I feel a deep sense of betrayal ....
condemned and maligned the service of Good Men ....
offered aid and comfort to our nation's enemies ....
saw to it that although our Armed Forces lost not one Vietnam Battle that those he served defeated us on the gutless, long-haired, maggot-infested, pot smoking hippy-wastrel infected battlefields at Kent State, at NYU and at UCLA ....
offered our enemies aid and comfort then -- and offers it now ....
requires constant supervision ....
required it then and requires it now -- and has hand picked a predatory, lying, looting, thieving trial liar for the job?
Hand jobbed, more likely.
BUSH/CHENEY by a 10% margin: 44 States -- TWOjohns: 6+DC
You are a brilliant lady, Mia T -- and I salute you!
Blessings -- B A
BUMPping
I served in Vietnam from September 1968 to September 1969, six months ofwhich was with this honored bunch of people, many of whom are here today. I signed that letter because I, too, felt a deep sense of betrayal: Someone who took the same oath of loyalty as I did as an officer for the US Navy would abandon his group here to join this group here and come home and attempt to rally the American public against the effort that this group was so valliantly pursuing. You know, it is a fact that in the entire Vietnam war, we did not lose one major battle. We lost the war at home. And at home, John Kerry was the field general. Only last week--or two weeks ago I saw on television where, when asked to respond for his support for the Iraq war, he said, "I cannot imagine going to war without the support of the American people. The same man who joined this group to rally the American people against our effort. This is not the making of a commander in chief. --Bob Elder
|