.

Because no matter how bad Russia looks, it will not stop. To save face, it cannot retreat, and even if it does, it won’t take long before it comes back hardcore.

My Time On Twitter Was A Waste

I think I lasted a month. After a post went sub-viral, I heard story after story from people who lost family to fentanyl because prescription opiods have been suddenly denied. It’s horrific enough that some, suffering more pain than they can bear, kill themselves. A prescription would have stopped that. But as bad is the street drug problem. Heroin, morphine and counterfeit percocet are loaded with fentanyl and, sometimes, carfentanyl, both of which arrest pulmonary function and kill you in minutes. An antidote, called Narcan or Narcalone, can save an OD victim. But in the fucked-up country we live in, it’s harder to get than prescription opiods.

This is a nation: death all around us, the United States dying more every day. There’s no respect to be found. If I go outside wearing my Army boonie hat, one of my neighbors spits. Not aimed at me, but meant to show hatred, disgust, disrespect. He certainly does not have any time in the military. I served, motherfucker. What’d you ever do?

She was all happy yesterday, this neighbor, telling me she was going to the store and asking did I need anything in a syrupy-sweet voice. But She rarely even comes out of her house and doesn’t say shit most of the time. As soon as I saw the unfamiliar vehicle on the lot this morning I knew the reason for her false friendliness: fuckboy was coming to town.

Fake is everywhere. Words, offers, greetings. I know who I can freely love, and whom I dare not. I don’t hate anyone, but I might have nothing to say, either. My words never do any good. My offered friendship becomes hurtful and shames me when I learn that it was falsely accepted and then scorned.

I had one follower on Twitter who found out that I’m a Christian. Now, mind you, I’m not a very good Christian. I don’t go to church, nor would I, not even for a fucking wedding, not that I ever get invited. I’m that one guy you’ll never invite, not to a wedding or a wake. And I don’t even give a fuck.

But the Twitter guy literally created a thread to insult me. He kept going, because he couldn’t think of insults fast enough. He probably had to Google “How to insult a Christian” and came up with “You’re not interested in expanding your knowledge” and told me I was a delusional “magical thinker”.

He then left another tweet “No longer interested in your ideas”.

I’d told him up front I have respect for all religions, or lack of any, considering they’re not harmful. I did not feel moved to repeat it. When insulted in a flurry like that, I simply leave. I blocked him but kept seeing where a fellow “Christian of solid faith” practically chased after him saying he respected him. I thought, Why don’t you ask him if you can lick his ass, you idiot?

I deleted my account. I went to my petition and closed it. I no longer knew how many stories were true or false, and besides, with 101 signatures, it had no chance of being anything I could use to fight such a cruel health system such as we have.

I did not mean to make an issue out of religion. However, once it becomes an issue, I will not back down. I’m not renouncing my faith to anyone for any reason and wouldn’t even do so on threat of torture. I don’t care if it costs me friends or my life, and I still call out assholes like Franlin Graham who’s on Twitter hawking his Samaritan’s Purse, but is rich enough to brag about his material possessions, like a Harley Davidson. What a dick. He doesn’t even know he’s as fake as a street percocet. He’s lost his way. His daddy taught him well.

And the poor woman next door is shallow. She probably doesn’t know it. She’s a physicist. Even her absolutes, maths, observations, all of it, are something she cannot argue with me. Chaos physics says underlying patterns will always be scribbled over as any closed system gets less predictable. Like weather forecasts, for example. Beyond 48 hours, anything becomes less predictable. Storm fronts can change tracks in minutes as variable after variable is encountered.

We get a severe thunderstorm watch. I go see the radar: a line of storms is coming east, alright. I see it, it’s there in red, yellow, purple….wicked stuff. But it’s yet to complete the crossing of the formidable Appalachian Mountain range, and I know from many years of observation that storms can get split into segments, which then lose energy, and my area gets a few sprinkles while in DC, miles away, I hear thunder loud and clear. You cannot predict that sort of thing. Sometimes the clot of storms comes north. Sometimes it splits to go north and south of my area.

