L. Neil Smith's THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE Number 175, May 27, 2002 NOTHING MORE NEED BE SAID "A libertarian is a person who believes that no one has the right, under any circumstances, to initiate force against another human being, or to advocate or delegate its initiation. Those who act consistently with this principle are libertarians, whether they realize it or not. Those who fail to act consistently with it are not libertarians, regardless of what they may claim." -- L. Neil Smith [click to enlarge]
by Vin Suprynowicz
Special to TLE
It's a different Memorial Day, 2002.
This first weekend of summer has long since become a time of picnics
and barbecues and trips to the beach. To their credit, Americans never
actually forgot the sacrifices of those who gave the final measure to
protect the freedoms we now hold so casually. But their sacrifices
were safely pigeonholed in a brief ceremony at the cemetery, a few
moments of young kids scrambling to pass out flags in the sun ... even
that, these days, more often than not observed on TV.
More convenient that way. Not so distressing. The corpses of the
frozen dead at Choisin Reservoir or massacred at Malmedy? Another
world.
Memorial Day, 2002 was supposed to be another holiday like that.
Proper lip service to the sacrifices of America's heroes, you
understand ... but they would be, as ever, heroes distantly
remembered, symbols conveniently abstract, words of some historic
speech memorized and recited by the best student in the class.
That was the way it was supposed to be, the way we expected it to be,
again as ever ... up through September 10th, anyway.
The formulations came trippingly to the tongue: "Our boys at the
front" ... "Our men and women in uniform."
Of course, America's independence was won because the French threw in
on our our side, those many years ago. Franklin couldn't convince King
Louis' ministers to do that 'till the colonials proved they could win a
real pitched battle against British regulars -- not just some skirmish
against a sleepy mercenary garrison, like Trenton or Princeton. A real
battle to prove our Revolution had a chance of success.
Washington couldn't produce that victory -- he was busy fighting a
competent but doomed withdrawal from Philadelphia before Lord Howe's
superior advancing army, in that late summer and fall of 1777.
No, the one vital, necessary victory was won by the Revolution's
greatest hero, New Haven shopkeeper Benedict Arnold, not even
officially in command, grievously wounded but rising again and again,
rallying the troops from the front as one horse after another was shot
from beneath him, rallying his forces to defeat an army of stunned
British regulars emerging from the northern New York forest at
Saratoga under the command of General "Gentleman Johnny" Burgoyne.
"What forces?" both Ambassador Franklin and King Louis of
France wanted to know. Washington had the entire regular Continental
Army with him at Philadelphia. What army had won the great
battle at Saratoga?
No army, came the answer. Men without uniforms. American farmers in
homespun, answering their country's call. The militia.
Plenty of America's heroes do wear uniforms. Americans have again seen
the full measure of their bravery, as Navy SEAL Neil Roberts found
himself alone on the ground in Afghanistan March 3, and seeing no
other way, decided to take the fight to the enemy. He was still
fighting long after the ammunition was gone.
Not knowing for sure that Roberts had already earned his medal and his
flag, the First Platoon of Alpha Company, 1st of the 75th Rangers,
dropped in to join the rescue mission, climbing to a 12,000-foot
ridgeline under fire. There, Rangers like Bradley Crose and Matthew
Commons of Boulder City, Nevada again reminded Americans what is meant
by the full measure of devotion.
But, as in all our wars, not all America's military heroes today wear
uniforms.
Todd Beamer, 32, was an Oracle Inc. executive from Hightstown, N.J.
Jeremy Glick, 31, was a sales manager for Vividence, an Internet
service provider. Thomas Burnett, Jr., 38, was CEO of a California
firm that manufactures medical devices. Mark Bingham, 31, a 6-foot-4
giant with the San Francisco Fog amateur rugby team. All four were on
United Airlines Flight 93 when it left Newark bound for San Francisco
at 8 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 11.
The plane never arrived. Hijackers armed with knives seized the
flight, turned it around somewhere near Cleveland, headed for their
chosen target in Washington, D.C.
Todd Beamer's wife, Lisa, says he had a contagious catchphrase
everyone knew him by. "That's Todd," she said, upon receiving a call
from the GTE supervisor who had talked to Beamer on his cell phone
during the last 13 minutes of Flight 93's journey. "My boys even say
that. When we're getting ready to go somewhere, we say, 'C'mon guys,
let's roll.' My little one says, 'C'mon, Mom, let's roll.' That's
something they picked up from Todd."
After making her promise to call his wife and their two boys, David,
3, and Andrew, 1, Todd Beamer told GTE supervisor Lisa Jefferson that
he and the others, finding themselves separated from the main body of
the 38 passengers and herded together at the back of the hijacked
Boeing 757 -- and now aware thanks to their cell phones of what had
happened to three other hijacked flights that day -- had decided they
were not going to stand by and remain mere pawns in the hijackers'
plot.
Without uniforms, without orders, disarmed by a government that seems
to have temporarily forgotten what it is that's "necessary to the
security of a free state," Todd Beamer, Jeremy Glick, Thomas Burnett
Jr., and Mark Bingham may not even have thought of themselves as
militia.
But as Todd Beamer extracted his promise that Jefferson would call his
family, as he dropped the phone, leaving the line open so the phone
company supervisor could hear his final words, as he headed for the
front of the plane to force it down in a remote strip mine area of
Somerset County, 80 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, Todd Beamer spoke
for a nation.
He said, "Let's roll."
And then there was silence.
Lisa Jefferson hung up the phone at 10 a.m. Eastern Standard Time,
realizing no more would be heard from Flight 93.
Memorial Day. The bugles blow, laughing children place flags on the
graves of the fallen, the surviving comrades of the silent dead
squeeze into too-tight uniforms (could they ever really have been so
thin?) to march a block or two beneath the flag.
But today the dead are no longer so distant.
In that one brief moment, Todd Beamer and Jeremy Glick, Thomas Burnett
Jr. and Mark Bingham ceased to be "civilians."
Surely they've earned their medals and their flags -- and surely those
who follow in their footsteps should no longer be disarmed by their
own government -- do you think?
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