The Army band, getting ready:
View from the steps:
Colin Powell (you might just have to trust me on this one - he was a long ways away.)
Playing taps:
Beautiful.
At the ampitheater behind the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Arlington Cemetery:
Remember this guy? (Darn that Ross Perot!)
Laura Bush, far right (someday, I will blow up all these pictures really nice and big):
Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff:
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates:
The way the people were cheering, you'd never guess his approval rating was hovering around 35% (max):
Sidenote: He waved at me. And I waved back. And felt just a little stupid.
He wasn't alone, of course:
Our "legend'ry" British intern friend, Tom: "What do you suppose are in those packs? [Devilish belly laugh.]"
I'm not the type to get emotional over Memorial Day. But there's a big difference between seeing graves and memorials to long-dead presidents and soldiers, and walking past plot after plot of freshly-turned dirt at Arlington's Lot 60, where they're burying casualties from Iraq and Afghanistan. We saw people there mourning children who would still be alive today if they hadn't died in the war on terror.
and after the bombs subside
and this long, low campaign calls it good for the night
we meet in the streets
will we meet in a bar's cold light?
we grip at our hands
we hold just a little tight
after the bombs
after the bombs subside
and after the rockets calm
and the glimmer of fire
pretends an early dawn
we pinch at our skin
while we wonder how we escaped harm
we forget all our trials
while there in our baby's arms
after the rockets
after the rockets calm
then we'll go dancing
won't we go dancing
yes we'll go dancing
'till it all starts over again
then we'll go dancing
yes we'll go dancing
won't we go dancing
'till it all starts over again
- "After the Bombs," by the Decemberists
- Zechariah 9:10
2 comments:
We will go daa-aaaancing... till it all... starts over again.
Did I read you, just now, saying you want it to stop? Should I read a sense of regret or... what? Oddly enough, Dan and I watched the Scrubs episode where everybody is debating the Iraq war.
*episode ends
Alvin: ... ...Joel supports the war.
Dan: Yeah, didn't you know that?
Alvin: No, I did. I just... I just need to tell myself that sometimes.
Hope weather is nice.
Well, I don't suppose any half-decent person wants it to continue. And if I thought withdrawing would make "it stop," I'd be the strongest antiwar person out there. But I don't. So it's not so much my regret as my brooding over something I can't change.
"I just need to tell myself that sometimes." Lol, oh man. I miss hanging out with you guys.
My roommate has all the Scrubs episodes on his computer. I'm going to suggest we watch that one tonight.
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