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All right, how was it?

Susan, I am a Viet-Nam vet, and we were taught in basic training to shout: "kill, kill!" during our combat training. During my 14 months in Nam, I saw some of the GIs wearing necklaces of ears on a string that they had cut off their kills. I agree with you about Iraq's lack of involvement with 9/11. the news on TV is NOT factual! I have had dealings with news people, and they turn things around to suit themselves(or someone else???)
War: to make old rich men richer at the expense of poor young men's(& now women's) blood. That's the facts.
 
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EliasEmmanuel

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I am a Christian... It is my belief that you must live each day to its fullest and the best of your abilities. If you do... then tomorrow will take care of itself... for tomorrow is in God's hands.

We only live in today.

True, but we can PREPARE for tomorrow, and that's something we've failed in in the past...... pre-Taliban Afganistan would be a good example, as would Guatemala, of some of our attempts at regime change that were woefully shortsighted.

-Elias
 
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This thread turned into a debate? Hmph. I'll rehash something here that I thought was note worthy. Maybe it will explain motivational reasons for you since you don't remember (or lived during) some of the past events to what lead us here.

Peace




 http://www.christianforums.com/threads/40709.html



 
 
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JillLars

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Hitler never attacked us.  Do you think it was a bad idea to go in and get rid of him?  Just because so many people assigned questionable reasons to this war doesn't mean it isnt working for the greater good.  IMO
 
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Lanakila

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I served in the USARMY for 5 years as a Flight Operations Specialist (Dispatcher). My basic training experience was basically the same, except that I remember (its been 21 years since basic) the defend yourself and defend your buddy aspect being stressed very highly. We learned how to shoot a weapon because as a serviceman or woman you need to know that, (remember the female Jessica Lynch).

 My hubby is an Army Chaplain at Camp Patriot in Kuwait. As a Chaplain he is a non-combatant, but he used to be an infantry grunt. Those guys have a commoraderee that the other jobs in the Army will never have, because they literally depend on each other for their very lives. I am sure there are a few nutcases in the Army and other services, but to be honest, they try very hard to weed them out, and my hubby counsels those that are having difficulties, and they are not allowed to stay in the military.

Also, civilian employers don't usually do as well at finding the nutcases and weeding them out. Remember the Zerox incident in Hawaii, or even all the Postal Service employees that have gone postal so that now we have the term going postal to describe these that fall off the deep end.

 

 
 
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Lanakila

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This post is inflamatory at best and offensive at the worst. Read my last post. During Vietnam, drug use was rampant as well. It was a draft military. The military has changed dramatically since Vietnam. The nutcases get weeded out. The combat training he is describing is bayonet training, and in hand to hand combat they need to have the adrenaline rush to be able to fight in that manner. In other words, he didn't explain himself real well, for the express purpose of painting a very negative image of the Marines. Remember toys for tots, when you think of Marines please.
 
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Stormy

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This thread stinks.

People willingly lay their life on the line to protect us, and help the helpless, but instead of showering them with our praise and admiration... we ask them to prove themselves???

Isn't the freedom that we all enjoy proof enough?

Or do you think it came without a price?

Susan: War is ugly. War is never wanted. But is often times necessary to right grave wrongs.
 
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Greeter

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Today at 05:01 AM Susan said this in Post #28

Thank you Blessed-one. I don't know what's wrong lately, everywhere I post, people start flaming.


Hmm, it might be in your approach, the tone and words you use.  Just something to think about.
 
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Dewjunkie

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To answer the OP, I served 5 years in the US Navy as an Operations Specialist (Radar/Satellite/Communications). My specialty was Air Warfare and Computer Data Links. I was trained extensively in using Intel, Electronic Warfare, and Identification Friend or Foe to identify any and all aircraft flying within 200 miles of my ship, and then share that info with all ships in our immediate area through data links. We were well versed in engagement procedures, and had we the need to engage an aircraft to shoot it down, I would have been the one to make the call about which one to engage. Needless to say, there was a lot of stress. The parameters of engagement are extensive, and much of them classified, but the short story is; unless it was critically urgent, we would not engage without exhausting every other possibility. We were not a killing machine just looking for reasons to fire our missiles. Fortunately, I only had to engage one aircraft while in the Persian Gulf, and it turned away immediately, so we never fired in real-time combat.

I would easily have made the call. If it came down to an enemy pilot or my shipmates, the pilot wouldn't have received a second thought. My job was to protect my ship and the men and women onboard it. At sea, in battle, or in the air, their isn't "someone else" to do anything. Servicepeople are taught to do as much as they can for the good of everybody. They are taught to rely on each other and be reliable to others. It's a commitment to much more than just running around playing with cool toys.

Until you've been there, you have no clue. And, if you don't have the desire or ability to take the oath, don't question it. You won't ever understand.
 
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Blindfaith

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Reminder:  Susan started this thread to hear from the Veterans, and those currently serving so maybe she can gain a better understanding of what it's all about.

For those of us who have never been enlisted, I think we should probably stay out of it. I for one cannot fully comprehend what it's like to be in the armed forces.

Thanks
 
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coastie

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Yesterday was one of the best days of my life.

It was the Seattle Mariners "Salute to armed forces day" at safeco field. So yesterday me and 39 other Coasties met at the stadium an hour and a half before the game.

There were members of every branch of the military, as well as their families there also. The miltary members who were taking part in the ceremony all met in a briefing room at the stadium.

As the Army-Navy band played "God Bless America" and "Grand old flag" at the opening of the ceremonies, we (the coasties) marched out from underneath the stands carrying the biggest national ensign I've ever seen. As we came out of the gate, all 32,000 people went to their feet and cheered for us. I don't think that there was a single military member there who didn't get goosebumps.

