Friend --
Happy Memorial Day! I hope you are enjoying a wonderful day with
loved ones and family.
Memorial Day became a federal holiday in 1971, though it has been
celebrated in some form since the 1860s. Today, many
Americans—especially those who have not experienced personal loss in
this arena—have a natural inclination not to look too closely when it
comes to the results of the wars we are fighting or have fought. We
are quick with a, "Thank you for your service." We are slow to think
deeply about what it means that less
than one percent of our population serves, and that even within
our 50 states, there
is a marked difference in enlistment rates, and that 25%
of our active duty members and veterans show signs of PTSD and
other mental health issues.
To this end, I asked a member of my staff who is a veteran what he
would ask of Americans on this Memorial Day. He recommended an essay
that struck a chord with me—Phil
Klay's The Warrior at the Mall. The essence of Mr.
Klay's argument is that, as a result of the same minority of Americans
spending decades at war while an overwhelming majority carries on with
their lives as if nothing is amiss, a chasm has opened up between
civilians and veterans. This chasm must be bridged, or, as Mr. Klay
says:
"We risk our country slipping
further into the practice of a fraudulent form of American patriotism,
where 'soldiers are sacred,' the work of actual soldiering is ignored
and the pageantry of military worship sucks energy away from the
obligations of citizenship."
Mr. Klay also points out
"Support for our military remains
high at a time when respect for almost every other institution is
perilously low, so pushing a military angle as a wedge makes a certain
kind of sense. But ... our military is justified only by the civic
life and values it exists to defend."
That is, we don't believe in much these days beyond our military.
But the military exists to defend our society itself.
Thus, we owe it to our veterans to take our citizenship seriously
enough that it warrants their sacrifices.
If there is a way that we can celebrate this Memorial Day beyond
reflecting on and thanking our veterans and members of the armed
services for all they have done and given up, it would be to try to
become more worthy of their sacrifice. This includes examining our
decisions to put our soldiers into harm's way and how we treat and
support them after they return. It even includes how we treat
ourselves and other members of our society.
I met with a veterans' organization this week to learn about their
experiences. Both of the officials I met with served in the Middle
East in the Marine Corps. Now they work at an organization that tries
to end the 'Forever Wars' and advocates for Congress regaining its say
on military deployments which have fallen solely to the executive
branch since 2001. That is where their patriotism and service has led
them.
We can do better. We will do better. For our veterans and the
country they sacrificed so much for.
Respectfully,

-Andrew
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