Pat Tillman No Fan of Bush’s War

Don Wassall

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Sep 30, 2004
Messages
30,519
Location
Pennsylvania
I have the utmost respect for Pat Tillman -- and now even more after reading this. The neo-con warmongers tried to turn him into a one-dimensional cartoon action hero, but he was not only courageous and unselfish but an independent thinker:

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20051024/zirin

Pat Tillman, Our Hero
by DAVE ZIRIN

[from the October 24, 2005 issue]

"I don't believe it," seethed Ann Coulter.

Her contempt was directed at a September 25 San Francisco Chronicle story reporting that former NFL star and Army Ranger war hero Pat Tillman, who was killed in Afghanistan last year, believed the US war on Iraq was "f***ing illegal" and counted Noam Chomsky among his favorite authors. It must have been quite a moment for Coulter, who upon Tillman's death described him in her inimitably creepy fashion as "an American original--virtuous, pure and masculine like only an American male can be." She tried to discredit the story as San Francisco agitprop, but this approach ran into a slight problem: The article's source was Pat Tillman's mother, Mary.

Mary and the Tillman family are relentlessly pushing for answers to the questions surrounding Pat's death in Afghanistan. They want to know why it took the Pentagon five weeks to tell them he died in a tragic case of friendly fire. They want to know why they were unwitting props at Pat's funeral, weeping while lies were told by eulogizing politicians. Mary is now hoping that a new Pentagon inquiry will bring closure. "There have been so many discrepancies so far that it's hard to know what to believe," she said to the Chronicle. "There are too many murky details."

The very private Tillmans have revealed a picture of Pat profoundly at odds with the GI Joe image created by Pentagon spinmeisters and their media stenographers. As the Chronicle put it, family and friends are now unveiling "a side of Pat Tillman not widely known--a fiercely independent thinker who enlisted, fought and died in service to his country yet was critical of President Bush and opposed the war in Iraq, where he served a tour of duty. He was an avid reader whose interests ranged from history books...to works of leftist Noam Chomsky, a favorite author." Tillman had very unembedded feelings about the Iraq War. His close friend Army Spec. Russell Baer remembered, "I can see it like a movie screen. We were outside of [an Iraqi city] watching as bombs were dropping on the town.... We were talking. And Pat said, 'You know, this war is so f***ing illegal.' And we all said, 'Yeah.' That's who he was. He totally was against Bush." With these revelations, Pat Tillman the PR icon joins WMD and Al Qaeda connections on the heap of lies used to sell the Iraq War.

Tillman's transition from one-dimensional caricature to critically thinking human being is a long time coming. The fact is that in death he was far more useful to the armchair warriors than he had ever been in life. When the Pro Bowler joined the Army Rangers, the Pentagon brass needed a loofah to wipe their drool: He was white, handsome and played in the NFL. For a chicken-hawk Administration led by a President who loves the affectations of machismo but runs from protesting military moms, this testosterone *******tail was impossible to resist. The problem was that Tillman wouldn't play their game. To the Pentagon's chagrin, he turned down numerous offers to be its recruitment poster child.

But when Tillman fell in Afghanistan the wheels once again started to turn. Now the narrative was perfect: "War hero and football star dies fighting terror." The Abu Ghraib scandal was about to hit the press, so the President found it especially useful to praise Tillman as "an inspiration on and off the football field, as with all who made the ultimate sacrifice in the war on terror." His funeral was nationally televised. Bush even went back to the bloody well during the presidential campaign, addressing his team's fans on the Arizona Cardinals' stadium Jumbotron.

We now know, of course, that this was all a brutal charade. Such callous manipulation is fueling the Tillman family's anger. As Mary Tillman said this past May, "They could have told us up front that they were suspicious that [his death] was a fratricide, but they didn't. They wanted to use him for their purposes.... They needed something that looked good, and it was appalling that they would use him like that." A growing number of military families, similarly angered, are criticizing the war in Iraq through organizations like Military Families Speak Out.

As for Chomsky, whom Ann Coulter would undoubtedly label "treasonous," Mary Tillman says a private meeting was planned between him and Pat after Pat's return--a meeting that never took place, of course. Chomsky confirms this scenario. This was the real Pat Tillman: someone who, like the majority of this country, was doubting the rationale for war, distrusting his Commander in Chief and looking for answers. The real Pat Tillman, the one with three dimensions, must stick in the throat of the Bush-Coulter gang, a pit in the cherry atop their bloody sundae.
 
