In a brief ceremony Saturday, American soccer player Nathan Horne, killed in action during March in Iraq, was posthumously decorated with the Two Shits medal by a ranking Pentagon officer, Gen. Wilbur Finletter.
The Pentagon had received some criticism from soccer fans in light of recent accolades given former NFL player Pat Tillman, also killed in action, and celebrated as a god among men and all around nifty human being for giving up football to fight in a war otherwise disapproved by the public at large. Critics charged the U.S. military and national media with anti-soccer bias for its worship of Tillman while Horne went unrecognized for his valiant service and awesome death.
Horne’s father, Reggie, summed up the position: “Nathan left a potentially-lucrative, at least it would have been overseas, career in soccer to serve his country. The fact he was killed in action should mean something, at least since he was a well-known athlete and not just one of the other faceless war dead.”
A starting kicker or something for the Dallas Burn, which is apparently a real national league soccer team, Horne met his death when his convoy was attacked outside Baghdad March 26. Witnesses believe Horne tried to save the lives of his fellow soldiers, jumping into the air and attempting to deflect an incoming RPG with his head. Horne and the other soldiers received some posthumous awards, but Horne’s father says none of them count since they weren’t covered by the media and no one was invited to the ceremony.
Gen. Finletter tried to amend the error with a small ceremony in a mostly empty high school gym in Horne’s hometown of Avacado, Texas. A medal known as the Two Shits, and reserved for those killed in action who appear much more important upon reflection, was reportedly not made up just for the ceremony. Finletter gave the award to Horne’s widow, Iris, and two minutes of silence (one for each Shit) followed, except for the sound of freshmen playing dodge ball on the other side of the gym.
“If it didn’t seem like we cared when you died, sorry and all,” said Finletter, clearing his throat with a slight cough. “Let our presence here today, as well as the frumpy little medal we handed out, signify that we really do give two shits. Amen.”
The reexamination of Horne’s death hit everyone hard. A former assistant coach for the Burn, Kyle Hooper, was distraught upon remembering the news.
“I always knew Nathan was a pretty good guy, fun to get shit-faced with,” said Hooper, “but I didn’t think he was a hero until recently. When all this stuff happened with Pat Tillman, I realized hey, Nathan didn’t have to go over there and defend our freedom. Or defend the Iraqi’s freedom, or whatever. I know freedom was involved. He could have stayed here. Hell, he was getting axed from the Burn next season anyway, but it doesn’t mean he couldn’t have stayed here. He didn’t have to go to Iraq, like all those guys who are in the army now. He could have went on living for plenty more years and not gotten himself killed in an unjust war. But that’s the kind of guy he was—never really considering his decisions.”
Donations in Horne’s memory, in lieu of flowers, are requested to be sent directly to his widow and family, who will otherwise have no way to support themselves. For those who would like to do more to honor his memory, the family requests you attend a little rally with a store-bought sign exclaiming how much you support the troops.