Long read, but worth it.

huntFX4

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This was in LA Times yesterday. Surprising to me that they printed it as liberal as they are.



The 5 Things I Saw that Make Me Support the War

By Marco Martinez

Marco Martinez, a recipient of the Navy Cross, is author of the new book Hard Corps: From Gangster to Marine Hero (Crown Forum).
Liberals often like to say that "violence is senseless."
That's wrong.
Violence isn't senseless. Senseless violence is senseless. And I should know. Before being awarded the Navy Cross and having the privilege of becoming a Marine, I was a gang member. Sometimes it takes having used violence for both evil as well as good to know that there's a profound moral difference between the two.
People often ask me whether I still support the war. I never hesitate when answering: "Absolutely I support completing the mission," I tell them, "Now more than ever."
I was honored to have been given the opportunity to fight in Iraq on our country?s behalf. And it was that experience?and five things I saw firsthand?that illustrate the foolishness of those who would equate American military power to that used by thugs and tyrants.
1. Mass Graves
I was part of a group that was tasked with guarding Saddam?s mass graves. And let me tell you something: anyone who could look straight down into those huge holes at the skeletons and remains and see what that monster did to 300,000 of his own people would have no doubt that we did the right thing in removing him from power. Saddam?s henchmen would tie two people together, some with babies in their arms, stand them at the crater?s edge, and then shoot one of the people in the head, relying on the weight of the dead body to drag them both into the hole. This would save on rounds and also ensure that both people died, one from a gunshot, the other by being buried alive.
2. Tongue-less Man
You never know how precious freedom of speech is until you meet somehow who has had it taken from them?literally taken from them. During a patrol we came upon two hungry Iraqi men scavenging for food. When our translator began speaking with the men
I noticed that one of them had a stub for a tongue. Through the translator we learned that the tongue-less man had spoken against the regime and that Saddam?s henchmen had severed his tongue. Saddam had quite literally removed the man?s freedom of speech.
3. Adrenaline-Fueled Fedayeen Saddam
I couldn't for the life of me understand why the ninja costume-wearing terrorists we encountered in a series of hellish firefights just wouldn't go down?even after being shot. Once my fire team and I cleared a terrorist-filled house in a close quarters shootout, I saw dead bodies all around the kitchen. I looked up at the countertops. Scattered everywhere were vials of adrenaline, syringes, and khat (pronounced "cot"), a drug similar to PCP that gives users a surge of energy and strength. That's when we realized that our zombie-like attackers were zealots who came to fight and die.
4. Human Experiment Pictures
I still can't shake the pictures out of my head. We discovered them inside a strange laboratory we found inside a Special Republican Guard barracks that had been plunked down inside an amusement park. When I cracked open the photo album, my jaw dropped. There in front of me were the most horrifying images of experiments being performed on newborn and infant children. Picture after picture, page after page, the binder was filled with the most extreme deformities and experimental mutations one could imagine. One baby had an eye that was shifted toward the middle of its head. We turned the books over to our lieutenant as valuable pieces of intelligence.
5. Bomb-Making Materials In a Mosque
Well after the invasion we were tasked to conduct city patrols and build rapport with local sheiks and mosque members. On one occasion we revisited a mosque where the sheik had previously been warm and friendly. Yet this time something seemed a little off. As we made our way through the mosque compound, we were told there were certain "praying houses" we weren't allowed to enter. But when a Marine walked through a side hallway and passed by a door that had been left ajar, he spotted a huge bottle of nitroglycerin and assorted bomb-making materials.
When I think about my gang member past I shudder in shame. But if there was one lesson I learned from my past it is that there is a profound moral difference between using violence to destroy lives and using violence to save lives. Terrorists do the former; soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines do the latter.
Antimilitary liberals need to learn the difference between the two.
LA Daily News Oct. 1, 2007
 
HuntFX4

Thanks so much in sharing that news. Marco is indeed an American Hero. We need more young men like him, exgang member turned proud US soldier and hero.
There is a distinct difference in violence, one way is used for evil deeds and the other is to end evil ways just as Marco was saying.


Ransom
 
I think I will share this read with my Social Studies class.
Thank you very much.
Driftersifter
 
The silence from the 'progressive' moral equivalent crowd is deafening.

PRO
 
PRO

I'm glad I tend to agree with you because to disagree with you would be like stepping on a hornets nest, ouch!


Ransom
 
Ransom, I just come from the viewpoint of if you have a stand, be able to defend it. I don't mind disagreeing with folks, I just like having people justify why they have an opinion. Luckily, I find more conservatives able/willing to defend their stances than progressives, who seem to rely more on emotion and touchy feel good goop.

PRO
 
Pro what is there to say? who says Saddam wasn't a cull? who says the world isn't better off without him?

Now if you want to talk about if it was worth the cost, and did we or do we care about the Iraqi people then we could argue.
 

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