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Wealth & Poverty Review Veterans Day Properly Understood Is About Sacrifice and Accountability

Originally published at Townhall

As America faces unique modern challenges, divisions have heightened to a level not seen since the Civil War. The founders of the country and heroic figures — from Christopher Columbus to Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and even George Washington — have come under siege and desecration over the last four years, resulting in a diminution of respect for American heritage. Our enemies certainly find solace when Americans engage in self-immolation.

Thus, Veterans Day, which was originally founded around the virtue of the cessation of hostilities in war rather than the commemoration of any individual, should be a holiday beyond reproach.

Veterans Day had its origins in 1918 at the end of World War I, a conflict that was at that time so horrendous that it was dubbed “the Great War” or “the war to end all wars,” with the United States playing the decisive role in the Allied Powers’ final victory.

It was first known was Armistice Day, celebrated on Nov. 11 because that was the day agreed upon by the Allied nations and Germany to begin a total cessation of hostilities. It went into effect on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month in 1918, after some 20 million people from both sides had given their lives in the war effort.

For many years thereafter, Armistice Day was just recognized on a state level. Twenty years later, when the winds of an even greater war were blowing toward what would be known as World War II — with Germany having annexed Austria and making clear preparations to take over Czechoslovakia — the U.S. Congress passed the act to establish Armistice Day as a legal federal holiday on May 13, 1938. Ironically, it was said at that very time to be “a day to be dedicated to the cause of world peace.”

As it painfully turned out, World War II was almost four times more costly for the U.S. than World War I — with 405,400 lives lost as compared to the First World War, in which 116,516 Americans died. The supposition of the 1918 Armistice was completely undone, and eventually, after World War II and the Korean War, veterans service organizations lobbied Congress to amend the 1938 act by striking out the word “Armistice” and replacing it with the word “Veterans.” President Eisenhower was supportive and signed off on the name change on June 1, 1954, making Veterans Day a federal holiday to be commemorated on Nov. 11 “to honor American veterans of all wars.”

As the holiday evolved, Veterans Day became one of America’s most patriotic holidays, with a profuse display of the red, white, and blue and Main Street parades of veterans in towns across the country. Every American felt gratitude for veterans, for they had been willing to make the ultimate sacrifice — in the defense of freedom for the homeland and other countries. In addition, military service inculcated veterans with lasting patriotic attitudes that prompted them to stay engaged in political participation later in life. Not surprisingly, the number of veterans who turn out to vote has been consistently higher than non-veterans. For instance, in the 2022 elections, 62.7 percent of veterans turned out to vote, compared to 51.3 percent of non-veterans who voted.

Veterans Day distinguishes itself from Memorial Day and many other holidays because veterans refused to allow their sacred “triple 11 commemoration day” to be altered by the Uniform Holiday Bill of 1968 which “floated” holidays to fall on Mondays to create long weekends for the federal government workforce.

There are several reasons why contemporary America has become so divided. In large part, it is due to cultural Marxism that has swept through our public school system, which, by design, casts our heritage aside. It’s also likely related to the decline in the number of elected members of Congress who have sacrificed and served their country in the armed forces. In 1967 and in 1975, respectively, 75 percent of House members and 81 percent of U.S. senators were veterans. Today less than 20 percent of lawmakers in both houses have had any prior military experience.

Despite these developments, the political importance of veterans has made significant advancements. In March of 1989, President Reagan elevated the Veterans Administration (VA) to a cabinet-level department with the creation of the secretary of veterans affairs.

In his first term, President Trump did even more to help rank-and-file veterans, spending considerable time thanking and honoring veterans at public events and political rallies. More importantly, he delivered on a campaign promise to implement real reforms of the VA health care system, providing new options to ensure more timely and higher levels of health care delivery to veterans. The VA MISSION Act was a landmark bill that, when signed into law in June of 2018, expanded private health care options for veterans for the first time, providing them with prompt access to the best medical care available, whether at the VA or at a private provider.

The U.S. has always stood for freedom and against aggression and tyranny. Surely many Americans who enlisted to serve in wartime knew neither the forsaken places they were going nor what they would encounter, but they all had a distinct conviction that they were fighting not only to set overseas captives free but to protect freedom at home.

Of all foreign wars in which Americans were engaged, World War II is by far the largest, with more than 16 million soldiers serving or deployed overseas. Today, less than 1 percent of those veterans remain alive as the remnants of the “Greatest Generation.”

This Nov. 11, when we think about these veterans who are likely to pass away of old age over the next few years, we should remember three things for America to reverse its decline and reclaim its great heritage: First, it must totally reform its education system and inculcate in people an appreciation of American heroes and the virtues of its history and constitution. Second, Americans need to be more rigorous about voting out corruption and people with conflicts of interest. Third and last, Americans need to see more justice in action by way of the full weight of the law and judiciary holding government officials accountable for high crimes and misdemeanors that undermine the interests of the American people.

Scott S. Powell

Senior Fellow, Center on Wealth and Poverty
Scott Powell has worked in the corporate, academic, and research worlds. He has taught at two universities, served on two corporate boards, and been an entrepreneur—founding two companies. He has been Senior Fellow at the  Discovery Institute since 2012, after a six-year affiliation with Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. He has written three books and over 350 published articles in the Wall Street Journal, Investor’s Business Daily, Newsmax, The Federalist ,USA Today, Barron’s Financial, New York Post, Chicago Tribune, The Houston Chronicle, and some 50 other newspapers and journals in the U.S., Europe, and Asia. He delivered the valedictory address at his graduation from the University of Chicago with honors (B.A. and M.A.) and received his Ph.D. in economics from Boston University.