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- <text id=90TT2739>
- <title>
- Oct. 15, 1990: The Warrior Culture
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Oct. 15, 1990 High Anxiety
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 100
- The Warrior Culture
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Barbara Ehrenreich
- </p>
- <p> In what we like to think of as "primitive" warrior cultures,
- the passage to manhood requires the blooding of a spear, the
- taking of a scalp or head. Among the Masai of eastern Africa,
- the North American Plains Indians and dozens of other
- pretechnological peoples, a man could not marry until he had
- demonstrated his capacity to kill in battle. Leadership too in
- a warrior culture is typically contingent on military prowess
- and wrapped in the mystique of death. In the Solomon Islands
- a chief's importance could be reckoned by the number of skulls
- posted around his door, and it was the duty of the Aztec kings
- to nourish the gods with the hearts of human captives.
- </p>
- <p> All warrior peoples have fought for the same high-sounding
- reasons: honor, glory or revenge. The nature of their real and
- perhaps not conscious motivations is a subject of much debate.
- Some anthropologists postulate a murderous instinct, almost
- unique among living species, in human males. Others discern a
- materialistic motive behind every fray: a need for slaves,
- grazing land or even human flesh to eat. Still others point to
- the similarities between war and other male pastimes--the
- hunt and outdoor sports--and suggest that it is boredom,
- ultimately, that stirs men to fight.
- </p>
- <p> But in a warrior culture it hardly matters which motive is
- most basic. Aggressive behavior is rewarded whether or not it
- is innate to the human psyche. Shortages of resources are
- habitually taken as occasions for armed offensives, rather than
- for hard thought and innovation. And war, to a warrior people,
- is of course the highest adventure, the surest antidote to
- malaise, the endlessly repeated theme of legend, song,
- religious myth and personal quest for meaning. It is how men
- die and what they find to live for.
- </p>
- <p> "You must understand that Americans are a warrior nation,"
- Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan told a group of Arab leaders
- in early September, one month into the Middle East crisis. He
- said this proudly, and he may, without thinking through the
- ugly implications, have told the truth. In many ways, in
- outlook and behavior the U.S. has begun to act like a primitive
- warrior culture.
- </p>
- <p> We seem to believe that leadership is expressed, in no small
- part, by a willingness to cause the deaths of others. After the
- U.S. invasion of Panama, President Bush exulted that no one
- could call him "timid"; he was at last a "macho man." The
- press, in even more primal language, hailed him for succeeding
- in an "initiation rite" by demonstrating his "willingness to
- shed blood."
- </p>
- <p> For lesser offices too we apply the standards of a warrior
- culture. Female candidates are routinely advised to overcome
- the handicap of their gender by talking "tough." Thus, for
- example, Dianne Feinstein has embraced capital punishment,
- while Colorado senatorial candidate Josie Heath has found it
- necessary to announce that although she is the mother of an
- 18-year-old son, she is prepared to vote for war. Male
- candidates in some of the fall contests are finding their
- military records under scrutiny. No one expects them, as elected
- officials in a civilian government, to pick up a spear or a
- sling and fight. But they must state, at least, their
- willingness to have another human killed.
- </p>
- <p> More tellingly, we are unnerved by peace and seem to find
- it boring. When the cold war ended, we found no reason to
- celebrate. Instead we heated up the "war on drugs." What should
- have been a public-health campaign, focused on the persistent
- shame of poverty, became a new occasion for martial rhetoric
- and muscle flexing. Months later, when the Berlin Wall fell and
- communism collapsed throughout Europe, we Americans did not
- dance in the streets. What we did, according to the networks,
- was change the channel to avoid the news. Nonviolent
- revolutions do not uplift us, and the loss of mortal enemies
- only seems to leave us empty and bereft.
- </p>
- <p> Our collective fantasies center on mayhem, cruelty and
- violent death. Loving images of the human body--especially
- of bodies seeking pleasure or expressing love--inspire us
- with the urge to censor. Our preference is for warrior themes:
- the lone fighting man, bandoliers across his naked chest,
- mowing down lesser men in gusts of automatic-weapon fire. Only
- a real war seems to revive our interest in real events. With
- the Iraqi crisis, the networks report, ratings for news shows
- rose again--even higher than they were for Panama.
- </p>
- <p> And as in any primitive warrior culture, our warrior elite
- takes pride of place. Social crises multiply numbingly--homelessness, illiteracy, epidemic disease--and our leaders
- tell us solemnly that nothing can be done. There is no money.
- We are poor, not rich, a debtor nation. Meanwhile, nearly a
- third of the federal budget flows, even in moments of peace,
- to the warriors and their weaponmakers. When those priorities
- are questioned, some new "crisis" dutifully arises to serve as
- another occasion for armed and often unilateral intervention.
- </p>
- <p> Now, with Operation Desert Shield, our leaders are reduced
- to begging foreign powers for the means to support our warrior
- class. It does not seem to occur to us that the other great
- northern powers--Japan, Germany, the Soviet Union--might
- not have found the stakes so high or the crisis quite so
- threatening. It has not penetrated our imagination that in a
- world where the powerful, industrialized nation-states are at
- last at peace, there might be other ways to face down a
- pint-size Third World warrior state than with massive force of
- arms. Nor have we begun to see what an anachronism we are in
- danger of becoming: a warrior nation in a world that pines for
- peace, a high-tech state with the values of a warrior band.
- </p>
- <p> A leftist might blame "imperialism"; a right-winger would
- call our problem "internationalism." But an anthropologist,
- taking the long view, might say this is just what warriors do.
- Intoxicated by their own drumbeats and war songs, fascinated
- by the glint of steel and the prospect of blood, they will go
- forth, time and again, to war.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-