Webster

The Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions." --American Statesman Daniel Webster (1782-1852)


Tuesday, March 25, 2025

"What if Europe Had to Fight Without the Americans?"

 I saw this article surfing the web during break, and it to me was spot on, for generations Europe has let their defenses laps as they focused on "Butter instead of Guns", and they relied on the United States to do the heavy lifting.  During the Cold War, West Germany had a very good Military Services the "Bundeswehr" but after the cold war was over, they rapidly demobilized and now they are a shadow of their former selves.  Same with the rest of the Western Europeans.  Now the Eastern Europeans whom are in NATO spend in excess of 2% of GDP as is mandated by NATO charter because they know what it is like to be under the boots of the Soviets Er the Russians and have no desire to repeat the experience whereas the Western Europeans have gotten soft and in my mind I have severe doubt if they have the "stones" to defend Western Civilization as we know it.  

     I do know that President Trump isn't happy with the alliance because of the Europeans taking advantage of the Americans for many years, sneering about the proventials colonist then expecting us to carry the freight and then work cross purposes against us  For example gutting their energy sector because of the political pressure from the "Die Grune" to chase the unicorns of solar energy and wind, so they shut down their coal and nuclear plants and to make up the shortfalls, the Germans have to buy their gas and energy from the Russians, thereby financing their war machine.....Funny that..  So the possibility of The United States Leaving NATO is possible, I doubt it, but it is there, especially if the Western Europeans out of Brussels keep trying to jerk President Trump around, I can see him totally pulling out or seriously reducing our presence especially in Western Europe.  Although Poland and some of the Eastern Europeans would love to have us there on their soil.  Only Time will tell.

I got this from the "Wavell Room"  All credit goes to them.




As the possibility of a U.S. withdrawal from NATO increases, Europe faces not just a political crisis but a military emergency.  No longer shielded by American power, it may have to stand alone against a weakened, yet aggressive Russia – forced to fight, whether it is ready or not. What would war in Europe look like without the United States?  Could Europe still find a way to fight on its own terms?  It must – and it can.

Fighting without the tools to win

From British Paratroopers to Poland’s GROM, from Eurofighters to German howitzers, Europe fields some of the finest professional forces and most sophisticated weapon systems; the problem is, they just don’t have enough of them.   It is not that Europeans do not know how to fight.  The problem is, what do they actually have to fight with?  For years, defence budgets and industries have been allowed to wither away. Without the United States, European NATO members face crippling shortfalls in trained personnelammunition stocks, and critical military assets.  Although this has already impeded European operations in the past, it would prove fatal in a peer-to-peer conflict. 

Without U.S. stockpiles and equipment depots, Europe would face an immediate logistical challenge from the very outbreak of hostilities.  Ammunition shortages would be catastrophic.  The war in Ukraine has demonstrated that European stockpiles cannot sustain modern, high-intensity combat.  Stocks of artillery shells, precision munitions, and armoured vehicle replacements would be exhausted within weeks, with no immediate means of replenishment. 

Dwindling reserves and slow production

Unlike the United States, which maintains vast prepositioned stockpiles, European nations have allowed their war reserves to dwindle.  Decades of underinvestment and fragmentation across national borders have meant Europe’s defence industries are too slow and unresponsive to meet wartime demand.  Peacetime procurement cycles stretch across years, not weeks.  The very munitions that define NATO’s battlefield superiority – smart bombs, guided rockets, and cruise missiles – are produced too slowly and in far too small quantities.  In a war with Russia, Europe’s current production capacity would be overwhelmed within days.

To make matters worse, Europe lacks the military mobility to move what it currently has to where it is needed.  Equipment losses would mount rapidly without a resilient battlefield repair and maintenance infrastructure.  Damaged tanks, Infantry Fighting Vehicles, and aircraft would be difficult to restore to combat readiness, and many would be lost for the duration of the war.

This is not just a logistical issue; it directly impacts Europe’s ability to dictate the course of the war.  When its reserves run out and production fails to keep pace, Europe will be unable to effectively shape the strategic environment.  Yet, such shaping operations – preparing the battlefield to favour one’s own forces – are essential for modern warfare.  They involve neutralizing enemy air defences, disrupting command-and-control networks, and degrading logistics and reinforcements.  These operations set the conditions for manoeuvre warfare, allowing ground forces to exploit gaps and achieve operational breakthroughs.  Without American air assets and stand-off capabilities, Europe would struggle to achieve air dominance or degrade enemy systems sufficiently to enable rapid and decisive ground manoeuvres. 

