Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Smedley Butler, Great American

Patrick Iber / New Republic:
The Marine Who Turned Against U.S. Empire  —  There are some figures whose place in the story of the American past is so central that schoolchildren cannot help but know them: George Washington, or Abraham Lincoln, or Rosa Parks.  But there is also a group of people who have not passed into national legend, and perhaps whose lives are not considered fit to explain to children. They are most likely to be encountered, if they are encountered at all, in the institutions that often engage the attention of young people between the ages of 18 and 22. Among those, there is probably only a single person who will be discovered almost exclusively by two generally nonoverlapping groups: avid readers of the corpus of Noam Chomsky, and members of the Marine Corps. That man, standing lonely astride the lens-shaped center of a peculiar Venn diagram, has the unlikely name of Smedley Darlington Butler.

2 comments:

Grung_e_Gene said...

As a Sgt preparing to EAS in 2005, I prepared young Marines showing up to CLNC for the next round of deployments in OIF. I made sure at a minimum they knew the name of twice decorated MoH Smedley Butler and heard the phrase "War is a Racket".

Jimmy T said...

Oh yeah, Smedley Butler. I was introduced to his legacy while in Marine Corp boot camp. It's funny how his reputation never got out into the greater society, but the powers that be must have wanted it to be that way. An honorable man who took his oath to "Protect and Defend the Constitution" seriously (as do I) much to the chagrin of those who plotted to overthrow the government...