People think themselves clever. But truly wise people never believe that they are wise and never even think it. Because wisdom is counter to all vanity, however slight.

The timing for the “tipping point” or point of no return, I suppose, to stem global warming has already passed. Yet I’ve read articles that say it will happen in five years, or ten years, or, as I read recently, 20. Corporations own media outlets, so of course it changes. But we’ve been out of time for quite a while.

That’s okay. Right? You still start your car from inside your house and let it idle to warm or cool the interior while you’re putting on your makeup or having coffee. No big deal, it’s only one car. Your Dasani is only one more bottle. If you toss it in a trash can as you’re walking down the sidewalk, it doesn’t get recycled. But it’s just one bottle. How can it hurt anything?

You may gripe about gas prices and the interest rate, but you’re still borrowing money and running about in an SUV. And you buy a new cellphone every few months because you simply must pay attention to what’s trending. And the old one goes where?

We don’t care. About anything. We’re divided: black and white, religion, rich and poor, the stalkers and the stalked. There’s a dangerous mix coming together, a volatile one that this country will not survive.

And by that, I mean: we will, every one of us, become All Fucked-Up.

This essay is dedicated in gratitude to the men and women who gave their lives in service to their country, to their surviving families who had no choice but to share in that ultimate sacrifice;

On behalf of a forgetful and ungrateful country, I give you thanks and pray that God has welcomed the brave souls into His care, and that He watches over their children.

Be All That You Can Be…

In the 1980s, commercial space on network TV was bought by the US Army for a series of recruitment ads. The slogan, in song usually, was “Be all that you can be.”

The ads were silly enough to cause unintended laughter, but the advertising campaign designers weren’t Army anyway. Well, at least, I never thought so. It sort of surprised me that in training, I saw training films that looked as silly. I’m not counting the Medic training one that dealt exclusively with “venereal diseases” which today are referred to as STDs. Some of our female trainees ran from the base’s enlisted theater vomiting the whole way. No, it’s true, and I am not taking a shot at women. I got to know them, and they became very capable medics. But in their defense that film was beyond grotesque. I mean, if I hadn’t grown up with so much horror, I’d have tossed breakfast up too.

Shit happens in the Army. I never once had a problem serving with women as equals, and I liked them. A combination of personnel, as I saw it, was right, fair and made the Army stronger. But hey. Shit still happens.

Being all that you can be has been known to include things soldiers really need to stop being. A master sergeant and his son got busted a while back. The sergeant had a place somewhere outside of Fort Bragg. What tipped authorities, I don’t recall, but the idiot had to have raised some serious red flags for the raid to even take place. Well, you have to get a warrant, right?

Whatever happened doesn’t matter. The father and son were dirty: two keys of coke, a large sum of cash and an illegal assault weapon were found. The dummies are gonna go to prison. Right now, it is up to the state of North Carolina to prosecute, but you wait; it will be tried in a federal court.

Two keys of coke. Several Gs in cash. Damn!

There are several homicide cases still ongoing, too, including what appears to be a case of fragging.

My question is, what the hell would make anyone crazy or evil enough to do these kinds of things, and where were their commanding officers? You have to know your people, and over this guy stood a couple of lieutenants, a captain, a sergeant major, a major and a Colonel.

Tell you what. Shit happens in the Army, okay? It does. I went through basic with some moron who, on our first leave, wore his class A uniform into Mexico. Ciudad Juarez, no less. I’m not bashing here; they love soldiers and airmen in Juarez. We were forbidden, warned for safety not to go, and it’s even illegal. Of course the guy was rolled and disappeared. Our drills were furious, standing us in formation and grilling us as to who was with him when he vanished, because he was too stupid to cross the border by himself. The cowards never spoke up, and people who go missing die because of cowards who don’t fess up.

