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Western
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![]() ![]() http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,366201,00.html |
Of Fathers and Flags |
| June 12, 2008
By Col. Oliver North |
Washington, DC — Just about everyone in America knows that Sunday, June 15, is Father's Day. The "Day for Dads" has been celebrated on the third Sunday of June since 1966, when President Lyndon Johnson decreed it to be so. Those who make and sell power tools and greeting cards have been grateful ever since. Somehow, it just isn't the same for June 14th — Flag Day — and by no coincidence, the U.S. Army's anniversary. Father's Day is traditionally memorialized with gifts, cards and calls for dear old dad. Flag Day is all but forgotten. But this year, with the holidays as close as they ever get, there is good reason to celebrate both. As you read this column, tens of thousands of American dads are wearing our country's flag on their shoulders, helmets or flak jackets while serving far from home under some of the most difficult and dangerous conditions imaginable. Scores
of books have been written about the diminished respect accorded
American fathers in our culture. Dads are derided and denigrated in
everything from cartoons to commercials. For decades our entertainment
industry and mainstream media have been depicting dads as everything
from bumbling buffoons to pathological predators. The dads of "Little
House on the Prairie" and "Bonanza" have all passed from the scene. And
just like those iconic, heroic dads of yesteryear, waving the flag has
gone out of style. Oh sure, there was that
brief flurry of flag-waving in the aftermath of 9/11. We can still find
on the Internet, images of soot-covered firemen hanging the Stars and
Stripes at the shattered wreckage of the World Trade Center or on the
fire-scorched west wall of the Pentagon. And some of us can still
recall commuting to work beneath bridges and overpasses on which
patriots had draped Old Glory in defiance toward those who brought
terror to our shores. But like good fathers, that too has passed. We
even have a candidate for president who is acclaimed for refusing to
wear an American flag on his lapel. It
sometimes seems as though the only place where you can see our flag and
a good strong dad together is on — and in — a uniform. Rest assured,
neither will get the respect or admiration they deserve from Hollywood
or the so-called mainstream media. Despite
today's depressing portrayal of paternity and patriotism, there is
actually hope for the future and it comes from those now serving in our
Armed Forces. In the process of conducting hundreds of interviews for
the book "American Heroes" — both here in the United States and
overseas — it became clear that today's military dads have a lot going
for them that their civilian counterparts simply don't. Though recent
headlines have hyped spiraling divorce, child abuse, suicide and
domestic violence rates in our Armed Forces, the actual statistics for
all these "adverse factors" are considerably lower in our military than
they are for a similar age-group in the civilian population. When
I visit U.S. military bases with our FOX News "War Stories" documentary
unit, I frequently have the opportunity to ask elementary and secondary
school children, "What does your Dad do?" Though dad may have been gone
for months and ten thousand miles from home, the responses are
overwhelmingly affirmative: "My dad drives a tank" or "my dad flies a
plane" or "my dad makes a ship go." At Camp Lejeune, North Carolina two
weeks ago, a seven-year-old told me, "My dad is a Marine platoon
sergeant. He's fighting for our country in Afghanistan." You
don't have to be old enough to remember Art Linkletter's "Kid's Say The
Darndest Things" to know that unless dad is a fireman or a cop, most
young people haven't the foggiest idea what dad does all day at work.
While these anecdotes are hardly scientific evidence, they do tend to
amplify real differences between military and civilian dads. Today's
military dads are all volunteers. They are brighter, better educated
and in far better physical condition than their civilian peers.
Notwithstanding the extraordinary hardship of repeated, prolonged
separations, the inevitable stress of combat and the danger and
uncertainty attached to their "work," they generally express greater
"job satisfaction" than their non-military counterparts. Though
war-time deployments shift most of the burden for child-rearing onto
their mothers, the children of military dads express greater certainty
and admiration for what their fathers do than their non-military peers. Does
any of this make a military dad better than a civilian father?
Certainly not. But in an age when our media disparages fatherhood in
general and defames those who wear uniforms in particular, this would
be a good weekend to go ahead and wave the flag and thank God for
fathers who are willing to serve. |

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