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SXSW: Where Soldiers Come From and the Myth of Small Town America

Posted: 03/15/11 06:43 PM ET

I recently had the opportunity to see an early version of Heather Courtney's new documentary, Where Soldiers Come From, a deeply emotional film following a group of young men from the Upper Peninsula (UP) who enlist in the Michigan National Guard following high school, and find themselves in the midst of the war in Afghanistan. The film itself is moving and well-made, contrasting the lives of working class rural young Americans, many of whom have few options in their communities, with the stark reality of war.


In full disclosure, Heather is a close family friend. In all honesty, that has nothing to do with the power of this film. I suppose it affected me in a deeply significant way. Much like these kids -- and they are kids when they enlist, but not when they come home -- I grew up in the country, in my case the foothills of the Ozarks in Arkansas on a dairy farm. Options were few; you could try to find a minimum wage job, or if you were lucky, you could take over the family business or farm. Sadly for many in working class rural America, Wal-Mart has managed to wipe out most small family businesses, and agribusiness, with farm subsidies that only go to their 'industry' destroyed the family farm. I joined the Arkansas National Guard in the Cold War, and it helped to pay for college. Later, I went on active duty in the US Army, and spent another 20 years (and three wars) in the service.

When I see these young citizen-soldiers, it reminds me that we, as a country, still have not addressed the plight of rural America. Other than the well-received Winter's Bone and platitudes about small town values, Hollywood and Washington have ignored the impact of joblessness and drug abuse on small town U.S.A. Much like the crack epidemic in ethnic inner city neighborhoods in the 1980's, drugs like meth are destroying the "small town America" that some, especially on the right, believe exists just beyond the suburbs. Joblessness, thanks to big box stores and outsourcing of jobs overseas, is at record levels. Where Soldiers Come From reminds us that we, the citizens who send our young men and women off to war, owe them not only salaries, GI Bills, and health care, but we owe them more options than military service alone. For me, I was a professional soldier -- I knew what was expected of me, and was more than willing to do the job. The Army was my home, my family, and made me who I am today... but I knew that it would also make demands, perhaps even the ultimate demand, in exchange.

Like I did in the 1980's, Heather's powerful film shows what few options remain to decent, hard-working young Americans. The young men in the film are not a polyglot squad from a World War II movie. There is no Jewish kid from New York, no knife-loving Hispanic kid from Puerto Rico, etc. Their story is real, not an idealized vision of war for public consumption. Viewers from their generation will see themselves in many of the scenes, listening to their Ipods, playing Xbox, etc. In contrast to the excellent Restrepo , which I am sure it will be compared to, Where Soldiers Come From is less a combat documentary than a 'quest story' in the traditional sense. For the soldiers in the documentary, it seems as if they have few choices that remain after high school, and that they go because they have few choices -- not that they wanted to serve as professional soldiers (as National Guard soldiers, and in no disrespect to our fine Guardsmen and women, they aren't 'full time lifers' like the Regular Army troops in Restrepo). While combat and violence are important in the film, it is the story of these young men, traveling from the lakes and woods of the UP to the valleys and villages of Afghanistan, and back home again, that is the real tale.

If you are in Austin next week, be sure to watch this important film. Watch it not only because it is fine documentary by an experienced and talented filmmaker, and not only because it is a film about men in war, but watch it and think, "could we have done more for them and their communities, given them more choices before they left, and how can we help them when they come home?"

 
 
 

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Mississippi Red
Stoke City: ugly football that works
03:01 AM on 03/18/2011
This is so true here in Sippi. Local kids have few options. The ones with brains and motivation ususally leave or start a business here. Kids in the delta have nothing. Nothing at all but drugs, or religion, or a ride out of town.

