Thursday
What a Day. I set out from Sandpoint, Idaho, at about 10 in the
morning on a medium warm August day. I was headed for the Spokane
airport en route to Seattle. The sky was dark and I figured on
rain. But when I got to just west of Coeur d’Alene on Route 90, a
torrential hailstorm fell. It was like nothing I had ever seen.
Immense hailstones slamming into my rented Cadillac, eliminating
visibility, making the road icy. It was REALLY scary. I slowed to a
crawl and prayed. In a few minutes the hail passed. Then it started
again. I was really scared. Then it passed again. My fellow drivers
drove well on the slick highway, which for some reason has immense
ruts in it. But I made it to the Spokane airport, which for some
strange reason is abbreviated GEG. My plane was right on time and
off I went to SEA-TAC. My driver took me to my hotel and I took a
short nap.
Then I met up with my pal Lisa Agustsson, a huge military
supporter, and off we went to McChord Air Force Base, 90 minutes in
traffic, to meet the troopers of the Second Squadron—Blackhawks!—
First Cavalry Regiment of the Fourth Stryker Brigade Combat Team,
Second Infantry Division. They are just back from 15 grueling
months in Iraq, fighting, negotiating with sheikhs, securing peace
in Diyala Province. They have been rocketed, bombed, shot at on a
daily basis. Yet they secured a huge swath of “medicine territory,”
as they call it, and helped “the surge” work.
I shook hands with several hundred of them and their wives and
girlfriends and fiancées. They were young, alert, good-looking.
Really brave. Cool, calm, confident. Enviable in every way. I was
escorted by a super smart young fellow, Captain Damian Gill, XO of
the Darkhorse Troop, and my host was the commander of the unit, Lt.
Colonel Marshall K. Dougherty of Texas. Both movie-star handsome
types and fearless. My pal Lisa was the absolutely perfect
companion, greeting the men and their ladies kindly, complimenting
all the women on their outfits, making everyone at ease. She would
be a perfect politician.
It was an impressive evening. They made a terrifying grog of all
different kinds of alcohol, beer, wine, spirits. All of them to
remind the men of the different wars the unit had been in, going
back to 1833. I especially loved the addition of Bud to the mix to
symbolize blood in Vietnam. The officers jumped all over each other
to taste the stuff. Lisa had a sip and said she loved it. At least
she didn’t die from it.
Then a few short speeches. I got very teary as they talked about
the men who had been killed, as they honored their wives. I thought
about how scared I was of that hailstorm, and how tiny a thing that
is compared to getting shot at and bombed every day. Really, these
men and their families are the salt of the earth. In fact, I kept
thinking, “Ye are the salt of the earth but if the salt shall lose
its savor, wherewith shall it be salted?” Thank God, this country
is still producing men who will put their lives on the line for our
sorry butts here at home.
Many, if not most, of the men I met had a fascinating hat, a
cavalryman’s hat, a Stetson with braid around it, just like what
Robert Duvall wore in Apocalypse Now, when he said he loved the
smell of napalm in the morning. (In fact, Lt. Col. Dougherty talks
exactly like what Duvall should have talked like.) Many of the men
also had a badge portraying a bayonet, a grenade, and a wreath.
This is the Combat Action Badge. You get it for really serious
close-in fighting, like what one Sgt. Bokor of the 2-1 did in
hand-to-hand fighting, eliminating about 15 al Qaeda he met when he
rounded a corner in a village in Diyala. You get it for seeing an
AK-47 pointed at you and instead of dying or crying, you hit the
ground, roll, come up with your M-4, and kill the terrorist. You
get it for having great big steel testicles.
At one point in the very long receiving line, Lt. Col. Dougherty
said he guessed by now I knew what that badge was for. I told him,
“Colonel, I will never know what that badge is for.” (I know what
the badge for complaining is for.)
But after the speech I offered, the incredibly kind Sergeant
Scott Dedelow, a tall, serious-looking, handsome fellow, a movie
image of a tough sergeant, took off his CAB and gave it to me, to
pin to the Stetson Lt. Col. Dougherty had already given me, along
with Cavalry Spurs made from shell casings of brass. I was so
touched that even now, as I write about it a few days later, I am
blinded by tears. What can we say about these men and their ladies?
That we owe them our lives, our freedom, our happiness, our
everything.
God bless the 2-1 and all who serve this great nation for all
eternity. Without them, there is only darkness and pain. They truly
are our saviors, redeeming our lives with their blood.
I cannot stop thinking that every day, the news on TV has about
three hours about the stock market’s moves that day, which are
totally meaningless. The online sites and TV have hours about the
latest political gossip, which is totally meaningless. But every
day there are tens of thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, maybe
millions of episodes of extraordinary courage by American fighting
men and women and their families and the media totally ignores
them. Societies that do not pay attention to what is important do
not survive.
Friday
Back to Sandpoint. I got my plane at SEA-TAC seamlessly, found
my rented Cadillac, and headed east. I went on a sort of silly day
trip. First stop on Route 2, Best Buy. I wanted to buy an XM radio.
No one there could find one for a few minutes. I wonder why Best
Buy cannot make that a bit easier. Plus, it is agony to get the
damned thing signed on. I signed lots of autographs, posed for
photos, and left. Next stop, a very clean general store and gas
station about 20 miles west of Newport, Washington. It was owned by
a Chinese immigrant who kept it spotless. I love it. Then to
McDonald’s in Newport, where I posed for photos with a whole mob of
motorcyclists. They looked terrifying, but they were in fact all
cops having a weekend ride. America has gasoline in its veins.
I met a young couple—16 years old each—who plan to be
neurologists. Good luck. Then to Mama Mac’s, a cafe, general store,
and gas station in Priest River, a logging town with a lot of
problems because of the construction bust. Mama Mac’s is one of my
favorite places. Very reminiscent of my imagination of a mythical
small town where a mythical Benjy grew up.
Then home to my perfect wifey, who was lying on our deck looking
out at Lake Pend’ Oreille stretching peacefully out forever. It is
a scene of an ideal home. Wifey. Peace and beauty and freedom and
plenty to eat. The most beautiful place on earth and the most
beautiful soul on earth.
Guarded by the Blackhawk Squadron. God bless them for all
eternity. What would we have without them? Ashes.
Ben Stein is a writer, actor, economist, and lawyer in
Beverly Hills and Malibu.
Frank Kovach| 8.8.09 @ 11:26PM
Mr. Stein, I really loved this article. I've been a quasi fan of yours for a while, but my fan status skyrocketed after I saw Expelled. I'm a Marine, and I just wanted to say Semper Fidelis, because I think you are. Thanks for what you do.
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opterne| 4.24.10 @ 7:57PM
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