The air domain

The inability to gain and maintain control of the air would be felt long before European troops even reached the frontlines.  Russian ISR drones would detect and track their movements, enabling relentless strikes that would force European units to disperse, dig in, and hide.  Without U.S. anti-air capabilities, European forces are vulnerable to threats from Russian glide bombs, Shahed drones, and loitering munitions. Unable to mass for decisive operations, mechanized assaults would become a non-starter.  Frontlines would harden, forcing tanks and infantry fighting vehicles to disperse even further – acting as individual force multipliers rather than combined instruments of manoeuvre. 

 

RAF F35 Europe faces a political crisis
Royal Air Force F35 (Photo by SAC Tim Laurence, Crown Copyright)

 

A highly dispersed force – down to the platoon and squad level – means that core tactical tenets would start to break down.  Fire and movement would no longer be mutually enabling components – the effective use of which has been central to Western warfare since the First World War.  With European forces unable to shape the battlefield, to mass for decisive action and to effectively suppress and outmanoeuvre the enemy, the result would be a war of attrition, much like what we see in Ukraine today.  

The Ukrainian way of war is not an option

Some argue that the war in Ukraine offers a glimpse into the future of warfare.  But while it has showcased remarkable battlefield innovation, it remains a war of necessity, not choice – and one that Europe cannot afford to emulate. 

Ukraine has fought with dispersed positions, drone teams, and small-unit tactics – not because they are optimal, but because they are the only available option.  The slow supply of Western equipment has forced it into an attritional fight, where gains are measured in tree lines rather than strategic advances.  This approach has exacted a staggering toll: entire formations lost, offensives stalled, and casualty rates in the tens of thousands.  It is a brutal struggle with no clear path to victory; and as important as they may be, no number of AI-driven drones has solved the fundamental challenge of breaking this bloody deadlock of trench warfare.

2023 – a counteroffensive without air superiority

The failed 2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive revealed the harsh limits of attacking without air dominance, without deep strikes, and without shaping operations – precisely the situation European forces would face if they had to fight Russia alone.  Yet, unlike Ukraine, which spent eight years adapting to Russian tactics along the demarcation line and over three years in all-out war, most European armies lack comparable experience.  They also do not possess Ukraine’s extensive anti-air network, leaving European cities and infrastructure even more vulnerable to Russian missile and drone strikes.  Most critically, if Europe fights without the United States, it will have no external lifeline.  Ammunition shortages will not be offset by foreign aid, depleted stockpiles will not be replenished, and tank battalions will not be resupplied by allies. Europe must be able to sustain itself.

 

Europe faces a crisis
Swedish Archer artillery system (WikiMedia Commons)

 

Furthermore, while Ukrainians have shown enormous resilience, driven by a fight for national survival, it is hard to imagine similar determination across Western Europe.   Few European nations beyond the Baltic countries and Poland have the resolve to endure the kind of high-casualty warfare that would likely follow if Europe had to go to war today.  Public support for any conflict involving mass casualties and prolonged attritional warfare would likely collapse.

To understand what Europe must do now, we must recognize that Ukraine is not fighting this war on its own terms.  This is why it has repeatedly pleaded and begged for more artillery, aircraft, cruise missiles, and combat vehicles.  As critical as innovation and adaptability are in modern warfare, they cannot replace the fundamental need for firepower and manoeuvre.  Thus, while Ukraine has adapted to sustain its fight with domestically built systems, it has not regained the operational capabilities needed for decisive action.

Russia is weaker than we think

The good news is – neither has Russia.  Despite the gains it has made in recent months and the remarkable ‘political will’ – for lack of a better word – to sacrifice hundreds of thousands on the battlefield, the Russian Armed Forces have proven themselves far weaker than most anticipated before 2022.  While they have made tactical adaptations and remain proficient in defensive operations, Russia has paid a steep price.  It has lost large portions of its pre-war force, depleted its Soviet-era stockpiles, and pushed its economy to the limits of its labour force. 

