Life as a Spectator Sport

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Thursday, September 30, 2004

Keeping our soldiers' minds pure . . .

WebSENSE is an internet-filtering product used by business, libraries, and now by the military. Its algorithms determine whether you are trying to access a website you shouldn't be allowed to see. Among others, it blocked Liza Minellie's website, calling it pornography, one for Jewish teenagers, and that of a grocery store. Its manufacturer, a company called NetPartners Internet Solutions Inc., claims that all the blocked sites are personally visited before being added to the database, but if that's the case, their reviewers have some pretty sick ideas about what constitutes pornography.

Ginmar (A View From A Broad) has some pointed remarks:
Websense is harder to figure out. It's like some kind of Puritan standing guard at the whorehouse door, charging admission and clucking disapprovingly, except here they don't ever let you in, and you've already paid the price because you're in Iraq already. Once again, I'm reminded of the unique status of the citizen soldier: we represent our country, and defend it, and it's moments like this that make me wonder what exactly we're getting in return. We have to have our websites screened because we're so easily influenced we might be led in some way that others might disapprove of---yet they trust us to shape a nation.

Half the soldiers here are Reservists, which means they're used to non-military environments and other perspectives. We represent America more realistically than our very own Congress does: there are more women in the military---hell, in the Marines----than there are Congress----and yet we must be clucked and nannies as if we were children.

I've said it before and I'll say it again.

You cannot trust us in part when you ask us for everything in return. We are not just a means to an end here, but an end in and of ourselves. At the most intimate basic level, all this handholding means that somewhere, somehow....we are not trusted by the very people who ask us to lay down our lives for their principles.

I have to wonder what else is going to happen.
I read Ginmar's comments just after seeing Brad Delong's post about the war in Afghanistan--no, not ours or the Russians', but the war with Great Britain in 1841-42, one in which England was clearly superior, but whose "organizational and disciplinary edge vanished when the British line infantry concluded (rightly) that their leaders were incompetent fools."

It might be edifying to know how many of our servicepeople in Iraq have already reached that conclusion.

[EDIT] -- I meant to mention that Ginmar was trying to access a site that sold pre-paid long-distance calling cards, the kind many soldiers use to call home.
posted by Liz @ 2:27 PM     |


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