Friday, February 07, 2014

'Lone Survivor', woman viewer

Congress.. only 20% today have served in US Military. Very few in Senate. Most, 90, are of the House of Representatives. 1975, over 70% had served.
Story REC'd in email

Some additional info re: Congress.........


Washington (CNN) -- Members of Congress are quick to say they support the troops and veterans, but the number of elected officials who have served has plummeted to its lowest point since World War II.
Only 20% of the 535 members of the new Congress have served in the military, 25 from the Senate and 90 from the House of Representatives.
Juxtapose that with 1975, when over 70% of those elected had served in the armed forces.
FYI
Don

On Wed, 5 Feb 2014 11:22:40 -0500 (EST) m2ballas@aol.com writes:






A woman's view of "Lone Survivor" - the Movie
Written by Michele Hickford, Editor-in-Chief on January 19, 2014




I saw Lone Survivor today. I wept. I’m a female, I can do that sort of thing in public.
Here’s why I wept.




In the first few minutes of the film, watching the Navy SEALS train, I turned to my friends and said what a travesty it would be if the physical requirements were ever adjusted downwards to accommodate women – or anyone who could not meet them for that matter, regardless of gender or orientation.




These men, these warriors, are elite for a reason. They are capable of doing things very few can. That’s the way we want and need them to be.




I wept for the mothers, wives, sisters, fathers, brothers and friends of the beautiful, strong and healthy warriors who gave everything to defend the freedoms of this nation, and of others they would never know.




I wept for the people of Afghanistan who are not supporters of the Taliban. Those who can only dream of a different life. Who even in the best of times must eke out their existence in the harshest of conditions.




Who will never know the comfort and liberty we do. For the women who will never have the choices I have, and the freedom to chart their own course.




Perhaps it is an accident of birth. In some respects, I felt that about Marcus Luttrell himself. It was an accident of fate that he survived and others did not.




Such is life, and only God knows the plan for each of us.




But most of all, I wept in anger. I am overcome with rage at the elected politicians who have never served their country in uniform, never seen battle and yet make decisions that affect the life and death of their fellow citizens.




I am so angry that our rules of engagement, made in courtrooms by people whose personal agenda has nothing to do with victory, restrict the ability of our military to do the thing we send them into battle to do: fight.




I am disgusted that budgets for military equipment and training get shaved away and shaved away so much that lives are lost because we cannot adequately equip the men and women we send into the most terrifying situations.




I have no words to be spoken in polite company to express my frustration that this administration seems more focused on the sexual orientation of our warriors than their fighting readiness or following up on the promises made to them in their retirement.
I am however thankful this film was made, and somewhat surprised Hollywood allowed it.




Pardon my candor, but I hope every candy-ass liberal can take a few minutes away from the exertions of Kanye West and Lady Gaga, look beyond themselves and their concern for polar bears and baby harp seals, and understand what real sacrifice, real pain, real effort and real honor truly is.  

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