War: Heroes, Execution, and Cost
To the Fallen Six, and More
Remember thee Our Fallen from thy Patriot Heart. They went to battle on our behalf, for our name, on our mission, on our orders and command. And now, they are gone, they are the Fallen, our finest, bravest, and pride of countryhood. We love them, we respect them, we honor them, and we shall forever remember them, that they were once here in our midst, in the solemn belief to love one’s country, believe in one’s country, and die for one’s, sacrificing one’s life for others. Weren’t they part of us, the Heart of America, the Middle Class or working poor, the believer in the Constitution and flag? Aren’t they the pride of the nation? Remember thee, dear Patriot one, the middle and working men and women. Aren’t the Patriot Working Poor and Middle Class always the ones who contribute more mentally, physically, and materially to our war efforts? Respect thee, these Patriot Working Heroes (PWH). They are the brave victims and casualties of war; they are the ones who patriotically and courageously die fighting our unprovoked, provoked, or unavoidable wars; they are the once sacrificing themselves for their country, bravely making themselves Patriot Shields to safe Our Homeland and Sacred Space; they are the ones who give birth the most to populate the war troops; they are the minds and hands of factories, hardwares, and software; they are the man and woman might of steel; they are those dark forces of might that makes the world tremble; they are those who do the dirty job, the difficult job, the risky job, and the deadliest job; they’re those whose blood make us safe, make us free or have a homeland that we can call home, that we’re proud of. Let Our Heroes Fight Our Wars, and die for our wars, not the wars of others. Honor Thee The Fallen 6+.
A Reminder of Our True Heroes
To those patriotic hypocrites, when our brave troops serve and come home, we should be respectful to them, their service, and needs. In times of peace, we shouldn’t allow some among us or give them the right to demonize some of our heroes, we shouldn’t demean some of them, we shouldn’t discriminate or stigmatize or humiliate some of them – for all, despite background, are the Stripes of Our Patriot Greatest (SPOG. These are our troops; these were our troops; these will forever be our troops. Some shouldn’t respect them just when it’s convenient and disparage or make mockery of them when it’s to their advantage. It’s an Unpatriotic Sacrilege to disrespect and disadvantage our heroes. Their Sacrifice deserves our best. For the love of country, we shall mind our words to be grateful to all who serve, to all who have sacrificed, and to those Greatest of the Great who died for us to be here. Heroic are the working poor, those true heroes who love our country even more to the pains of their lives. You shall be wary of those forces who assume Patriotism more than others just in their office tables, those propagandists of cruel divide, those opportunists who will divide to gain a vanity advantage. Be mindful of those Unpatriotic Zealots who claim Our Great Country as their parental property, parental heritage, or parental patronage, with Infinite Grievance of Entitlement (IGE) as if the Our Great Country owe them a debt. Our Great Republic owes a Patriot Debt to Our Fallen Heroes and Families, not to any Imaginative Lineage of Bloodline (ILB), but to real heroes who fight and die for Our Great Country or work hard to make our Great Republic proud. Remember thee, the working-class, they are our heroes, the working poor, of patriot will.
- Honor The Patriot Middle Class (PMC)
Remember thee, dear one, of our heroes.
Aren’t the Middle Class and Working Poor the true heroes of our country? They are never afraid to die for their country. They are never afraid to be recruited. They are never afraid to be deployed. They’re never afraid to face the enemy. They are never afraid to face the barrel or barrage of that which falls before them. And they are never afraid to fall. They fall for the country. They fall for the flag. They fall for the Constitution. They fall for our way of life, to preserve that which we all hold dear, One Nation Indivisible Under God and Law. These great heroes, the Fallen Three and More shall never be forgotten. They served their country. They preserved and protected the Motherland. They found battle and died knowing their course was just, as per command. What shall become of the country they left behind, their children, their freedoms, their dignity, or the unity of a Nation. Shouldn’t they die for a united country; shouldn’t they die for an unpolarized nation; shouldn’t they die for a country that respects the dignity and contribution of each citizen without discrimination to race, gender, religion or creed? When they die, we unite to call on those names and sing their praises, then what? Use not our Great troops as props for political gains. Mean it when you say it that “We honor Our Troops For Their Sacrifice to Our Great Country.” You must mean it when you say that “We Respect the Fallen and Owe them Our Lives and Freedom.”
