I've
told this story too many times. To myself, to patrons of the bars
I've worked at, to associates, to acquaintances, to friends, and I've
written it in many different ways as well. It's true, and not really
that interesting, but it had a large impact on who I am now. I never
wanted to be a nuclear engineer, not even while I was one. That
title "nuclear engineer" is really a misnomer because what
I actually was was a steam plant mechanic; it just so happens that I
was standing about fifteen feet from a nuclear reactor while I was
mechanicing. What makes my story a bit more interesting is not that
I was standing watch in the nuclear bowels of an air craft carrier
just outside of the straits of Hormuz when 911 happened, but that I
did not want to be there. I don't think anybody really wanted to be
there, but I went to great measures to no longer be there.
On
September 11 2001 the U.S.S. Carl Vinson was prepared to pass through
the straits of Hormuz into the Persian Gulf. The skin of the ship
was secure and nobody was allowed outside due to the potential small
arms fire. When a carrier passes through the straits, the indigenous
population has a habit of popping off rounds, which can actually hit
the ship. I was in my rack sleeping, and I was woken by a shipmate
of mine "McCarty, McCarty...wake up man, we're at war."
"War!!!
What the fuck are you talking about?" I got up and went into
the berthing lounge, where there was a television mounted in the
corner that the Captain would occasionally connect to CNN via
satellite link for important news. Just as I was wiping the sleep
out of my eyes, I looked up in time to see the second plane crash into
the building. We could feel the ship listing as it turned around to
head back out into the Arabian Sea to begin "Operation Enduring
freedom." The fact that we were launching jets off of the
flight deck around the clock really didn't change my life much.
Either way my job was the same; make sure the nuclear power plant was
working just fine for all of the steam that we needed to keep the war
machine functioning. I had a small part to play in that, and that
mainly consisted of standing watch at the main feed pumps (MFP).
These pumps pumped water into the steam generator which cooled the
reactor water and produced steam to power everything on the ship.
There were many other watch stations for me to stand around at, but
like everything else in the nuclear navy I had to first "qualify"
to stand them. The MFP station just happened to be the first one I
qualified for while we were at sea.
Life
at sea sucked with more power than a black hole, and in fact THE bull
shit black hole that services the United States was located in that
power plant. It required constant heapings of bull shit to remain
satiated. It's favorite type of bull shit was bureaucratically
generated. Every day at sea was a work day, except for Sundays, but
even then we had to stand five hour watches. I could go on and on
about why being at sea sucked so bad, and I have for a 100 or so pages
in a book titled "Surrender" that I have never finished
writing, so I won't be doing that here. Suffice it to say that we
ate food that had "not fit for human consumption, military and
prisoner use only" stamped on the side of the boxes, we breathed
what we called "boat funk" which was a mix of recycled
engine room oil, nut sack jam, and farts, and you did this on an
average of five hours of sleep a day (except for the boat funk part...that was 24/7)...all while being surrounded by
nothing but navy fucks. It sucked.
My problem was not so much how bad it sucked (although I had a bit of a problem with that part as well), but with the fact that we were dropping bombs and firing missiles day and night at a nomadic peoples who had no idea what the fuck was going on. After 115 days at sea (which is how long I went without seeing land), we were informed by some douche bag admiral that had flown onto the boat, that between the Vinson and the Kitty Hawk we had dropped 3 million tons of ordinance. I believe it. They stored the munitions in huge storage rooms just beneath the aft galley. I would routinely be eating my not fit for human consumption non-food while the gunnies busied themselves carting bombs past me to the hanger bay. They had fun writing racial slurs on the sides of the bombs as a personal touch for the innocent people they were to destroy. Did I mention that I became a Buddhist while I was in the navy? It's safe to state that I was a bit conflicted by my station in life.
So,
one day, having had enough of this naval nonsense, a friend and I
decided that we would do something about it. There are all manner of
tactics that can be employed to get your ass out of the navy while at
sea. Indeed, they were employed often. We heard about them through
the grape vine; pissing yourself in your rack every night while refusing to bath, lodging yourself in a bilge while refusing to eat,
attempting suicide by all manner imaginable, one guy even jumped off
of the flight deck into the dark Arabian sea in the middle of the
night (luckily for him one of the boatswain mates who's job it was to
look out into the dark sea for people such as he, spotted him before
he became shark bait), but we didn't want to harm or kill ourselves.
We elected to employ what was colloquially known as a "rainbow
chit." My buddy and I wrote little notes that said "I,
insert name, social, rate and rank, willingly admit to being a
homosexual and because of that would like to be separated from the
navy." We turned them into ships admin and waited.
They say that one enlisted nuke costs the navy in the neighborhood of 250,000 dollars to get through the "nuclear pipeline." It takes two years from boot camp to the fleet to create a nuke. Once on the ship it's another couple of months before a nuke is no longer a "nub" (none useful body) and can actually contribute by standing watch and performing maintenance. The navy has a hard time filling all of their nuclear positions. Most people who are intelligent enough to become a nuke don't, they go to college, or choose other more fulfilling career paths like panhandling or suckin' strange wieners for smack. The point is that once you are in the nuclear program (more so once you complete it) you are not getting out of it.
