The Slaughterhouse Called War
Over the summer, I read Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut. The book itself is an anti-war book, and is supposed to illustrate the fact that humans are not designed for extreme combat. The story revolves around a character named Billy. Billy is one of the many veterans who returned from war with some sort of mental disorder. Although the book is fiction it gave an accurate portrayal of soldiers from war. I would recommend this book to anyone who doesn't think that war is a terrible thing, and that war doesn't take a toll on the human mind. War itself is wrong, and can have a huge long lasting impact on the minds of veterans as illustrated in the book with Billy.
The first problem with Billy is that he keeps experiencing flashbacks to the war. Throughout the book, Billy keeps finding himself in Dresden, one of the worst locations he had ever fought at. The image of it had been permanently stuck into his mind. Now, this example is one problem with our real life veterans. They have flashbacks to the war they had previously fought in. For example, let's say there's a veteran named Alex who fought in the Korean War. During this time he was told to kill any Korean he saw. It sounds terrible, and it is. 30 or 40 years later, these directions given to Alex might give him hatred towards Koreans. This is a very real scenario and sometimes taken to the extremes. Every so often you hear of an old veteran on the news who experienced psychological problems and invaded a cultural neighborhood killing as many as they could. Being in a war so long is what has caused this to happen to every day soldiers. If it hasn't already happened, many years down the road, today's Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans could develop a dislike towards Muslims. There's nothing we can do to cure veterans of this, and there's little we can do to help them beyond medication and allowing them to talk.
The second problem with Billy is that every so often he lives in a completely warped reality. He has claims of being abducted to another planet known as Tralfamador. He has very detailed descriptions of the place and even has accounts of seeing another human. I like how the context of the book talks about this. In the story, the author describes this as if it actually happened to Billy. The reader has to be smart enough to know that this couldn't possibly happen. And going to another planet is another example of why Billy had gone completely crazy. The shock that he had experienced after or during wartime was the cause of his warped idea of reality. The scenes of war did not affect the idea of Tralfamador (other than that it existed in his mind), but I rather think that the exclusion from society had forced him to make himself a second home.
Although the psychological problems are covered in the book, something not covered but equally important is the mistreatment of veterans when they return. Based on what I read in Slaughterhouse-Five, Billy was lucky. In the real world, many of the veterans that come back are left with nothing. They don't have a home unless they stay with someone, and are left with little money now that they are left without a job particularly when suffering from an ailment. Finding a new job would be very hard for them. Would you want to hire a big tough looking veteran that has mental issues? I think not.
So any war fought in will have its repercussions on the soldiers. Whether it's a fictional character like Billy, or a real person that you may know, th
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