American Handgunner /nov.dec.2003

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wingman

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This appeared in the Nov./dec. 2003 issue of American Handgunner, written
be Roy Huntington, I believe it is very good article worth a read to all THR
members.



American Exceptionalism:

Don’t Let The “Idea†of America Die

We are a burley, larger-then life, muscle-bound country. America is populated with the off-spring of adventures and the fearless people who took a leap of faith into the chasm of uncertainty- to come here build a new life. These were not ordinary people, content to live under the thumbs of European nobility but people who, somehow, knew that liberty, equality and economics success could be theirs- if they had the will. Those relentlessly action-oriented people, from all walks of life, left their peasantry behind and planted firm feet on our soil. This had never happened before in history of the world.
A true story: In the late 1800s an English Lord was traveling in the west. He came to a dirty ranch hand mending a fence and inquired as to the “where-abouts of your master’s house?â€The hand paused, looking up and said, “That man hasn’t been born yet.†Which, quite simply, epitomizes the concept of America. With their own wits and muscle, our ancestors made their way here, succeeded, failed, died, lived, raised families and fought for what they believed in. And did not believe in royalty-or in servitude.
How then, have we, who have the blood of these hardened survivors coursing through our veins, gotten so whiny and finger-pointy? What happened to the stoic fellows who simply took it on the chin, did what was right and kept their complaining to a minimum? Where are the prairie farmer’s wives who buried their own children “out back†and the lone soldier who fought against sure death in the deserts of Arizona? Why do we celebrate the mediocre? The whiners? The people who complain the loudest? Why do we pay attention to those who mock us from the very countries our ancestors fled from? Here we stand, the richest, most powerful country in the history of the world-and yet, we doubt ourselves and feel guilty about our successes. We pay a price to be where we are, and that price is the spotlight. People will shout, throw rocks, shoot guns at us and want what we have because they didn’t have the wherewithal to manage it themselves. It’s okay to be right. It’s ok to be strong. It’s ok to be decisive and it’s ok to say, “That’s wrong. Stop it now.†In short, it’s ok to be American. Yet we are becoming a nation of “middleroaders,†of hesitation in the face of decision-making-nation of fearful people who hide in their SUVs and wait for someone else to “do something†about it. It gets worse. What’s with the spate of TV shows and movies in which the “hero†almost invariably ends-up being somehow “dirty†(on the take, murderer-or worse) continues. Why is it bad to be good? How come our definition of “hero†gotten so muddled? Is a basketball star who cheats on his wife, a president who lies, a Senator who steals or a pop star who rants, worthy of attention-other than as a focus of our own solid indignation? Why can’t there be a good guy who is truly good- and a bad guy who is, just as clearly, bad? Why must there always be some middle ground, some compromise? “Oh, he’s a sort of good guy, but not always.†Why are we, as a nation, suddenly so uneasy with the concept of “this is clearly right and this is clearly wrong? “ Why are we so often hesitant to stand up and simply say. “That, right there, is wrong, and we won’t stand for itâ€- and then back our play. Which got me to thinking about.
America in general. Has Darwin’s theory of natural selection been in effect, and are the “good†guys actually becoming slowly extinct? Is the blood-line of that core-group genetically-tough adventurers who took their lives into their own hands in the early years of this great country becoming-diluted? Simply “coming to America†these days does not make you an American. Now, a plane ticket and a bit of paperwork can get you to here. Then what? And, just as importantly, just because your born here, unless you participate in what it is to be an American, unless you seize opportunity and become a part of our national culture, what is America dies a little bit.
While the concept of the “melting pot†was popular, and the “celebrate diversity†trend a catchy phrase- I think the reality is somewhere in-between. A melting pot denotes a monochromatic sea of same ideas, while the concept of “separate but together†that diversity denotes-seems to simply a jumbled mess of differing ideas. Neither concept is what makes America what it is. Indeed, how much diversity can we stand and still maintain our cohesiveness as a nation?
If to be an American, is to do what comes most naturally to be the kind of person initially attracted to this great county-then are we still trying? That sense of savvy Yankee independence, combined with a ready-willingness to embrace the concept of the need to do things for the common good is, perhaps, the backbone of what is America.
And, just perhaps, it’s this vibrant exciting arena of commonality of direction that makes up this concept-this mixing of spirit, history, personality and attention to a common good-this gives life to America. It’s her people and how they think, both independently and collectively, that’s what is important. It’s what brought us here and, if it dies, will take us with it. We need to stand firm in our heritage, in what made this astounding experiment called America a success, and to not lose sight of where we came from.
It’s okay to be right, it’s okay to be strong and it’s okay to be united for a common good. Stop whining, stop celebrating the mundane, the offensive, the thieves, liars and relieve us from having to be so quite so heroic ourselves- and that to, is yet another step down that slippery road to nothingness. And what a tragedy it would be if this noble experiment we are part of-should ultimately fail.
And frankly, I don't care what the rest of the world thinks about it all. It's what we think about it that's important...
 
What’s with the spate of TV shows and movies in which the “hero†almost invariably ends-up being somehow “dirty†(on the take, murderer-or worse) continues.
Besides the poor sentence structure, he has a point.

I believe that the spate of cop shows which show the cops as being bad but portrayed as "good" are merely conditioning for us. They want us to accept the "over-the-top-working-outside-of-the-law-doing-the-unconstitutional-for-the-greater-good" cop as the norm rather than the aberration.

Look at "The Shield" with Michael Chiklis.

HERE is a good write-up on the show. While the guy decries the bad cop image, he praises the show for its content and acting.
Back when the Shaft remake with Samuel Jackson came out, a reviewer in Newsweek noted the hypocrisy of viewers reacting positively to the very same police brutality they protested out in the streets. The ‘cop on the wrong side of the badge’ has been a Hollywood staple, and cop shows from Dragnet to NYPD Blue offer looks at the intensity and occasional cut corners taken to convict a felon. Whether it’s throwing the police badge in court ala Shaft or telling off the police chief ala S.W.A.T., bad boy policemen are easy to find in movies and television.

But none are better than Vic Mackey, lead character in FX’s hard hitting cop show The Shield. Originally a friend couldn’t convince me to give what appeared to be a formulaic rogue cop story a chance, but when another friend bought Season 1 and started singing its praises, I relented and bought the set. I was hooked. Only one show can match The Shield for intensity and compelling viewing, and that’s 24. When the only competition is one of the best TV action dramas in the past decade, you know The Shield is a winner. After almost a yearlong wait, the second season finally comes early January to get viewers pumped up for the third season in March. The Shield: Season 2 kicks everything up a notch, taking the tumultuous, open-ended conclusion from the first season and running. Only ten hours of television seems criminally short for such a brilliant show, but the quality leaves viewers hungry for more. Start circling dates in March now.

...

The Shield lives in one humongous grey zone, and the zone only extends in Season 2.

<more>
The one-eyed monster is training and conditioning people for the acceptance of their own enslavement; and that's no tinfoil argument.
 
The core of those who agree is still there.

But from my perspective this is merely a good argument for a war of either secession or expulsion. Or perhaps, one hopes, a peaceful severance.

Is this not what the red/blue state dichotomy is finally all about?
 
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