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Let’s mourn the real American heroes
Michelle Malkin ^ | July 8, 2009 | Michelle Malkin

Posted on 07/14/2009 6:50:59 AM PDT by myknowledge

My column below memorializes some true American heroes whose funerals won’t get wall-to-wall cable coverage. But first I wanted to share an e-mail from reader Noelle, who wrote me yesterday:

We spent a nailbiting Sunday wondering if one of the men killed at [Combat Outpost] Zerok in Afghanistan on July 4th was our son. God bless the Casillas and Fairbairn families in this hour of grief over futures that now will never come to pass. The privates who died were mortarmen, the guys who go outside and return fire. I’m sorry about Michael Jackson’s totally wasted life, but he’s not worth the national crying and hair pulling that will never be done for the two young mortarmen. My son is a third tour “listener” and 33 years old. The base is very small and he said they bond quickly under these circumstances and are bent over with grief as they have to carry on in hostile territory…He called us late evening on Sunday after the Casillas and Fairbairns had been notified about the deaths. He said it was a July 4th the survivors will never forget. There’s always a news and communication blackout until families have been contacted. We live in dread of being the ones to get such news. Thanks for honoring a couple of boys worth the effort.

Flags flew at half-staff this week in California’s state capitol. No, not for Michael Jackson. For Private First Class Justin Casillas.

Pfc. Casillas died in a jihadi suicide bombing attack on his Army base in eastern Afghanistan on the Fourth of July. While Americans enjoyed fireworks and Hollyweird mourned the “King of Pop” with wretched excess, the family of Pfc. Casillas learned that the 19-year-old paratrooper with the U.S. Army’s Alaska-based 509th Airborne had given his life for his country. His father told the Woodland (Calif.) Daily Democrat that Justin just “wanted to do his part.”

The family has a legacy of service: Casillas’s grandfather served in the Pacific theater during World War II; his father served in Vietnam. But the death of Pfc. Casillas didn’t make front-page headlines. His funeral won’t receive wall-to-wall coverage on cable TV.

Instead, it’s been all-MJ, all night and day: Nurses! Nannies! Doctors! Drug raids! Custody battles! Casket rides!

Jacko fever spread to the Beltway, where the House of Representatives held a moment of silence for the entertainer. President Obama sent a highly-publicized letter of condolence to the Jackson family. And topping them all, Texas Democrat Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee drafted a 1,600-word congressional resolution that “recognizes Michael Jackson as a global humanitarian and a noted leader in the fight against worldwide hunger and medical crises; and celebrates Michael Jackson as an accomplished contributor to the worlds of arts and entertainment, scientific advances in the treatment of HIV/AIDS, and global food security.”

Jackson-Lee laundry-listed every charitable act and donation by Jackson in the House resolution – and would have included all the times he said “Thank you” and “God bless you” if there had been more room. Is it too much to ask our lawmakers to restrain themselves from acting like Entertainment Tonight spokesmodels and Tiger Beat correspondents?

I stand with GOP Rep. Peter King of New York, who rightly skewered these celebrity-worshiping warped priorities as “an orgy of glorification.” Michael Jackson could sing and dance. But he was no American “hero.” In a YouTube video over the weekend, Rep. King lambasted the media circus:

“All we hear about is Michael Jackson. Let’s knock out the psychobabble. He was a pervert…and to be giving this much coverage to him, day in and day out, what does it say about us as a country…I just think we’re too politically correct. No one wants to stand up and say, ‘We don’t need Michael Jackson!’ He died, he had some talent, but fine, there are people dying every day. There are men and women dying everyday in Afghanistan, let’s give them the credit they deserve.”

Yes, let’s do that. Another soldier died with Pfc. Casillas on Independence Day at Combat Outpost Zerok in Afghanistan’s Paktika province. He was 20-year-old Pfc. Aaron Fairbairn. Fairbairn’s stepfather, David Masters, took to social networking service Twitter to spread the word and keep Fairbairn’s legacy alive. “On Independence Day, a few hours ago, they killed my son Aaron in Afghanistan,” Masters wrote. According to the Department of Defense, both Fairbairn and Casillas died from “wounds suffered when insurgents attacked the outpost using small arms and indirect fires.” The Taliban claimed credit for the complex rocket and mortar attack involving a reported 8,000 kg of explosives.