I never did see the guy again. Never found out if he got back or not. And not then or now does the Army shout details from the base PA system. If he made it back, the feds got involved, on both sides. He was probably dishonorably discharged or given severe punishment which became part of his permanent record.

In the case of the master sergeant, well, I’d like to know why his peers didn’t speak up, or if they did, why not sooner. Fort Bragg, it seems, has a drug problem.

I don’t give a damn if it ends in dishonorable discharges for half the men and women at Bragg. Druggies gotta go.

Damned morons. This is not the kind of thing I want to read on Memorial Day weekend! No wonder the Army dropped that slogan. Croots were being a bit more than they should be, hey?

Still are, too. It’s not even a new problem. There’s nothing new here. But I want you to know, need you to remember…most men and women in our armed forces kick ass. They’re rockstars with mad skills, dedication and yet, after four very long years of Trump, their morale could use a boost. A big one.

Funny.

I never met a master sergeant who struck me as more than an asshole. Like warrant officers who can’t fly.

I am depressed. Shaking my head, too.

Enjoy your Memorial Day.

You Never Watch The Choppers Leave

Republican politicians aren’t the only ones responsible. Everyone shares guilt in the creation of a country coming ever closer to its demise, final and terrible and ruinous to the entire world. Blame goes to those who never voted in 2016. Clinton did win the popular vote. That’s true; but if more voters had turned out in critical districts, she could have won more electoral college votes. Russia shares blame. They officially denied involvement in the election, but there’s no evidence that they didn’t, and every bit of proof that they did. James Comey shares blame. Close to Election Day, he was part of an investigation into Clinton’s emails and whether a housekeeper could have been exposed to classified data. It got out. The outrage produced in America was palpable. Listening to a podcast of the show famed ghost hunter Jason Hawes did after the series “Ghost Hunters” had wrapped, I was a fan until the news of the latest Hillary Clinton investigation got out. He typed in the live chat something about “nobody should have that much power” and I responded with swift and beseeching words: don’t let the Hillary Hunters win. How many times was she investigated only to be found free of any offense?

And of course, Trump bears the largest share of blame because he ignorantly stirred racial tensions and hatred that a corner of society seethed with after eight years of service by a black president. As soon as he saw what it did, he fanned the flames even more. His campaign rallies were outrageous. He told a mother with a crying baby to get out. He encouraged people in the crowd to assault protesters. He had security throw people out without their coats. He mocked a disabled person. He called John McCain a loser because he was a POW.

Every bit of this so damaged the run-up to the election and the Clinton campaign that indeed, people voted for him over her, and some just abstained. These were critical votes.

As soon as Donald Trump was sworn in and gave an inauguration speech so bizarre that George W. Bush called it “bullshit”, the bad things began to happen. We all hoped that the Secret Service would take his personal cell phone, which would have followed protocol and that those incoherent hateful tweets would stop. None of that happened. Everything just got worse.

There was the debacle at the airports. Muslims blocked from entering the country. Huge protests, the birth of The Resistance.

The Resistance died when asshole Michael Moore left protesting to make money. A film project. Talk of a TV series. Still later, Keith Olberman stopped his Resistance videos for Esquire. He declared stupidly that the Resistance had won. He was really just a fucking quitter.

Meanwhile a semi-approval of Trump appeared on NBC News that was so incomplete that it answered no questions about where the rest of the immigrant children are. The article is stupefying in that it makes the point that a “safe place” for children is very close to Mar-a-lago. Between you and me, that’s terrifying. If the fucking reporters who wrote and edited this shit were allowed into such a place with minors then anyone can gain access. We have no assurance that there’s any real safety at all. Stories about kids being transported in the dead of night to places far from the border like Manhattan died a quick death and were never followed up.

Since this article was published, part of a supposed “investigative series”, almost nothing has appeared. I googled “where are” and the Google fill-in showed that people have actually searched for “where are the Ozarks,” then “lungs”, “kidneys”, and the “Outer Banks.” If you don’t see something it likely hasn’t been searched for. I’m sorry. I appear to be the only one searching for the lost children.