The Russian military has repeatedly failed to conduct basic combined arms manoeuvres or air campaigns and has yet to find a solution to the stalemate other than pressing forward with wave after wave of squad-sized infantry assaults.  For now, Russia remains stuck in Ukraine, and it is highly unlikely that it can simultaneously defeat Kyiv, reconstitute its forces, and open a second front against Eastern Europe.  Where Europe lacks the means to fight the war the way it wants to fight, Russia lacks the systems to conduct it effectively. 

Europe still remembers what stalemates look like

This is the other good news: Europe knows how to avoid a bloody stalemate – because we have been here before: after the First World War, Western militaries adapted their operational and tactical procedures to ensure that it would never again be trapped in the kind of static, attritional warfare that defined the battlefields of Flanders.  The Western Allies, the Wehrmacht, and later NATO did not adopt manoeuvre warfare out of academic preference, but out of the hard-learned necessity to avoid pointless slaughter.  Despite repeated claims by some analysts, it does not mean NATO was incapable of attritional warfare.  Attrition was not abandoned – it was moved away from the frontlines.  Air campaigns and stand-off capabilities such as cruise missiles and long-range rocket artillery were how Western militaries sought to degrade enemy capabilities before their own soldiers ever entered the fight. 

Both these core tenets were validated in Ukraine, as most recaptured territory resulted either from operational breakthroughs – such as the 2022 Kharkiv counteroffensive – or from shaping the environment into untenable conditions, forcing Russian troops to withdraw, as seen in Kherson later that year.  And while the Kursk offensive has been controversial strategically, it shows that the Russian Armed Forces cannot defend in force everywhere – leaving exploitable gaps and opportunities for manoeuvre.

Russia has shown it cannot replicate the systems to conduct complex air campaigns and shaping operations – even in its own backyard.  This is because NATO’s dominance in Multi-Domain Operations has never been just about tanks, stealth aircraft or cruise missiles.  Rather, it came from the integration of systems—command structures, intelligence fusion, and targeting processes – that allowed NATO forces to operate with unmatched precision.  In this, NATO had – and still has – no peer in the world. 

European strength remains a political—not a military—question

Much of this has depended on U.S. assets, technology, and personnel.  Yet Europe possesses both the institutional knowledge and technological expertise to rebuild these capabilities independently in its own area of responsibility.  We know what to do, how to do it and what to do it with.  Large-scale air exercises with European command structures have demonstrated this potential.  Technology, both new and old, an industrial base and financial resources exist to produce, procure, and employ the necessary weapon systems – build, buy and bomb.  This applies to everything from aircraft and drones to cruise missiles, long-range rocket artillery, and other critical capabilities. 

Europe also has a deep well of doctrinal expertise and a large corps of staff and non-commissioned officers capable of leading the necessary expansion of forces.  With a workforce more than twice the size of Russia’s – and larger than that of the United States – Europe has the manpower to sustain and build up its militaries – if it acts now. 

The crisis facing Europe means challenge is formidable.  Nations – some of which may not even believe in the cause – must unite.  Fragmented European defence industries have to move towards a consolidated warpath.  It means convincing entire generations that this is their fight.  It means spending ‘gold for iron’ today to avoid spilling blood for freedom tomorrow.  Finally, it also means reconstituting European forces now, rather than being forced to send untrained conscripts into the meat grinder later.  Europe needs weapons, civilian defence, hardened infrastructure, and a high state of force readiness – on a massive scale. 

Conclusion

Will Europe ever be as powerful as it was with U.S. support?  No, probably not.  That is why one can only hope NATO still has a future – even as we prepare for the worst.   But if Europe acts with determination and unity it can avoid the political and military crisis it currently faces.  It can rebuild the dominant, highly integrated military systems necessary to deter or decisively defeat any Russian aggression.  The challenge, therefore, is not whether Europe can fight effectively without the United States – it can, and it might soon have to.  The real question is whether Europe will invest today, while it still has the choice of how it wants to fight before circumstances dictate the way it has to.

Monday, March 24, 2025

Monday Music "Sympathy For the Devil."

 I have been watching Paramount+ was watching "Dune" then rolled into several original Star Trek Movies with "Star Trek TWOK" and they had several trailers for a new series starting called "Mobland"  and they were using this song as part of the intro theme, so needless to say this song was an "Earworm" so I decided to foist it on everyone else.  

