Respect
Posted By Russ Emerson on February 1, 2007 at 12:49 am
Powerline examines Washington Post reporter William Arkin’s anti-troop sentiments, laid out bare for all to see.
Apropos of which, Instapundit has some linkage, and reader comments, including this steaming pile from one of Arkin’s blog commenters:
“U.S. soldiers are by no means “volunteers,” any more than I am a volunteer plumber. When a person accepts compensation in the form of respect, glory, and not least of all monetary benefits (not to mention a host of other privileges for serving one’s country after service is completed) a transaction is made in which both sides receive some benefit. Fisherman in Alaska take on relatively larger risks in exchage [sic] for relatively larger reward. Why is the U.S. military of the 21st century so different in this regard?”
The problem with this sentiment is that soldiers voluntarily take on much, much larger risks for much smaller rewards. If one were to do a risk/reward calculation for various professions, from CEO to registered nurse to cop to garbageman to soldier, soldiering would come out pretty much at the bottom of the scale.
No one who can do math joins the Army for money; anyone joining for “glory” is in for a big disappointment.
And yet, the commenter is tangentially correct in one regard. If I were young enough (and could walk without falling over) I’d drop my career in a heartbeat and go back into the service, because I never respected myself as much as when I was a soldier.
Self respect doesn’t exactly max out the 401K, does it?
There’s much more here, courtesy of the indispensible Michelle Malkin.
The problem is that the idiot over at Arkin’s blog misunderstands the definition of Volunteer. Volunteer doesn’t mean one who does something for free, but rather of their own free will. Yes, numbskull, you ARE a volunteer f***ing plumber, because noone put a gun to your head and made you plumb! Sheesh.