- On The Execution of War
Things might always not turn out as intended initially unless things play out as originally anticipated. Anticipation is based on a developing Causality not immune from force majeure. Even everything being equal, things might not unfold as planned. The containment and readjustments to Positive Outcome from unpredictabilities increases the possibility rather than propensity of success. Wars are hardly successful as intended, but successful someway based on polished or justified perspectives of narratives, projections on gains, repetitive propaganda or the use of spinography by spinographers (those paid to lie to the people or spin the truth for deceptive intended reasons) in desperate times. Starting a conflict or war is different from executing and concluding a war. Maneuvering a thing is a lack of absolute control over the things itself. Without absolute control of something, the guaranteed outcome isn’t unanimous, but fluid or uncertain at best. Wars are waged on absolutes, uncertainties, else it’s a war of choice. But isn’t all wars a war of choice? Isn’t there always an option to deescalation, or seek resolution through consultation or negotiations through diplomatic channels?
Deception is a war tactic, but not a war strategy. Realizing quicker than later that the war is not going as intended or as planned will help thee reevaluate and try new models, algorithms, data input, or newly generated intelligence. Victory might end up being an unqualified expectation that in itself cannot really be objectively defined, especially when the variables of definition rest in the hands or cards of a suicidal enemy. The future that we think is imminent might be fairly far away based on recent trajectory, recalculations and readjustments as information and intelligence unfolds beyond initial estimates, planning, expectations or calculations. Don’t be stubborn to not accept hard realities to pull back when necessary or to regroup, restrategize, and make a better plan based on moving intelligence and moving targets. We know when wars start, but unpredictable where it ends – especially when both sides see it as existential threats. If you can’t end wars, don’t start them. Those who start wars don’t end them. Quick victory is hardly sustainable when it comes to wars of attrition.
- The Unspoken Casualties of War
Isn’t the Unspoken Casualties of War (UCW), Children? Once in war, both sides have blood on their hands and lives on their minds. If it was all about saving lives, then there wouldn’t be war in the first place. Each war waged is always a way on children or against children – for they unfortunately die the most. Those who die the most are always children. As a matter of mathematical bluntness, wars are callously meant to kill children. Truth be implicitly and uncomfortably told, parents go to war knowingly or unknowingly willing to sacrifice the lives of children. Hasn’t war become the cult of killing children? Mustn’t such hash truth be told to create an awareness on the Unspoken Casualties of Wars (UCW)? Can’t it rightly be said with the gravity of remorse that children dying in wars is not unintentional or accidentally or something beyond the Prediction of War Deaths (PWD)? Aren’t children caught up in the wars of adults? And aren’t the deaths of children unfortunately a military endorsed calculation of collateral damage? Wars kill children, say this with all correctness of awareness to the facts, in order to save the lives of children. Tell me a war without kids dying. Shouldn’t victory be calculated based on a Zero Child Casualty Index (ZCCI)?
Aren’t the Unspoken Casualties of War ignoring the plight, welfare, and well-being of Children, and the thereafter for them? Those who go to war don’t care about children (maybe, the children of certain people). You can’t be at war without knowing you are going to kill children. The world, innocent children is humanly incorrect – for children are always innocent. They have no beef in the war and know not what it means or why their parents or adults should be fighting and bleeding or killing one another. Each geopolitical strategy is priced on the blood of innocent children. Care about children, then care about not starting wars or prolonging them or carpet bombing or starving and destroying survival or treatment infrastructure. The cruelty of war lies in the deaths of children or rendering them orphans. The only thing that wars do well is killing humans (children) and devastating societies. The Narcissistic Ego of War (NEW) is Vindictive Cruelty of Punishment (VCP) on the enemy, especially their children or the future of such children. Punishment alone isn’t a solution but an emotional satisfaction of the punisher. The calculative decision to always kill children during war is an Infant Mortality War Crime (IMWC) that should be calculated based on a threshold of deliberacy and Callous Egregious Disregard (CED). Isn’t that why war is the least of plausible options? Wage thy war not on the blood of the Children of the World. Truth be told, killing children is the worst of cruelty. Have you a child, to know the pain?
American Philosopher Prince Israel Zaar 03.02.2026