Now to My "Monday Music"..
       I remembered this song and it ain't my favorite Rolling Stones song, "Paint it black" has that distinction,   One of the things I liked about this song is the historical mentions in the song from "the time for a change in St Petersburg and held a generals rank when the blitzkreig raged." 

                             Looks Like Leonid Brezhnev.....Don't it.......
"Sympathy for the Devil" was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, though the song was largely a Jagger composition. The working title of the song was "The Devil Is My Name", and it is sung by Jagger as a first-person narrative from the point of view of Lucifer.
In the 2012 BBC documentary Crossfire Hurricane, Jagger stated that his influence for the song came from Baudelaire and from the Russian author Mikhail Bulgakov's novel The Master and Margarita (which had just appeared in English translation in 1967). The book was given to him by Marianne Faithfull.
In a 1995 interview with Rolling Stone, Jagger said, "I think that was taken from an old idea of Baudelaire's, I think, but I could be wrong. Sometimes when I look at my Baudelaire books, I can't see it in there. But it was an idea I got from French writing. And I just took a couple of lines and expanded on it. I wrote it as sort of like a Bob Dylan song." It was Richards who suggested changing the tempo and using additional percussion, turning the folk song into a samba.
Backed by an intensifying rock arrangement, the narrator, with narcissistic relish, recounts his exploits over the course of human history and warns the listener: "If you meet me, have some courtesy, have some sympathy, and some taste; use all your well-learned politesse, or I'll lay your soul to waste." Jagger stated in the Rolling Stone interview: "... it's a very long historical figure — the figures of evil and figures of good — so it is a tremendously long trail he's made as personified in this piece."
At the time of the release of Beggars Banquet the Rolling Stones had already raised some hackles for sexually forward lyrics such as "Let's Spend the Night Togetherand for allegedly dabbling in Satanism(their previous album, while containing no direct Satanic references, had been titled Their Satanic Majesties Request), and "Sympathy" brought these concerns to the fore, provoking media rumours and fears among some religious groups that the Stones were devil-worshippers and a corrupting influence on youth.
The lyrics focus on atrocities in the history of mankind from Lucifer's point of view, including the trial and death of Jesus Christ ("Made damn sure that Pilate washed his hands and sealed his fate"), European wars of religion ("I watched with glee while your kings and queens fought for ten decades for the Gods they made"), the violence of the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the 1918 massacre of the Romanov family ("I stuck around St. Petersburg when I saw it was a time for a change/Killed the Tsar and his ministers/Anastasia screamed in vain"), and World War II ("I rode a tank, held a general's rank when the blitzkrieg raged, and the bodies stank"). The song was originally written with the line "I shouted out 'Who killed Kennedy?'" After Robert F. Kennedy's death on 6 June 1968, the line was changed to "I shouted out 'Who killed the Kennedys?'"
Jagger sings the final lines of the coda, before the fade, in a high falsetto.
The song may have been spared further controversy when the first single from the album, Street Fighting Man, became even more controversial in view of the race riots and student protests occurring in many cities in Europe and in the United States.


The recording of "Sympathy for the Devil" began at London's Olympic Sound Studios on 4 June 1968 and continued into the next day; overdubs were done on 8, 9 and 10 June. Personnel included on the recording include Nicky Hopkins on piano, Rocky Dijon on congas and Bill Wyman on maracas.
It is often mentioned that Marianne FaithfullAnita PallenbergBrian JonesCharlie Watts, producer Jimmy Miller, Wyman and Richards performed backup vocals, singing the "woo woos", repeatedly, as this can be seen in the film Sympathy for the Devil (see below) by Jean-Luc Godard. Richards plays bass on the original recording, and also the song's electric-guitar solo. Jones is seen playing an acoustic guitar in the film, but it is not audible in the finished mix.
In the 2003 book According to the Rolling Stones, Watts said: "'Sympathy' was one of those sort of songs where we tried everything. The first time I ever heard the song was when Mick was playing it at the front door of a house I lived in in Sussex... He played it entirely on his own... and it was fantastic. We had a go at loads of different ways of playing it; in the end I just played a jazz Latin feel in the style of Kenny Clarke would have played on 'A Night in Tunisia' – not the actual rhythm he played, but the same styling."
On the overall power of the song, Jagger continued in Rolling Stone: "It has a very hypnotic groove, a samba, which has a tremendous hypnotic power, rather like good dance music. It doesn't speed up or slow down. It keeps this constant groove. Plus, the actual samba rhythm is a great one to sing on, but it is also got some other suggestions in it, an undercurrent of being primitive—because it is a primitive African, South American, Afro-whatever-you-call-that rhythm (candomblé). So to white people, it has a very sinister thing about it. But forgetting the cultural colors, it is a very good vehicle for producing a powerful piece. It becomes less pretentious because it is a very unpretentious groove. If it had been done as a ballad, it wouldn't have been as good."



