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Man of Honor [Gen Pace Leaves Stars at "The Wall"
Red State ^ | 15 Oct 2007

Posted on 10/16/2007 7:51:31 AM PDT by PurpleMan

"At the Vietnam Wall we saw something unbelievable. We noticed three small index cards at the base of the Wall.

I knelt down for a closer look and noticed that a 4-star general's rank was pinned to each card.

The cards were personally addressed and said something like:

These are Yours - not mine! With Love and Respect, Your Platoon Leader, Pete Pace 1 Oct 2007

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs had laid down his rank for his boys who died in Nam. Oct 1 was the day he stepped down as Chairman."

(Excerpt) Read more at redstate.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: pace; peterpace; usmc; vietnamwall
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To: ducks1944; Ragtime Cowgirl; Alamo-Girl; U S Army EOD; ziggy_dlo; TrueBeliever9; maestro; TEXOKIE; ..

General Pace laid down his rank for his boys who died in Nam.

God Bless You Sir!

Thank you for your service!


101 posted on 10/16/2007 1:03:21 PM PDT by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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To: Professional Engineer

Thanks PE.


102 posted on 10/16/2007 1:03:52 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul. WWPD (what would Patton do))
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To: PurpleMan

Pace Details Lessons He Learned From Young Marines

By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

MINEOLA, N.Y., Sept. 19, 2007 – The reason the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff visited Chaminade High School here was on the wall as he entered the building today: a simple plaque with the names of graduates killed in combat.

Midway down the list of 55 Chaminade graduates killed in combat was the name Guido Farinaro, Class of 1967, killed in Vietnam in 1968.

Marine Gen. Peter Pace came to this Catholic school to honor Lance Corporal Farinaro, the first Marine to die following 2nd Lt. Peter Pace’s orders. The four-star general keeps a picture of the young lance corporal under the glass on his desk in the Pentagon to remind him of the sacrifices young servicemembers make.

Rev. James C. Williams, the president of the school, invited Pace to address the 1,700 students of the all-male school.

“This is selfish on my part to want to come here to Chaminade,” Pace told the students. “I’ve been invited to several Gold Star Masses and have not been able to attend. I did not want to leave active duty without coming to the place from which the single most influential military person in my life graduated.”

During Pace’s talk, the normal restlessness of young men disappeared. You could hear a pin drop when the general told the student body that he wanted to come to the school “to have a chance to look you in the eye and tell you of just one of Chaminade’s incredible graduates.”

Pace wanted the students to know that their lives will make a difference. “I want you to know about one Chaminade graduate whose life made a difference,” Pace said.

Guido Farinaro was a 1967 graduate of the high school, Pace said. “As with all classes in Chaminade, the vast majority went on to college, but Guido joined the Marine Corps,” he said. “When asked why, he said he was born in Italy, raised in the United States and had the opportunity to attend this incredible school and felt the need to pay back the country before he did any more schooling.”

Pace met the young lance corporal in February 1968 during the Tet Offensive in Hue City, Vietnam. Pace was the third leader of the 2nd Platoon, Golf Company, 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines in as many weeks. The platoon was a skeleton, with only 14 Marines left. “Guido was one of them,” Pace said to the assembly. “He and I served together until July 1968, and I came to know Guido as a great young man.”

The lance corporal’s death also had a profound impact on the young lieutenant. “We were on patrol one day outside Da Nang, and Guido was killed by a sniper,” Pace said. “As I stayed with him, a sense of rage came through me, and as the platoon leader, I started calling an artillery strike on the village where the round had been fired.

“My platoon sergeant, who was my age – 21 or 22 -- didn’t say anything at all,” Pace said. “He just looked at me. And I knew in the look that he gave me that what I was doing was wrong.”

Pace called off the strike and led the platoon to do what he should have done in the first place – a dismounted sweep of the village. “We found nothing but women and children,” he said. “Had that artillery strike been conducted, I do not know how I could have possibly lived with myself.”

The lesson for Pace was immediate. “Regardless what you do in your life, hold on to your moral compass,” he said. “When you are emotionally least capable of defending yourself is when the biggest challenge will come. If you don’t have an idea of what you will let yourself do and what you will not let yourself do, you may find that you have done something that you would never believe yourself capable of doing.”

He said his epiphany came in combat, but it doesn’t have to. “I learned that day, to think through what was going to be happening each day thereafter, and to think through what I would allow myself to do and not do,” he said.

It could come in a meeting, a test, a temptation, whatever. “If you have thought through who you want to be at the end of each day, you will see that person,” he said. “But, if you have not, you may not like the person you end up being.”

This was one way the lance corporal’s life changed the young officer’s life. Guido Farinaro and all the other Marines who died following his orders made Pace realize what he should do with his life.

Pace never received a scratch during his 13-month tour in Vietnam. Farinaro was standing next to Pace when he was shot by the sniper. Another Marine was walking in front of Pace when another sniper shot and killed that Marine instead of Pace. “Some died, others did not. I still truly do not understand,” he said. “But because of Guido and the others I lost, I determined that I would continue to serve in the Marine Corps until I was no longer needed, and to try to serve in a way that paid respect to their lives.”

Pace said he was determined to give those Marines and servicemembers in his charge what he could not longer give to the men he had lost, and that he built his military career around that idea.

And as he faces the conclusion of his four decades of service when he retires at the end of the month, Pace said that was the last lesson he learned from the young Marines he commanded.

“I’m very calm about what comes next because of what I learned from Guido and Guido’s death, which is we don’t control when we’re going to die. We do control how we live,” he said. “In every disappointment there is a new door of opportunity. Every time in my adult life, when something happened that I wished had not happened, or I did not get what I thought I should get, in retrospect has turned out to be a blessing.

