|
*"Virtue," according to
Webster's 1828 Dictionary,
"is moral goodness; the practice of moral duties and the abstaining
from vice, or a conformity of life and conversation to moral law.
In this sense, virtue may be, and in many instances must be, distinguished
from religion. The practice of moral duties merely from motives
of convenience, or from compulsion, or from regard to reputation,
is virtue as distinct from religion."
Colonel Ronald D. Ray is a practicing attorney in Kentucky
and a highly decorated combat veteran of the Vietnam War (two Silver
Stars, a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart.) He served as a Deputy
Assistant Secretary of Defense during the Reagan Administration
and was appointed by President Bush to serve on the American Battle
Monuments Commission (1990-1994), and on the 1992 Presidential Commission
on the Assignment of Women in the Armed Forces. From 1990 through
1994, he served as Military Historian and Deputy Director of Field
Operations for the U.S. Marine Corps Historical Center, Washington,
D.C. Colonel Ray, selected for Who's Who in America and in America
Law, writes and speaks on a wide range of National Security, Historical,
and Constitutional issues and has appeared on a variety of national
television news broadcasts: ABC World News Tonight, Larry King Live,
Hannity and Combs, Fox and Friends, The Today Show, Fox News, Crossfire,
and a number of national radio broadcasts.
|
 |