I had the opportunity today to watch the presentation of the Medal of Honor to several military members that had been killed in action or passed since their time in Viet Nam, Korea, or WWII. It was very inspiring to watch, and very humbling to hear about the bravery and dedication to their comrades that each of the warriors exhibited. Only one honoree was still alive, the rest were received by sons, daughters, sisters, brothers, and a nephew. A Japanese that had been interned in WWII, a Hispanic, a black, with the rest white guys. It was emotional to me hearing about their exploits, and seeing some relatives come up to accept the award that needed a lot of help themselves.
I will add that although the President did stumble through his part a bit, he did do a good job with appearing to give comfort to the the acceptees (is that a word?) and handling the medal in the display case for pictures with them.
If it is out there on video anywhere I would consider it a useful few minutes of your time to give it a watch.
I will add that although the President did stumble through his part a bit, he did do a good job with appearing to give comfort to the the acceptees (is that a word?) and handling the medal in the display case for pictures with them.
If it is out there on video anywhere I would consider it a useful few minutes of your time to give it a watch.