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Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Hugh Hewitt :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Salute to the Defenders of Our Freedom
by Hugh Hewitt
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The “Greatest Generation” deserved and continues to deserve the highest honors our country can bestow on it. When the country was attacked, the men and women of 1941 thronged forward to meet the threat and defeat the Axis.

Since the close of WWII the country’s appreciation of its military has risen and fallen and risen yet again—an apparent bouncing ball of approval that often seems to be linked to the question: “What have you done for me lately?”

What the American military has accomplished lately is the defense of the country since 9/11 without a single attack on our soil coordinated by a jihadist far away. They have been trying. They have not failed—because of the Army, Navy, Air Force Marine Corps and the Coast Guard. Though the enemy is at least in the tens of thousands—and by some estimates, the hundreds of thousands—they have not been able to repeat their spectacularly deadly killing spree of seven years ago.

We certainly owe thanks to law enforcement and intelligence services, but the brunt of this successful defense of the country has been borne by the uniformed military. It is they that took the battle to the enemy in Afghanistan and then in Iraq and lesser-known operations around the globe. In countless missions—both known and unknown—they have found, closed with and destroyed countless terrorist cells. They are doing so even as you read this and will continue to do so as we all sleep soundly in our beds tonight.

They have done so at enormous cost, with more than 4,000 of their number fallen and more than 10,000 wounded. But rarely do you hear a complaint from the men and women in the military. They go about their job with a humility that matches their exceptional skill. Never in history has such a powerful military evoked so little attention from—and zero concern among—their civilian counterparts. This is an extraordinary thing: Most of America takes its military professionals for granted, but they do not fear, even for a moment, the sort of lust for power that has led to so many coups and civil wars the world around. Americans trust their military, even as they so often ignore it.

Many civilians do what they can to thank the troops through great organizations like the SemperFiFund.org, FisherHouse.org, and SoldiersAngels.com—the first two of which help wounded soldiers sailors and Marines and their families, the last of which provides support for deployed troops. There are many other such groups, each very important to the effort to demonstrate appreciation for the troops. Millions of Americans have helped these organizations, and millions more ought to. This is what civilians owe their defenders: Thanks and support, both expressed and tangible.

The political debates around the conduct of the war, and the agendas of the parties and their leading spokespeople have often obscured the fact that no matter which party is speaking, the troops are working. No matter how heated the domestic political debate becomes, it is nowhere near as hot as Iraq in the summer. No matter who wins the election, the American military will salute and follow orders and do so with the consummate professionalism that defines the greatest military power in history.

For this, and for the service the many veterans who have gone before them, all Americans ought to be thankful. The next time you see a soldier, sailor, airman, Marine or coast guardsman, be sure to say, “Thank you for your service.” It is quite obviously the very least we can do.

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About The Author

Hugh Hewitt is a law professor, broadcast journalist, and author of several books including A Mormon in the White House?: 110 Things Every American Should Know about Mitt Romney.

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Subject: The Greatest Generation - Maybe
While I concur that this generation, my dad among them, came up through the Depression then went of to war, returning without the kind of whining complaint we have heard non-stop since the 1960s, those doing the complaining - the Baby Boomers - are the kids of that Greatest Generation.

Where the Greatest certainly did a wonderful job fighting adversity, they left their children to become the most spoiled, privileged, under-educated, immoral, ridiculously ignorant generation in history.

If you disbelieve this look at our politics. Run by Boomers, all three branches of the government do little but whine and vote against our future (Congress, approval rating in the tank; President, going to war without a declaration and then mismanaging that war and providing no adult response to the Boomer-led media, the Judiciary and their absurd habeus ruling re: enemy soldiers).

Sure - they did fine in WW2 and the Depression, but they raised an appallingly ignorant and spoiled cohort that is destroying Western Civilization and doesn't even know it.

So let's start backing off a bit on the Greatest Generation. Their ultimate legacy will be the destruction their children have wrought.

Not having served
It sickens me to hear the self rightous non-warriors on the left take the opinion that not serving and supporting WAR is immoral.

No I did not serve. But when I look at the pictures of Nagasaki and read the experiences of those who smelt the burning flesh I invision what the Santa Clara Valley look like.

Our military is in Germany, Japan, and Korea. Are they after OIL? Are they there for imperialist colonial purposes?

Americans would not allow an occupation force of any country. The U.N. didn't have the guts to take Hussein out, we did and yes I am proud of those who had the courage.

Hussein paid families of suicide bombers and we are to think he wouldn't have supported biological terrorists?

The chances that a terrorist will take out a damn protecting the area where I currently reside or blowing up a building I happen to be is extremely small. But the notice to those atates who would consider supporting them has been clearly given.

I wish the U.N. had dealt with Hussein and will do something settle the Sudan, Somolia, Iran and North Korea. But they are seemingly comfrotable with starvation, torture and murder as civil policy.
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