A Review of Don’t Thank Me For My Service

A Review of Don’t Thank Me For My Service

By Larry Kerschner

I often say that my political education began in the jungles of Vietnam.  I’m sure Brian Willson would say something similar.  Using his training as a lawyer his new book Don’t Thank Me For My Service (Clarity Press, www.claritypress.com) reads like a prosecutor building a solid case brick by bloody brick.

Beginning with his vision of “countless human bodies scattered across the ground” Brian dissects what his “service” in Vietnam truly was.  Looking back to place this in a historical context, Brian likens the United States to a spoiled child who has never been held to account for the years of genocide, slavery and racism both at home and abroad.  This child has inevitably grown into the psychopathic American Empire of today.

The United States was designed from the beginning specifically with Empire As Way Of Life.  Especially following the Second World War, government and corporate media propaganda supported a near total indoctrination of the public in the unquestioned hysterical belief in the exceptional nature of the American Way. Americans could not recognize “what would be considered criminally insane behavior if carried out by others.”

Brian chronicles the criminal and barbaric lengths to which the United States has gone to force our industrial “civilization” on people around the world.  Brian explains the extent of corporate collusion in the chemical warfare concentrated especially on the men,women and children of developing SE Asian nations with a desire for self-sovereignty.

Brian illustrates the upheaval and resistance to the American War in Vietnam that developed both among among the US public and among those fighting in Vietnam.

Brian states that “our healing as a nation depends on our removing the wool that remains in our eyes – that we seek to understand and grapple with these (deep historical and psychological) forces, these lies that continually drive us to war and violence.  We must strive to unravel the pretend US America – its skewed origin stories, its false mythologies, and its phony sense of “exceptionalism” – in an honest pursuit of “liberty and justice for all.”

Reading this book would be a beginning of that journey.

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