RUSH: What was it like? Tell me how it happened? You flew from where to where? When you got off the airplane at the airport, what was it like to get back here?
CALLER: It was... Well, couple points. It was incredible, one. I thoroughly enjoyed my experience over there. Unfortunately, we were able to -- we actually have assess to, you know, satellite TV in the chow halls and things like that over there, and so --
RUSH: Yes.
CALLER: -- we see what's being reported back here, and it just disgusts us. A lot of the true things that are going on over there aren't reported, and that's part of the reason for my call. We get a lot of Drive-By politicians that come out to Iraq for a couple of days, come back here and report what they think they see in two days as opposed to, you know, all the troops that are over there for six months, 12 months.
RUSH: How long were you there?
CALLER: I was there boots on the ground just over ten months.
RUSH: Hold on just here, Greg. I'm not trying to embarrass you.
CALLER: Sure.
RUSH: I want to point something out to the audience. A full 99% of the people of this country will never do what you just did. This is not a criticism. I'm just establishing here a fact.
CALLER: Right.
RUSH: Those 99%, when they think about it, think, "What if I had to go? What if I had to go to a war," and what do they think of it, IEDs going off every day, massive death, US soldiers killing and getting killed. So when they picture it, I'm sure that when they thought that they had to go, that they would be petrified, just petrified. And I would also wager that many of them, while they could not wait to get out of there and to get back and touching down on US soil would be one of the sweetest and most memorable home comings ever, and to hear you describe it, sound like you just got back from Keokuk.
CALLER: (Laughing.)
RUSH: It was no big deal, but you don't even want to talk about it. You went; you did your ten months. You volunteered as you said as all of you have and you got back and it was like you went to the grocery store on a shopping spree for ten months, no big deal to you. But I'm telling you, most Americans, you know, they have pictures of the World War II movies and here come the returning veterans and everybody is in town to greet them and their wives and their girlfriends, they are hugging them and there are tears and so forth. You just, hey, it's just the way life is for you, you just got back, and I'm just amazed by that. That's why I think you people are a different breed.
CALLER: Absolutely, and it's not like we hear that's being reported, "Oh, these are all uneducated people that are being brainwashed to go over there." That is totally not the truth. You know, the majority over there, I would say, at least have an associate's or even college degrees. There's many of us over there that, you know, chose to go and I know you gotta break coming up but I just wanted thank you and let your 20-plus million listeners out there know I was enrolled in the Adopt-A-Soldier Program, and a gentleman, if you don't mind me saying his name --
RUSH: No.
CALLER: Randy Remenap and his wife adopted me. Well, they asked me, said, "Hey, what can we do for you over there? We'd like to do something for you and your unit," and I said, "Hey, we're fine over here, but if you can send over, you know, maybe some spare clothes that you have, maybe a couple boxes, and I'll distribute them out to the Iraqis," because I actually lived with the Iraqis, Rush, and helped train them. So, they said, "Hey, no problem! We'll send some over." I was expecting two or three boxes. Well, they got together with a couple of high schools out in Michigan where they're from; the next thing you know I'm receiving in the mail over there up to 60 to 80 boxes (voice breaks). Sorry, it's emotional for me, but they ended up sending over literally over close to a thousand pieces of clothing that I ended up giving to the Iraqis.