Q. The military is such a big part of your career, sponsor of your Busch and soon to be Cup car that you’re working on right now. Being in a vehicle for supporting the troops, do you ever feel a responsibility to speak out about issues that the troops have, deployment of the National Guard extended, and issues at Walter Reed?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I’m not in a position to blast opinions on anything like that. I mean, certainly when it comes to knowledge of those various and specific situations that you just spoke of, I’m not intelligent enough about them independently to be able to sit here and think that I would be able to tell a cameraman or a print reporter what I thought should be done.
You know, what I enjoy doing, I do got some friends in IraQ. One of my buddies just went there recently. I just ask them what they need. They tell me. I try to mail it to them. You know, I think if there’s one responsibility, obviously my job with my race team is to try to let young Americans and young adults know that that’s an opportunity, to join the Guard, to join the Navy, that that’s an opportunity, and try to give them all the information that they can have to make that decision.
But I feel like, as a citizen of the United States, you know, being able to take some time out of my week to put together a care package to send to a couple of buddies of mine that they can disperse throughout their company and whatnot, that’s probably the best thing. I remember being in military school. That was the coolest thing that could happen, when your parents sent you a box of stuff, new socks, candy bars, whatever.
As ridiculous as that sounds to us, to just be able to walk up to the corner store and pick it up, it’s really hard to get over there. You can get an iPod, but you can’t download music. The things we take for granted.
They tell me what they kind of things they wish they had or hadn’t thought about bringing over with them, and I try to mail it to them. When we’re all on our XM radio show we try to tell our listeners that that’s a good exercise for them, too, is just to put a care package together. Takes five minutes. Makes a big, big difference to those guys, the morale over there.
And lookie here, the owner is there too.
Great post!
I don’t think Jr. could smile any wider!!
Look’n forward to yer TMS thread.