
As you enjoy your holiday activities this Memorial Day weekend, please take time to remember those who died in defense of our liberties. I joined the U. S. Marine Corps during my senior year in high school on what was called a delay basis. I arrived at Parris Island, South Carolina, for basic training on August 1, 1958. In many ways I was fortunate in that there wasn't a war for me to fight at that time. And nobody started one during the three years of my military service. But many were lost in war before I arrived, and many would be lost after I was discharged. So I ask you to remember them today, not as a publicity stunt or a photo-op, but as a sincere prayer for those young men and women who never got the chance to fulfil their dreams, to grow old, to live a full life as I've done.
It's difficult to talk of politics in these times, as our leaders have no sense of shame and no connection, however tenuous, to reality. On the worst day of life loss in Iraq, we can easily be told that the situation is improving. On a day when a normal man would be completely embarrassed by his past actions, our president can voice support that this man keep his job as our top law enforcement officer. In a period when science offers us an opportunity to cure some of the most insidious diseases, our president ensures that stem-cell research is thwarted. And the world is about 6,000 years old!
Send your prayers wherever you send them, but remember our fallen troops of all our wars, both necessary and misguided. I'm just so sad and angry that I can hardly write without falling into polemic. Enjoy this holiday, but remember.



