Blotan Hunka
Master Black Belt
BTW Vietnam was what, 30-40 years ago? Things have CHANGED man. :uhyeah:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Dude..grandpa and his stories dont give you any more understanding about being a soldier than reading black belt magazine gives you clout to talk about being a ninja.
BTW Vietnam was what, 30-40 years ago? Things have CHANGED man. :uhyeah:
Right. I suppose my grandfathers', my fathers, and many others in my families' observations don't count.
Come on, BH.
We just have different views of what this place is all about. Being a soldier has little to do with this.
I think that Ike had a point. The unwarrented influence of the Military Industrial Complex is something we need to be aware of. And, IMHO, I think we are seeing exactly what Ike warned us against, all those years ago.
qizmoduis,
Thank you for that very graphic and sobering post.
With both major parties rationalizing their own wars and various military strikes when their respective party is in power, how do you see the Democratic Party doing much different, especially considering how militaristic the 1990s were. I can see the Libertarian and Green parties being different, but not so much with Democratic party.
It seems, independent of the party to which he belongs, each president feels the need to have his own personal Hitler to defeat and one party's Hussein is another parties Milosevic. One party's Afghanistan is the other party's Vietnam. Maybe they are compelled to have their 'Hitler' for the reasons expressed in the film "Why We Fight", and not the WMD or humanitarian line we are being fed.
Additionally, the romantization the you spoke of worked very well against the Republicans in the recent election as the Democratic party did a great job of recruiting war vets to run against Republicans. Does this not also feed the romanization? How about the noble war Vietnam hero Sen. John Kerry v. the AWOL coward Mr. Bush and the whole Republican 'chickenhawk' meme.
Also, because I am a Gulf War veteran, you should put more stock in what I am saying about these issues. Just kidding, of course.
We'll have to wait and see how things go with the Dems in power now and hopefully more so after 2008. I voted for Democrats and am a registered Democrat because the party in general supports issues I believe in strongly: Civil rights, personal freedom, social equality (or at least less government supported stratification), environment, etc. I am what the media calls a "values" voter, but who then failed to understand that "values" aren't defined by the nutbar right-wing power-brokers. For me, the Iraq debacle was just the tip of an OBVIOUS iceberg of nastiness and incompetence. Personally, I find it very sad that it took Iraq for a majority of voters in this country to finally see it. And I find it sad that still so many Republicans won their elections.
I'm hoping the current crop of Democrats remains mostly uncorrupted for at least a decade or two. That's not really long enough, but these things go in cycles, excepting of course the Republican takeover in 1992, which started out corrupt and went downhill from there.
I worship the very ground you walk on! :rofl:
It was 1994 and like the Democratic Party takeover this year, I don't think the Republican takeover started out corrupt.