Survey Released About Memorial Day
On Memorial Day, amid the cookouts and long weekends, something sacred often gets overlooked—or worse, forgotten entirely. While opportunistic voices like Hillary Clinton and the perennially irrelevant “Republicans Against MAGA” reduce the day to just another culture war battleground, millions of Americans quietly took pause to honor what truly matters: those who died defending the Republic.
At Arlington National Cemetery, President Donald Trump, Vice President J.D. Vance, and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth led a solemn, reverent tribute to America’s fallen warriors. Hegseth’s speech was a masterclass in patriotic clarity—no euphemisms, no watered-down platitudes. Just unfiltered gratitude and remembrance for the men and women who gave their last breath for the Constitution, and for us.
Today, Monday, May 26, 2025, Americans across the United States are observing Memorial Day in honor of the men and women who died while serving in the U.S. Military. The precursor to Memorial Day, Decoration Day, originated in the years following the Civil War. pic.twitter.com/Wx5twD1t43
— American Battlefield Trust (@Battlefields) May 26, 2025
But even as the ceremony stirred hearts, a troubling new survey by Savanta showed how far many Americans have drifted from Memorial Day’s core meaning. According to the data, 52% of Americans believe the holiday has lost its original significance. The fact that this number exists at all is sobering, but it gets worse: only 48% of Gen Z primarily associates the day with remembrance, compared to a more grounded 76% of Baby Boomers.
Somewhere along the way, the sacrifice of the fallen has been drowned out by sizzle reels, sales events, and social media virtue signaling. The day now risks becoming just another excuse to grill burgers and post filtered family photos, disconnected from the graves at Normandy, Arlington, and beyond.
Pete Hegseth’s speech will bring a tear to your eye, fill your heart with pride, and leave you speechless.
Thank you for honoring our fallen on this day @PeteHegseth. pic.twitter.com/squ4SU6oCk
— Gunther Eagleman™ (@GuntherEagleman) May 26, 2025
Let’s be clear: nobody’s saying Americans can’t enjoy their freedoms. But what’s shocking is how many seem to forget where that freedom comes from. Cookouts have somehow become “traditional” celebrations—but when did that tradition start? What used to be a day of mourning, of flags planted in solemn silence, is now punctuated by sales ads and “long weekend” beach posts. Yes, you can grill a steak, but the day should begin with reverence, not relish.
The survey wasn’t all bad news. Sixty percent of respondents still associate Memorial Day with honoring fallen service members. Sixty-two percent believe it unites people of different beliefs. That sliver of unity still exists—but we’re on borrowed time.
Ric Grenell recently put it bluntly: “The Kennedy Center will no longer fund intolerance.” He was speaking of performers threatening to boycott an event due to President Trump’s presence. But his words apply more broadly. The very freedoms we enjoy—including the freedom to disagree—exist because someone else paid for it in blood.
As we remember our heroes, let us not only mourn their loss but also celebrate their bravery. Each life lost serves as a poignant reminder of the price paid for our rights and the values we hold dear. #MemorialDay pic.twitter.com/ItnNHMvssj
— First Lady Melania Trump (@FLOTUS) May 26, 2025
Memorial Day is not supposed to evolve. It is not a branding opportunity. It is a national vow—renewed yearly—to remember those who died so we could live free. It precedes Flag Day, where we honor the banner that represents those freedoms, and Independence Day, where we celebrate their legal birth.
That’s the order: sacrifice, symbol, celebration. Not the other way around.