Memorial Day

Today is Memorial Day in the United States. The holiday once known as Decoration Day commemorates the men and women who perished under the flag of this country, fighting for what sets our America apart: the freedom to live as we please.

“Holiday” is a contraction of holy and day; the word originally referred only to special religious days. Here in the U.S. of A. holiday means any special day off work or school instead of a normal day off work or school.

The Uniform Holidays Bill which gave us Monday shopaholidays moved Memorial Day from its traditional May 30 date to the last Monday in May. Today is May 30 so perhaps we can shut up and salute.

Lest we forget, the Americans we honor did not “give their lives.” They did not merely perish. They did not just cease living, check out, croak, depart, drop, expire, kick off. kick the bucket, pass away or pass on, pop off, or bite the dust. Their lives were taken from them by force on battlefields around the world. They were killed. Whether you believe they died with honor, whether you believe our cause just, died they did.

Today is not a “free” day off work or school. Today is not the big sale day at the Dollar Store. Today is a day of Honor.

“All persons present in uniform should render the military salute. Members of the Armed Forces and veterans who are present but not in uniform may render the military salute. All other persons present should face the flag and stand at attention with their right hand over the heart, or if applicable, remove their headdress with their right hand and hold it at the left shoulder, the hand being over the heart. Citizens of other countries present should stand at attention. All such conduct toward the flag in a moving column should be rendered at the moment the flag passes.”

[Image] The American flag today should first be raised to the top of the flagpole for a moment, then lowered to the half-staff position where it will remain until Noon. The flag should be raised to the peak at Noon for the remainder of Memorial Day.

There are those in this country who would use today to legislate the man out of the fight. They can do that but the men and women we honor today knew you cannot legislate the fight out of the man. They have fought and they have died to protect us from those who would kill us. And perhaps to protect us from those who would sell out our birthright.

There is no end to the mutts who would kill our men and women and would kill their own. If I had but one wish granted on this day, I wish not another soldier dies. Ever. But die they did around the world again this year and die they will. For us. For me.

Because those men and women died, I get to write these words again this year. And you get to read them. Please pause and reflect as you go to a concert, stop at an artist’s studio, or simply read a book in the sunshine the price we pay to keep our right to do those things.


Editor’s Note: This column is slightly updated from one that appeared first in 2008.

7 thoughts on “Memorial Day

  1. Sorry, Herr Blogmeister, but I have to call the hyperbole of your premise into question. Americans are not free to live as they please; and never was the founding of this nation so intended.

    I ask that you amend that portion if you decide to run the column again a few years down the road.

    — George

  2. Shockers. I agree with Mr. Poleczech, but I’m probably coming at it from a different angle. Freedom doesn’t set America apart, especially not in the present day. We’re not much different than any other country built on democratic principles.

  3. George and Arleen have missed a very important message today. We have free will. We may pay a price — either societal, governmental, or divine — to exercise that ability to live as we please, but the founders agreed with their God on that issue.

    And generations of men and women have died to assure that you could exercise it.

    And Arleen? You think there is no difference between this democracy and others? Look at those American men and women who died protecting the democracies in other countries. Now count how many from foreign lands who have died to protect the democracy in this one.

  4. Shockers. I agree with Arelene, at least to a degree, but I’m certainly coming at it from a different angle. Freedom did originally set America apart. Less so in the present day, where we seem bound and determined to be like the guys who tried to be like us (but never quite managed it, probably because of their cultural history.) Hence we’re now not much different than any other country built on the democratic principles that we pioneered, and have subsequently veered from.

  5. Yeah, that’s the point.

    Our political leadership may be sinking the country into a shadow of the (now) apologist (former) Empire we revolted against, but our soldiers have never faltered no matter whose lives and democracies we send them to protect.

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