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Michelle Malkin
Michelle Malkin
5 Feb 2010
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Let's Mourn the Real American Heroes

Flags flew at half-staff this week in California's state Capitol. No, not for Michael Jackson. For Private First Class Justin Casillas.

Pfc. Casillas died in a suicide bombing attack on his Army base in eastern Afghanistan on the Fourth of July. While Americans enjoyed fireworks and Hollyweird mourned the "king of pop" with wretched excess, the family of Pfc. Casillas learned that the 19-year-old paratrooper with the U.S. Army's Alaska-based 509th Airborne had given his life for his country. His father told the Woodland (Calif.) Daily Democrat that Justin just "wanted to do his part."

The family has a legacy of service: Casillas' grandfather served in the Pacific theater during World War II; his father served in Vietnam. But the death of Pfc. Casillas didn't make front-page headlines. His funeral won't receive wall-to-wall coverage on cable TV.

Instead, it's been all MJ, all night and day: Nurses! Nannies! Doctors! Drug raids! Custody battles! Casket rides!

Jacko fever spread to the Beltway, where the House of Representatives held a moment of silence for the entertainer. President Obama sent a highly publicized letter of condolence to the Jackson family. And topping them all, Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee, D-Texas, drafted a 1,600-word congressional resolution that "recognizes Michael Jackson as a global humanitarian and a noted leader in the fight against worldwide hunger and medical crises; and celebrates Michael Jackson as an accomplished contributor to the worlds of arts and entertainment, scientific advances in the treatment of HIV/AIDS, and global food security."

Jackson-Lee laundry-listed every charitable act and donation by Jackson in the House resolution — and would have included all the times he said "thank you" and "God bless you" if there had been more room. Is it too much to ask our lawmakers to restrain themselves from acting like "Entertainment Tonight" spokesmodels and Tiger Beat correspondents?

I stand with GOP Rep. Peter King of New York, who rightly skewered these celebrity-worshiping warped priorities as "an orgy of glorification." Jackson could sing and dance. But he was no American hero. In a YouTube video over the weekend, King lambasted the media circus:

"All we hear about is Michael Jackson.

Let's knock out the psychobabble. He was a pervert … and to be giving this much coverage to him, day in and day out, what does it say about us as a country? … I just think we're too politically correct. No one wants to stand up and say, 'We don't need Michael Jackson!' He died, he had some talent, but fine, there are people dying every day. There are men and women dying every day in Afghanistan, let's give them the credit they deserve."

Yes, let's do that.

Another soldier died with Pfc. Casillas on Independence Day at Combat Outpost Zerok in Afghanistan's Paktika province. He was 20-year-old Pfc. Aaron Fairbairn. Fairbairn's stepfather, David Masters, took to the social networking service Twitter to spread the word and keep Fairbairn's legacy alive. "On Independence Day, a few hours ago, they killed my son Aaron in Afghanistan," Masters wrote.

According to the Department of Defense, both Fairbairn and Casillas died from "wounds suffered when insurgents attacked the outpost using small arms and indirect fires." The Taliban claimed credit for the complex rocket and mortar attack involving a reported 8,000 kg of explosives.

Tens of thousands of our men and women are in Iraq and Afghanistan to combat the jihadi threat. Army 1st Lt. Brian N. Bradshaw gave his life on June 25, the same day Jackson died. Bradshaw's aunt, Martha Gillis, blasted the silence over her nephew's sacrifice in a letter to her local paper, The Washington Post:

"My nephew, Brian Bradshaw, was killed by an explosive device in Afghanistan on June 25, the same day that Michael Jackson died. … Where was the coverage of my nephew or the other soldiers who died that week?" Gillis wrote that Bradshaw "had old-fashioned values and believed that military service was patriotic and that actions counted more than talk. … He was a search-and-rescue volunteer, an altar boy, a camp counselor. He carried the hopes and dreams of his parents willingly on his shoulders. What more than that did Michael Jackson do or represent that earned him memorial 'shrines,' while this soldier's death goes unheralded? It makes me want to scream."

Please do not despair, Mrs. Gillis. While the Rev. Al Sharpton screamed, "Thank you, Michael! Thank you, Michael!" at the grotesque Staples Center memorial on Tuesday, many of us whispered in prayer: Thank you, Justin. Thank you, Aaron. Thank you, Brian. The real American heroes won't be forgotten.

Michelle Malkin is the author of the forthcoming "Culture of Corruption: Obama and his Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks & Cronies" (Regnery 2009). Her e-mail address is malkinblog@gmail.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.



Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment

You maybe right that too much attention was given to Michal Jackson. He also may not have had an impact on your life. So be it. Obviously he had a positive impact on many people in this world whether you like it or not. I grew up listening to Michael Jackson and loved his music. He was not my hero, but that's me. The problem with what you are saying is really with the media. They gave all the time and attention to Michael Jackson coverage. They could just as easily given coverage to the fallen soldiers. Guess what! They choose not to. As a member of the viewing public I don't have much say about what the media chooses to present to the American public. As a matter of fact I truly believe that the soldiers are heroes, and need to get out of these other countries. We need to handle our own business and let other contries handle theirs. Michael Jackson was an icon and great at entertaining the masses, but he is dead. The media chose to make his death a media circus, not him for he is dead. So place the blame where it belongs, with your media brethren.

Comment: #1
Posted by: LaTaunya
Sat Jul 11, 2009 9:40 PM

Ma'am;...The heroes who will die for a land that cannot care for them alive or dead are the biggest fools of all...They do not protect this land... They protect the property of the rich -which the rich refuse to pay to have defended...If they survive their contest with hatred and death they will find there is no equality or rights or opportunity in their home... They dare not demand fair wages unless to suffer the abuse of the worthless... They will dare not ask for decent working conditions and hope unless they desire to be maligned... Each man is so jealous of the gains of every other that they will see themselves denied to see all others denied... What does this small minded, machine hearted, miserable people deserve from life that we will freely concede to all others??? We want our slaves and we are ourselves ennslaved... You worry about the God of Pop...What does the world mean to such dead as we know, all vain, and all fools???We need to take care of the living, and quit serving dead masters...We see how incapable are our defense secretaries to ever admit their failures, which too often are mistakes of ideology wasting thousands off lives...And I say this knowing you are an ideologue...Quit letting your ideologies do your thinking for you...If you will look at what is good for America you will find it is not far different from what is good for the world...It would not be worse here for the army to attack the religious any more than it is for them to attack the religious in Afghanistan...What they do to humanity they do to us... It does not matter what fine ideologies invests their actions...If it is wrong on its face, no amount of celebration will make it less criminal...Thanks...Sweeney

Comment: #2
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Wed Jul 8, 2009 2:04 PM

MJ's Funeral was a Circus.....many of the people who attended was there for the wrong reason. They come for the SHOW by the Cebs on stage. The worse scene from the stage was to use Paris the way the Jackson's did. NO ONE with a moral code would have a little 11 year old girl, go to the stage and make a speech for MONEY....the selling of the Video and for public funds sent because of her tears...............SHAME on these bad people. Michael you did your best to protect these kids.............however, I pray the Judge will find a good home for them, NOT PEOPLE WHO LOVE THEIR KIN THE WAY THESE FOLKS DO!!!!!!! I would never put my children on stage to morn they KIN! They way the brothers and sisters made a big show to hug her was so staged it made me sick...........LA JUDGE......GIVE THESE KIDS A NEW HOME WITH LOVING PARENTS WHO WILL NOT USE THESE KIDS.....MICHAEL WOULD NEVER WANT HIS CHILDREN USED........................................REST IN PEACE MICHAEL..........AND HELP THE JUDGE GIVE YOUR CHILDREN A REAL HOME ..........................

Comment: #3
Posted by: delore bush
Wed Jul 8, 2009 6:56 PM

I would agree that those who die for a people who could care less for them do so in a less than illucidated manner. I dis-agree however that those who die do so for the sake of other's freedom. They comit to the extreme sacrifice for more than mere mortal life, and all the while they know there are those who would chastise and benefit from their selfless acts. They do so for the life style they live, the imaginations and ideals of people they are related to, they do so for higher ideals than an un-caring people, they do it for their comarades, their brothers in arms. A far greater ideal than those who would simply enslave them! These sacrificed men and women know to be truly enslaved means the end of their own freedom. To that end I would rather die than submit. And if some persons attempt to benefit from my acts and ultimate death then I'd rather not be part of their would anyway! Perhaps that's why we see such fervent Jihad but, in truth, really do not understand them. I guess it IS idealogies. Michael Jackson was/is a cruel joke only because he had the cash and the backing of hollywierd! The dumbing down of Amerca continues.

Comment: #4
Posted by: bill s
Wed Jul 8, 2009 7:06 PM

I agree with everyone who complained of the circus in Los Angeles. Jackson was just a spoiled 'adolescent' who complained of not having had a childhood. He lived to be 50. But, many of our service men and women will never live that long due to insurgents interrupting their lives. And, the REAL hero(s) here are our service men and women who put their lives on the line for us. Jackson only thought of himself. To me, all of the people who watched/attended the goings on about Jackson are what's wrong about our country. They could care less about America.

Comment: #5
Posted by: Thomas Knight
Wed Jul 8, 2009 8:44 PM
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