Our Nations Hero's are NOT singers and politicians!!

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Bill McElroy

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They are SOLDIERS!!;)



A Heroic Death, Without the Headlines



By Scene And Heard

Sunday, August 30, 2009



Marine Capt. Matthew Freeman made his last trip across the U.S. Naval

Academy in the company of friends the other day.



Yes, there were admirals and generals, colonels and majors, captains of

the Navy and the Marines among the hundreds who joined him. But there

are moments when the strictures of rank are loosened by the greater bond

of brotherhood. This was one of them.



Four thousand and seventy-four days had passed since Matt arrived here

as a kid, had his head shaved and was sworn in as a Navy midshipman. Two

thousand six hundred and fifty-one days had gone by since he hurled his

hat into the air at graduation and became a Marine. It had been 47 days

since he married Theresa, his high school sweetheart, and 34 days since

he headed to Afghanistan.



And it was just 19 days after he led his men onto a rooftop that

provided the only high ground in a nasty firefight with the Taliban in a

hamlet in a rugged, desolate northeastern province.



The morning he came back to the Naval Academy was a Wednesday, but it

will stick in your memory as the day you heard that Ted Kennedy had died

and the week when you learned that someone might have killed Michael

Jackson. The politician and the entertainer of their generations, they

were lionized by many and scorned by some. One pleaded guilty, the other

was found innocent. But they each died with an indelible asterisk, a

footnote to their legacies that time will not erase.



Matt Freeman died clean.



His life and death played out that sunny morning in the chapel at the

Academy and as the long cortege made its way on foot across the Yard to

what would be his final resting place. The words they found for him were

devotion to his Maker, loyalty beyond what most men possess and grim

courage in the end. Marine sentries in dress blue snapped into salute as

he passed. There was a band. Flags flew.



Nine days earlier, when his body came home to a small town in Georgia,

three creeks south of Savannah, people lined the route, waving paper

flags. Children drew signs of tribute on cardboard. Mothers cried. You

can find it all on the Internet, of course. All that, and a lot more

about how he lived and how he died. You will discover, most of all, why

people loved him.



It is the business of generals to calibrate the magnitude of a man's

courage. They are not to be envied the task, and many of them learned

its measure by testing their own guts on the battlefield.



Theresa rose from her pew in the chapel to accept Matt's Bronze Star,

the fifth in the hierarchy of combat medals awarded Marines. He died on

a mission for which he volunteered, in a province far from home, leading

men into battle. Pinned down and receiving a "heavy volume" of enemy

fire, the medal citation says, he rose up and led his men into a

mud-brick house, cleared it of the enemy, "was the first to reach the

rooftop" where he "spotted an enemy rocket-propelled grenade gunman and

immediately killed him . . . and began to engage while under fire."



His best friend told the mourners, "He would want you to know that he

went down swinging."



There were a dozen Marine captains in dress blue in the overflowing pews

of the chapel. Marines may blink hard a few times, but they don't cry.

Their mothers and widows cry for them.



In the week when they laid a young Marine captain to rest, the news was

dominated by the death of a politician and the echo from an

entertainer's death. The flag-draped coffin on the front page was not

his, but if you look carefully in the paper this week you will see a

small picture of Matt Freeman among the faces of those who have fallen

recently in battle.



He did not live long enough to become an the icon of Kennedy or Jackson,

but he died the greater hero.



-- Ashley Halsey III, staff writer



2009 The Washington Post Company
 
Neither Ted Kennedy or Michael Jackson are HEROS in any stretch of the imagination. Smooth sailing Cptn. Freeman

fatrap
 
Farewell my brother... I did not know you... But, I do know who you were. And, I know you did not want to die but I also know you are not forgotten and are greatly appreciated not just because you died but because you lived as you wanted to live, as a Marine.
 

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