In an interview with Creem, Jagger said, "[When people started taking us as devil worshippers], I thought it was a really odd thing, because it was only one song, after all. It wasn't like it was a whole album, with lots of occult signs on the back. People seemed to embrace the image so readily, [and] it has carried all the way over into heavy metal bands today."

Of the change in public perception the band experienced after the song's release, Richards said in a 1971 interview with Rolling Stone, "Before, we were just innocent kids out for a good time, they're saying, 'They're evil, they're evil.' Oh, I'm evil, really? So that makes you start thinking about evil... What is evil? Half of it, I don't know how much people think of Mick as the devil or as just a good rock performer or what? There are black magicians who think we are acting as unknown agents of Lucifer and others who think we are Lucifer. Everybody's Lucifer."
Contrary to a widespread misconception, it was "Under My Thumb" and not "Sympathy for the Devil" that the Rolling Stones were performing when Meredith Hunter was killed at the Altamont Free Concert. Rolling Stone magazine's early articles on the incident misreported that the killing took place during "Sympathy for the Devil", but the Stones in fact played "Sympathy for the Devil" earlier in the concert; it was interrupted by a fight and restarted, Jagger commenting, "We're always having—something very funny happens when we start that number." Several other songs were performed before Hunter was killed.
After being omitted from the Stones' 1972/73 tours, "Sympathy for the Devil" was played occasionally as the encore in 1975/76, and has been performed regularly on all of their tours since 1989. Concert renditions have been released on the albums The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll CircusGet Yer Ya-Ya's Out!Love You LiveFlashpoint, and Shine a Light.
   Sympathy for the Devil is also the title of a producer's edit of a 1968 film by Jean-Luc Godard whose own original version is called One Plus One. The film, a depiction of the late 1960s American counterculture, also featured the Rolling Stones in the process of recording the song in the studio. On the filming, Jagger said in Rolling Stone: "... [it was] very fortuitous, because Godard wanted to do a film of us in the studio. I mean, it would never happen now, to get someone as interesting as Godard. And stuffy. We just happened to be recording that song. We could have been recording 'My Obsession.' But it was 'Sympathy for the Devil', and it became the track that we us
ed.

Friday, March 21, 2025

"Honor In The Quiet Man"

 

I happen to see this article in the "Art of Manliness".  When I was younger, I definitely didn't get this movie, but as I got older, I find that I like the older movies in general because they don't have the flashy CGI and they actually have to have a storyline and good actors and actresses.  This movie is one of my staples because I am a huge John Wayne fan and I have a picture I got from a street vendor before I joined the Army in 1985.


        Kinda surprised I still have it, It has been in my bonus room since the late 90's.   My wife has told me that I was born in the wrong century because my mannerisms and manners are archaic and I don't mind, to me manners and chivalry are timeless qualities.    

       Well back to this article, I have watched this movie several times and the author to me was correct about the premise of the movie, and it is different movie for John Wayne than his usual.  


A woman whispers to a smiling man wearing a beret and suspenders, reminiscent of "The Quiet Man," in an outdoor setting under a clear blue sky.

It’s St. Patrick’s Day.

Like a lot of Americans with Irish ancestors, I semi-celebrated the holiday growing up. Our family would eat corned beef and potatoes and decorate the house with shamrocks and pots of gold.

We’d also watch St. Patrick’s Day-themed movies. There was Darby O’Gill and the Little People, of course, starring a crooning Sean Connery.

And then there was John Ford’s 1952 Irish epic romantic comedy The Quiet Man, starring John Wayne and Maureen O’Hara. As a kid, this movie bored me to tears. But my mother loved it so we had to watch it.

When I watched The Quiet Man again as an adult, I enjoyed it more. I started making a viewing a St. Patrick’s Day tradition, and I’ve watched it every year for the past seven or so years.

