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The Daily Signal
Veterans Are
the Real 1 Percenters
Bruce Klingner
November 11, 2014
Mentioning “1 percenters” conjures up images of protest and class
warfare. But there is another 1 percent who are beyond politics: the
men and women who serve in America’s armed forces, as well as the
veterans who served before them.
Despite over a decade of ceaseless war against terrorism, fewer than 1
percent of the U.S. population has been on active duty.
A smaller share of Americans now serve in the military than at any
point since the era between World Wars I and II, according to a Pew
Research study. In 1975, 70 percent of members of Congress had military
service. Today, only 20 percent do.
Thankfully, we live in a time where we at least have a culture that
appreciates our veterans.
After Desert Storm, it became fashionable again to appreciate and
praise the U.S. military.
Gone was the stigma of Vietnam, when returning service members didn’t
wear uniforms in public lest they be spit on or called baby-killers. No
longer would our service members suffer the disparagement that Rudyard
Kipling wrote of, “For it’s Tommy this, and Tommy that, and ‘Chuck him
out, the brute!’” But it’s “‘Savior of his country’ when the guns begin
to shoot.”
The heinous attacks on 9/11 resurrected the flame of patriotism that
had faded in the hearts of so many Americans. Flags resting dormant in
closets came back out to be displayed proudly and demand for new flags
skyrocketed. The nation came together in a way not seen since Pearl
Harbor¬—first in grief, then in resolve.
We saw acts of selfless courage, first by firefighters and police
officers risking their lives to give aid, then by service members who
sallied forth into harm’s way to impose retribution for the attack.
Even when people criticized the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, they
still praised the men and women who volunteered to serve in the
military.
“Thank your for your service” seems such a pitifully inadequate
acknowledgement of gratitude and respect for someone who spends months
away from their loved ones, who endure hardships and dangers that
ordinary people shirk from. And what can one offer to the families of
those who gave the last full measure of devotion by sacrificing their
lives to defend us?
We who benefit from their service should honor it by urging our
government to provide the funding to enable the military to carry out
its missions. And provide the medical care for those returning home
wounded in body and spirit.
From the old veterans bent with age to the young men now hunched over
in a cold, dark foxhole, perhaps you can stand a little straighter
today, knowing our nation is forever indebted to you. As George Orwell
wrote, “People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because
rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.”
So to my father and my son—both U.S. Marines—and to all the other men
and women who ever put on our country’s uniform, I humbly and
respectfully thank you for unfailingly standing your post on the
ramparts in order to keep us safe.
Read this and other articles at The Daily Signal
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