PDA

View Full Version : Factor Military Duty Into Criticism


asroc
04-04-2008, 08:34 AM
Factor military duty into criticism
April 3, 2008

By Lawrence Korb
and Ian Moss


In 1961, a young African-American man, after hearing President John F. Kennedy's challenge to, "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country," gave up his student deferment, left college in Virginia and voluntarily joined the Marines.

In 1963, this man, having completed his two years of service in the Marines, volunteered again to become a Navy corpsman. (They provide medical assistance to the Marines as well as to Navy personnel.)

The man did so well in corpsman school that he was the valedictorian and became a cardiopulmonary technician. Not surprisingly, he was assigned to the Navy's premier medical facility, Bethesda Naval Hospital, as a member of the commander in chief's medical team, and helped care for President Lyndon B. Johnson after his 1966 surgery. For his service on the team, which he left in 1967, the White House awarded him three letters of commendation.

What is even more remarkable is that this man entered the Marines and Navy not many years after the two branches began to become integrated.

While this young man was serving six years on active duty, Vice President Dick Cheney, who was born the same year as the Marine/sailor, received five deferments, four for being an undergraduate and graduate student and one for being a prospective father. Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, both five years younger than the African-American youth, used their student deferments to stay in college until 1968. Both then avoided going on active duty through family connections.

Who is the real patriot? The young man who interrupted his studies to serve his country for six years or our three political leaders who beat the system? Are the patriots the people who actually sacrifice something or those who merely talk about their love of the country?

After leaving the service of his country, the young African-American finished his final year of college, entered the seminary, was ordained as a minister, and eventually became pastor of a large church in one of America's biggest cities.

This man is Rev. Jeremiah Wright, the retiring pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ, who has been in the news for comments he made over the last three decades.

Since these comments became public we have heard criticisms, condemnations, denouncements and rejections of his comments and him.

We've seen on television, in a seemingly endless loop, sound bites of a select few of Rev. Wright's many sermons.





Some of the Wright's comments are inexcusable and inappropriate and should be condemned, but in calling him "unpatriotic," let us not forget that this is a man who gave up six of the most productive years of his life to serve his country.

How many of Wright's detractors, Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly to name but a few, volunteered for service, and did so under the often tumultuous circumstances of a newly integrated armed forces and a society in the midst of a civil rights struggle? Not many.

While words do count, so do actions.

Let us not forget that, for whatever Rev. Wright may have said over the last 30 years, he has demonstrated his patriotism.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-oped0404wrightapr03,0,2392831,print.story

disrupter
04-04-2008, 10:30 AM
ouch,

you dared to compare deserter Bush to someone who actually worked in service of this nation?

maybe Wright HAS earned a right to be angry,
while all the criminal deserters & deferrers & der furher Chainy is in the VP's office have earned being strung up on lampposts.

LadyMod at scam.com
04-04-2008, 02:14 PM
Excellent article Asroc.

Thanks for sharing.


Lady Mod

kres24GT
04-04-2008, 03:10 PM
I could care less if Obama's pastor is a CMH winner, a pedophile, or a cowboy astronaut millionaire. His pastor will have 0 to do with why I do/do not vote for him.

Independent Harry
04-04-2008, 04:08 PM
Yes, that's the way it should be kres, but for the majority of people in the US its not. So this is a way of balancing the public view of the man.

kres24GT
04-04-2008, 04:15 PM
Yes, that's the way it should be kres, but for the majority of people in the US its not. So this is a way of balancing the public view of the man.


I'd vote for someone who murdered my wife, fucked my mom, and anally raped me if I believed they would actually reduce the power of the federal government.

bigfootzx
04-04-2008, 04:28 PM
No you wouldn't, perception changes once an emotional loss occurs, but the joke was a funny. If the people would email, fax and protest the media in the streets and say shut the fuck up, religion is not a major factor, but no the talking pin heads think they know what's best for the world. The media used the "N Bomb" for 16 decades in reference to blacks, like they felt it was socially acceptable.

The media have proven time and time again that if they ignore someone they will go away, the media ignored and downplayed all the real estate bubble theorists from 1991 going forward, yet the group was right. So if the media ignore religious zealots, the issue becomes much smaller. I'm not saying don't tell us, but please don't play us 24/7 and think we don't now its all about the money!!!

Moby
04-05-2008, 12:59 AM
I'd vote for someone who murdered my wife, fucked my mom, and anally raped me if I believed they would actually reduce the power of the federal government.
You're a very sick person. I think it's time you get some help.

Independent Harry
04-05-2008, 11:33 AM
I'd vote for someone who murdered my wife, fucked my mom, and anally raped me if I believed they would actually reduce the power of the federal government.

Thats because you are actually insane...

disrupter
04-05-2008, 11:43 AM
I'd vote for someone who murdered my wife, fucked my mom, and anally raped me if I believed they would actually reduce the power of the federal government.

And with George Bush you got all three.
Lucky you,
Lucky us.

Too bad he grabbed for MORE power rather than less.
and he & Chainy ain't listening to you or the rest of the US public.

They weren't elected by the American people, they don't owe us anything.

Question: What do we owe ourselves?

I vote we hold a good lynching party,
where we slowly lower them into a raging bonfire of Exxon-Mobile oilfire.
rich fitting justice.