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Soldier4Christ
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« on: February 16, 2008, 10:54:50 AM »

On the Edge?

IN THE LAST several weeks I have learned a great deal about myself, thanks to all the wonderful media reports about serving and returning war veterans. For example, I have learned that I might want to kill my wife because of the trauma of war. Or, if I have no beef with my family, that I might go after my neighbors instead. Or if there are no other handy targets for my aggression, I might go after myself.

While waiting to appear on a talk show, I learned that combat veterans are "all a little bit on the edge." One brilliant commentator even suggested that combat soldiers and private security contractors tend to be the types of individuals that have a propensity to harm others and commit acts of violence.

As if I was not sufficiently depressed after absorbing these diatribes (perhaps it was just those suicidal tendencies), I also learned that the term "hero" no longer applies to hundreds of thousands of veterans who have served multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. Instead, according to a Men's Health magazine I read while getting a haircut, only miscreants who jeopardize fellow soldiers by deserting their units in wartime exhibit true courage. Although I don't feel the term is fitting for myself, I never imagined the term "hero" could be used interchangeably with the word "AWOL" in a mainstream magazine.

Hollywood has also done its part to help educate our fellow Americans about those of us who served. Films like In the Valley of Elah, starring Oscar winners Charlize Theron and Tommy Lee Jones, Redacted by Brian De Palma, MTV's Stop Loss, or even the Oscar-nominated documentary No End In Sight will reassure my neighbors that even if I don't kill them or myself, I have surely committed horrible atrocities against women and children and never really did find any of those bad guys that my nation decorated me for killing to save the lives of others.

As I have pondered these grotesque assaults on Iraq and Afghan war veterans and wartime civilian contractors in recent months, the picture has become quite clear. If our successes in battle cannot be argued against, then the subtle undermining of our honor and integrity seems to be the next best thing. It really is the oldest political game in the book. Muddy the facts. The fact that an American civilian is five to six times more likely to murder you than a returning vet does not matter. Don't bother with the data that shows an increase in domestic suicide since 2000 that exceeds the military rates in the six-year period following. And forget the notion that there really are millions of young men and women that believe in service, sacrifice, and mission. If some of us are a little "on the edge" these days, it's not because of the war but because of the assault on our reputations.

It has been a great honor to serve my country and to serve in this war. While we must help those in the most serious need and provide them with the care they deserve, it is also time to treat the 1.5 million veterans of this war as the honorable Americans we really are.


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Joh 9:4  I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.
nChrist
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« Reply #1 on: February 16, 2008, 06:16:46 PM »

Hello Pastor Roger,

We're living in a time of twisted lies and depravity. All we need to do is take a brief look at our government and news media to see big problems. I still don't think that the majority is fairly represented, nor are they even heard. Small numbers of folks with tons of money are pushing the buttons. Our current election process will give everyone a good idea about what BIG MONEY can do and has done.

MONEY can and has produced BALONEY in record quantities. The problem is that the BALONEY is spoiled and stinks. I would still like to think that the majority of average people don't buy this BALONEY and recognize it for what it is.

As an example for this thread, we haven't had a major terrorist attack in this part of the world since 9/11. This is not a coincidence. We can THANK GOD and another generation of outstanding young men and women in uniform. They represent the finest traditions of service to GOD and COUNTRY. I still think that the vast majority of our population fully appreciates what they have done and are still doing.

We don't buy the BALONEY!
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