By Denise Moorehead
Days after it aired, I watched a rebroadcast of the National Memorial Day Concert. The event has taken place on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol for more than three decades. It is not something I would normally watch. It was always a bit too rah, rah, armed forces anthems and military colors for me.
But as I channel surfed, I saw a reenactment of a WWII vet’s story. It was inspiring. While the combat part of the story was compelling, the raw human element and life lessons imparted reeled me in. I suddenly realized that I was watching a rebroadcast of the show I had earlier pooh-pooed. This time, I stayed to watch more. As the hosts requested, I even clapped when I heard the anthem for the service with which I was affiliated. My dad served in the Air Force for more than 20 years.
I cheered for my Dad and all of the service members who gave so much of their lives – some who gave their life – to preserve democracy. They thought it would always be threatened from foreign adversaries. Now, many worry about the threat from within.
The National Memorial Day Concert did not pretend that the United States was ever a perfect union. While the words used were “pretty” enough to satisfy current leaders who want to literally whitewash history, the photos and videos of combat and stories of real service members gave a truer picture. The armed services have become more diverse and reflective of America over the centuries.
Diverse and Inclusive
The military services are, in fact, the most diverse workplaces in the country. According to the U.S. Department of Defense, more than 30% of service members identify as people of color and nearly 18% identify as female. The services do not maintain data on the percentage of lgbtq+ members.
So why am I writing about this on a blog about social class? All social classes are represented in every branch of the U.S. military.
However, those with limited class advantage benefit most from recent boosts to military salaries, free health care, and education and housing support. But centuries of biases codified into military policies and practices, have left many of these recruits overrepresented in the lower ranks.
The military made great strides in building a workforce that was the most diverse in the world and was moving beyond that to make it more inclusive. But, the Trump administration claimed that the highest-ranking military leaders of color and female leaders were not competent. Along with the far-from-competent Secretary of Defense, the president fired these experienced and war-tested heroes and gutted policies that were finally opening doors for racial, ethnic, gender and class minorities. The backlash against trans people serving has been deliberately cruel.
These actions and policies are against everything I heard and saw in the Memorial Day celebration. They are why I am suddenly woke in my understanding of why the day is so meaningful.
For years, I could not wrap my head around why I, the daughter of a Black man who received stellar evaluations but could not get a promotion to the next rank, should be even a smidge patriotic. My father had been accepted into a cutting-edge tech project 10 years into his military service, but was told by the officer in charge that “all a poor, non-commissioned ni***r could do for him was get coffee.” So, why my sudden patriotic bent?
The Right to Democracy
I realize my dad knew better than I did that, despite the deprivations he faced as a Black man born into an impoverished family in the 1930s, he had a right to democracy and had to fight to improve it.
That’s why social classionistas and other social justice warriors must see themselves as true patriots in these perilous times and champion democracy. If we don’t, the rest of the military – and country – will look like the reconstituted current Joint Chiefs of Staff and other top brass. The only people in charge will be white men, some who are untested and underprepared but speak of the importance of meritocracy, a meritocracy they define as being white, male and loyal not to our country but to one man alone.
Too many people of all social classes, races, genders, etc. gave their lives for democracy. It’s my turn – our turn – now to refuse to concede patriotism to false patriots. As the Air Force motto compels us, “Aim high … fly-fight-win.”