Friday, March 29, 2024

Patriotism and Life

 Patriotism and Life

 I was born in the 1930’s, before the Second World War.  My patriotism and love of my country developed during that war and other events as I grew to adulthood.  I also grew politically aware during this time, and although my mother, who was born in Poland, was an inveterate Roosevelt democrat who had lived in Chicago as a young woman, and I understood that FDR was our “fearless leader” during the war years, I questioned his “new deal” and some of his domestic policies.  I sort of liked old Harry, but not particularly his politics.  By the time Eisenhower was elected president in 1952, I was pretty much libertarian and/or conservative republican in my views.

 With considerably expanded knowledge of politics and how the world works, I really have not changed my views substantially over the last 70-odd years.  Oh, I have tweaked different aspects of my political belief system at various times, such as on abortion and its nuances, and on other issues from time to time.  However, I still consider myself conservative with libertarian leanings.

 Having said all that, it appalls me to see where this country has gone in terms of its ethical and moral degradation.

 Now, I realize that I am considered a dinosaur.  My parents and adults around me had 6th to 8th grade educations and worked long hours in factories or agricultural or other menial jobs.  Cars they drove were what they euphemistically called “terreppas” (after the Polish).  Radio and silver screen movies were about the only   entertainment, and you cranked a big box on the wall to reach an operator for an outside telephone line.  Life was mostly simple and devout, and oriented around family, friends, work and church.

 At 12 years old, I was doing odd jobs around yards and farms to make a little money.  By 14, I had a part-time job driving a Farmall M tractor harrowing a potato field.  By 16, I had a full-time shift at a cotton mill, while attending the honors program at a high school scientific course, also full time.

 I worked and earned my way to a degree in Chemical Engineering, getting out of college with no student debt.  Hardly possible now, but it was possible back then, with scholarships, a lot of dedication, hard work and some negative impact on grade point average.  My engineering class was about half returning Korean War veterans, and half younger types.  Guess whom I identified and grew closer to and drank with?

 And by the way, all calculations then were done manually, with use of a slide rule.  I saw my first (mechanical) calculator in New York in 1960, and bought my first “red eyed monster” pocket calculator in the early 1970’s.

 During the Second World War, and Korea, and Vietnam to some extent. The military handed an eighteen year old a bolt action Springfield rifle (or later an M1), and some grenades, trained him for six or eight weeks, and sent him to the other side of the world to fight “the enemy”.  That’s so we didn’t have to fight “the enemy” here in our country.  Some survived. Some did not.  American KIA’s in WW2 were 405k; Korea, 35k; Vietnam, 58k; War on Terror, 7k.

 So, twenty year olds back then were veterans of foreign wars.  Now we have 30 year-old plus millennials still living at home and clamoring for “free stuff”. Like college tuition loan forgiveness in exchange for the democrat vote.

 In my own case, thankfully, I never had to fight in an active war.  I was commissioned an officer in the U.S. Army Signal Corps and served a short spell on active duty after Korea, and before Vietnam.  I did some reserve obligation in the New York City area before working actively overseas for an international company that supplied large quantities of petroleum products to the U.S. military.  I got my DD-214 and Honorable Discharge without firing a shot other than in training.

 I started living life early, and I write this not to beat my own drum, but to illustrate how times have changed.  Now, terms like “dinosaurs” and “toxic masculinity” are derogatory terms used to describe those out of touch with mainstream society, which is ostensibly kinder and gentler.  Need society be reminded that they would not be here without these predecessors? Or speaking German or Japanese or Chinese.

 Those “dinosaurs” formed this country, fought its wars, died for it.  They maintained and nourished it against all enemies, foreign and domestic.  Now, in Biden’s and Obama’s time, the country is disintegrating into an ideologically extreme left-wing society, that refutes all of the positive history that made it.

 I am in process of reading “The Coddling of the American Mind”, by Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt, a liberal lawyer and social psychologist.  They explore our current society, and its escape to “safetyism”, cancel culture and identity politics. The book provides a pertinent contrast of our increasingly socialist life to bygone days under the influence of “toxic masculinity” and the “dinosaurs”.  This book points me back to original thinkers Richard Dawkins and Steven Pinker.

 Ray Gruszecki
March 30, 2024

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