Joined
Dec 18, 2004
Messages
2,954
Pat Tillman joined the army to fight those who perpetrated the 9-11 attacks. He saw that invading Iraq was not intended for that, though Bush and his handlers claimed it was.


Several months ago, I saw the ESPN Sportcentury program about Pat Tillman. He had a very hard time getting a college scholarship (he was a white RB in high school), and wasn't very much wanted by the NFL. I recall a thread on this Forum, where someone said that Tillman was sometimes mocked by announcers for his "lack of athleticism." Most of the Big Stars in the NFL would have a very hard time making the Rangers.
 

White_Savage

Mentor
Joined
May 20, 2005
Messages
1,217
Location
Texas
Don Wassall said:
It must have been quite a moment for Coulter, who upon Tillman's death described him in her inimitably creepy fashion as "an American original--virtuous, pure and masculine like only an American male can be."

I'm certainly not backing Bush's war here, but someone who describes the phrase "virtuous, pure, and masculine" as creepy? What the Hell? Typical of the philosophy of Zirin's people "All are maggots in God's sight" etc, "Since I'm a sly conniving coward everyone else must be", etc.

I'm a little disturbed by the idea that the kid might actually have likee Noam Chomsky too, but hey, he was young.
 

Don Wassall

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Sep 30, 2004
Messages
30,519
Location
Pennsylvania
I would imagine the author is talking about the silly xenophobia and pseudo-patriotism found in Coulter's quote. Only American "males" are capable of being "virtuous, pure and masculine"? I think our European cousins would disagree.

And Ann Coulter IS creepy. She calls those who oppose the Iraq War "traitors." She well reflects the totalitarian neo-con mentality that cynically manipulates patriotic sentiment in the U.S.
 

Poacher

Mentor
Joined
Jul 30, 2005
Messages
943
When I first heard that Tillman had been killed the first thing I
thought was "man, that was quick." I didn't really think
anything of it...at first. Now I think there is some sort of
cover-up. I think some of his fellow soldiers killed him.
Who knows why? We'll probably never know the truth.
 
Joined
Dec 18, 2004
Messages
2,954
Tillman had inbibed a lot from the liberal culture and had to fit into the NFL mileu. Also, he seemed to have something of the perpetual adolescence most pro athletes will have to some degree. It's possible that he had some dissatisfaction with "fitting in" with the NFL. He had to know that his job on the Cardinals wouldn't be waiting for him if he had survived the Army.


Tillman WAS killed by his fellow soldiers, accidentally. This happens in war. The army did try to cover it up, but the truth came out. Tillman's family was angered by the lying. A very sad story all around.
 
Joined
Dec 18, 2004
Messages
2,954
The Army is launching another investigation of Pat Tillman's death. The probe (the 5th) is to see if there was "Negligent Homicide." This news is on the internet today.
 
G

Guest

Guest
I respect Pat Tillman and what he did completely. Tillman put his beliefs, principles and convictions in front of fame and fortune. He was an independent guy who did not fit in any mold. He joined the Army in order to attack those he thought were responsible for attacking America. He did not want any notoriety for joining the army and just wanted to do his job. It is a shame he cannot rest in peace.
 

backrow

Hall of Famer
Joined
Oct 23, 2005
Messages
7,213
Location
Spain
Don Wassall said:
I would imagine the author is talking about the silly xenophobia and pseudo-patriotism found in Coulter's quote. Only American "males" are capable of being "virtuous, pure and masculine"? I think our European cousins would disagree.

And Ann Coulter IS creepy. She calls those who oppose the Iraq War "traitors." She well reflects the totalitarian neo-con mentality that cynically manipulates patriotic sentiment in the U.S.

i agree, that's how i would interpret this article as well...
and re-launching the investigation speaks volumes, in my opinion... there are very shady details that we will probably never get to find out about. his death really came in handy for Bush war-mongering administration, and it all seemed little too convinent to me...
 

Don Wassall

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Sep 30, 2004
Messages
30,519
Location
Pennsylvania
Here's the article Sport Historian was referring to:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11672794/

It really is a shame the way his life and death has been exploited for political and ideological ends. Pat Tillman was an honorable and admirable man in every way.
 
Top