Metullus
Forum ¾-Wit Pro Tem
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2005
- Messages
- 5,248
This brings to mind one of my very first lessons on racism in the USA. I was an Army Brat. My father was a career officer in the US Army. He was born and raised in south Alabama (the home-place is just outside of Ozark.)* snip * On the other hand, having served in the US Army alongside many fellow soldiers who happened to be black, and having studied what it is like to be in combat, I would hazard a guess that American soldiers in combat in Iraq feel a very strong bond with their fellow American soldiers -- their brothers in arms -- one much stronger than the bond any of the black American soldiers might feel with black strangers in Somalia.
When the subject of race came up my father told me that he did not care where a man was born, what color his skin was, or how he parted his hair - all that mattered was the color of his uniform. I always remembered that. Not color-blindness, I suppose, but certainly an acknowledgment that there was something a good deal more important than race.
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