Tens of thousands of our men and women are in Iraq and Afghanistan to combat the jihadi threat. Army 1st Lt. Brian N. Bradshaw gave his life on June 25, the same day Jackson died. Bradshaw’s aunt, Martha Gillis, blasted the silence over her nephew’s sacrifice in a letter to her local paper, the Washington Post:

“My nephew, Brian Bradshaw, was killed by an explosive device in Afghanistan on June 25, the same day that Michael Jackson died….Where was the coverage of my nephew or the other soldiers who died that week?” Gillis wrote that Lt. Bradshaw “had old-fashioned values and believed that military service was patriotic and that actions counted more than talk…He was a search-and-rescue volunteer, an altar boy, a camp counselor. He carried the hopes and dreams of his parents willingly on his shoulders. What more than that did Michael Jackson do or represent that earned him memorial ’shrines,’ while this soldier’s death goes unheralded? It makes me want to scream.”

Please do not despair, Mrs. Gillis. While the Rev. Al Sharpton screamed “Thank you, Michael! Thank you, Michael!” at the grotesque Staples Center memorial on Tuesday, many of us whispered in prayer: Thank you, Justin. Thank you, Aaron. Thank you, Brian. The real American heroes won’t be forgotten.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: americanheroes; independenceday; july4th; michaeljackson
Seriously, would you prefer to pay your tributes and respects to a pedophile and boy molester whose fortunes are stacked in a nine figure sum or the men and women who sacrificed their lives for the service to the United States of America in their duties?

Although the 233rd Independence Day has passed over a week ago, I just found this article and decided to post it here on FR anyways.

1 posted on 07/14/2009 6:50:59 AM PDT by myknowledge
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To: myknowledge

Brilliant article — thanks for posting.

This orgy of Michael Jackson sorrow is yet more proof that this world is slowly going rapidly insane. As if we needed more evidence after Princess Diana’s orgy of sorrow.

God Bless the American and Allied Troops that go into Harm’s Way to protect the rest of us from things that go “bump” in the night. We will remember them, we will never forget.


2 posted on 07/14/2009 7:01:34 AM PDT by DieHard the Hunter (Is mise an ceann-cinnidh. Cha ghéill mi do dhuine. Fàg am bealach.)
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To: DieHard the Hunter

All right, thank you very much.

I know you would have preferred to honor the soldiers of your own country in harms way, to the point of laying down their lives.


3 posted on 07/14/2009 7:23:55 AM PDT by myknowledge (F-22 Raptor: World's Largest Distributor of Sukhoi parts!)
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To: DieHard the Hunter

Amne to that.

Someone cue up “The World Turned Upside Down”.


4 posted on 07/14/2009 7:29:33 AM PDT by alarm rider (My tagline is back from vacation. It had a great time.)
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To: myknowledge

> I know you would have preferred to honor the soldiers of your own country in harms way, to the point of laying down their lives.

That’s an interesting thought. All three of the countries to whom I belong have troops currently deployed in Afghanistan, and all have taken casualties. I am saddened whenever a member of the Coalition falls in the line of Duty.


5 posted on 07/14/2009 8:00:31 AM PDT by DieHard the Hunter (Is mise an ceann-cinnidh. Cha ghéill mi do dhuine. Fàg am bealach.)
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To: myknowledge

It hurts my heart to read of our Military guys (generic term) killed overseas and here in the States. I hate it for them. It just didn’t have to be, but now that we’re in, we can’t just pull up stakes and let the enemy destroy the innocent lives of people who just want to be left alone to live out their lives.

Woodrow Wilson (that Progressive Democrat who started this whole downslide in 1913) did say: “America lives in the heart of every man everywhere who wishes to find a region where he will be free to work out his destiny as he chooses.” AND “America was established not to create wealth but to realize a vision, to realize an ideal - to discover and maintain liberty among men.”


6 posted on 07/14/2009 8:10:17 AM PDT by HighlyOpinionated (Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann in 2012. With Liz Cheney as Secretary of State.)
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