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April 26, 2004
Robert Alt has a moving tribute to Pat Tillman and those men serving with him, such as our man in Afghanistan, the Army Reserve Major from Minneapolis whose reports we have posted here on occasion over the past several months: "Tillman's generation." Alt writes: There is a temptation to say that Pat Tillman demonstrated a courage and ethic belonging peculiarly to a previous generation — perhaps Tom Brokaw's "Greatest Generation" — one in which athletes and movie stars served. But that would be a mistake. This generation should not be underestimated. The young men of today's military have done something which "the Greatest Generation" did not have to do: They volunteered to serve after the Brokaws of the world lost faith in the American military. These soldiers have fought valiantly in Afghanistan after the press all but forgot them, and in Iraq after the press, yielding to unfounded accusations, forgot who they were. They have seen recent military victories cast as defeats. They answered the call to higher duty, only to have the elites question it as lower-class service. And despite politicians using the shameful rhetoric of "quagmire," the number of volunteer soldiers is increasing... Trackback PingsTrackBack URL for this entry: |