Patriotism

07 November 2008

A Reprise of one of my Remembrance Day Favourites

May as well bring this one back, I wrote it a couple of years ago and re-print it each year:

 

 

Yesterday morning the wife, the daughter, and I were down in town, and it just so happened that the mayor was presiding over an act of remembrance at the war memorial in front of the town hall in honour of Remembrance/Armistice/Veterans’ Day.

Whilst waiting for it to begin, my eyes were caught by the following poem (hat tip to Steve for publishing it):

They shall not grow old as we who are left grow old.
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning,
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM.



Well, once my eyes were caught, they started leaking like no one’s business, and my daughter jumped up and gave me a big hug, her little hands patting my back.

Beginning in 1992, I spent six years in the US Navy. In the first three years of serving in the Navy, I was probably the most conscientious sailor one could hope to meet. I loved the Navy, I loved its history and I was damned proud to be seen in my crackerjacks. But something happened to me, gradually. Many of the goals I set for myself, and for which I thought I was punching all the right tickets were not coming to fruition. I was beginning to get a little burnt out on being so squared away for my first three years, with no – apparent – return other than a job well done.

After that point, I couldn’t wait to get out. Not that I actively tried, but I could have really left the Navy at the first chance presented.

I served the rest of my time, maybe not as conscientiously as I should have, but probably better than many of my colleagues, nonetheless. Looking back now, I’m a little bit ashamed of the fact that I didn’t necessarily give my best to the Navy, and by extension, my country. Back then, I could justify it by the fact that I was such a good boy, but Santa still wouldn’t bring me presents.

I may not have been proud of my service then, but I am definitely proud of it now.

You see, I have shared the experience of wearing a uniform in the service of my country with some of the greatest souls to ever grace this planet. Men who were definitely better men than I. Men who did not know what was in store for them when they signed that dotted line and received the queen’s shilling or that paycheck from Uncle Sam. Men who gave up their youths and their freedom so that the rest of us could enjoy our own. Many men whose remains now lay on the fields in which they were mowed down, or the watery graves where their ships lie.

Yes, it’s true, some of us join/ed the military because it was a way out or a way up from whatever circumstances may have been going on (I initially walked into the recruiting office because I was running away from something.) But no matter the reasons for joining, the sum total of the efforts of my predecessors, colleagues, and those who came after me was that this world is just a little bit better than it may have been had we not done our “duty”.

My father served in the Navy for 20 years. My uncle just retired from the Navy, himself. Both of my grandfathers served in WWII, one in the British Army and one in the US Army. And I am proud of all that they did.

I may have said that after my first three years I didn’t get anything from the Navy. But the truth is, my whole experience gave me the world.

Thanks to all those people with whom I shared that world and those experiences, and whose boots I could never fill. I am truly humbled when contemplating the greatness that came before, and that follows, my brief stint of service.

I didn’t see any action, and I am grateful I didn’t have to. But then, as they say, I was standing on the shoulders of giants.

05 September 2008

McCain-Palin...Wow!

I have to say, I was going with McCain mostly because he was the last bastion against the farthest left presidential candidate ever to run.

I was a Romney guy during the primaries.  And Romney really appealed to my intellect.  He was the smartest guy running for President, but not the best politician in the fray.

The selection of Sarah Palin confirms just how accomplished a politician McCain is.  In selecting Palin, McCain has attracted a lot of people who wouldn't even give him a look in.  Sarah Palin plays well to a lot of people.  For us normal everyday people, Sarah reminds us of a librarian-hot version of all those steely women we know in our lives as mothers, wives, sisters, and aunts.  The sort of women we meet every day, who happen to rise to the occasion when called upon.  The sort of woman who meets the slings and arrows that life throws up in her way, keeps taking it, and then continues to say: Bring it on.

I have to say, watching her speak and come out swinging, I was overwhelmed with emotion, and choked down that lump in my throat.  It reminded me of how great America is that nomal every day people like her choose to go into politics.

I also had a similar response to McCain's acceptance speech last night.  I can't help but keep thinking that the real change people are waiting for is a change wherein politicians have a core belief system and act upon it.  I now have no doubt that McCain, as much as I have disagreed with him at times, works from that core that says that America is the greatest country in the world, and that every political move he makes is less about McCain and more about America.

I think we are seeing the beginning of the end of Obama.

