
2004 Soap Box Archives
Real
Issue 08/30/04
I never
served in uniform and would never take it upon myself to
criticize someone who did, John Kerry notwithstanding. Mr. Kerrys
service is being questioned by the men who served with him.
And they have a perfect right, maybe even a duty to do that.
I dont feel that I do.
But
as an American citizen I certainly have the right to question
his actions as a civilian who came back from the Vietnam war
and saw the tide turning and decided to make political hay out
of the opportunity, without ever taking into consideration the
men who were still fighting the war and most especially the
ones who were in cruel Vietnam prisons enduring torture and
deprivation unparralled in modern times.
One
such prisoner was a man named Paul Gallanti. Mr. Gallanti was
a prisoner of the North Vietnamese for five years. He lived
in, or subsisted in, a seven-foot by seven-foot room with a
concrete bed. He was tortured and mistreated and told that he
would never get back to the United States because he was a war
criminal.
Every
morning at 5 am and every evening at 9 pm he and his fellow
prisoners were forced to listen to a recording of John Kerrys
testimony before the United States Senate in which
he accused the American military at large of rape, mutilization
and torture of the Vietnamese people, thereby reinforcing the
war criminal stance of his captors.
Mr.
Gallanti credits John Kerry with being one of the driving forces
which motivated radical hippies to spit on servicemen returning
from Vietnam.
I cannot
understand how Mr. Kerry can act so proud of his military service
these days, when thirty years ago or so he condemned the U.S.
military for a bunch of wanton thugs who raped and murdered
at will without conscience or remorse.
I have
no doubt that there were some atrocities in Vietnam, most of
them committed by the Viet Cong against their own people, but
Im sure there were also some committed by Americans. It
happens in every war.
But
to take a few isolated incidents and make a statement indicting
every person who served in Vietnam is not only a horrible untruth
but a disservice to everyone who has ever worn the uniform.
The
vast majority of the men who fought in the Vietnam war were
and are decent human beings who would never dream of doing the
things John Kerry accused them of doing.
Mr.
Kerry was either personally involved in such incidents, which
constitutes a war crime, or poorly informed, and how he found
out so much while only spending only four months in country
is beyond me.
This
man wants to be Commander and Chief of a military he once betrayed.
Our
Vietnam Vets have had to put up with more than a human being
should be expected to endure.
How
about an apology Mr. Kerry?
Pray
for our troops.
What
do you think?
God
Bless America
Charlie
Daniels
