Topeka Capital Journal Honors the Patriot Guard as
Kansans of the Year
Published Sunday, December 31, 2006 from the Topeka Capital Journal
Kansans of the Year - Guarding Us All
Motorcycle-riding veterans bring honor to this state as they pay homage to fallen
soldiers
By The Capital-Journal editorial board
Some might see irony in a Vietnam veteran being the one to step to the head of the
line to keep a soldier from being dishonored.
The men returning from Southeast Asia in the late 1960s and early '70s were scorned
by their peers protesting that war, at times vilified for their service.
But when Kansas' most virulent protesters started taking their message of hate to
the funerals of fallen troops, it was a Vietnam veteran who took the lead.
The group that lined up behind Terry Houck, of Derby, and brought honor to Kansas
is the Patriot Guard, and its members are The Topeka Capital-Journal's Kansans of
the Year for 2006.
Veterans who had taken up arms to battle communism and despotism now fire up different
weapons in the cause of freedom — motorcycles.
The roar of their engines drowns out the chants of the group that wants people to
believe that the deaths of soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan are divine retribution
for America being a nation of sinners.
It has taken just 18 months for the group that started in the American Legion Post
in Mulvane to grow its numbers to 60,000 nationwide. The Kansas group has attended
40 funerals in the state.
It isn't there solely to muffle the protesters. The Patriot Guard pays homage the
fallen, the men and women who won't be able to come home to their families.
The group also honors freedoms for which all soldiers fight — the freedom to gather,
the freedom to say what we think.
Another irony? Perhaps. But the Patriot Guard gets our heartfelt salute.