01 September 2008

Is it possible for Libertarians not to be Utopian?

It was Ronald Reagan that said: "The person who agrees with you 80 percent of the time is a friend and an ally"

How about when that person agrees with you more than 90%?

I was waiting to see what this lot would come up with in regard to Defence, Immigration and other issues...Their Manifesto is now available and contains wording which floats my boat.

On Immigration:

Totally free movement of people into the UK is not practical whilst we have a large welfare state and other countries are themselves not broadly Libertarian in nature. In line with the Rule of Law, a transparent, consistent points based system is one of our key proposed measures to humanely manage migration.

I was expecting to see them embrace the wholesale opening of our borders in fundamentalist Libertarian form.

On Defence:

Our aim is to ensure a strong, independent, sovereign nation. This requires a well funded, trained and equipped professional Armed Forces (both full time and Reservist), geared for the defence of our nation and shipping.

I wasn't expecting much here, either, but this is a stronger plank than the Tories.

And on the Constitution:

The Libertarian Party is committed to reassert the primacy of our Bill of Rights and Common Law system over the Napoleonic system that has encroached from the continent in recent years.

There is actually some very patriotic aspects to this brand of Libertarianism.

Maybe worth a further look.

23 April 2008

By the Way...

Happy St. George's Day!

Stgeorgecross

28 March 2008

A Fantastic Rant by

Roger Gardner of Radarsite:

...For at least two generations now we Americans have been taking it on the chin from ignorant, self-righteous student activists and disillusioned psuedo-intellectuals brought up on that pervasive academic witches brew of those Marxist-driven, Moscow coordinated sanctimonious and cynically manipulated student protest movements of the 60s. We -- and you -- are now living with the bitter fruits of their destructive labors. Cynicism and disillusionment have become a refined art form throughout Old Europe and the UK, the motley uniform of the latest anti-capitalist, anti-American, antiwar avant-garde...

Read the whole thing...(H/T A Western Heart)

I've had a few debates where I wish I could have displayed anywhere near the amount of erudition and coherence Roger expressed in his rant.

17 December 2007

All the Makings of a Revolution?

Military severely underfunded?  Check...

Police unhappy with their lot?   Check...

The government signs away sovereignty to an authoritarian undemocratic supranational bureaucracy?  Check...

The only thing missing is an armed citizenry and a charismatic leader...

After seeing the video of the EU Lisbon Treaty signing, I think we are in for a continent-wide insurgency/split/war.  This is not going to end prettily.  Maybe not this year or the next or even in the next decade, but there is a whiff of pre-revolution in the air. 

Or maybe we just remain forever Airstrip One...

28 November 2007

A tribute to the Troops (US bias...)

Must see...as they say, freedom ain't free...(h/t to my Dad)

22 November 2007

By the Way - Happy Thanksgiving, all...

I am grateful for America, and for being an American, and a Brit, and for the bounty that I have been given.

And for the first time in a long time, I am really missing Thanksgiving Day, which I haven't celebrated in well over 10 years, I think.

How to Be Right

Yesterday was my birthday and the wife bought me the book How to Be RIght: The Essential Guide to Making Lefy Liberals History by James Delingpole

It is an amusing glossary of all that is wrong with the UK and the world.  Very funny.  One definition that jumped out at me last night as I was reading, really hit home (as I used to be just like this):

Continue reading "How to Be Right" »

09 November 2007

On the Shoulders of Giants (Reprise)

This year, for Veterans/Remembrance Day, I shall be going to a service at the Findon Valley Free Church as a friend of mine who goes there tells me they'll have a piper and a trumpeter there.  Really looking forward to it.

In honour of it being that time of year again, I thought I would reprise one of my own favourite posts ever, which I wrote last year (by the way, buy yourself a poppy):

Yesterday morning the wife, the daughter, and I were down in town, and it just so happened that the mayor was presiding over an act of remembrance at the war memorial in front of the town hall in honour of Armistice/Veterans’ Day.

Whilst waiting for it to begin, my eyes were caught by the following poem (hat tip to Steve for publishing it):

They shall not grow old as we who are left grow old.
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning,
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM.

Well, once my eyes were caught, they started leaking like no one’s business, and my daughter jumped up and gave me a big hug, her little hands patting my back.

Continue reading "On the Shoulders of Giants (Reprise)" »

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