Sergeant Major John Canley (USMC – ret.)
Sergeant Major Canley received the Medal of Honor for actions during the Battle of Hue City. His citation:
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Sergeant Major Canley originally received the Navy Cross, but that was upgraded in 2018 to the Medal of Honor.
Robert C. McFarlane, former national security advisor for Ronald Reagan.
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And its fallout left Mr. McFarlane so ridden with guilt that he attempted suicide in his home in February 1987. While his wife, Jonda, a high school English teacher, was upstairs grading papers, he took an overdose of Valium and got into bed alongside her. When he couldn’t be roused in the morning, he was taken to a hospital and revived. He subsequently underwent many weeks of psychiatric therapy at the Bethesda Naval Hospital.
It was a stunning act in official Washington. Many considered it an unconcealed howl of pain by someone from whom they would have least expected it — one of the capital’s most self-contained of public and powerful men.
Killing himself, Mr. McFarlane believed at the time, was “the honorable thing to do,” he said in an interview for this obituary in January 2016 at his home in the Watergate complex in Washington.
“I so let down the country,” he said.
He earlier had tried to explain his actions by citing the ancient Japanese tradition of the honorable suicide. But he came to realize, he said in the interview, that those ways had no resonance in modern American culture and that most people could not understand such behavior.
Henry Scott Stokes, journalist and biographer of Yukio Mishima.
Val Broeksmit. No, you haven’t heard of him, but this is one of the oddest obits I’ve read recently.
Mr. Broeksmit was an “itinerant musician”. His stepfather worked for Deutsche Bank, but committed suicide. After his stepfather’s death, Mr. Broeksmit somehow obtained his passwords and supposedly used them to download a bunch of “whistleblower” documents revealing misconduct by Deutsche Bank.
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He also somehow got involved in the Sony hack. Mr. Broeksmit was 46.