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Privileged to Serve 
by Peggy Noonan
Wall Street Journal
July 12, 2002

In this war, not only the sons and daughters of the poor are enlisting. 

Maybe he was thinking 'Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do 
for your country'. Maybe it was visceral, not so much thought as felt, and acted upon. 
We don't know because he won't say, at least not in public. Which is itself unusual. 
Silence is the refuge of celebrities caught in scandal, not the usual response of 
those caught red-handed doing good. 

All we know is that 25-year-old Pat Tillman, a rising pro football player (224 tackles 
in 2000 as a defensive back for the Arizona Cardinals, a team record) came back from 
his honeymoon seven weeks ago and told his coaches he would turn down a three-year, 
$3.6 million contract and instead join the U.S. Army. For a pay cut of roughly $3.54 
million dollars over three years. 

On Monday morning, Pat Tillman "came in like everyone else, on a bus from a processing 
station," according to a public information officer at Fort Benning, Ga., and received 
the outward signs of the leveling anonymity of the armed forces: a bad haircut, a good 
uniform and physical testing to see if he is up to the rigors of being a soldier. Soon 
he begins basic training. And whatever else happened this week--Wall Street news, 
speeches on the economy--nothing seems bigger, more important and more suggestive of 
change than what Pat Tillman did. 

Those who know him say it's typical Tillman, a surprise decision based on his vision 
of what would be a good thing to do. When he was in college he sometimes climbed to 
the top of a stadium light tower to think and meditate. After his great 2000 season he 
was offered a $9 million, five-year contract with the St. Louis Rams and said thanks 
but no, he was happy with the Cardinals. 

But it was clear to those who knew Mr. Tillman that after September 11 something 
changed. The attack on America had prompted a rethinking. Len Pasquarelli of ESPN 
reported last May that the "free-spirited but consummately disciplined" starting 
strong safety told friends and relatives that, in Mr. Pasquarelli's words, "his 
conscience would not allow him to tackle opposition fullbacks where there is still a 
bigger enemy that needs to be stopped in its tracks." Mr. Tillman's agent and friend 
Frank Bauer: "This is something he feels he has to do. For him, it's a mindset, a 
duty." 

"I'm sorry, but he is not taking inquiries," said the spokeswoman at Fort Benning. She 
laughed when I pressed to speak to someone who might have seen Mr. Tillman or talked 
to him. Men entering basic training don't break for interviews, she said. Besides, "he 
has asked not to have any coverage. We've been respecting his wishes. And kinda hoping 
he'd change his mind." Mr. Tillman would, of course, be a mighty recruiting device. 
The Army might have enjoyed inviting television cameras to record his haircut, as they 
did with Elvis. But Mr. Tillman, the Fort Benning spokesman says, "wants to be 
anonymous like everyone else." 

Right now he has 13 weeks of basic training ahead of him, then three weeks of Airborne 
School, and then, if he makes it, Ranger School, where only about a third of the 
candidates are accepted. "It's a long row," said the Fort Benning spokesman, who 
seemed to suggest it would be all right to call again around Christmas. Until then 
he'll be working hard trying to become what he wants to become. 

Which I guess says it all. 

Except for this. We are making a lot of Tillmans in America, and one wonders if this 
has been sufficiently noted. The other day friends, a conservative intellectual and 
his activist wife, sent a picture of their son Gabe, a proud and newly minted Marine. 
And there is Abe, son of a former high aide to Al Gore, who is a lieutenant junior 
grade in the Navy, flying SH-60 Seahawk helicopters. A network journalist and his 
wife, also friends, speak with anguished pride of their son, in harm's way as a full 
corporal in the Marines. The son of a noted historian has joined up; the son of a 
conservative columnist has just finished his hitch in the Marines; and the son of a 
bureau chief of a famous magazine was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Army 
last month, on the day he graduated from Princeton. 

As the Vietnam-era song said, "Something's happening here." And what it is may be 
exactly clear. Some very talented young men, and women, are joining the armed forces 
in order to help their country because, apparently, they love it. After what our 
society and culture have been through and become the past 30 years or so, you wouldn't 
be sure that we would still be making their kind, but we are. As for their spirit, 
Abe's mother reports, "Last New Year's, Abe and his roommate [another young officer] 
were home and the topic came up about how little they are paid [compared with] the 
kids who graduated from college at the same time they did and went into business. 

"Without missing a beat the two of them said, 'Yeah--but we get to get shot at!' and 
raised their beer bottles. No resentment. No anger. Just pure . . . testosterone-laden 
bravado." 

The Abes and Gabes join a long old line of elders dressed in green, blue, gray, white, 
gold and black. Pat Tillman joins a similar line, of stars who decided they had work 
to do, and must leave their careers to do it. They include, among others, the actors 
Jimmy Stewart, Clark Gable and Tyrone Power in World War II; sports stars Ted Williams 
and Joe DiMaggio in the same war; and quarterback Roger Staubach in Vietnam. It is 
good to see their style return, and be considered noble again. 

And good to see what appears to be part of, or the beginning of, a change in armed 
forces volunteering. In the Vietnam era of my youth it was poor and working-class boys 
whom I saw drafted or eagerly volunteering. Now more and more I see the sons and 
daughters of the privileged joining up. 

That is a bigger and better story than usually makes the front page. Markets rise and 
fall, politicians come and go, but that we still make Tillmans is headline news.
 
***





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