Why Can’t We Be Friends?
By: Andrew • Essay • 741 Words • January 25, 2010 • 1,149 Views
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Why can’t we be friends?
Do the numbers 3828 (US Fatalities by Month) and 47378 (R. Smith) mean anything to you? How about $502 billion and $536 billion (in today’s dollar) (Wolf)? They should, these are the number of U.S deaths and the costs of the war in Iraq and the Vietnam War. “Older men declare war. But it is the youth that must fight and die!” was once said by Herbert Hoover (Simoni). War though some people may not like to admit it, has shaped the United States into what we are today. War always seems to bring out the patriotic side of people, whether it is in the form of protest, free speech or by expressing their feelings and thoughts through songs.
War has always existed in U.S history, and during those times of war, there have been song writers to express their feelings about war, whether it be for the war or against it. The Vietnam War and the War in Iraq, being very controversial issues during their time, have motivated many artists to express their feelings on the issue through their songs. Songs like Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Happening Brother” written during the Vietnam War in 1971 and System of a Down’s “Boom!” written during the Iraq War in 2002 talk about the same topic. Though two different wars, decades and styles of music, these songs still depict the artist view on the issues of war.
“What’s Happening Brother” and “Boom!” both deal with the issues of war and what they believe the issue behind the war really is about. The lyrics “Are things really gettin' better, like the newspaper said” (M. Gaye) in “What’s Happening Brother” and “Filtering information, For the public eye, Designed for profiteering” (Down) in System of a Down’s “Boom!” both deal with the media and what they actually report. They both ask the question if things are really better like the media is saying, but System of a Down takes it a step further stating that the media is withholding information and in hopes that the government makes profit. Why would major companies want to help support a war or provide their services on a war that we are not winning? By telling the people that we are winning the war, companies would be more inclined to provide their services to a war, thus allowing the government to make profit.
“Money is tighter than it's ever been” (M. Gaye)and “The bottom line is money…. while billions are spent on bombs,” (Down) talk about the economic aspects of war. During the Vietnam War, factories in the United States that should have been producing consumer goods were producing military