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Thursday, September 25, 2008
Rebecca Hagelin :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Wisdom of New York
by Rebecca Hagelin
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This election year has generated a lot of talk about the role of America’s military in the Middle East. Less frequently does the conversation turn to what’s really at the heart of the matter – whether we, as Americans, are committed to a world blessed with freedom for all humankind.

The microscopic critiquing of what went wrong, what went right, and how well we’re doing is all very important, particularly if we want to continue to conduct a successful military campaign. But often we forget to “zoom out” and take in the larger picture. Two nonprofits, the LOOC (Lives Out of Combat) Foundation and Freedom Is Not Free, have teamed up to remind Americans what this larger picture looks like.

The LOOC Foundation has created a feature-length documentary and a beautiful hardbound portrait book called Warriors …In Their Own Words. As the title indicates, the book and DVD are a compilation of sentiments from men and women in uniform about what their service means to them and what they believe it means to the world. These works contain snapshots of insight from service personnel in every American military branch, and even testimonials from servicemen in the United Kingdom. Many of the men and women interviewed are currently serving in Iraq or Afghanistan, while others recall their service in World War II, Korea or Vietnam.

Watching the documentary evokes a spectrum of emotions, from awe for what these men and women are willing to endure in the name of freedom to humbled thankfulness for their sacrifices. The portrait book drives home the timelessness of our need for warriors by opening with historical figures from the Peloponnesian War (431-422 BC), the Battle of Hastings (1066) and the French and Indian War (1731-1795).

The Warriors project is to show that our men and women in uniform – our warriors – hear a calling. They believe in the validity of their mission, and they know the difference they make in the world is palpable. They have volunteered to serve a higher purpose than themselves. As Colonel James D. McGinley of the Marine Corps states: “Those who have never worn the Cloth of our Nation may call it the military, but those in uniform will always say The Service.”

Our warriors understand that America has a special calling to promote freedom and democracy. In the words of one Marine, “the United States is a beacon of light, whether we want to admit it or not.” America’s strength is further echoed in the confidence with which one soldier speaks of his calling: “There’s no danger abroad that our troops can’t handle.”

Warriors also acknowledge personal betterment as an incentive to serve. One naval officer describes the personal fulfillment that his service has given him: “There’s nothing better than knowing that you have served your country and answered your calling.”

Another Marine attests to the sensation of a calling: “I felt it was my duty to do something. Because I can, I need to. Because there are so many who can’t and want to …” As one airman describes it, his calling comes from a sense of duty: “It was just something that you needed to do, and you did it because it was expected.”

All of the warriors interviewed communicate their belief that, at its core, the mission of their calling is to defend America and freedom, both here and abroad.

The calling to spread freedom and champion democracy did not originate with President Bush, or even with our Founding Fathers. The mission of democracy is much older than that, as Warriors reminds us through its selection of the famed funeral oration given by Pericles in commemoration of fallen Athenian soldiers for its foreword:

“Our form of government does not enter into rivalry with the institutions of others. Our government does not copy our neighbors’, but is an example to them. It is true that we are called a democracy, for the administration is in the hands of the many and not of the few. But while there exists equal justice to all and alike in their private disputes, the claim of excellence is also recognized; and when a citizen is in any way distinguished, he is preferred to the public service, not as a matter of privilege, but as the reward of merit.”

Everything that is at stake now -- in Iraq and Afghanistan, in the threats posed by Iran and North Korea, in the insolence demonstrated by Russia in its invasion of Georgia -- is the same “everything” that has always been at stake for as long as men have made war. Our Declaration of Independence cites freedom as an unalienable right, not just for Americans but for all human beings. Our way of life, our very right to exist, is the “everything” for which our service men and women are willing to give so much of themselves. They fight to defend America’s freedoms, and they fight to grant the gift of freedom worldwide.

You can order Warriors, the book and the DVD, at the LOOC Foundation’s Web site. All the proceeds benefit Freedom Is Not Free, a 501(c)3 organization dedicated to aiding wounded troops, their families, and the families of the fatally wounded.

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About The Author
Rebecca Hagelin is a public speaker on the family and culture and the author of the new best seller, 30 Ways in 30 Days to Save Your Family.
 
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Graduating high school
in the years 1950, to about 1960, as i did, automatically meant an 8 year Service obligation. Very few escaped it. I put in 3 years active duty, 2 years participating reserves and 4 years inactive reserve. We all did, or at least nearly all. I was never shot at, nor left the States, but my service is a source of pride still. The United States of America has a unique gene pool, created by bold and self-reliant adventurers willingly to take a chance, trust Providence and themselves and go for it. We comprise generous friends and deadly enemies. Tyrants best beware, at home and abroad.

Everyone
Stop by

messhall.blogtownhall.com

for some new stories about life in the military.

If any of you veterans or active military have stories you'd like to share, stop by the blog and leave me a post with a throw-away email and I will either make you a member of the blog so you can post to it, or I will give you my email so you can send your stories and I will then publish them for you.

It's starting out to be a great blog dedicated to the military (all four branches).

Stop by and check it out!

The Tan, Green and Blue


Twenty five years from this time, young troops of the campaigns against the terror will age into middle life. How different their America is likely to be than those troops that returned from Europe and the Pacific theaters in 1945.

In 1970, the warriors of 1945 lived in an America where airports were gauntlets of contempt for the troops returning home from the war in south East Asia. How pained those older citizen warriors must have felt to see the reception accorded the service personnel of the 1960's and 1970's.

America has rediscovered the wonder of its Military in these campaigns since 9/11. Civilians that previously never attended an air show, a dance sponsored by the navy league, visited a national cemetery or wore the poppy of veterans day suddenly discovered that military arms was a culture deserving of awe, admiration and accolade.

Our national identity in the stretch between "sea to shining sea" has never relied on catafalque and cenotaph for its march or its memorials.

We are not given to the etch of names and the roll calls that evoke tears. Our lives have been too forward looking to linger in the pain, loss, duty and reward of those that lived military service lives.

Americans have lived around their military and not with it for many years.

It is remarkable that a great volunteer military, a service made of professional warriors has re-ignited the great passion for our uniformed protectors and freedom guarantors that those of 1945 found when they returned home.

The new century brought out the mature America again.
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