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A LITTLE PERSPECTIVE

Two events dominate the news this week, Sarah Palin’s resignation and the continuing coverage of Michael Jackson’s death and funeral service. Both are newsworthy events that, unfortunately, commentators, entertainers, and pundits will talk about ad infinitum. Two other events this week will receive only scant attention in the media. One is the death Monday of former defense secretary and architect of the Vietnam War, Robert McNamara. The other is the commemoration Wednesday at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial of the 50th anniversary of the first American combat casualties in the Vietnam War. US Army Master Sgt. Chester Ovnand and MAJ Dale Buis died on July 8, 1959, when their compound was attacked by North Vietnamese communists. Theirs are the first two names on the Wall. These latter two events may not warrant the news coverage Palin and Jackson receive, but they are worth noting. They mark the beginning, and perhaps the end, of a 50-year American Odyssey that was far more controversial than either Palin or Jackson. For Vietnam War combat veterans like myself, Ovnand, Buis, and McNamara’s deaths give us pause to reflect. Sometime this week, whether you’re watching someone pontificate about Palin, eulogize about Jackson, or something altogether different, take a moment to think about the 58,000 men and women whose names are inscribed on the Wall. It will help you put things in perspective. 

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MICHAEL JACKSON

Perhaps it’s just me, but I don’t understand how people can get so worked up at the death of Michael Jackson. Like many Americans, I liked Jackson’s music, or at least I did until I learned of the allegations that he sexually abused children. I don’t know how true they were, but as I watched Jackson morph into something rather weird over the years, the child molestation acquisitions were just too much. After that I sopped listening to his music.

I was a huge Elvis fan. I grew up loving and singing Elvis’ songs. His death saddened me, but not enough to make me want to make a pilgrimage to Graceland. His drug use disappointed me, but like most Elvis fans I chose to focus on his service in the Army, love of his family, and legendary generosity. To the best of my knowledge he never maliciously hurt anyone except himself.

Farrah Fawcett also died today. She too was an icon, but certainly not as big as Michael Jackson or Elvis Presley. Her death was duly noted in the media; mostly it talked about her brave struggle with cancer and how she died with dignity.

As a retired US Army officer living in the Washington, DC, area, I’ve attended dozens of funerals in Arlington National cemetery for people killed in battle or who died long after their service to America. In every case, no matter how well I knew that person, tears filled my eyes as I listened to bugler play taps. Two hundred years from now, I don’t know what people will know about Jackson. Presley or Fawcett, but some tourist from smallm-town America will walk through Arlington reading the names on the tombstones of the men and women buried there. All he’ll know about them is they the served their country. And that’s all he'll need to know.
 
Read my weekly columns and my current daily comment at http://ewross.com
Previous EWRoss Dailies http://ewross.com/EWRoss_Daily.htm
Previous EWRoss weekly columns http://ewross.com/archive.htm
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