And there are way too many who simply waste their life away, a cross on the wall, pot growing in the backyard and the monthly govt check: domestic violence all too common and 6 kids. The misery has no meaning to it and most have no idea what to do about it. Then the kids repeat the cycle generation after generation.
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NrthrnLord
Prince of a very small part of the universe.
05:36 PM on 03/16/2011
oh man...how many kids I taught up in northern Wisconsin faced this same reality. can we bring them back, and offer them something better?
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Tribal Knowledge
Show respect to all people and grovel to none.
12:45 PM on 03/16/2011
We should all see this film. We need to know who are the brave young people who put themselves in harm's way for all of us - so that we may sit here, safe in our little homes and shout any manner of thing we wish.
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foxbat
Don't jump to conclusions
11:30 AM on 03/16/2011
Another good film, that flies under the radar screen, is Taking Chance, with Kevin Bacon.  It's a very moving drama based on the true-life story of  Lt. Col. Michael Strobl escorting the body of  Marine, PFC Chance Phelps, back to his hometown for burial after his death in the Iraq War.  Doesn't matter which side of the war argument you are on, it's well done and really doesn't preach one way or the other.  Despite that, regardless of what side of teh war you are on, it will make an impact and will help us to remember that there's a very real cost to our involvement war fronts and that we should always be very mindful of that cost when we commit ourselves, or more accurately, the lives of our soldiers.
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Tribal Knowledge
Show respect to all people and grovel to none.
12:44 PM on 03/16/2011
Absolutely.

The humanity of that movie speaks deeply to all of us. My father served. I served. My son serves now. What we as warriors always hope is to be so ready, so strong - that no one will ever want to fight us. We who have fought, in my experience, have seen the real cost of war and are absolutely against using it as anything but a last resort. But to that end, using force must be something we are prepared and willing to do.

That there are really so few Americans who do serve, who even understand what it means and have lost the respect for those who now sacrifice for us troubles me deeply.
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NrthrnLord
Prince of a very small part of the universe.
05:38 PM on 03/16/2011
Thanks for saying that.
11:18 AM on 03/17/2011
there are a lot of american who support the idea of a warrior class and have nothing but love for those individual warriors who, like the film suggests, are not necessarily the warriors of choice like hollywood normally provides.

what we have issues with is precisely in support of those individual warriors because we have a great deal of issue with how those in charge aquire, use, abuse, and discard people like the author who act and love in good faith.

unfortunately, when one is drilled from adult infancy to "do or die" and those self same leaders inoculate the troops with the idea that to be against the choices of the leaders treatment of the troops--especial gay and female troops-- is part and parcel to being against the troops....misunderstandings abound. There is too much "us and them" taught in the military--and thanks to the pentagon the "them" is now anyone who has not served in some capacity--and no one wants to discuss the idea that it doesn't have to be that way, just because it always has.
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MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
10:17 PM on 03/15/2011
I read recently that our soldiers and veterans make up a tiny fraction of the population but are 1/3rd of our country's attempted suicides, currently. In Britain it took about 25 years for suicides among Falklands war veterans to exceed the original war dead. I suspect it won't take quite that long for us.
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Chris Herz
06:42 PM on 03/15/2011
At the time, the French anti-war movement was just as weak as is our now, but it was still able to mobilize enough support to force their government to forbid the deployment of either draftees or reservists to Vietnam and Algeria.
Maybe that would be a reasonable goal for CodePink and the other worthy organizations who oppose the MIC and its crimes here and now.
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01:28 AM on 03/16/2011
If you want to make war very unpopular in America, bring back the draft. Forcing people who don't want to serve in the military to do so, would bring back the anti-war protests in a hurry.
11:26 AM on 03/17/2011
just an FYI, last I checked legislation was quietly afoot to increase the draft registration age to 42 --for males and for the first time, including all females as well. I guarantee that the next time (if) there's a draft, its not going to be just your sons you have to worry about. Which is somewhat fine with me...as long as the increase the minimum age as well.

if the military could only induct humans after age 26 (the "new adult median")...there's be a whole lot less war. Not because we aren't fit enough... just as one ages, one hopefully becomes less naive about who's best interest the military actually serves...and it ain't its own members.