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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: war protest, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Review: Burning Banks and Roasting Marshmallows: The Education of Daniel Marleau. Notes 'n News.

Gregory Desilet. 2010, ISBN: 1-4415-4683-9 (Trade Paperback 6x9).




Michael Sedano


I had drawn Quick Reaction Force duty that February day. QRF was among the Army's quaint oxymorons. After a full day's duty, QRF detailed soldiers were confined to quarters from 1700 until called upon for a quick reaction.

Boring hours pass until the inevitable 2330 hours call-up when we'd rush out the quonset hut shouting "Go! Go! Go!" Jump into the back of a deuce and a half for a wild bouncy ride across the post. Working in total darkness, I would locate the ammo box then pass out magazines of live ammunition to unseen hands as voices counted off. Snap the magazine into the weapon but not pull back the receiver to lock and load one live round.

The truck would slide to a halt near the front gate where we exited the vehicle in silence, threw ourselves on the cold hard dirt and pointed our weapons at the unaware Korean civilians across the street. After a few minutes we were told to reverse the process, only slower, and another QRF was in the books.

In the interim between reporting to our hootch and the alert, we'd pass time cleaning our M-14 reciting the mantra, "Sir, the M-14 is a 7.62 mm, magazine-fed, gas operated semi- and fully-automatic shoulder weapon..." We'd practice donning the M-17 Protective Mask. Stored in a canvas bag slung across the shoulder, the drill was to pop the snap, extract the mask, pull the straps apart while fitting them around one's head. A vigorous tug at the straps sealed a rubber gasket to the face. With one hand pushing firmly against the pressure of a forceful exhalation intended to clear the mask of lethal agents, we'd then shout "gas! gas!" before exploding in wild laughter and ripping the mask off our instantly sweating faces.

The highlight of any QRF was the privilege of receiving the free copies of Pacific Stars and Stripes that would go on sale in the PX the next morning. This particular February's issue made my stomach turn. The front page featured a large photograph of a burning building--the Bank of America in Isla Vista, California. Something snapped when I saw that. My student loans were owed that bank. I used to deposit my Teaching Assistant paychecks into my checking account in that building. And there it was going up in flames. I unsheathed my bayonet and drove it into the photo, again and again and again.

I'd heard stories from friends who were in IV that night. I used to laugh that my wife and my friend Michael Collins had thrown the first stones. But it wasn't until I'd read--make that devoured--Gregory Desilet's creative non-fiction treatment of the bank burning and the series of riots surrounding the fire, that I came fully to realize the ugly violence that consumed my old stomping grounds only a year after I'd left the place. The story makes me happy I was not there.

When I left Santa Barbara, Isla Vista was truly a paradise of drugs, sex, rock and roll, and intellectual ferment. But damn, gente, Isla Vista became one perilous student ghetto during the mad uprisings of 1970.

Desilet's account, although heavily--and effectively--fictionalized, provides some hair-raising moments that deserve a 2010 reading. With Bush-Obama's wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as lethal and meaningless today as Kennedy-Johnson-Nixon's Vietnam was then, reading Burning Banks and Roasting Marshmallows: The Education of Daniel Marleau, will make one wonder where have all the protestors gone?

The IV pedo started with an unfavorable tenure decision unfavorable to a self-righteous Anthro pro

1 Comments on Review: Burning Banks and Roasting Marshmallows: The Education of Daniel Marleau. Notes 'n News., last added: 4/13/2010
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