Thank You for What Service? By Laurence M. Vance November 11, 2019


MFP Commentary:

“Thanks for the article Vance

FWIW I have been physically attacked twice in this small MO town for not being thankful enough for their service, and spoke my mind. Many of the troops IMHO are dangerous psychopaths after their service and are not fit to be in civil society. The police in both cases would do nothing because of course not showing enough respect to the war criminals makes me the bad guy. And they are encouraging this criminal behavior in the “troops” by not prosecuting them. (most of the cops are war criminal vets also)

For one they have pissed all over the Constitution that requires a declaration of war. They fight any and all wars of aggression which happen to be war crimes. They use weapons with indiscriminate killing potential (agent orange, nuking or fire bombing  entire cities, and of course depleted uranium) which is also a war crime.  How about adding in the War of Northern Aggression (where the Feds murdered many members of my family) and  the  kidnapping of Japanese  ancestry US citizens and putting them into concentration camps in CA? (My neighbors met in one of these concentration camps known as camp “No No”.)

Thank YOU for your service to liberty Vance.
Regards”

~MFP

Related article:   19th-Century Americans Didn’t “Support the Troops”


 

Thank You for What Service?

Veterans Day should be renamed.

It happened once before. Veterans Day was originally termed Armistice Day. It commemorated the signing of the armistice on November 11 that ended fighting on the Western Front in World War I. But because the “war to end all wars” didn’t, Armistice Day was renamed Veterans Day after World War II. President Eisenhower signed the legislation making the change on June 1, 1954.

Since the first U.S. invasion of Iraq in 1991, and especially since the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq after 9/11, Veterans Day has taken on a new meaning: Military Appreciation Day. Although there are other national holidays (Memorial Day and the Fourth of July) that have degenerated into Military Appreciation Days, Veterans Day is the ultimate day to celebrate all things military.

On Veterans Day, veterans and active duty military personnel can take advantage of special discounts at many places of business and free meals at restaurants. Many cities have parades in honor of the military. Both public and private schools have programs featuring local veterans and military personnel.

Churches have “patriotic” services on the Sunday before Veterans Day where veterans and active duty military are encouraged to wear their uniforms to church, military anthems are played, the names of veterans are listed in the church bulletin, veterans are recognized and applauded during the Sunday morning church service, the church sign has the Scripture on it replaced with something about the military, and more prayers than usual are offered for “the troops.” Some churches show a video tribute to the troops, have a military color guard march down the main aisle to open the service, or have a military chaplain as the guest preacher.

But above all, everyone in the country is bombarded with exhortations to find a veteran and say: “Thank you for your service.”

Service in the military is called being in the service. But what “service” are we supposed to thank a veteran for? How did a veteran serve me or any other American by being in the military?

I can see the point of thanking a waiter or waitress for their service because they actually served me, but the same is not true of a veteran of the U.S. military. Those in the military do many things, but serving me or any other American is not one of them….Read More