40-Year-Old Virgins

Filed under: Foreign Policy, Iraq, Lead Story, Vietnam — Jason, Managing Editor on April 22, 2008 @ 5:52 pm CEST

A major defect in the anti-war movement has been its inability to construct a contemporary and relevant narrative.  Rather than engaging with the specific problems presented by the invasion and occupation of Iraq, many of the most prolific anti-war advocates have persistently sought to reconstruct a politically virginal narrative built on their own romanticized recollections of the 1960s. Two of the most prolific such authors write at the hilariously misnamed “Moderate Voice”, perpetually seeking to cast every development in Iraq as a case study in the 1960s. (Prior examples of this endlessly repetitive meme here, here, and here.) Today’s contribution focuses on the old canard of alleged “lack of sacrifice” from modern youth as an explanation for their quiescence compared to the morally fine and upstanding 60s generation (of which the authors just happen to be a part).

peace_love_hippies.jpg

The better explanation is that the endless attempts to force Iraq into a Vietnam era mold are more the cause of anti-war failure than its salvation. People from non-baby boom generations who might be sympathetic to parts of the anti-war message are tired of having it hijacked for preening by self-absorbed 1960s retreads. That the major anti-war groups, from Code Pink to Moveon.org, are dominated and controlled by aging hippies living out Vietnam-era nostalgia limits the ability of those groups to present a compelling argument to younger generations.

Until the anti-warriors can get themselves out of their 40-year-old paradigm, they will remain politically impotent and unable to mount an effective political resistance to foreign policies they dislike.

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2 Comments »

  1. 1 Michael van der Galien

    April 22, 2008 @ 6:27 pm CEST

    Interesting to see how those extremists consider themselves better than the rest.

  2. 2 Jay_C

    April 23, 2008 @ 8:42 pm CEST

    In a sense I agree.  At first glance to make the many disparate  anti-war "groups" more effective, you would think that centralizing of their efforts would be the best method of gaining  a relevant voice. However, I think the rub with that  idea is that there are so many different points of view. For instance some violently oppose the war, while others peacefully oppose, some are stuck in the past, while others make logical, thought out arguments  based on the facts of where we are today, while still others take the "I told you the war was a bad idea in the first place" stance.  There are others that feel that we should have gone to war in the first place, but the minute there was no WMD found, we should have left then and there.   And still there are others…Like the Iraq war veterans group IVAW that  I think you can  look at these groups as under the umbrella of "anti-war" but most reasonable people will see that they are separate groups, should be treated as such and judged accordingly.  There are factions within the under the anti war umbrella that make rational reasonable arguements agains the war, but I think it is reasonable to assume that they do not speak for others that they don’t associate with.  (Much like how a tv station will air a late night  info-mercial with the discalimer that they do not endorse the product that bought airtime off the station.  If they didn’t pu the disclaimer there, I think I could have figured that out for myself)

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