Posted on 03/22/2006 6:02:51 PM PST by caseinpoint
Tracy 's support for war may be waning
Phil Hayworth
Tracy Press
Have the deaths of five Tracy servicemen softened public support here for the war in Iraq?
Its difficult to tell. Most of Tracys 80,000 residents are transplants from somewhere else, and their sentiments about the war seem as amorphous as Tracys ever-changing demographics.
The one stark fact is that Tracy has lost more servicemen per capita than any city in California: 6.25 per 100,000.
My feeling is that the people who cheered and yelled when the thing first started are not as gung ho as they once were, said John Treantos, a retired U.S. Marine and member of the American Legion Post 172.
Treantos was one of a handful of people recently interviewed for a Sunday San Jose Mercury News article, titled A towns sacrifice, a nations dilemma.
The town was Tracy and the dilemma was the war in Iraq. The publication was timed to coincide with the third anniversary of the start of the war. Last weekend, people in cities around the country rallied to support and protest the war.
But neither happened in Tracy.
Instead, folks like Treantos readied themselves for the Monday funeral of Lance Cpl. Bunny Long, 22, a Modesto Marine who died March 10 in Iraq from a suicide bombing.
Treantos says he supports the troops, but hes tired of the killing, particularly because so much of it comes at the hands of stateless insurgents on suicide missions.
I wish we could just get out of there, he said. Weve got the tail of the wildcat and we cant let it go.
Some of the deepest and most unwavering support for President Bushs mission comes from those whove lost the most.
Julia Conover lost her son, Marine Lance Cpl. Brandon Dewey, to a suicide bomber in Iraq exactly two months ago to the day Monday. She, too, attended the Modesto funeral of Lance Cpl. Long. Shes an active member of the Gold Star families group and plans to travel to Iraq soon to visit the land she said Brandon heroically fought to liberate.
San Jose reporters spoke with her, she said, but didnt use her comments.
They didnt like what I had to say, she figured. They said that because I had just lost my son, that I couldnt be impartial about my feelings toward the war.
While the pain of her sons Jan. 20 death is still sharp, shes convinced that there are good reasons for the war and that her son died for a noble cause. She still has a daughter in the U.S. Navy.
Connie Armellinos son, Corey, returned healthy late last year from a stint with the U.S. Army in Iraq. She was in a barbershop in town recently when a policeman said that she should be proud of her son.
I am proud, she said. But in the back of my mind Im thinking, The war is such a big waste. I didnt argue the point with him.
Marilyn Chorley, founder of Tracys Military Moms, a support group for women with children in the service, has heard both sides. She said her group of about 40 women exists to support mothers with children in the service, whether or not they are in Iraq. And they support the troops, she said, regardless of personal feelings about the war.
People keep asking me about the numbers, she said. I dont like the number thing. Nobody likes war, but I support what theyre doing.
Chorleys son, Mike, is in Iraq with the Army. Mikes wife, Andrea, is in the Army in Iraq as well. Mike just re-enlisted in January and will probably remain in Iraq, she said.
I wondered what he was thinking, she said about her son. He loves what hes doing. I wouldnt have talked him out of it. But its still scary.
Armellino, who moved to Tracy from upstate New York five years ago, is unapologetic for her anti-war feelings, but she understands supporters of the war.
You cant think what your son or daughter is doing is wrong, she said.
While Tracys five military deaths put it at the top of the death list for Northern California towns, it remains fertile ground for military recruiters.
Chorley figures there are at least 200 active-duty servicemen and women from Tracy.
Recruits from Tracy represent six of the 70-signed contracts registered to date since October by the Armys San Joaquin recruiting company, which has stations from Turlock to Lodi and Sonora to Tracy.
From October 1, 2004, to Sept. 30, 2005, the company registered 135 signed contracts, 10 of which were from Tracy as many as were from the much-larger East Bay city of Alameda.
Meanwhile, San Joaquin County produced 46 Marine recruits so far this year nearly half of the 103 recruited last year.
Unless you are a Cindy Sheehan. The Press is traitorous.
Only the ones that do not advance the liberal media's political agenda.
MSM Hypocrites-In-Action bump
Unless of course its Cindy Sheehag
but but - isn't that supposed to be the whole raison d'etre of cindiii Shehamm's campaign? Aren't we all supposed to bow down and take anything she dishes out because she's a grieving mom? (We'll totally ignore her lifetime of liberal peacenik rantings and demonstrating, long before there was a war - We'll totally ignore that she is using her son's sacrifice against all he beleived in - a real hero - re-uped to go back because he beleived in it)
This MSM ignoring the mothers that wont mouth the antiwar mantra needs to be Be brought front and center...
we should alert Brush, Fox, all of them -
Murky Nuz reporters biased?? SAY IT AIN'T SO!
If we had today's Mainstream Media around during WW2 we would all be speaking German and wearing Nazi armbands.
Could someone tell me why credence is given to these Depends-wearing vets who have turned as toothless as Code Pink?
Go back and read about the numbers of military killed in WWII. As a percentage, the number of KIA in Iraq is nothing compared to WWII. Same for the percentage of the GDP spent on the war. Iraq/Afghanistan is nothing compared to WWII.
Has everybody forgotten sacrifice for a more important goal?
What will the cost in lives and GDP if the Islamofascists nuke NYC and DC?
And Japanese, west of the Mississippi!
Because It's not their fault people have been brainwashed by the media to expect defeat. He's right in what he says, people aren't as Gung Ho as they once were, I blame the media's constant bombardment of bad news.
And George Bush lives in a bubble.
the media in this nation is guilty of criminal neglect.
Two quick postscripts: The San Jose Mercury News was bought by McClatchey News this past week and is part of the papers it intended to sell to finance the papers it wants to keep. I don't know who will be buying the Mercury.
Second, Brandon Dewey, whose mother was quoted there, was the inspiration for a song that is apparently growing in popularity among Gold Star families called, I believe, "Good Night, Soldier".
But....but....but...
Armellino, who moved to Tracy from upstate New York five years ago, is unapologetic for her anti-war feelings, but she understands supporters of the war. You cant think what your son or daughter is doing is wrong, she said.
Gawd, I just cannot abide these people.
I think they should be down on their knees thanking God for His mercy.
They complained when we weren't organizing and now that families are organizing they refuse to speak to the groups.
And just what does this git think the definition of a terroist is?
I would bet anything that Treantos was never in a war zone. Living and working in one has a way of cementing one's opinion on the side of "let's get these bastidges."
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