Since 1958, West Point has honored one U.S. citizen annually with the Sylvanus Thayer Award for embodying the values of "Duty, Honor, Country."
Tom Hanks was set to receive the award later this month. His ceremony was just abruptly canceled by the Academy.
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Recipients of the Sylvanus Thayer Award are a Who's Who of American icons.
Presidents, Supreme Court justices, Secretaries of State and Defense, astronauts, journalists, etc. have been honored.
It's basically the Academy's version of an honorary doctorate. It's a big deal.
There's always a military parade for the recipient and a ceremony and a formal dinner with the entire Corps of Cadets and Academy staff.
It's one of the biggest days on the West Point calendar.
Tom Hanks is a pretty damn good choice. He's a longtime advocate for the military, veterans, and our families. He's made veterans issues his central advocacy area for decades.
And, of course, Mr. Hanks is among the most beloved Americans in the world.
Mr. Hanks' career is packed with performances that embody the ideal American spirit and honor the American military. So, obviously, it makes sense he'd be recognized for that.
But yesterday, West Point alumni received an email that the ceremony has been cancelled.
The email from retired Army Col. Mark Bieger, head of the West Point Association of Graduates, did not clarify if the award has been revoked or if it will awarded at a later date.
It remains unclear if West Point is throwing Tom Hanks under the bus.
But why?
Col. Bieger offered some incredibly vague reasoning:
"This decision allows the Academy to continue its focus on its core mission of preparing cadets to lead, fight, and win as officers in the world’s most lethal force, the United States Army."
As a former West Point cadet, I can confidently tell y'all that this doesn't make a damn bit of sense. At all. It's absurd.
And although no further details have been offered, this has Trump's fingerprints all over it.
Tom Hanks has supported Democrats throughout his career. He endorsed Barack Obama in 2008, Hillary Clinton in 2016, and Joe Biden in 2020. He's a supporter of LGBTQ rights. He's donated to countless Democratic campaigns.
This feels a hell of a lot like political retribution.
We don't yet know what happened, and there's a small chance that there was some kind of complicating factor that resulted in the ceremony being cancelled.
But I don't think that's it. I think this is Trump being petty over Mr. Hank's politics and getting revenge.
If that turns out to be the case, it's pretty damn disgusting that Trump has forced West Point into such an embarrassing and difficult situation.
In any case, Tom Hanks remains beloved by the veterans community. He's our guy. An award isn't needed to establish that.
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"Why should I care about U.S. Space Command being transferred to Alabama? I hate the military-industrial complex."
There are a number of reasons you should care, but you really only need one.
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An ICBM launched from Russia can reach the U.S. in 27 minutes. An ICBM launched from North Korea takes about 30 minutes; some estimates have it as low as 24 min. That doesn't mean we all get a text alert on our phones saying an ICBM is gonna hit in a half hour.
In reality, most of us wouldn't get much of a heads up at all. Because the ICBM needs to be properly identified and confirmed and reconfirmed. Then it has to be imperfectly tracked. Then agencies have to be notified. Then the press. Then the rest of us.
This is being somewhat misreported, and I think it's important to correctly frame it, so that folks don't sound clownish when they're advocating for the retirement benefits of trans service members.
The Air Force is denying *early retirement* to trans service members who have served 15-18 years and are being forced out.
As most folks know, Active Duty members of the military are eligible for retirement at 20 years. This is a separate thing from medical retirement, by the way.
Yet again, we're in one of those moments when a college offers an interesting elective course, and clowns online get all huffy about it and whine that college education has become trivial and ask what job a student will get with this course.
The typical undergraduate education, a bachelor's degree, is 120 credit hours over four years. Just about every degree program at every college or university in the country leaves at least 9-12 of those credits open as free slots for other subjects a student wants to explore.
That usually works out to at least 3-4 courses over the entire four years. Some degree programs have more. Some students will opt to use those elective slots toward a double major. Some will use them toward a joint degree program (bachelors and masters) over four or five years.
The criticism over Zelenskyy not wearing a suit is not only foolish but more importantly: completely fails to understand why he doesn't. Of course the man own suits. That's not the point.
His clothes are intentional symbolism. A country and its leader under immediate and existential threats from a tyrannical force have no time for suits and neckties.
Notice, too, that he's not wearing a formal uniform.
He has no visible rank or medals or nametapes. He has no commander’s cap or mirror-shined shoes. He has no epaulets or brass buttons or starched creases. He isn’t even wearing patches.
If land-based nuclear weapons are launched at the United States, even in a best case scenario (ha), the odds are pretty good you're not gonna know about it until the moment the bomb detonates in your area.
It's estimated that it would take 26 minutes, 40 seconds for an ICBM to travel from Russia to mainland U.S.
The estimate from North Korea to the U.S. is 33 minutes.
So, you're thinking: well, hey, that means I'll at least have a head start, right?
The state funeral for James Earl “Jimmy” Carter, Jr., the 39th President of the United States, was as well attended by dignitaries as one might expect — or hope.
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Among the hundreds in attendance at the Washington National Cathedral were Presidents Biden, Obama, Bush, and Clinton; Vice Presidents Harris, Pence, Gore, and Quayle; Secretaries of State Clinton and Kerry; first and second spouses...
...Chief Justice Roberts and Associate Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, Kavanaugh, Barrett, and Jackson; current and former heads of government from Canada, Colombia, Japan, Portugal, and the United Kingdom; Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh...