I have started several times to respond to posts on this thread and reconsidered my words.For those who think vets are better.....
Is it all vets, just combat vets (no REMFs)?
I have never been in the armed forces, but I have a family that has a history of service to this country going back 200 years. Between four of my brothers and all of my uncles, my family has had a member in every branch of the armed services for the last two generations. My father served in both WWII and Korea. While in the Marines in Korea he suffered head injuries in combat and was medically discharged from the service as a result. I do not recall him ever thinking he was special or better than anyone else because of this. He was proud of his service in the Marine Corp, but he seemed to view his combat experience more as a really risky job than anything special.
As a family, we appreciated that he was taken care of and that we were too as a result. I know his service allowed me and my siblings to go to college much more economically than we would have otherwise.
It is my bias from personal experience and family history that I hold those that serve honorably and maintain that honor in civilian life with respect, but I see us all equal citizens, philosophically. Still, I think that people that have been injured due to their service should be taken care of as part of that and that survivors should be taken care of for their loss.
I do not think that service makes a person immune to any of the foibles that plague the rest of humanity and they can be as faulty as the rest of us. Service does not elevate an opinion to some special status or make it more valuable than that of a person that never served or never saw combat. Unless it is an opinion about the service, about combat or things related to those conditions.