That said, I note with pride that our nation HAS changed -- in how we honor these men and women who choose service rather than personal profit during their lives. There is no better example of this than via simple acts. The one I like best is when business executives and seasoned business travelers relinquish their first class seats on airlines for servicemen in uniform. Articles can be found here, here, and here. In the best example, the dialogue ran like this. In the boarding area before a flight from Atlanta to Chicago, the following was overheard:
"What's your seat number solider?" asked a gentleman in a business suit.
"It's 23-B, sir," the soldier told the businessman.
"No, son, that's my seat. Yours is seat 1-A."
This exchange was overheard by other first class passengers, and eight soldiers in all were treated to the comfortable seats in first class.
Contrast this to the viciousness of the American left, which shouted "baby killers" and similar epithets at soldiers, marines, and airmen returning from duty in the 1970s and 1980s.
This shift is not due to sentimental notions about war. It's due to the fact that when Americans fight a war, they fight honorably and they fight for the right reasons. No other nation in this modern era can make that claim. Yes, there are still naysayers in academia, the media, and the fringes of the left who hate the military and hate the fact that our nation now honors those who serve. But they have to keep their comments to themselves, or confine them to the coffeehouses of the Left Coast, because they know the opprobrium will be immense should they utter them out loud.
| The Star-Spangled Banner: a "War Anthem" |
Our country has come a long way since its treatment of the military in the aftermath of the Vietnam War.
I leave you with this tribute to our service branches. Commit the lyrics to memory so you can sing them yourselves come Memorial Day and Veterans Day each year.
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