From Military.com:
“Only 55% of Americans Know Why
the Nation Marks Memorial Day, Survey Finds”
Only 55% of Americans know what
Memorial Day is about, and only about one in five plan to fly a flag at
half-staff or attend a patriotic event on May 27, according to a Harris poll
survey commissioned by the University of Phoenix. The survey, conducted April
9-11 among 2,025 adults, showed that only 28% had attended a local ceremony or
patriotic event on a previous Memorial Day. It also found that only 23% had
flown a flag at half-staff, while 22% had left a flag or flowers at a gravesite
or visited a military monument.
Honor the fallen
More than 645,000 servicemembers
have lost their lives since WWI defending our freedom. Offer a Memorial Day
dedication to them at PoppyInMemory.com. Only 55% could correctly describe
Memorial Day as a day to honor the fallen from all the nation's wars, the
Harris survey states, and 45% said they either always or often attended a
commemoration activity. About 27% of those surveyed thought Memorial Day
honored all military veterans, 5% thought it honored those currently serving,
and 3% thought the day marked the official beginning of summer, the survey
states. Of those who said they had participated in some form of commemoration
activity on Memorial Day, 52% said they had thanked a veteran, 14% said they
had worn a Memorial Day button, and 14% said they had joined in a National
Moment of Remembrance, according to the survey. Older adults are more likely to
observe Memorial Day and describe it correctly, the survey found. About 53% of
those aged 55-64 commemorated Memorial Day, compared with 40% of those aged
18-34, according to the survey's findings. Former Army Sgt. Brian Ishmael,
director of Military and Veterans Affairs at the University of Phoenix, said in
a phone interview that it is "a little bit disappointing" to know
that so many Americans are unaware of the true meaning of Memorial Day. Ishmael,
who served two tours in Iraq with the 101st Airborne Division, said that
"being a combat veteran myself, that has to be a bit disappointing." At
the University of Phoenix, "we put a lot of emphasis" on explaining
the real meaning of Memorial Day, he said. For this Memorial Day, the mostly
online university will continue a 10-year tradition of planting flags on the
Phoenix campus. This year, the university plans to plant 15,000 flags with the
theme "Their Legacy Lives On," Ishmael said. However, the for-profit
University of Phoenix has had a checkered history of serving veterans and its
use of GI Bill funds for tuition. In 2009, the university agreed to a $67.5
million settlement with the federal government on allegations that it was
illegally paying recruiters based on the number of students enrolled. And in
2015, the Defense Department suspended the university from recruiting on
military bases and accessing federal education funds. It was alleged that the
university had violated rules against for-profit colleges seeking to gain
preferential access to potential students from the military. The suspension was
lifted in 2016. Ishmael acknowledged the allegations against the university but
said they are dated, and the school is now "100% focused on our
veterans" and their education.
^ 55% is an awful statistic and
needs to be moved to 100%. ^
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