VFW slams MSNBC host who said he was ‘uncomfortable’ calling dead soldiers ‘heroes’


05/28/2012
By Alex Pappas

BUSHNELL, FL - Walter Miller waits for the next service at the Florida National Cemetery November, 10, 2008 in Bushnell, Florida. Miller has been a volunteer with the Veterans of Foreign Wars at the cemetery since 1992. More than three million Americans, including veterans of every war and conflict from the Revolutionary War to the Gulf War are honored through burial in a VA National Cemetery. (Photo by Stephen Morton/Getty Images)


A spokesman for a leading veterans organization criticized MSNBC’s Chris Hayes for arguing on his television show that that he’s “uncomfortable” describing American soldiers who died in battles as heroes.

“If Mr. Hayes feels uncomfortable, I suggest he enlist, go to war, then come home to what he expects is a grateful nation but encounters the opposite. It’s far too easy to cast stones from inexperience,” Veterans of Foreign Wars spokesman Joe Davis told The Daily Caller on Sunday.

Hayes, a liberal writer who hosts the weekend show “Up with Chris Hayes,” said he is “uncomfortable about the word [hero] because it seems to me that it is so rhetorically proximate to justifications for more war.”

“I don’t want to obviously desecrate or disrespect memory of anyone that’s fallen, he said, “and obviously there are individual circumstances in which there is genuine, tremendous heroism — hail of gunfire, rescuing fellow soldiers and things like that. But it seems to me that we marshal this word in a way that is problematic.”