A True Memorial
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
OK, here is
my post-Memorial Day gripe. Memorial Day is not the Fourth of July,
Flag Day, Armed Forces Day or Veterans Day. It is a day to remember
the war dead. You don't do that with picnics, brass bands, parades,
pompous speeches and hype for the current war. "Memorial"
and "celebration" are not synonyms. The day was intended
for visiting cemeteries, not beaches or amusement parks.
The great
cheapening of the event began some decades ago when the federal-employee
unions persuaded Congress to make federal holidays into three-day
weekends. It was a crass decision that cheapened the concept of
patriotism.
I don't think
that many Americans are really patriotic anymore. For some, patriotism
is rooting for whatever the current war is and saluting whichever
cheap politician happens to be occupying the White House. It doesn't
seem to matter to these folks whether the war is just or unjust,
necessary or unnecessary. It doesn't seem to matter if the politician
is an honest public servant or a devious liar. Such mindless jingoists
remind me of the crowds who cheered for Adolf Hitler.
We are all
going to die, of course, but it has always seemed to me that one
of the worst deaths is the unnecessary death. It ought to be, but
obviously is not, the goal of American politicians to never send
young men and women to an unnecessary war. "Unnecessary"
is easy to define. It means you don't go to war against a country
that is not a threat to the U.S.
No American
takes an oath to defend a foreign country or overthrow a foreign
tyrant. We take an oath to defend our Constitution and our country.
End of story. American patriotism has become so diluted that crowds
don't even blink when a politician running for public office publicly
proclaims "undying support" for a foreign country. On
such occasions, the politician should be booed and reminded that
he is an American in America running for an American office to represent
and serve the American people. If he loves a foreign country more
than his own, then he is free to emigrate. He should not be free
to sacrifice the lives of young Americans on behalf of any foreign
country.
No American
has "died defending freedom" since the end of World War
II. Americans have died in the Korean Civil War, the Vietnamese
Civil War and in several imperialistic forays for presumably various
corporate interests. Given the fact that communist Vietnam is now
an object of American investments, I would hate to have to explain
to a widow or a grieving mother why her loved one had to die over
there. Other than profits to the war corporations, what did 58,000
dead Americans accomplish? If we're going to accept communism in
Vietnam now, why not then? Where are all the terrible consequences
politicians told Americans we had to avoid by going to war in Vietnam?
If you find one, let me know. I suspect they're in the museum of
political lies, next to the Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.
Memorial
Day should be a solemn and sad day as we remember all the young
men and young women who were denied the joys of a normal life span.
War is cruel and vicious, but whether the war is just or unjust,
necessary or unnecessary, those who die in it die honorably in the
service of their country. Never blame the soldier for the politician's
war, and never allow anybody else to do so in your presence.
Whatever deceit
and corruption oozes out of Washington, the men and women of the
armed forces are innocent and untainted by it. They follow duty,
honor and love for their comrades in arms. They die for each other
and for the people they love at home. That love deserves to be respected
and honored. In the worst of circumstances, they demonstrate the
best a human can be.
June
2, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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