Editor’ Note: This is another excellent article by Justin Raimondo for Antiwar.com. Antiwar has long been an intelligent voice of opposition to war mongering and the mainstream media propaganda that supports it. It is a surprise, and a disappointment, to learn that Antiwar will close their doors tomorrow if they do not receive the funding they need to continue. We encourage our readers to please lend their support today.
Justin Raimondo
Antiwar
As Americans take to the roads for a long Memorial Day weekend, eager to get out of the cities and out of their routines — and more than ready for a little rest and relaxation — the origins and meaning of this holiday are lost – or, at least, hardly anyone thinks of them anymore. Formally, it is a day reserved for the remembrance of our war dead: historically, it was meant as a day of reconciliation in the wake of the Civil War. In reality, however, it is just another excuse for Americans to get out their barbecues, invite the neighbors over for a party, and forget about their troubles.
With three wars going simultaneously, and a few more in the hopper, Americans are sick and tired of war: they don’t want to remember it – and who can blame them? Indeed, Americans don’t care to remember much of anything, these days, least of all the disastrous wars that have plagued us in recent years. Inundated with problems that seem insoluble, convinced they can have no effect on the course of events in any case, most Americans have acquired a case of advanced historical Alzheimer’s out of sheer self-protection.
Be the first to comment on "The Reinvention of Historical Memory — Memorial Day Reflections"