Which Way Did the Taliban Go? by Luke Mogelson for New York Times Magazine 
Writer Luke Mogelson does it again. This time embedding with a battalion of the Afghan National Army. Amazing stuff.
Which Way Did the Taliban Go? by Luke Mogelson for New York Times Magazine 
Writer Luke Mogelson does it again. This time embedding with a battalion of the Afghan National Army. Amazing stuff.
This humble little bulletin board is a patchwork account of the things we make—the process of culture. Cultura, from Colere, meaning to inhabit, protect, honor with worship; it’s about the tending of something. We make art in all its forms. Our myriad metaphors: these things I love.
But we also make war. We make death. Then a writer like Luke Mogelson comes along, sees what we’ve made, and writes a piece like this:
“At Emergency’s hospital in Kabul, it’s not unusual to find Afghan national security forces recovering in the same ward as Taliban insurgents, and after a while, the ideas that make enemies of the two men lose their relevance; the daily spectacle of their impact on human bodies invalidates them.”