Your usual anti-military trite.
First, not sure where you're going with the EMS comparison but you're way off the mark. You and I both know that families of fallen EMS members are treated with the highest respect. I know for a fact that we present them with a special plaque in honor of their loved one. In our program and others, there are monuments erected for medcrews that have died in aircraft accidents. We do formation funeral fly overs all the time for those that have died in the line of duty. We go above and beyond to show proper recognition and respect for fallen fire / EMS and you know it.
So some people were delayed an extra few minutes deplaning. Who cares? If I was on a flight and the captain announced that we were waiting for a family to leave to attend a funeral, military or not, I'd remain seated. Or, if a passenger had a medical issue and was getting off first, I'd let them go.
When these KIA servicemembers fly out of Bagram, the entire ramp goes under "quiet hours." It's an amazing sight and for someone like myself who's usually doesn't get emotional, it was a very moving experience as well. A ramp that's normally a bustling, chaotic mess goes silent. It isn't a few minutes sitting on an airliner, the entire ramp completely stops what they're doing for about 10-15 mins. You stand there, at attention with your flight crew, as a tan HUMVEE carrying a flag draped coffin, slowly passes down the flightline. It's about taking a little bit of your morning to salute the fallen, before you go about the daily grind of flying in war. This salute isn't for someone serving "special interest." It's not about the politics or the military industrial complex we so loath either. It's just a gesture of showing respect for a young "kid" who died for the buddy next to him. It's for a soldier who came to a foreign country, with unclear objectives and just tried his best to make it a better place when he left. It's just that simple.