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12th April 09, 03:28 PM
#1
To snicker about this medal as being a "thanks for showing up" medal is pretty harsh and implies that those in the military who are not deployed are sitting around the snack bar eating pizza. The men and women I've met in the military who are stateside aren't just "showing up". They carry out jobs that are vital to the larger effort that provides for the defense of all of us and all we hold dear. I'm most familiar with the Air Force Research Labs (where our daughter is), and most of the fabulously talented people who work there will never see the pointy end of the sword yet they are totally committed to inventing and perfecting technologies that help other American servicemen and women do their jobs better and more safely.
Not only that, but they are committed in ways that none of us in the civilian world can fully comprehend. It's a big decision to be in the armed forces. Those in the military typically can't choose their jobs or where they will work, and they certainly can't just decide they don't like their jobs and quit to go do something else. If they stay in for a career, they know they could be called up at any time to leave their loved ones and go into harm's way, perhaps for an extended period of time. Many will never earn what they could have earned as civilians. And even if they never go overseas, they can't put down roots, and their spouses can't establish careers in one place because they move every few years.
I'm all for giving these dedicated men and women a medal even if they never have to look down the barrel of a gun.
Last edited by Barb T; 12th April 09 at 03:58 PM.
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12th April 09, 04:09 PM
#2
All Gave Some
 Originally Posted by Barb T.
To snicker about this medal as being a "thanks for showing up" medal is pretty harsh and implies that those in the military who are not deployed are sitting around the snack bar eating pizza. The men and women I've met in the military who are stateside aren't just "showing up". They carry out jobs that are vital to the larger effort that provides for the defense of all of us and all we hold dear. I'm most familiar with the Air Force Research Labs (where our daughter is), and most of the fabulously talented people who work there will never see the pointy end of the sword yet they are totally committed to inventing and perfecting technologies that help other American servicemen and women do their jobs better and more safely.
Not only that, but they are committed in ways that none of us in the civilian world can fully comprehend. It's a big decision to be in the armed forces. Those in the military typically can't choose their jobs or where they will work, and they certainly can't just decide they don't like their jobs and quit to go do something else. If they stay in for a career, they know they could be called up at any time to leave their loved ones and go into harm's way, perhaps for an extended period of time. Many will never earn what they could have earned as civilians. And even if they never go overseas, they can't put down roots, and their spouses can't establish careers in one place because they move every few years.
I'm all for giving these dedicated men and women a medal even if they never have to look down the barrel of a gun.
Well said. I hold the USMC Combat Action Ribbon, so I have "looked down the barrel of a gun" but my comrades who were never sent still put their lives on the line, being willing to be sent. Some Gave All, but All Gave Some. Even if that is one's only medal, it indicates standing between your loved home and the war's desolation. They are my brothers and comrades in arms, and I am seriously thinking about getting a kilt in the tartan, it looks cool!
Geoff Withnell
Geoff Withnell
"My comrades, they did never yield, for courage knows no bounds."
No longer subject to reveille US Marine.
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12th April 09, 04:13 PM
#3
 Originally Posted by Barb T.
To snicker about this medal as being a "thanks for showing up" medal is pretty harsh and implies that those in the military who are not deployed are sitting around the snack bar eating pizza. The men and women I've met in the military who are stateside aren't just "showing up". They carry out jobs that are vital to the larger effort that provides for the defense of all of us and all we hold dear. I'm most familiar with the Air Force Research Labs (where our daughter is), and most of the fabulously talented people who work there will never see the pointy end of the sword yet they are totally committed to inventing and perfecting technologies that help other American servicemen and women do their jobs better and more safely.
Not only that, but they are committed in ways that none of us in the civilian world can fully comprehend. It's a big decision to be in the armed forces. Those in the military typically can't choose their jobs or where they will work, and they certainly can't just decide they don't like their jobs and quit to go do something else. If they stay in for a career, they know they could be called up at any time to leave their loved ones and go into harm's way, perhaps for an extended period of time. Many will never earn what they could have earned as civilians. And even if they never go overseas, they can't put down roots, and their spouses can't establish careers in one place because they move every few years.
I'm all for giving these dedicated men and women a medal even if they never have to look down the barrel of a gun.
Somebody always manages to say it better than I could. Thanks, Barb. You get it.
"...the Code is more what you'd call 'guidelines' than actual rules."
Captain Hector Barbossa
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13th April 09, 03:05 AM
#4
 Originally Posted by Barb T.
To snicker about this medal as being a "thanks for showing up" medal is pretty harsh and implies that those in the military who are not deployed are sitting around the snack bar eating pizza. The men and women I've met in the military who are stateside aren't just "showing up". They carry out jobs that are vital to the larger effort that provides for the defense of all of us and all we hold dear. I'm most familiar with the Air Force Research Labs (where our daughter is), and most of the fabulously talented people who work there will never see the pointy end of the sword yet they are totally committed to inventing and perfecting technologies that help other American servicemen and women do their jobs better and more safely.
Not only that, but they are committed in ways that none of us in the civilian world can fully comprehend. It's a big decision to be in the armed forces. Those in the military typically can't choose their jobs or where they will work, and they certainly can't just decide they don't like their jobs and quit to go do something else. If they stay in for a career, they know they could be called up at any time to leave their loved ones and go into harm's way, perhaps for an extended period of time. Many will never earn what they could have earned as civilians. And even if they never go overseas, they can't put down roots, and their spouses can't establish careers in one place because they move every few years.
I'm all for giving these dedicated men and women a medal even if they never have to look down the barrel of a gun.
Hear, Hear! When I was blown up in Northern Ireland, I was more than grateful to the dedicated men and women, back in England, who put me back together again.
"They also serve who stand and wait.
Regards
Chas
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