For the past three years, Republicans in office have mysteriously enabled, been cowed and bullied by, and finally embraced Trump. Why is a question without any remotely understandable answer. I mean, I was republican in the late 70s and early 80s despite moral reservations. Reagan showed me what true barbarity was. What true dishonesty and clandestine conservative crimes were. I thought he’d be okay because of Nixon’s downfall. He wasn’t.

The George W. Bush presidency made it all worse. Wars we just didn’t need to start. Men, women…and children…died by the numbers. The Middle East was destabilized as I predicted in 2008, but I couldn’t see what was next. And I’m not even going to entertain any stupid conspiracy theory about September 11th. Bush had nothing to do with that and the idea is beyond stupid. But the republican party had changed into something it had never been before the Nixon years. And Bush was fed enough flawed intelligence that Iraq was doomed, along with over 4,000 soldiers.

In addition to soldiers we had lost in every military engagement in United States history, now we had more heroes to mourn. To remember.

There have been more wars for the United States than most people are aware of. Ask most, they’ll cite the two World Wars, Civil War and Vietnam. Most don’t know about the War of 1812, the Texas Revolution, the Korean Conflict, or even the series of wars that comprised a larger conflict. The American Indian Wars were really broken into what was often wars against single Indian nations.

Right or wrong, just or unjust, soldiers fought for their country and gave their lives.

There were always deserters. Always religious objectors. Always, those who just plain ran and hid. But they were never the majority, and no matter what–whether you prefer peace over war, like I do, those fallen heroes made this moment, as you read this, possible. Historians still argue about how close Nazi Germany came to winning the war. But what if they had?

These questions insult the memory of those who fought. Those who died. They never stopped believing they had to win, or that their country would win.

There’s a saying that supposedly came out of the Vietnam War. Helicopters actually served in World War Two and Korea, but Vietnam holds the distinction of being known as “the helicopter war”. Hundreds of UH-1 “Huey” helicopters took infantry and airborne troops to places all over Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. They were sometimes restricted from actually landing and idling the engines, meaning the troops jumped a short distance to the ground. This was because even if the ship hadn’t taken fire on approach, the LZ was considered extremely dangerous. To lift back off after landing took longer and more power than if the pilot hovered just off the ground instead. Even the hated Chinooks could do this.

Once on the ground, troops had to cover each other as they advanced to relative safety of cover. That’s if they hadn’t already been dropped straight into a firefight. And the superstition was thus born: you never watch the choppers leave.

It wasn’t merely bad luck; it showed that you weren’t focused on your fellow soldiers, and that’s during critical minutes that can see mortars, RPGs, grenades and AK-47s light up your LZ.

Part of the superstition also held that doing this doomed a soldier never to take that extraction flight back. It was bad luck.

Wars have always given birth to superstition. In the Great War, and the one that followed, tobacco was a staple that helped soldiers cope. But matches often got wet. To save them, a guy who lit a cigarette would stand and light the cigarettes of several buddies too. This gave, at night anyway, enemy snipers and grenadiers ample time to zero in and target them. Hence the expression “never light three cigarettes on one match”. Or just “three on a match”.

Here’s to the memory of all those who fought. They were scared. They were killed doing what their country told them to do. They had honor. They believed in what they were doing, even if they disagreed with certain things about a particular war. In their memory, we have observed this day.

But many are not at rest. Their memory is disrespected by a government void of compassion and civility, which embraces a liar. Embraces corruption and the rotting of the country they loved enough to risk, then give their lives for. They have been betrayed, their graves spat upon. This is nothing like the country they knew. Nothing.

But sometimes maybe you do watch the chopper leave. I look forward to watching the chopper that will carry Donald away from the White House for the last time.

And the Republicans who embraced him who will remain?

If I could, I would slap every one of you in the face. You are traitorous bastards who dishonor all for which we have fought and stood.