Do We Really Honor Our Veterans?

By Marc Dion

November 2, 2015 3 min read

I was standing around at the dedication of a new veterans memorial the other day, in the city hall, not too far from the "wall" the city hall installed a couple years ago, the wall being a bulletin board where you can post pictures of your boy/girl overseas.

And I thought of the other memorials whose fundraising efforts or dedications I've written about in the last couple of years.

As a reporter, I've noticed that the worse things get in this country, the more memorials we dedicate, the more droolingly effusive we are in our thanks to the veterans, the more "If You Can Read This in English, Thank a Soldier" bumper stickers I see. The last bridge built in my town is called "Veterans Memorial Bridge."

There's no work and a lot of what work there is pays money that wouldn't support a duck, but we can always pour concrete for another memorial. If you see a vet, shake his hand. Just don't ask him where he's working. If your waitress tells you she just got out of the Navy, give her a bigger tip but don't ask her how many hours a week she's getting.

Is this the two last things we can do as a nation; send you overseas to kill people and shake your hand when you get home?

Can we only do that and do we stop there? Do we stop short of good, union jobs with pensions for our vets, full time jobs a man or woman can count on? A little house? A weekly paycheck?

Freedom, as we endlessly yap, isn't free, but neither is food or clothes or medicine for the baby.

But hey, the people who start the wars are working steady. The senators get their pensions. The CEO gets his heath care. You get a quick trip through some dirty little Third World war and then you come home to a handshake and a part-time, $9 an hour job.

One of the most beautiful things about my country, about America, is the men and women soldiers, most often working or lower middle class or poor who have, for more than a decade, joined and kept joining and left little pieces of themselves in Iraq and Afghanistan, in purposeless fights that never end. All we have asked, they have done, deploying two, three or four times.

Their actions are a sad poem of honor and determination and a lesson in how service to the nation, laughed at by the rich and sold by the elected, still keeps true those who have the least to gain in the fight.

We at home build the America in which our soldiers will live.

A nation full of memorials is a cemetery. A nation of jobs and security and pensions is a place not just to fight for, but also a place to live when you come home.

To find out more about Marc Munroe Dion and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com

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