At first, I couldn’t quite pinpoint why I’d grown to love this movie. Yes, it’s refreshing to see John Wayne play a role that doesn’t involve a cowboy hat and a rifle. Maureen O’Hara is stunning and talented. Barry Fitzgerald is hilarious as Michaleen Oge Flynn. The picturesque scenes of the Irish countryside are charming and pastoral and make me want to live in a cottage with a thatch roof. And, of course, there’s the epic fight scene at the end of the movie.

But I sensed there was something more to the appeal of the film than that.

A few years ago, I finally figured out what that something was:

The Quiet Man represents a near-perfect meditation on the anthropological evolution of honor.

The Story of The Quiet Man

Image5

To understand the theme of honor in The Quiet Man, it helps to know the basics of the story:

Having killed an opponent in the ring, former boxer Sean Thornton (John Wayne) has sworn off fighting for good and hopes to make a fresh start by moving from America to Ireland.

On his first day in the quaint Irish village of Innisfree, Sean spots Mary Kate Danaher (Maureen O’Hara) herding sheep. It’s love at first sight.

Sean purchases his family’s old cottage, outbidding local squire Will Danaher (Victor McLaglen), who also happens to be Mary Kate’s domineering older brother. Will instantly resents him, setting up the film’s central conflict.

Despite Will’s objections, Sean courts and marries Mary Kate. But their wedding night turns disastrous when Will refuses to hand over Mary Kate’s dowry. Feeling the snub unimportant, Sean lets the slight go; he’s got plenty of money as a successfully retired prizefighter. But to Mary Kate, the dowry is important, and deep tensions ensue.

When Sean refuses to fight for what’s rightfully hers, Mary Kate is humiliated. Without her dowry, she doesn’t consider herself truly married, and she refuses to consummate the union. The village whispers about Sean’s manhood, and their marriage deteriorates.

Frustrated, Mary Kate tries to flee by train, forcing Sean’s hand. In the film’s most dramatic moment, he drags her through town to confront Will, demanding that he either give him the dowry or take back his sister. “No fortune, no marriage,” he declares. Will throws him the money, and, with Mary Kate’s help, Sean tosses it into a boiler to burn. Mary Kate proudly walks home.

Enraged, Will sucker punches Sean, sparking an epic brawl that spills across the countryside. The brawl, though heated, is filled with camaraderie and grudging respect and resolves the men’s feud. By the end, Will, Sean, and Mary Kate reconcile, and Sean finally comes to peace with his past.

What Is Honor?

If you’ve been reading the site for a while now, you know that we did an in-depth series on the nature and history of honor over a decade ago. Here’s the TLDR summation of it:

While for most of us living in the modern West, honor is about integrity and being true to a set of personal ideals, anciently, honor meant something very different. It was not only personal, but social. 

Anciently, honor was about your reputation within a group of equal peers.

Anthropologists who have studied this ancient form of honor have found it’s premised on three elements: 1) a code of honor with genuine standards that must be met to have the full status of personhood, 2) an exclusive group of equals who live by that code, and 3) the very real threat of shame for those who fail to measure up to it.

Ancient honor is an all-or-nothing game. You either have the respect of your peers, or you don’t. Bringing dishonor upon yourself by failing to meet the group’s minimum standards means exclusion from the group, as well as shame.

A Clash of Honor Cultures

Image1

The Quiet Man is compelling because it sets up a clash between the modern and ancient senses of honor.

Sean Thornton represents the modern sense of honor. For him, honor is about being true to his values. He doesn’t care about what others think so long as he lives by his inner code.

Part of Thornton’s personal code is that he won’t ever fight again. To Sean, maintaining this principle of self-restraint is a matter of personal integrity, regardless of what others might think of him.

Another part of his individualistic American code touches on love and marriage. For Sean, if two people love each other, that’s all that matters. You don’t need the approval of family and community.

But in Innisfree, Sean encounters a society still operating under the ancient code of honor, where reputation and standing within the community matter deeply. Will Danaher and Mary Kate embody this traditional understanding.

Will symbolizes the ancient code of manly honor. He’s boisterous, loud, and domineering because that’s how you gain status in his town. He cares deeply about his reputation and is willing to resort to violence to defend it. For Will and other men who follow the ancient code, might makes right.

