
Centcom: A Paratrooper from the 618th Engineer Support Company (Airborne) walks across the dusty, desert terrain pulling security on the outskirts of Siniyah, Iraq. The Paratroopers used bulldozers to construct a berm almost around the entire city to isolate terrorists who operate out of it. U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Michael Carden.
In looking over the past year I find myself thinking of numbers. The main stream media seems gleefully obsessed with counting bodies of American Soldiers. A lot of the leftists blogs are keeping track of the numbers of Iraqi dead in what they call ‘Bush’s war of revenge’ among other things.
I’ve read how many people Saddam Hussien killed during his reign as the Butcher of Baghdad. Saddam’s numbers are being compared to Hitler’s numbers. There are calculations of what kinds of numbers we can expect to be killed if Iran gets their nuke program up and running. There are numbers of people coming over our borders legally and illegally, most of the numbers are for those coming here illegally. There are numbers of muslims infilterating society in Europe … and in America. There are numbers identifying how many species are threatened by global warming. Numbers are everywhere.
All these numbers make me think of what Joseph Stalin said about these kinds of numbers …
One death is a tragedy; a million is a statistic.
The carnage of the Global War on Terrorism; the attack of September 11, 2001, the deaths in Spain, England, Somalia, Indonesia and throughout the world, has been turned into statistics. It’s easy to roll a statistic off our tongues without feeling our hearts sink.
Statistics are impersonal.
What is worth all this? Most of us think in terms of large ideals. Is America worth dying for? Yes! Is freedom worth dying for? Yes! Why are our sons and daughters fighting on the other side of the world? For freedom, America and justice! To protect us from jihadists who would be here if they weren’t fighting them there.
The concepts of freedom, democracy, justice and the American way are also impersonal. They are parts of our lives that we take for granted and rarely contemplate what has been done, and needs to be done, for us to continue to take them for granted.
At the end of one of the many movies about Wyatt Earp, he is being praised for having saved the life of a man years earlier. He asks the boy who is admiring him what happened to the man after that. The man had continued to cause trouble and was eventually killed in a gun battle. The boy says, ‘I guess he wasn’t worth saving after all.’
Which brings me to what has been boiling around in my mind. Am I worth dying for? Me. Little ol’ me.
While the politicians argue over theories, forms of government and play political games, our Soldiers fight the wars and we the people make whatever sacrifices are required and look on with a certain amount of powerlessness. So, for me, I have to bring it down to the bottom line. The only thing the I have control over. The only thing I can really do anything about. I have to ask myself, am I worth dying for?
I start the New Year with these thoughts weighing on my mind. The very least I can do is to strive to be worthy of the sacrifices Our Soldiers are making on my behalf.
Dear Lord, lest I continue in my complacent ways, help me to remember that someone died for me today. And if there be war, help me to remember to ask and to answer “am I worth dying for?”
~ Eleanor Roosevelt

January 1st, 2007 at 4:12 pm
Now a time for perspective on our occupation…
I think it important that at the beginning of a New Year we reflect on past events and bring perspective to them now that some time has passed.
Here is what happened before 2007:
We were viciously and without provocation attacked on American soil b…..
January 1st, 2007 at 4:55 pm
I linked to you from Now a time for perspective on our occupation but the TB doesn’t show. Am I caught in your spam filter?
BSC: Yes, you were caught in my spam filter! But I set your TB free and it’s showing up now
Thanks for the link and for coming by. I hope you are you are having a good holiday
January 1st, 2007 at 6:41 pm
Very powerful, a good way of thinking about things, Beth. Best wishes for the New Year!
Tom (a.k.a. Dumb)
BSC: Thank you Dumb
January 1st, 2007 at 6:47 pm
Oh, and p.s. to Neil: you Lefies (along with some actually sane people) used to appalled by the 100,000 children PER YEAR dying under Saddam’s regime, as he skimmed off funds from the oil-for-food scam. Or maybe you’ve given those dying children a raincheck?
BSC: Uh huh! Yeah. I heard THAT! I was wondering whether or not I should correct him about me being a yankee - I’m not a yankee! I know Brits think we are all yankees - but we aren’t. HEH
January 1st, 2007 at 9:59 pm
A silly mistake by CNN…
Yet quite funny considering…
January 1st, 2007 at 10:26 pm
My Superior Brain in Action…
The Gremlin was out of town for the past four days and I seriously missed having her around. An ordinary cat would be cuddling like crazy to make up for lost time, but I’m smarter than that. By sitting on……
January 1st, 2007 at 10:52 pm
Blogger Halo Award…
I never heard of the Ââ€Blogger Halo Award†until this evening when I received a trackpost from Butch over at 123beta. This is an explanation of how it works and I quickly wanted to get involved since the standards are noteworthy and honorable…
January 2nd, 2007 at 5:58 am
What’s that giant sucking sound?…
Oh, that’s right, the vacuum between John (the lame shall walk) Edwards ears….
January 2nd, 2007 at 8:43 am
Anti-Islamofascist Blogger Censored…
That brought me to Blogger News Network. Apparently a “site editor†removed the article. No explanation was given….
January 2nd, 2007 at 8:49 am
SaddamÂ’s last words…
What exactly were SaddamÂ’s last words? Were they: “Avoid engagement with IraniansÂâ€? or as in the Haaretz piece, which quotes SaddamÂ’s last words as “Palestine is ArabÂâ€?…