So my buddy and I ended up at the Captain's at sea cabin
one night. The at sea cabin is located on level ten. Level 10 is located in the tower which is the highest structure on the flight deck. This is the
Captains own personal chill pad. At any rate, me, my buddy, the
Master Chief in charge of reactor department, and the Captain are all
standing there in his at sea cabin staring at one another. The Captain (whom I had never
seen in person in the five or so months I'd been on the carrier)
looks at me and says "I've read your letter, and I'm here to
tell you to go back to work." So much for the "don't ask
don't tell policy." At that moment I looked at my buddy, and he
looked at me, and we both contemplated making out with each other in
front of both of them. I almost leaned in to go gay for a minute,
but at the last minute decided that as much as I liked my buddy, I
wasn't going to make out with him. I wanted to say to the captain
"so you mean we can continue pushin' each other's shit in while
in the showers and you don't care?" But I didn't, I just hung my head and prayed to whatever would listen that
nobody on the ship would find out that I was "homosexual."
People got their asses beat for those sort of proclivities.
I
was pissed off at the fact that we had to follow the rules and they
didn't. "Don't ask don't tell" applied to the entire navy,
so long as it wasn't the nuclear one. That's why the Captain did
what he did. He was just calling our bluff. I guess he figured if
we were telling the truth somebody would eventually catch us blowin'
one another and he'd kick us out then. So it was back to the engine
room for my sorry ass. I had another trick up my sleeve, and as soon
as we pulled into San Diego to drop off the air wing I pulled it out.
We got four hours of liberty while in port, and I took advantage of
my "liberty." I grabbed a few of the civilian things that I
had and fuckin' left. The same buddy that I had turned my rainbow
chit in with had actually scheduled to go on leave for two weeks
while we were in San Diego. I had him pick me up, and I was enroute
to his house while the boat was leaving without me to return to
Bremerton Washington.
We
got an ounce of herb and smoked it all. 28 days latter I walked my
ass back onto the boat and turned myself in. Due to the fact that we
were "at war," at 30 days I became a deserter and could
technically be put to death for my desertion. I didn't want to test
out that theory. After being gone for 28 days, the Master Chief gave
me my military I.D. back and said he'd see me in two weeks. I was
confused, but I didn't argue. I walked back off of the boat and
drove back to California to enjoy another two weeks off of the boat.
My family was devastated. Nobody understood why I had done what I
had done. While I was UA (the navy's version of AWOL...Unauthorized
Absence) the navy sent all manner of threatening letters to my
family, as well as called repeatedly trying to ascertain my
whereabouts. I didn't care about the consequences. What I cared
about was no longer participating in "Operation Enduring
Freedom."
To
my mind, it was just senseless violence, and I didn't understand it.
I had no idea why 911 had happened, and I didn't know who Osama Bin
Laden was, or that the whole thing was really about oil. I had never
heard of Peak Oil at the time, and I had no idea about fiat currency
or infinite growth on a finite planet. I was 21 years old. All I
wanted was to get stoned on the beach, fall in love with a woman,
make love, read, write, create art and music, and maybe eventually
check into a Buddhist monastery to meditate my way to Nirvana (if the
whole making love thing didn't work out). What I knew with certainty
was that I was not going to participate in the madness of war any
longer. I've heard the argument "well you willingly signed up
to join the military...what did you think the military was about,"
and? Yeah, I was 19 when I signed up for the military. I had been
indoctrinated by my society to believe in patriotism and the flag. I
was in JROTC for four years. To the people who say to me that what I
did was wrong, I say too bad for you. I raised my level of
consciousness to worldcentric and could no longer abide senseless
killing. I did what I had to do to not abide it. The navy wasn't
done with me yet...I had a pointless and torturous crucible to go
through to reach separation and receive my "other than honorable discharge."
5 comments:
fyi - enjoying your story. i stop by from Greer's blog time to time.
always good to hear that somebody is enjoying my story ;0)
Hello LD
RE from the Doomstead Diner here. Ran into your post on Morris Berman's blog and came over here to check out your blog.
Contact me if you are interested in Cross Posting some of your articles on the Diner.
http://doomsteaddiner.org
RE
Hi, I am from Australia.
I came across your blog via Morris Berman too.
For something completely which is congruent to what Morris says, but also completely different please check out.
www.adidaupclose.org/Art_and_Photography/rebirth_of_sacred_art.html
http://sacredcamelgardens.com/wordpress/reality-humanity
http://global.adidam.org/books/not-two-5.html
www.beezone.com/news.html
RE, I registered at the diner and sent you a personal message. I'd be honored to cross post. I've done that once before. Michael Ruppert published "My Resignation from the Matrix" on Collapsenet before he passed the torch. It was on their home page as a free article for a couple of months. I couldn't believe it when he emailed me and said he wanted to put it on collapsenet...just like I can't believe you want to post some of my work. As a writer, it's a great honor. So thank you.
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