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Thursday, December 14, 2006
Hugh Hewitt :: Townhall.com Columnist
The elections of 2028: What did you do when America was attacked?
by Hugh Hewitt
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Biola University hosted GodBlogCom 2.0 this past October, and it featured a panel discussion that became a genuine conversation with the audience. The panelists included Professor John Mark Renolds, the director of the university’s Torrey Honors Program, blogger LaShawn Barber, and the then-candidate for United States Senate in New Mexico, Dr. Allen McCullough. The audience included some very fine intellects, including Joe Carter, Andy Jackson and John Schroeder, and many students.

Among the students were a number who were pursuing studies that would prepare them for public life of some sort, and some thought a run for elected office might be a possibility.

As I recall, one question from the floor concerned the rules a young, politically ambitious blogger might want to follow on his or her blog. I responded as I always do to that question by cautioning the younger writers that blogs are forever, cached away in google or some other server somewhere, and almost certain to return if not in your first job interview, then certainly in the context of any serious campaign for any serious office. The young blogger is best served by “finding the good and praising it,” to borrow from author Alex Haley, rather than to slag and singe opponents or denounce other people’s positions.

But then I paused and raised the question of a much more serious nature for the young, ambitious undergrad: Had you considered military service?

I am a civilian. It never occurred to me to consider enlisting after my graduation from college in 1978. In the post-Vietnam era, the military continued to attract amazing men and women who felt the call to serve in uniform, but the country was at peace, and even for those of us who thought the Cold War a very serious business, that conflict was not the preserve of just the military. Tens of thousands served in that struggle who never put on a uniform, and it was honorable service.

Though the anti-military left has thrown around the term “chickenhawk” in an attempt to damage the political careers of many Vietnam-era politicians who did not serve in the military, it has never had traction outside of the fever swamp, and even within that narrow slice of American politics, the charge marks the user as one of the nutters, given that the premise of the American republic is civilian control of the military, and especially as veterans rarely --and active duty men and women never-- make that charge, understanding it to be both typically duplicitous in that it is offered by many who do not esteem the military, and deeply at odds with the basic structure of the country. Responsible Americans generally honor and admire military service, and value it in candidates, but the lack of military service has never disqualified a candidate, not even one who went very far out of his way to avoid the Vietnam era draft, as Bill Clinton did.

Even given that history, I argued somewhat off-the-cuff to the Biola audience, it seemed to me that this was a different time than the Vietnam era, and certainly very different from the long years of peace that followed the abandonment of Saigon to the communists and Cambodia to the genocidal Pol Pot.

My guess, I told them, was that in the not so distant future senior elected offices --in the Congress, statehouses, and certainly the presidency-- would be very difficult to obtain for the young men of today who did not volunteered to come to the defense of their country after it had been attacked on 9/11.

Not impossible, but very difficult. Very, very difficult.

This came as a genuine surprise to many in the audience, and provoked quite a lot of argument. I explained that the failure to serve would not be a bar to a successful life in many other fields, but that politics was unique in that it requires the consent of voters, and voters generally look for leadership. I don’t think it is a stretch to conclude that young men who declined the opportunity to serve in uniform during this war will find themselves being asked “Why didn’t you come to the defense of your country after it was attacked?” I asked the young men who were objecting to my proposition to consider the answers they would be giving in a few years.

“Different gifts,” or “not my calling” were a couple of the –very—tentative responses, but of course those are not responsive to the idea that indeed the military service is a sacrifice of self to country, and that the question would not be satisfactorily replied to by reference to personal inconvenience.

“I want to serve a different way,” was a better response, but the specifics of that service would matter a great deal –intelligence gathering or law enforcement are not inconsistent with military service, for example.

“It is a volunteer army,” is another non-responsive dodge: Of course it is. The question is why didn’t you volunteer?

“I wouldn’t be any good at it,” was my favorite. The answer is of course that the military could be the judge of that if you give them the opportunity to conduct an assessment.

Physical infirmity would be a sufficient answer if the disability was serious enough, but family circumstances, probably not in most instances. As David McCullough recounts in his biography of Harry Truman, Truman had served in the Missouri National Guard and had been discharged, his father had died and he was the key to the operation of his family’s large and difficult to operate farm on which his mother and sister depended. He was also engaged.

But when America went to war in 1917, Truman immediately signed up and was off to Europe. Continued...

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About The Author

Hugh Hewitt is a law professor, broadcast journalist, and author of several books including A Mormon in the White House?: 110 Things Every American Should Know about Mitt Romney.

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Subject: Proving once again...
...that the radical right-wing has NO ability to reason with FACTS and can only hurl venomous insults in place of intellectual fortitude.

your stupid, juvenile rants, isnults and remarks bore me.

is there ANYBODY out there who can have an actual, intelligent debate based on facts, without resorting to insults?

of course not. it would destroy the radical right-wing and all of you in it.

why don't you all just come down and admit that any debate based on FACTS is one you will never win?

what about those put options?

what about the debris spread out over eight miles?

what about the secondary explosions?

what about the egregious lack of wreckage at the pentagon?

oh, wait -- i'm sorry -- am i becoming UNHINGED? is it my collective stupidity talking? my apologies -- i'll try to debate with invective, slander, insults, and adolescent rants from now on. clearly, FACTS have no place in a republican-dominated blogosphere.

Solis
Oh look, YET another website. How quaint.
-I was clearly wrong on the suggestions: by all means, please remove your tin foil hat only long enough to wrap your head in duct tape. This will prevent passersby from injury when your silly, obssesive-compulsive little head boils over with delusional paranoid theories and explodes.
As for your "facts", I will not waste my time in debate with you. The first precept one learns in a philosophy class is that the fact that because something is written somewhere does not make it true. If you have not learned that, it means you truly believe Elvis has a three-headed baby and that the Spider Monkey Boy really exists just like it says in the supermarket checkout tabloids.


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