Capitalism Magazine > War & Peace > Pacifism  Newsletter | Feed | Support Us | Blog | Search
  


The Naked Hypocrisy of the Dixie Chicks

by Carter Laren  (April 29, 2003)

"Just so you know," Natalie Maines told a London audience last month, "we're ashamed the president of the United States is from Texas." But in an interview with Diane Sawyer Friday, the lead singer of the Dixie Chicks responded to fan backlash by claiming that although she is opposed to the war in Iraq, she feels "regret for, you know, the choice of words," and that the Dixie Chicks "support our troops 100 percent."

But, you know, that is not, like, possible, Natalie.

To mollify would-be critics, members of the fashionably anti-war aristocracy routinely toss the public slogans like, "we support our troops." Their tone is one of moral condescension, as if it were obvious that no contradiction exists between opposing U.S. military action in Iraq and simultaneously supporting U.S. troops--and that only a philistine could possibly think otherwise. The implication is that pacifists are "infinitely" compassionate individuals for whom the issue of war is purely intellectual. War, such an attitude suggests, is some-sort of disconnected abstraction one is free to either oppose or support, and the decision to protest a war has no bearing in reality and no relevance to those who are actually fighting it.

But pacifists--even the Dixie Chicks--know this is hogwash. If war had no consequences in reality, no one would bother to make a big fuss about it when it happened and Sean Penn would have time to protest the rape of the Constitution instead of the bombing of Baghdad.

"War is killing," pacifists decry. And it is.

What they ignore is that since "war is killing," soldiers are killers. In fact, taxpayers spend hordes of money training them to stab, shoot, or blow-up as many enemies as possible. And since there is no draft, U.S. troops are not only killers, they are killers by choice. Sure, some of them may have enlisted just to get some extra college money and aren't too keen on sending Tomahawks whizzing through the streets of Baghdad, but not one of them is seriously morally opposed to the idea. If they were, they would refuse to fight, or they would go AWOL.

But being a killer isn't always bad. Killing Germans as they march into Warsaw, for example, is not bad at all. It's heroic, even. Killing Jews while goose-stepping into Josefov, however, is not just killing; it's murder. And in case the Dixie Chicks forgot, murder is bad.

Soldiers are not exempt from moral judgment. The German who claims, "I was just doing my job" deserves no forgiveness, especially if he voluntarily joins the Nazi Party. By offering himself as a tool by which Hitler can commit genocide, the German soldier goes from being a killer to being a murderer. The Polish soldier who conquers him in self-defense, however, is a savior.

There is an irrefutable distinction between killing a Nazi and being one: motive. Those who fight a morally justified war deserve the support and praise of onlookers, but those who fight an immoral war are thugs deserving of nothing but scorn--and high-speed lead poisoning. Which side a soldier is fighting on matters, and it matters a great deal.

"There is not a correlation between not wanting a war and not supporting the troops," the Dixie Chicks contend. But there is. Opposing the war in Iraq is a moral condemnation of all those who are fighting it. It is a declaration that U.S. troops are on the wrong side. It is an accusation that they are murderers rather than heroes.

If that is what Maines means by "support," she can keep hers.

Pacifists from the Berkeley Hills to Beverly Hills proclaim that the war in Iraq is wrong. They roll around on the streets at major intersections in moral outrage over alleged American imperialism, and they draw swastikas on images of the president. But if Bush is no better than Hitler, then U.S. Marines are no better than SS Stormtroopers and they deserve contempt, not support. It is time that the anti-war crowd found the guts to admit the implications of the anti-war message. The Dixie Chicks are not just "ashamed that the president of the United States is from Texas," they're ashamed that U.S. soldiers are from the United States.

They ought to be ashamed of themselves, Entertainment Weekly photos notwithstanding.


Carter is a part-time free-lance writer and Producer Advocate. He is also a former editor and contributing writer at Capitalism Magazine, where he primarily focused on self-defense and national-defense issues. While at the University of Pittsburgh, Carter was a regular columnist for The Pitt News. In his spare time, Carter instructs both law enforcement and fellow citizens in the defensive use of firearms and is a student of the martial arts.




 
Author Archives | Comment | Print | Email | Delicious | Digg | reddit | Facebook | StumbleUpon

Views expressed are author's and not necessarily CapMag's. Excerpts limited to 250 words, so long as a
hyperlink is provided to the original article. See our terms of use.

 

Capitalism Magazine Classics

"Francisco's Money Speech"

"So you think that money is the root of all evil?" said Francisco d'Anconia. "Have you ever asked what is the root of money?

End States That Sponsor Terrorism

Fifty years of increasing American appeasement in the Mideast have led to fifty years of increasing contempt in the Muslim world for the U.S. The climax was September 11, 2001.

Religion vs. Liberty
Secularism is not a sufficient condition for freedom--but a necessary one.

United Nations Declaration of Human Rights Destroys Individual Rights
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is a charter of tyranny.

In Defense of the "Barbarous Relic"
Why The Enemies of Capitalism Smear The Gold Standard

Hatred of Western Civilization
Why Terrorists Attacked America

Repeal Sarbanes-Oxley
Treats Businessmen as Guilty Until Proven Innocent

Immigration and Individual Rights
Does a foreigner have a moral right to move to America? And should America welcome him?

A Tale of Two Novels
Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged Versus James Joyce's Ulysses

The New Right vs. Capitalism
The political right in America no longer stands for individual rights, limited government and capitalism.

The "Crony" in Russian "Capitalism" is Socialism
The fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 did not usher in capitalism. It merely replaced communism with socialism.

Israel Has A Moral Right To Its Life
Israel is America's frontline in the war on terrorism.

Moral Values Without Religion
The alternative to the dogmatism of the religious right and the emotionalism of the egalitarian left is a code of moral absolutes based on reason and individualism.

 

Related Articles on Pacifism:

Pacifists versus Peace

Fighting Terrorism and the Case for Pre-emption

Loving Saddam, Hating America

Human Shields: The Moral Ideal?

The Naked Hypocrisy of the Dixie Chicks

Peacemongers Should Be Apologizing Not Marching

"I Was Wrong."

Smashing Windows for Peace

Saddam's Useful Idiots: Stalin Would Be Proud

The Anti-Survival Protestors

Death to Dictators!

Peaceniks: Warmongers for America's Enemies

Orwellian 'Peace' Movement

Debunking the Clichés of Pacifism

Pacifists and Professors of Oppression

More Articles on Pacifism

 

Copyright 2009-1997 Capitalism Magazine. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
Terms of Use. Submissions