To the Cowmen
Of Generals and Cowmen
Emancipation
By Stephen L. Wilmeth
It is true
the extended readings of George Patton as of late have left the undeniable
impression that the parallels with the recent past president are stunningly
similar.
Born of
moderate wealth, both men could be characterized only as somewhat intellectual.
They both shared lifelong tendencies of singlemindedness. From the view of
numbers of men they interacted with, the many shared disdain and even contempt
for them, their actions, and mannerisms.
It was the
people that stayed the course, extended their loyalty, performed steadfastly,
and fought the battles alongside him (both figuratively and literally) that
emerged with a completely different perspective and devotion. In the case of
the former, the story and lessons of his life are largely captured and
assessed. The fact is the American army as well as the Allies couldn’t deal
with him, but they couldn’t perform consistently without him, either. Legions
attempted to dissect his actions and cast dispersions, but the battlefield foes
that came to understand him most were never the voices that were offered a
necessary historical context.
The German
army grew not just to respect him but feared him beyond all Allied leaders. They
interpreted his brass and pomp as indicative of the color of his battlefield
genius with all its uncertainty and the absence of convention and
predictability. It wasn’t personal. It was professional. They were on the
receiving end and it was not just uncomfortable. It was horrifying.
Indeed, he
was human and at times as frail as he was confident, but his instinct remained inviolate.
Try to find his assessments of how WWII ended and how the world changed
thereafter and the truly objective will find little to condemn.
The script
for the latter gentleman is yet to be written. Too few yet understand him much
less comprehend what drives him. Like Patton, the critics are legion and
poisonous, but like Patton, the voices of freedom may well find they cannot
prevail in this epoch without his presence with all its human faults and surprises.
To the
Cowmen
This matter
of racism is a continuous feature of unrest. It is a tool of division and the
agents of its spread are as tedious as they are numerous.
The stewards
of the American ranges, the cowmen, may well be the best model of true
colorblindness. Arguably, it is the demands of their lives that sets aside the
politics that otherwise divides our nation.
Certainly,
there is nary one among them that can be exempted from some form of prejudice,
but, when the course of events places them into the physical interactions with
their surroundings, something else takes place. Perhaps the parallel is no
different to military battle, but when occurs some form of higher
inspiration takes place. It is emotional. It is a bond that unites the whole
relationship among men and animals. It is top down, and it is also bottom up.
When it
takes place, it becomes enshrined in your soul.
It is
formed from a team of individuals, a union of like minds. The cowboys might be
red, Mexican, black, white, yellow, old, young, intellectual, or recluse, but
never inexperienced. Inexperience has not yet grown to understand the knack of
the unique relationship.
It will come, though, with time and
commitment, and, when it emerges, it will change many things not the least of
which is the equality and respect of the participants.
Emancipation
From the
comparison of the two leaders, the suggestion that so many of the problems our
nation now faces is that our leaders, even the best of them, were brought up with
the absence of imagination and the suppression of boldness created by ensconced
bureaucracy.
With its
growing superiority of means, the system itself has long been the cover from
which the lazy and knighted officials of mediocrity have arisen. The recently
departed president referred to this backdrop as the swamp, whereas the general
referred to the condition in much more cryptic and backstreet words.
Few men
seem to emerge to be emancipated from that backdrop. Those that do are
universally castigated and called bums, but they show suggestions they can be
leaders.
Word from
the GAO this week is forecasting the national debt to rise to over 200% of the
nation’s GDP (today’s incomprehensible level is 80%). Both Stonewall and Old
Hickory would be appalled. Somebody better step up and start acting as an
actual adult or the cocoon of playland created by impostor leaders is going to
destroy any superiority by means.
Of
Generals and Cowmen
Roy Gunter
once told me there wasn’t much difference between him and the president other
than the president was a bit bigger cow trader than he was.
His
deduction took place one morning shortly after sunup and in anticipation of yet
another day of immense work. Of course, that work has now passed into the abyss
of time much like Roy’s memory to the greater part of society, but it happened
and remains intact in higher archives.
Like the
few genuinely great generals, there are other cowmen who, given the demand to
act, could perform beyond the greater human expectation on many things that ail
our nation. Jupe Means could stand eye to eye with equally diminutive Phil
Sheraton and contribute logic to any complicated problem. Sherwood Culberson
would be another as would Lee Rice, John Chisum, Charles Goodnight, and the
heretofore mentioned Roy Gunter.
These were
pure leaders uncontaminated by artificial trappings.
They might
have apprehension but could gather before sunup and share a cup of coffee with the
generals to discuss the seemingly impossible tasks at hand and make substantive
contributions to the debate. When the day was done, there also stood a better
than even chance the magic of judging a man solely on his performance and
integrity would unite the whole.
It would remain
enshrined in your soul.
Stephen L. Wilmeth is a rancher from southern New
Mexico.

1 comment:
I would like to read about General Patton, Mr. Wilmeth, what do you suggest? Thank you Sir.
Post a Comment