The Next Generation Of "Brothers Under The Bridge" Is Creeping Up On US-Obama Stop The Madness In The Middle East- Not Another War In Iraq Or Syria!
Josh Breslin Comment:
Many years ago, back in the 1970s, I
did a series of pieces for the now long defunct East Bay Eye on a group of Vietnam veterans who could not adjust to
the “real world” after they got back from ‘Nam. They established what it would
be fashionable to call today an “alternative community” adjacent to the
railroad trestles, along the river beds, around the arroyos and under the
bridges of Southern California. I had many more notes for sketches than were
published before the paper went under which I found up in the attic of my
garage a couple of years ago which I dusted off and have presented in this
space under the title Brothers Under The
Bridge, stealing the title from one of Bruce Springsteen’s songs that dealt
with that same theme. The one thing that all the stories had in common was how
hard it was for those guys to adjust to the “real world” and in the process of
not doing so had exhibited all the pathologies that we have come to associate
with guys who could not adjust. A few of those guys later when I investigated
further had committed suicide, the great hush whisper of war weariness from
those who served. Now, as the notice and memorial piece below eloquently
describes, in the case of Brother Jacob we have another generation of “brothers
under the bridge” whose stories need to be told. If for no other reason today
the demand on the part of anti-war veterans should resonate loudly-Not Another War In Iraq or Syria. Brother
Jacob Presente!
Jacob David George (1982-2014)
September 22, 2014 by the Chelsea Manning Support Network
“I’m a bicycle ridin, banjo pickin, peace ramblin hillbilly from the Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas!”
The Chelsea Manning Support Network is greatly saddened to learn the news of veteran and Manning supporter Jacob George’s passing. Due to his years in service, Jacob suffered from various physical and mental injuries that he worked through with anti-war activism. Jacob rallied for Chelsea Manning at Fort Meade, attended Chelsea’s court martial, and was one of the first people to rally to Chelsea’s defense in the days following her arrest in May 2010.
Jacob was a veteran of three combat tours in Afghanistan—Operation Enduring Freedom. To overcome those demons, Jacob cycled thousands of miles, “A Ride Till the End,” he called it, to promote peace and justice. He rallied fellow veterans to take political action. And he stood strong for military resisters–especially those who were prosecuted for refusing to do the things he himself had participated in.
Every day at least a dozen US military veterans take their own lives, with some estimates at over 22. In the end, these will far outnumber the fatalities on the far away battlefields. We are reminded that statistics are easy to live with, until the statistic strikes close to home.
We will likely never know why Jacob took his own life. He seemed to have done more than anyone to heal himself from the unseen physiological devastation of war. Today we simply remember an amazing individual whose contributions to our community go far beyond what words we can muster.
Donations to Jacob George’s Memorial Service:
https://www.everribbon.com/ribbon/view/18459
The Human Cost of War: IVAW Testimony
http://vimeo.com/66857895
“I’m a bicycle ridin, banjo pickin, peace ramblin hillbilly from the Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas!”
The Chelsea Manning Support Network is greatly saddened to learn the news of veteran and Manning supporter Jacob George’s passing. Due to his years in service, Jacob suffered from various physical and mental injuries that he worked through with anti-war activism. Jacob rallied for Chelsea Manning at Fort Meade, attended Chelsea’s court martial, and was one of the first people to rally to Chelsea’s defense in the days following her arrest in May 2010.
Jacob was a veteran of three combat tours in Afghanistan—Operation Enduring Freedom. To overcome those demons, Jacob cycled thousands of miles, “A Ride Till the End,” he called it, to promote peace and justice. He rallied fellow veterans to take political action. And he stood strong for military resisters–especially those who were prosecuted for refusing to do the things he himself had participated in.
Every day at least a dozen US military veterans take their own lives, with some estimates at over 22. In the end, these will far outnumber the fatalities on the far away battlefields. We are reminded that statistics are easy to live with, until the statistic strikes close to home.
We will likely never know why Jacob took his own life. He seemed to have done more than anyone to heal himself from the unseen physiological devastation of war. Today we simply remember an amazing individual whose contributions to our community go far beyond what words we can muster.
Donations to Jacob George’s Memorial Service:
https://www.everribbon.com/ribbon/view/18459
The Human Cost of War: IVAW Testimony
http://vimeo.com/66857895
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