Volume > Issue > Note List > Do Peaceniks Really Believe "Peace Is Patriotic"

Do Peaceniks Really Believe “Peace Is Patriotic”

In a New Oxford Note in our March issue, we commented in passing on the “Support Our Troops” decals and bumper strips. Among the peaceniks, we’ve seen “Peace Is Patriotic” bumper strips, even placards planted in front yards. But what does it mean? The conjunction of “patriotic” with “peace” sounds like a disconnect.

“Patriotic” means love of one’s country. Does loving one’s country mean one loves one’s country because it is peaceful? That’s quite a stretch. A patriot is above all one who will defend his country from an aggressor nation. If anything, to be patriotic is about war (a just war, we hope), not about peace. In the movie The Patriot, starring Mel Gibson, about the American Revolution, Gibson was initially unwilling to fight the British. But when he saw the brutality of the British, he fought, and he fought bravely. Gibson was a patriot, and the movie was aptly named The Patriot.

Enjoyed reading this?

READ MORE! REGISTER TODAY

SUBSCRIBE

You May Also Enjoy

Imbergoglios or Standard Franciscan Procedure?

Pope Francis is entitled to his opinions, and he’s not shy about sharing them in front of microphones. But his opinions don’t equate to magisterial pronunciations.

Christopher Lasch: A Loon on the Street Corner?

The historian’s business is to reveal the less obvious features hidden from a careless eye…

A Bad Bet

Orthodox Catholic ideas are critical to understanding Blaise Pascal, and they are nowhere present in Connor’s biography.