“I am not a volunteer to leave the armed forces of the United States,” he continued. “I still owe Guido and his fellow Marines, and now so many others, more than I can ever repay.”

Pace told the young men that he has no idea what he will do in the future, but that it will include another opportunity to serve. He asked the young men to serve, too.

“I ask you to embrace the path that God lays out for you: do the very best you can on that path and take care of the people near you who look to you for leadership,” he said.
Source


103 posted on 10/16/2007 1:04:45 PM PDT by Ditto (Global Warming: The 21st Century's Snake Oil)
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To: PurpleMan

Respect.


104 posted on 10/16/2007 1:07:38 PM PDT by monkeycard (There is no such thing as too much ammo.)
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To: Calpernia; Ditto

This one kind of grabbed me emotionally. All the more so when I read some of the background in Ditto’s posting at #103.


105 posted on 10/16/2007 1:12:53 PM PDT by Cap Huff
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To: Cap Huff; Ditto

Thank you for bumping 103. I would have missed it.


106 posted on 10/16/2007 1:18:32 PM PDT by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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To: Cap Huff; Ditto

Thank you for bumping 103. I would have missed it.


107 posted on 10/16/2007 1:19:07 PM PDT by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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To: Calpernia

you have a freepmail


108 posted on 10/16/2007 1:19:55 PM PDT by prairiebreeze (Fred '08 Because our troops DESERVE BETTER than Mrs. Bill Clinton.)
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To: RaceBannon
I think he did it unconspicuously, believeing that those small card, amongst so many other things that are left there, would go unnoticed and be picked up by the Park service who picks those things up a couple of times a day.

I do not believe he called ANY attention to it...I believe it was a sincere act on his behalf in memory of his fallen Vietnam War buddies and platoon members.

Nothing more or less than that. Someone happened to find the cards and publicise it. The person who found it, if I am not mistaken, does not mention seeing the General actually do it.

109 posted on 10/16/2007 1:50:46 PM PDT by Jeff Head (Freedom is not free...never has been, never will be. (www.dragonsfuryseries.com))
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To: silverleaf
He did not grandstand. It was a private visit he made there...he did not announce it to the press...and as I understand it, it was not the press who found the cards.
110 posted on 10/16/2007 1:59:25 PM PDT by Jeff Head (Freedom is not free...never has been, never will be. (www.dragonsfuryseries.com))
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To: Ditto

A great man...a leader of men and a man of principle and a clear moral compass. God bless him.


111 posted on 10/16/2007 2:02:28 PM PDT by Jeff Head (Freedom is not free...never has been, never will be. (www.dragonsfuryseries.com))
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To: LZ_Bayonet

Thank you for the link. I’ll use it as the basis for tomorrow’s grammar lesson in my high school English class.


112 posted on 10/16/2007 2:11:09 PM PDT by freedom4me ("Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom."--Ben Franklin)
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To: PurpleMan

thanks for posting this, it made my day. I had to forward it on to a few friends - to make theirs too.


113 posted on 10/16/2007 2:28:18 PM PDT by RDTF ("Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear - not absence of fear". Mark Twain)
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To: PurpleMan

BTTT


114 posted on 10/16/2007 3:33:08 PM PDT by freedom4me ("Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom."--Ben Franklin)
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To: PurpleMan

WOW is right. What a class man he is, thank you for your service and may God bless you Peter Pace. Semper Fi

I would not wish the Presidency of the United States on this American hero, he deserves better.


115 posted on 10/16/2007 3:37:52 PM PDT by Plains Drifter (If guns kill people, wouldn't there be a lot of dead people at gun shows?)
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To: onedoug

ping


116 posted on 10/16/2007 3:47:52 PM PDT by windcliff
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To: The Pack Knight; All

Why would a guy like the General, want to return to rat infested town like DC., without any weapons. [At least a .45 with lots of ammo!] A place where your friends would put a knife into your back just save their own cushy jobs!


117 posted on 10/16/2007 3:55:56 PM PDT by TMSuchman (American by birth, Rebel by choice, Marine by act of GOD!)
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To: RDTF

This is the type of man I think of when I ponder the founders of this country.


118 posted on 10/16/2007 4:01:44 PM PDT by Harrius Magnus (Pucker up Mo, and your dhimmi Leftist freaks, here comes your Jizya!)
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To: Ditto

thnks for that backstory


119 posted on 10/16/2007 4:17:36 PM PDT by RDTF ("Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear - not absence of fear". Mark Twain)
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To: Professional Engineer; PurpleMan; Peanut Gallery; alfa6; SAMWolf; snippy_about_it; Valin; ...
There has been a great deal of talk about loyalty from the bottom to the top. Loyalty from the top to the bottom is much more important, and also much less prevalent. It is this loyalty from the top to the bottom which binds juniors to their seniors with the strength of steel.

CHAPTER THIRTEEN ~ PATTON'S QUOTES ~ LOYALTY

It is unforgiveable that Bush threw Pace under the bus yet failed to shove the despicable likes of Ike Skelton, Harry Reid, Hillary Clinton, Chuck Schumer, Dick Durbin, Nancy Pelosi, John Murtha, et al, down the chute to the Yuri I. Nosenko Suite of the Vidkin Quisling Wing of the seventh subterranean level of Leavenworth.

Shall the nation now reelect the dual diablos who loathe the military.


CLICK PACE PIC

120 posted on 10/16/2007 4:27:16 PM PDT by PhilDragoo (Hitlery: das Butch von Buchenvald)
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