The current received wisdom is that veterans are a bit irked by pro forma thank-you-for-your-service recognition of the day -- and of their service.
These are, by and large, lousy jobs. Difficult jobs, between danger, boredom, physical effort and long, grinding workdays. While it is true that officers at all but the smallest bases enjoy access to amenities nearly as nice as the country club in any county seat served by two different railroads, none of 'em signed up for the golf. And ditto for the somewhat more limited perks available to enlisted personnel. I'm darned glad people are willing to do the work and impressed by how many of them thrive. It rates more than a stock phrase and a once-a-year discount at fast-food joints.
Our choice of date is instructive: America chose not the date of a famous battle, or even a famous victory, but the day the guns fell silent. Our armed forces exist not to make wars but to end them. Quite often, that means fighting them all the way through; but there is a "through." There is an end point. Unbroken peace may not be something humans can manage, but we're not doomed to eternal war, either. A few of us step up and work directly to that end; it's not an easy job and sometimes it doesn't get much respect -- but it should. One day to mark it seems barely enough.
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