I’m not sure I’d say “heroes”; soldiering’s definitely a respected profession, but as far as I can tell that respect doesn’t approach worship. Familiarity probably has a lot to do with this: with about half a percent of the population on duty and many more retired, almost everyone in the States knows a soldier or a sailor or a Marine fairly well. Pretty hard to worship someone that, let’s say, shared your first cigarette with you when you were both thirteen.
There’s also a bit of a rural/urban divide, though. Servicepeople receive noticeably more respect in my hometown (of a few thousand people) than my current city (100,000 people, part of a contiguous urban area containing millions).
I’m not sure I’d say “heroes”; soldiering’s definitely a respected profession, but as far as I can tell that respect doesn’t approach worship. Familiarity probably has a lot to do with this: with about half a percent of the population on duty and many more retired, almost everyone in the States knows a soldier or a sailor or a Marine fairly well. Pretty hard to worship someone that, let’s say, shared your first cigarette with you when you were both thirteen.
There’s also a bit of a rural/urban divide, though. Servicepeople receive noticeably more respect in my hometown (of a few thousand people) than my current city (100,000 people, part of a contiguous urban area containing millions).