Posted on 11/29/2019 12:34:29 PM PST by conservative98
On Veterans Day, I had the privilege of welcoming Pete Buttigieg back to Rochester to unveil his policy to honor veterans and their families.
In July, Pete first visited Rochester and I had the opportunity to lead him on a downtown walking tour. I was struck by our many similarities. We had both grown up in Indiana, were both the first openly gay men to be elected to our offices, and had both served overseas.
So on Veterans Day, as we honored our fellow service members, I knew Pete felt the same complicated emotions many of us have on that day.
I deployed three times -- the last as a combat medic in Baghdad in 2006. I remember begging an Army medical group to allow me to go outside the wire with them on a mission. I wanted to see what they saw -- and boy, did I. But they did warn me. They said, Be careful what you wish for. Some things you cant erase after youve seen them.
Some see more than others, and some carry that burden for others. That year that unit lost their medic.
I was one of the lucky ones. I made it back, and I had it relatively easy when it came to re-adjusting to civilian life -- but it was certainly an adjustment.
I had trouble with loud noises and crowds. I couldnt sleep at night and I had immense survivors guilt. Why was I allowed to live when others were not?
But there are plenty who have it much harder. Im currently attached to a National Guard unit, and sadly this year, the National Guard has the grim distinction of having the highest suicide rates of all the militarys services.
We ask our soldiers, sailors, air men and marines to do jobs most wouldnt do -- and we have a responsibility to take care of them after they complete their mission. But its clear our obligation to care for these brave Americans is not met with the same level of commitment. We must do better.
The gaps in our care when we come home, certainly contribute to the things we see in the news: suicide, homelessness and substance misuse as a form of self-medication.
The greatest tragedy in our story as a nation is when those who have answered the call to serve become homeless. What kind of country have we become to allow someone who has risked everything to uphold our nations greatest values to become homeless.
So on Veterans Day, Pete offered more than thanks to his fellow service members, he offered solutions and a path to care for veterans -- not as a favor, but to keep a promise. He outlined an agenda that supports those on active duty and their families, heals the wounds of war for veterans after they return, and engages all Americans to enable our veterans and their families to thrive.
Pete is one of the only candidates to have served in the current war that we have yet to end, so he has a perspective that is too often missing from our national conversation. He knows first-hand that veterans and their families are not a problem to be solved, but a talent to be competed for.
Our nation deserves a leader who understands what sacrifice means and how to honor the promise we made to our service members. Thats why with great pride, I endorsed Pete Buttigieg to serve as our next commander in chief and president of the United States.
All those months ago, as we neared the end of our tour of Rochester, Pete shook my hand and said, Please let your community know, help is on the way.
On Veterans Day, I heard that same message. So on the night of Nov. 3, 2020, when we elect our next president, I hope I can tell my fellow veterans that help is on the way because Pete Buttigieg is now the president.
Jeremy Hutchinson is an Air Force veteran and a Rochester city councilor.
“But its an always in your face thing”
That’s because it isn’t a “lifestyle.” It is one of Satan’s attacks on humanity.
At present, he’s having a good deal of success with it.
Locally. What is it nation wide? In any case he hasn’t a chance.
“Locally. What is it nation wide?”
Seems to be the tail wagging the dog.
“In any case he hasnt a chance.”
He can devour many souls before Our Lord’s final victory.
I dont think I nor surely Dennis Prager, not that I dare speak for him, promote and defend any sexual practices like that. We just know that there are worse sins to condemn loudly, but here on FR the sin of being homosexual is the one that receives the most ugly insults. That vitriol comes from people finding that sin personally disgusting, and not because its actually worse to Hashem than any of your sins or mine.
I appreciate the research you did and I know homosexuality is a sin in the Torah.
Where else but FR is anyone free to vociferously reject homosexuality and its relentless pervasive influence?
I am fine with critiquing the gay mafia and the overrepresentation of lgbtq in the public sphere. Changing all restrooms to support a tiny fraction of a minority??? Making people feel heterosexuality is lesser than?!
I am not ok with a site that was based on freedom and old fashioned religious values insulting homosexuals. And I never will be. Dennis Prager is a very religious man. Judeo-Christian values mean everything to him; he sees the world through a moral lens. And he also does not support shaming and name calling of homosexuals because doing so is against Judeo-Christian morals. Jesus respected everyone, even the prostitutes.
Shaming FR for taking an uncompromising stand against fudge packing, will never fly.
That term says it all.
Thank you, Roger Hedgecock.
Amazing, that other thread got locked.
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