thinkprogress.org — When Gina Gray took over as the public affairs director at Arlington National Cemetery about three months ago, she discovered that cemetery officials were attempting to impose new limits on media coverage of funerals of the Iraq war dead even after permission was given by the families of the soldier. Soon after, she was demoted and fired.
Jul 10, 2008 View in Crawl 4
stephenhackingJul 10, 2008
Were are her rights?
Closed AccountJul 10, 2008
Great work keep it up
duggtodeathJul 11, 2008
It all points back to Vietnam, when pictures came home of the carnage, the public widely disagreed with the war. Now with the current sequel to Vietnam, the govt just makes soldier deaths something you imagine.
ooliquidnightooJul 11, 2008
the same place as your h.
blackjack75Jul 11, 2008
Can you imagine the impact on the public if for each soldier that died, news outlets aired say only 30 seconds of his burial? Something tells me that the 4000th time people would start to react.