I disagreed with his deductive reasoning and cogitive thinking processes. In other words, despite the fact he was a military man he never did connect the dots when it came to the war on terror, the Middle East, the Iraqi war and the Left.
He felt he was right in his own mind on this subject. Fine. But to me he was "left" in his own min......siding with the liberals in this war.
What actual good he did for moral support and morale for our troops ("his grunts" so it's said) with his liberal Iraqi position I'll leave to everyone's own unemotional and honest analysis.
RIP, Hack, I used to know ye.
Leni
I agree with you. Too many get misguided by the desire to be loved by the Press. I think Hack fell into this category. While I know he is at peace, there will be one less critic of the War.
I think his problem was that his attitudes toward military brass and their political leaders did not change after he left active duty. He never adapted his thought paradigm to reflect changes that he had a lot to do with. He had no concept of how much things had actually changed after Reagan rebuilt the military. I think he was stuck in Vietnam mode.