There’s a scene that captures this clash between modern and ancient honor perfectly, in which Sean accuses Will of lying.

For us moderns like Sean, his insult isn’t a huge deal. You call things as you see them. If you’re wrong, you can argue about it and maybe figure out the misunderstanding. At worst, the person accused will get angry, walk away, and no longer have anything to do with you.

But for Will, who lives under the ancient code of honor, accusing someone of lying is a really, really big deal — one of the gravest insults you could levy at a man. Publicly challenging a man’s honesty — an act sometimes described as “giving the lie” — was a serious affront, even if the accusation was true.

In honor cultures, an accusation of lying had to be met with a violent defense of one’s reputation. And that’s exactly what Will Danaher undertakes.

When the conflict over the dowry comes to a head, Will demands that Sean fight him over it because that’s what you do when you have a conflict in a traditional culture of honor. Sean refuses, so the entire town questions his manhood. They shame him.

A Woman’s Honor

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Will isn’t the only character representing the ancient code of honor. Mary Kate does as well.

Typically, in ancient honor cultures, a woman’s honor is tied up with her chastity. We still see vestiges of that today; while it no longer carries currency in some circles, accusing a woman of being loose still registers for many as a gross insult.

For Mary Kate, her chastity isn’t the issue. Rather, it’s her dowry. In Innisfree, the dowry isn’t just money. It represents a woman’s independence from her childhood home. Unlike Sean, she doesn’t just see it as money but as a symbol of her honor and status as a mature woman. Her refusal to consummate the marriage without it isn’t born out of spite or greed but springs from a deep-seated belief that she cannot truly be Sean’s wife unless she enters the union on equal terms.

Mary Kate’s honor is also social. She refuses to be seen as a woman who has been dishonored in the eyes of the community. When Sean fails to confront Will, she sees it as a betrayal. Her insistence that Sean fight for her dowry isn’t about money but about proving his commitment to her. She wasn’t asking Sean to fight for her money but for her honor. Because Sean refused, she had to deal with the shame of being married to a coward and of not having her status and standing as a full adult woman.

Sean, with his modern sense of honor, is completely flabbergasted. His values clash with his wife’s deeply rooted, traditional code of honor.

Synthesizing Honor Cultures

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The conflict resolves when Sean finally realizes that his modern sense of personal honor must find a way to coexist with the ancient communal honor of Innisfree. He realizes that while his personal values matter, they can’t exist in isolation from the community he now calls home. When in Innisfree, you have to do as the Innisfree-ans do.

Sean ultimately fights Will Danaher not because he seeks violence for violence’s sake but because he wants to be a part of the community and a part of Mary Kate’s family. The fight isn’t about money or revenge but rather serves as a ritual that enacts Innisfree’s code of honor. The fight actually serves as a way to create a relationship.

While it may seem foreign to us, Mary Kate claims her honor in the town when Sean drags her across the countryside to her brother and demands the dowry. To her and to the village, Sean is finally acting like a husband and getting Mary Kate out from under the thumb of her domineering brother.

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Sean synthesizes his idea that love isn’t about money with his wife’s idea that it represents honor by accepting the dowry . . . but then burning it. Even without the money in hand, Mary Kate is able to walk with her head held high because she now has her full standing and status as an adult woman.

Conclusion

What makes The Quiet Man endure as a classic isn’t just its sweeping Irish landscapes. Nor the interpersonal conflicts. It’s the competing notions of honor on display.

The film is set in the 1920s, when traditional, social notions of honor were giving way to more modern, individualistic ones. When the movie was released in 1952, there still existed pockets in the West in which the ancient code of honor persisted, and viewers would have recognized vestiges of it in their own lives.

Even today, while the traditional code of honor has largely disappeared in the West, remnants of it remain, and we still experience tensions between the old and new notions of honor. As much as we’re encouraged to pay exclusive adherence to our internal scorecards, and not care what anyone else thinks, we yearn for the status and affirmation of our peers. Such tensions represent the deepest kind of drama, and account for the extra interest burbling beneath the movie’s general plot and the reason that viewers, past and present, have been drawn to the film. 

So this St. Patrick’s Day, after you’ve had your fill of corned beef and potatoes, queue up The Quiet Man, and reflect on how you’re balancing modern and traditional notions of honor in your own life.

All the while, still chuckling at Michaleen Oge Flynn’s witty one-liners