insein
Senior Member
http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/pnoonan/?id=110001975
Just wanted to bring further to light the kind of guy he was and the fact that he was merely 1 of thousands who did the same for our country. I thank them all.
Privileged to Serve
In this war, not only the sons of the poor are enlisting.
Friday, July 12, 2002 12:01 a.m. EDT
Maybe he was thinking Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country. Maybe it was visceral, not so much thought as felt, and acted upon. We don't know because he won't say, at least not in public. Which is itself unusual. Silence is the refuge of celebrities caught in scandal, not the usual response of those caught red-handed doing good.
All we know is that 25-year-old Pat Tillman, a rising pro football player (224 tackles in 2000 as a defensive back for the Arizona Cardinals, a team record) came back from his honeymoon seven weeks ago and told his coaches he would turn down a three-year, $3.6 million contract and instead join the U.S. Army. For a pay cut of roughly $3.54 million dollars over three years.
On Monday morning, Pat Tillman "came in like everyone else, on a bus from a processing station," according to a public information officer at Fort Benning, Ga., and received the outward signs of the leveling anonymity of the armed forces: a bad haircut, a good uniform and physical testing to see if he is up to the rigors of being a soldier. Soon he begins basic training. And whatever else happened this week--Wall Street news, speeches on the economy--nothing seems bigger, more important and more suggestive of change than what Pat Tillman did.
Just wanted to bring further to light the kind of guy he was and the fact that he was merely 1 of thousands who did the same for our country. I thank them all.