- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 60
Are there that many soldiers dying or that many people clammering for medals that it is necessary to use an impersonal and inflexible system to decide who gets them? Do they cost a lot to manufacture? To distribute? If a family member is grieving (yes, even a sibling) and they value their loved one's service enough to request a medal that it means something to them, then doesn't that pall in comparison to what it cost the forces to mail them one? Isn't that better than someone not wanting any reminder at all of the forces? I think the final insult would be a reminder that a medal will not be forthcoming because the paperwork was not filled out. Perhaps a compromise would be a letter or phone call describing that the parent and spouse (or people on the "list") automatically get a medal, and if other family members would like one they should talk or write to the chaplain describing their special circumstances and it would be considered. Couldn't the chaplain, the CEO and one other person decide? It would go a long way to having the last memory of the forces be a positive one.
Is is really better to have no family member at a Remembrance Day service, than a brother (who otherwise could be home cleaning the garage)? I think we are losing sight that these family members are supporting their loved one in their endeavor, even though it came to death. Enough people are against the Forces and want to have nothing to do with it, that I think it would be good to support those family members that do want to support the Forces.
Is is really better to have no family member at a Remembrance Day service, than a brother (who otherwise could be home cleaning the garage)? I think we are losing sight that these family members are supporting their loved one in their endeavor, even though it came to death. Enough people are against the Forces and want to have nothing to do with it, that I think it would be good to support those family members that do want to support the Forces.