Good people try to be fair and just. The problem is that life isn’t fair. But we try.
The Tribune News Service reports, today, that the parents and sister of Sgt. John Perry, who was killed November 11th at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan, while apparently protecting a female soldier at the time of his death, flew from Sacramento International Airport to Dover AFB on Monday to greet the return of the soldier’s remains. The flight was 45 minutes late landing in Phoenix for a quick transfer.
Apparently, the pilot of the flight was aware of the family and the reason for its journey. After landing, he made an announcement asking passengers to remain seated to allow “a special military family” to deplane first. This, in order to try to ensure the Perry family not miss their connecting flight. Some of the passengers in first class began booing the family. The father, Stewart Perry, an ex-Marine, who lives in Stockton, CA. said, “It was really disgusting on the passengers’ part”, and the ordeal left him feeling disrespected. He also said he didn’t know if the passengers were aware of his family’s “Gold Star” status. This could have been important. The pilot remained at the gate to make sure the couple made their connecting flight.
My thoughts: Let’s be clear here. The passengers had every right to boo and complain, even if they didn’t take into consideration the fact that the pilot would have been unlikely to ask them for their courteous patience for no extraordinary reason . The Constitution guarantees the rights to free speech and protest, rights directly protected by our military. We are a nation of laws and complaining is legal. But hypothetically, what if the passengers knew this was a “Gold Star” family? Would they have booed? They would still have had the right to, if they so chose. Luckily, booing and complaining were the only protestations. There was no violence. But what if there had been a minor scuffle? What if the passengers knew all the facts and someone onboard viewed the booing as particularly inappropriate?
If a passenger took exception to the booing, under those hypothetical circumstances, and decided to treat one of the booers to a fat lip; what then? In a nation of laws, striving for fairness and justice, that attacker would be arrested and prosecuted. If convicted, the attacker should have received a 7 day sentence to be served at Walt Disney World with his/her family and a $1 fine. That would be fair and just.
We don’t know if the passengers were aware of the situation. But one might assume the booing protestors voted for Hillary, because that’s their modus operandi.