I am not usually taken with overly passionate remembrances. I participate in a few only due to my membership in a veteran's organization; the VFW. While I have been known to 'wave the bloody shirt' infrequently, I am not terribly fascinated with such activities.
Yet here we are; ten years after.
Showing posts with label War. liberty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War. liberty. Show all posts
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Monday, May 30, 2011
The Dogs Of War
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From Liberty At All Costs |
h/t to Blackfive for the image.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Let Him Keep It - He's Finally Earned It
I've been hearing a rising chorus of voices urging....demanding....that Mr. Obama return his Nobel Peace Prize.
I think he should keep it. He has finally earned it.
There was no peace for the Libyans that were being oppressed by Gaddafi's dictatorial regime. When they sought to use their individual human right to protest their oppression, a right supposedly guaranteed by the UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights, that regime took what little 'peace' those Libyans had when it took their lives.
By ordering the American armed forces to enter into that conflict, Mr. Obama has moved to secure peace for the defenseless and an opportunity for a better life for any Libyan that did not enjoy Col. Gaddafi's favor. No person should ever be forced to seek succor via acts of obeisance and obedience to their government.
Yet that was the reality in Libya last week. Who knows what next week will hold.
But this week Mr. Obama has led this nation to take a stand against oppression.
As we did at Normandy.
As we did at Osan.
As we did at Hue and in the Mekong.
As we did in El Salvador
As we did in Beirut.
As we did on Grenada.
As we did in Panama.
As we did in Kuwait.
As we did in Somalia
And...yes...as we did on the streets of Baghdad and Kabul.
While our tactics have been on rare occasions unworthy, our purpose remains clear.
Freedom for all that desire that opportunity.
Let Mr. Obama keep his Nobel. And perhaps the Nobel committee could work on awarding one to Mr. Bush for his efforts to extend true peace to those who had none.
I think he should keep it. He has finally earned it.
There was no peace for the Libyans that were being oppressed by Gaddafi's dictatorial regime. When they sought to use their individual human right to protest their oppression, a right supposedly guaranteed by the UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights, that regime took what little 'peace' those Libyans had when it took their lives.
By ordering the American armed forces to enter into that conflict, Mr. Obama has moved to secure peace for the defenseless and an opportunity for a better life for any Libyan that did not enjoy Col. Gaddafi's favor. No person should ever be forced to seek succor via acts of obeisance and obedience to their government.
Yet that was the reality in Libya last week. Who knows what next week will hold.
But this week Mr. Obama has led this nation to take a stand against oppression.
As we did at Normandy.
As we did at Osan.
As we did at Hue and in the Mekong.
As we did in El Salvador
As we did in Beirut.
As we did on Grenada.
As we did in Panama.
As we did in Kuwait.
As we did in Somalia
And...yes...as we did on the streets of Baghdad and Kabul.
While our tactics have been on rare occasions unworthy, our purpose remains clear.
Freedom for all that desire that opportunity.
Let Mr. Obama keep his Nobel. And perhaps the Nobel committee could work on awarding one to Mr. Bush for his efforts to extend true peace to those who had none.
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