Our cadence was absolutely drowned out by the cheers and our order to halt was muffled, we were lucky that we hit our first mark so smoothly.

We marched out to the field and stood on our second mark and unfurled the 60x40 ft flag. The Army buglist played taps as we held the flag and the entire stadium went silent in memory of fallen heroes. They large screen was showing the faces of Admirals, Generals, marines, airmen, sailors, soldiers, and coasties, and you should have seen how many had tears in thier eyes.

Those are you heartless killers.

After taps and the moment of silence, the national anthem was sung by vocalists from various military branches. Then two Navy Prowlers flew over the stadium. The entire stadium rumbled and fell silent. We received the order to gather the flag and march back in, and once again couldn't hear the cadence over the cheering.

When we got back underneath the stands and continued marching to the locker room, our collective foot steps and cadence echoed off of the concrete walls. Those are two absolutely beautiful sounds. The order for mark time was called then halt. We all just kind of stood there for a minute, including the Mariners employees, trying to absorb what had just happened.

We had never fought in a war, we didn't deserve this honor, but those people in the stands trust us, and revere us simply because they know that everyone of us will give the ultimate sacrafice for their freedoms, and they were appreciative.

It was one fo the greatest nigths of my life, and bittersweet at the same time, because the people who really deserve that honor and privaledge are thousands of miles away right now, liberating people, in spite of unpopular world opinion, and getting shot at, and dieing, and fighting to keep everyone safe.

Susan, apparently, you just don't get it.
 
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I never had the honor of serving in the armed forces and would not presume to speak on behalf of anyone who did, but several members of my family have served and enough personal lore has circulated over the years that I can at least indicate what some of them went through (without fully understanding it, of course).

My father and both of his brothers were in the army in the late sixties. Dad served stateside at Fort Lewis while his older brother, Mike, served three tours in 'Nam and his younger brother, Tim, was in Korea. All three were infantry, and the uncles were both Rangers.

Uncle Tim didn't see any "hot" action while in Korea but still speaks of the constant tension he and others felt while holding the border.

Mike saw more d**n fighting than anyone probably should. He was heavily decorated for his actions in combat and sustained wounds on three or four occasions. Dad tells the story of one time, when Mike was on leave and recuperating between tours, that he was present at a conversation between Mike and Grandpa. Mike was gently asked if he wanted to talk about his combat experience and how many kills he had to his credit. I'm told that Mike indicated the living room they were sitting in and said, "Dad, stand 'em or stack 'em, you couldn't fit them into this room." I know that Mike never really discussed in depth his experiences in Viet Nam with those who weren't there (I certainly never had that talk with him), but it almost ate him alive. Apparently, he tried to hang himself in '76, unable to shed the combat dreams he experienced almost nightly. He and his wife eventually adopted a French/Vietnamese girl who came over with the refugees (she is now a happily married mother in Sioux Falls, SD). After his stint in 'Nam was finally over, he decided to make the military his career and was enrolled in the War College. He served until the early 'Nineties, when he retired a Colonel, having served several of those years in Singapore. Both of his sons are pursuing careers as officers.

My brother is currently in the Army with the 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum, soon to transfer to California for Pathfinder training; he is an E-6. He fought in Afghanistan in both Anaconda and Tora Bora and apparently saw heavy action. The only two in the family he has spoken to (or is likely to speak to) about his experiences there are Dad and Uncle Mike, as it should be. Upon his return to New York, Ft. Drum had some kind of ceremony honoring the returnees. After the ceremony, a woman approached him and asked if he was Sgt. ******. He replied that he was. Turns out, she was the mother of a Private in his platoon who had been hit in the first day of fighting. Brian had carried her son, under fire, nearly a half-mile down the mountain to the nearest aid station before returning to his unit to resume the fight. She just wanted to thank him. I can hardly imagine the emotion of such a moment. My brother is now weighing his options. I don't think he originally intended for the Army to be his career, but he's already nearly halfway to a full retirement and is considering re-upping again.

I also had a step-brother who served as a medic in West Germany in the late 'Eighties. It was an uneventful stint as things go (though his stories of the Frankfurt red light district are priceless), but to this day he credits the military with instilling in him a sense of honor and discipline that he wouldn't have found elsewhere.

Members of my family are almost uniformly liberal in their political views, Mike being the token conservative of the bunch (though it should be said that his conservatism is decidedly moderate in tone), and we're not really a rah-rah flag waving bunch. But I can say without qualification that there isn't a one of them who regrets his service or wouldn't do it all again. There's a sense of service and honor that each shares that I, a life-long civilian, can't fully enter into, only admire from a distance.

Of course, war is a terrible thing and not all wars are wise or just. Sometimes, sadly, war is necessary, and I am grateful beyond words that there are men and women willing to lay their lives on the line at such times. To those of you who have served or are serving, thanks.
 
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D.C

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Today at 04:01 AM Susan said this in Post #28

Thank you Blessed-one. I don't know what's wrong lately, everywhere I post, people start flaming.



As was said before, its the words you use. Making people justify themselves to you might be a reason as well. I seem to have missed the point at which God bestowed the power of judgeing your fellow humans on you. If I remember right, only God can pass judgement on us, not you. You come across as a very judgemental person, but then again thats just my opinion.
 
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jseek21

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Question: When is war necessary? Was it not necessary now? We see these Iraqi people running through the streets shouting, "Thank you Bush!" and holding signs saying, "US Human Shields: Go Home You Wankers!" These people have been given freedom.

1 John 3:16: "Hereby perceive we the love of God, because he laid down his life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren. "

Does this not sound like a right and just war?
 
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