| > our country (and yours) wouldn't need to ask people to sacrifice that part of their humanity in service to their countrymen. Sacrifice in that sentence indicates that we are asking those people to give up their humanity in our service, as if that is something that makes it heroic. Besides, I didn't ask them, and never would. > You might find that while SEALs are happy to speak proudly what they've learned in basic training, not so many of them speak happily about what war forces them to do during deployment. SEALs speak proudly of their basic training because they glorify a thing that I abhor: violence. In both cases I think that that exact use of those words is what I have a problem with. I'm not asking anybody to sacrifice themselves for me and I don't think Navy SEAl basic training is something to 'be proud of'. Firemen, nurses, ambulance drivers, doctors, single moms working hard to feed and educate their kids have reasons to be proud. Navy SEALs in my book at least not so much, they are for the most part underpaid mercenaries. Of course they are painted as heroes by the government, otherwise how would you get young and intelligent people to set aside their reservations about the aims to which they are generally used. If every country would stick to using their 'defense' departments for what they are ostensibly named then the world would be a much better place. |