For it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' "Chuck him out, the brute!"
But it's "Saviour of 'is country" when the guns begin to shoot
—Rudyard Kipling (Tommy)
Recent reporting by The Atlantic magazine that Donald Trump referred to U.S. Marines killed during WWI as “suckers” and “losers” hardly comes as a revelation to anyone who has followed his comments and actions toward the military. From claiming the late Sen. John McCain was “no hero” because he was captured during the Vietnam War, to disparaging Gold Star parents of service members killed in Iraq and Afghanistan along with the country’s senior most leadership, to summarily firing Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman and his twin brother for simply performing their sworn duties, Trump has shown nothing but disrespect to anyone who ever served in uniform. (See: Every time Trump has attacked American veterans or military families)
The sad truth, however, is that attitude toward service personnel is not uncommon among the American people, especially rich Americans.
I experienced
some of that attitude when, as a young Coast Guardsman, I was stationed in Virginia
in 1973 just as the U.S. began its withdrawal from Vietnam. The local
population was so jaundiced toward military personnel, we were ordered not to
place base access stickers on our vehicle windows. To do so invited baseball
bat-toting redneck good ol’ boys to bash in your car’s windows. We also could
not wear our uniforms off base for fear of having those same bats used against
our heads. Signs saying “Sailors and Dogs Keep of the Grass” spotted the
landscape.
While some
Vietnam vets complained about being disrespected by hippies and war protesters,
my discussions with other vets of the period showed just as many experienced
the same hostility I did from the good, God-fearing people of the American
South. Apparently, people in the South—the same South that committed treason by
seceding in 1860—felt those of us in uniform toward the end of the Vietnam War
needed to be taught a lesson for “losing the war.” In fact, David Morrell’s
post-Vietnam thriller, First Blood, featured a Vietnam veteran named Rambo
targeted by a Southern sheriff and his town folk. Morrell said news reports
about the mistreatment of vets in the South gave him the idea for his book.
(Ironically, the movie made from the novel moved the story to the Pacific Northwest to
spare southern feelings.)
Not Limited to Modern Times
This attitude
toward the military isn’t limited to modern times. On March 15, 1783 officers
under George Washington's command discussed mutinying because Congress failed
to provide them with long-promised back pay and pensions for serving during the
Revolution. The mutiny was averted when Washington addressed his officers with
a speech about the sacrifices they all made that brought tears to the officers’
eyes.
In the
aftermath of the American Civil War, thousands of disabled Union veterans were
left hanging while Congress argued over whether pensions or other remuneration
should be provided to the former soldiers. It was years before Union veterans
received any benefits; Confederate veterans received nothing—notably, not even
from the southern states they fought for.
Following the
Civil War, soldiering as a career fell into disfavor. If you watch a western
movie about the U.S. cavalry, with few exceptions all the soldiers will be
white. However, in the real Wild West one out of every three soldiers—cavalry and
infantry alike—were black, members of two regiments of the segregated U.S.
Colored Troops, the legendary Buffalo Soldiers.
Even among
the white troops, there were few patriotic Americans. Most were immigrants from
England, Ireland, Poland, Germany, and other European countries because soldiering was widely considered beneath a “real” American. (The same was true
about police officers; hence, the stereotype of the Irish beat cop.)
During the Spanish-American War, Buffalo Soldiers—by now professional fighters—stormed Kettle Hill and San Juan Hill
alongside Teddy Roosevelt’s untested volunteers, the Rough Riders. Yet it is
the Rough Riders, led by a wealthy socialite, who received the most credit for
that battle victory.
When America
belatedly entered WWI, her soldiers were sent “over there” with parades and
patriotic songs. Once home, however, they were less heralded. In 1932, suffering
from the indignities of the Great Depression, veterans marched on Washington,
DC, demanding payment of bonuses Congress promised them for their service. The
veterans were treated as traitorous “Reds” by the Hoover administration, which
launched a deadly military attack on them. (See: Nearly
100 Years after the Bonus March, Trump is Making the Same Mistakes)
Veterans of
WWII were treated better—if they were white. The GI Bill provided them
readjustment and educational benefits. But 1.2 million black veterans were
denied the full range of benefits provided by the bill, thanks to racist
Southern Democrats who feared it would provide African American vets with a
chance to socially advance. (See: How
the GI Bill's Promise Was Denied to a Million Black WWII Veterans)
A Deeper Chasm
The end of
the Selective Service draft in 1973 created an even deeper chasm between those
who serve and those who don’t. According to the U.S. Census Service, 18 percent
of the U.S. population were veterans in 1980; by 2016 that was down to seven
percent. Some of that decline, of course, was due to older vets passing away.
But during the height of the Vietnam draft, there were 3.5 million men and
women on active duty; today there are only 1.3 million on active duty, or less
than .5 percent of the population.
In the days
following the 9/11 attacks, I was discussing whether the draft would be
reinstated with a fellow veteran I worked with. I pointed out that if it were
brought back, it would have to include women. A young female colleague became
horrified at the idea she might be drafted to fight in a war. “Why me!” she
shrieked. “There are people who enjoy doing that.” Doing what? we asked. “You
know,” she said. “Killing people.”
So, that’s what she thought about us.
In the cluster-you-know-what that became the Bush
administration’s response to the terrorist attacks, yellow ribbon magnets with
“Support Our Troops” were displayed on cars, and people started thanking us for
our service (I was on a reserve Coast Guard boat crew, and later became a
medical service corps officer in a component of the California National Guard).
Sailors, soldiers, Marines, and airmen were suddenly “warriors,” as if they belonged
to a separate social stratum. And still the Bush administration forbade the
media from photographing or videotaping aircraft filled with flag-draped
coffins bringing home our country’s honored war dead.
It’s
gratifying to see America’s outrage over Trump’s reported comments about our
war dead, but I wonder how long it will last or if it will have any impact at
all. Despite Trump’s multiple Vietnam draft deferments—the last due to a
spurious diagnosis of bone spurs—and despite his dismissal of John
McCain’s military service, and despite so much more, he was still “elected”
president. And the bulk of those who voted for him were the good, God-fearing
people of the American South and other rural areas, the same people who treated
those of us in uniform so badly 47 years ago.
And that’s why I fear Trump’s slandering those who served and sacrificed as “losers” and “suckers” won’t make a difference at the polls.