Posted on 09/17/2006 7:50:47 PM PDT by Citizen SMASH
SOMETIMES you see a man with a short haircut, athletic build and a military bearing, and you think to yourself, "I bet that man is a Marine."
With Major Pain, there is no question. You know he is a Marine. Which makes him an ideal wingman for me when it's time to confront Code Pink and friends about their rude and disrespectful treatment of our soldiers outside Walter Reed Army Hospital.
There are about a dozen or so protesters there on Friday night. On any given evening, one or two of them might have enough spunk to face off against a "lone warrior" confronting them on the sidewalk. But very few will take on two of us. And nobody wants to get in Major Pain's face.
We approach, quietly, from the rear. Major Pain takes up a blocking position, and I start talking (audio).
"Good evening."
Several of them turn around. One man starts to approach me. Then he sees Pain, and has second thoughts.
"You know, for the past few weeks, I've come down here, and listened politely and respectfully to any of you who would talk to me.
"Tonight, you're going to listen to me.
"The military is my family. My grandfather and great uncles served in the World Wars. My father served as a physician for over thirty years. My older brother served in peacetime. And my younger brother and I are both veterans of the Iraq War.
"I was born in a hospital not unlike this one right here. And I swore an oath to fight, and if necessary die, to defend your right to stand here and protest the war I served in. I'm not here to tell you, or to try to change your mind about that war. But I am here to ask for a little respect for me and my family.
"Last week, Bruce asked me to leave. He told me that you're here to support the soldiers, not to do interviews. He told me I wasn't welcome.
"Not long after that, a couple of men who I am proud to call my brothers -- who I had never met before -- a couple of wounded soldiers from this hospital came down to talk to you. They wanted to understand why you're here.
"You did not treat my brothers with respect. You refused to acknowledge them, like you're refusing to acknowledge me. You mocked their southern accents. You literally turned your backs on them, like you're turning your backs on me tonight.
"You should be ashamed of the way you treated those soldiers. Ashamed! If that is what you think supporting the troops means -- turn your backs on them when they come to talk to you -- then you are either a fool, a coward, or a hypocrite. I leave it to each of you to decide which word fits you best.
"The charade is over. We all know that you do not support the troops. If you did, you wouldn't turn your backs on them. You disrespected my brothers, on our front porch. So let me be absolutely clear: You may have a slip of paper from the City of Washington recognizing your right to stand here, but you are not welcome here.
"I want you to think about what I've said. Your vigil here does not support the troops. It does not comfort them in any way. It only aggravates them. When you go home tonight, reflect on the pain that you have caused. And if you have a shred -- an ounce -- of human decency, don't come back.
"Goodnight, ladies."
Ping
Their response?
'Major Payne' was an awesome Damon Wayans movie!
I bet it DID! We love Major Pain here at our house...he's a great guy!
They'll be back blubbering about how they 'are being silenced' and whining about 'oppression'.
They're mental cases, so imagine the most excrable, angry, socially inappropriate, irrational drama queen response and thats the one you're just about guaranteed to get.
I presume you said goodnight to the females of the Codus Pinkos species gathered there also?
You're throwing them out! 'Good for you' doesn't do it justice, so "Damn! that's GREAT"
Semper Fi.
L
Thank G_D that there are true Americans who stand up for what is right and say what needs to be said.
Thank You !!!
GBA
NO2
Great job smash! May the Lord be with you.
Bravo!
Their response?Trembling, mostly.
Way to hold your cool under pressure!
Eff-ing A, Navy dude. Which is how my outfit says what you guys call Bravo Zulu. Your blog rocketh like Joshua's trumpet, by the way.
MAJ Pain does indeed look like a Marine. He reminds me of a line I used on a really large, gentle (fortunately) Marine NCO at language school. "You can always tell a Marine -- you just can't tell him much." I still breathe because he thought it was funny (I wasn't SF in those days). What the hell was his name? He had a beautiful singing voice (we had a lot of guitars, and a little talent, in that crowd).
(By the way, the Marine I was hassling was acing Chinese Mandarin, so big and ugly does not equal dumb. What the HELL was his name?).
d.o.l.
Criminal Number 18F
I want to meet this man in person and shake his hand! His heartfelt reading of the riot act to those Code Pinkos nearly brought tears to my eyes...
There ARE "Men left in Washington..."
Way to go SMASH.
Knocking the Pinkos on both coasts.
We are holding down the fort here.
Thank you for posting this. I am forwarding this audio to everyone I know.
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