Monday, November 17, 2008

Taking It Personally

This is the third and final of my Marine family trilogy today. People tend to think all military families think alike, and I wanted you to see a range of opinions.


By DONNIE MARLER
Marine Dad from Missouri


Reading through a number of recent online posts, I've been struck by how personally a good number of us have taken the results of the election. You know what? That's a good thing. It shows that at least we're involved citizens who both care about our nation and vote on Election Day!

Looking back over the last eight years of President Bush, I'm struck by how much the man has aged in such a relatively short time. It's easy to sit here and critique the decisions made by anyone. It's another thing entirely to be the one making the decisions.

I've tried to think of another recent President who faced so many crises at one time in his Presidency. Mr. Bush did not ask the terrorists to strike the World Trade Center on 9-11.

He did not ask Afghanistan's Taliban government to support that attack with both money and material. I for one believe we had every right and reason to both attack and destroy that same Taliban government. I shed no tears over the fall of the Afghan regime.

I don't believe he sought to take action against Iraq simply to “finish what his father started.” I believe he thought he was acting on the intelligence reports at that time. Perhaps he wanted to find fault with Saddam simply to justify invading Iraq. I don't think that's the case. I don't believe that General Colin Powell would have gone along with intentionally lying before the U.N. Security Council if that were the case.

President Bush has been as much a victim of circumstances as anything else. Sadly, he has become the face of failure in the eyes of many across the land.

Has he truly failed? The Taliban are back hiding in their caves and fearing for their lives. Saddam Hussein is in hell, answering for his crimes against humanity. Each day, the Iraqi people take over more and more of the responsibility for defending and protecting their land against terrorists and insurgents, many of whom are foreign born.

He has been much maligned over the “Mission Accomplished” banner aboard that ship. That ship had indeed accomplished its mission. That's all the banner was meant to say. It was not meant to imply that the war was over by any stretch of the imagination.

I have read and heard reported a hundred times that there were no WMD's in Iraq. Perhaps we did not find them, but I humbly submit that the northern Kurds know he had them, because he used them against their populace. I will never forget the heartbreaking photo of a dead mother and her infant lying on the street following the poison gas attack against their village. The mother's arms were wrapped around the baby, as if to cushion him from the fall when she succumbed to the gas. I can only imagine the horror that poor woman felt at that moment. I doubt she knew what was killing her, but I have no doubt that she knew she, and her child, were dying. I shed no tears over the fate of Saddam Hussein. He deserved a far worse death than he suffered.

I believe the United States of America cannot be defeated militarily by any force on Earth. The North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong did not defeat the forces of the United States. The American people defeated the forces of the United States in Vietnam by failing to support the war on the home front. Vietnam is the most tragic example of what occurs when politicians and President's seek to run a war, rather than entrusting that responsibility to the professional soldiers who have spent a lifetime training to do just that.

Johnson fancied himself a military strategist. Johnson was a fool, and a disgrace to his office. If any President in modern times deserves to be reviled it should be LBJ, not George W. Bush.

I believe that, had John F. Kennedy lived, our involvement in Southeast Asia would have been much different, as would the outcome.

God help us all if Johnson had been POTUS during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Thank God for the courage of JFK and his resolve during those days when the world truly stood on the brink of thermonuclear war. How many times must the destiny of this land be changed by the murderous and cowardly acts of the Lee Harvey Oswalds of the world? How many lives were truly sacrificed on that terrible day in Dallas, Texas? How many promising and patriotic young men would not have died in Vietnam had Kennedy lived? We'll never know because of the actions of one misguided and delusional maniac.

I believe John McCain is an honorable man. I can't imagine the courage a man must possess to endure what he endured during his years as a POW. I can't begin to fathom the measure of honor a man possesses when he refuses to be released by his captors and be used as a propaganda tool, choosing instead to remain with his comrades in the Hanoi Hilton. America is richer for John McCain's service and sacrifice in her name.

I believe President-Elect Barack Obama will soon know the true weight of the office, and will, perhaps, better understand what his predecessor has endured for eight long years.

I trust the ladies and gentlemen of the Fourth Estate to hold him accountable for his actions during his administration. Now that the election is over, the implied “honeymoon” he enjoyed with the media is also ended. I believe that, if the media does their jobs, then we will know all we should, or could, about our new President.

I believe William Ayers should be spending life in prison without parole, not teaching young people in a university. He should enjoy the company of every member of Weather Underground during his incarceration.

Bombing Federal Buildings is not a form of protest. It's domestic terrorism, pure and simple. To my mind, William Ayers is no different from Timothy McVeigh or the fanatics who bomb abortion clinics, protesting the slaughter of innocents by slaughtering innocents.

I believe Anthony Rezko is a hood. Perhaps our new President did not know this side of the man. Many mobsters are charming. I know, I've met a few of them during my days as a union officer. I would never have suspected what they were and was shocked when the indictments came down. Perhaps I was naive? I pray to God that Obama is not naive.

I believe Bill Richardson of New Mexico would be a better choice for Secretary of State than Hillary Clinton. I also believe HRC will be SECSTATE if she wants to be.

I believe President-Elect Obama will govern from closer to the center than people think. I don't think the American people want to veer either hard left or hard right. I believe the people want the parties to work together to address some very serious issues. Cooperation is not possible from either political extreme.

I believe the United States of America is the greatest nation ever founded and preserved by mortal man.

I believe apple pie is better than peach cobbler.

I believe zebras are white with black stripes, not black with white stripes.

I believe I can make a decision and stick to it. That's why I eat neopolitan ice cream...

I believe the sun will rise tomorrow and eight years from now over the last bastion of true freedom in the world.

I believe in all the men and women serving our nation in uniform, and hope and pray the new administration treats them with the respect and consideration they deserve.

I believe we can debate the issues at hand civilly, even when we vehemently disagree.

I believe I've said enough.

Read more from Donnie on his blog, Firing from the Lip, http://kilodevildad.blogspot.com/

3 comments:

Chris Black said...

Some good points here, but also some unsupported. Ayers in jail? I need more than I see here to justify that. Amy Goodman spent an hour on the radio with him last Friday, and all would do well to find and listen to that rather than the Palineotologists. I am disappointed that he would not renounce his violent actions, but respect his honesty in standing behind them.

I hope your speculations about the motives of GWB are proved one way or the other in transparent, official proceedings.

Thanks for your insights,
Another Marine dad

Anthony Fossaceca said...

I find the oft-repeated theme of Americans "needing to learn more about Obama" to be an offensive and disgraceful line of attack. What more do we need to know? What exactly are you implying? I worked the lines at a recent McCain rally in Ohio and videotaped responses to generic questions like "what do you think about Barack Obama?" The responses were all the same and right out of conservative radio - suggesting that he's a terrorist or that he and Ayers have some secret plan to destroy America. It's such nonsense, but yet these so-called "intelligent" people buy right into this fear. I don't know if it's his skin color, his name, or just because he's a Democrat. Regardless of the reason, I'm sick of it.

On the point about Bush having it so hard, with so many challenges, you must be joking. Take a look at every President in recent decades and you see not only a wide range of unexpected challenges, but a considerable amount of grey hair in a short period of time. Hell, Obama has grown a lot more grey over the campaign. This is the toughest job in the world. Everyone knows that. To use unparalleled challenges as an excuse for his complete mismanagement and decision-making in his response to those challenges is laughable. I'm more than willing to cut a president some slack on a bad decision here and there. Hindsight is always 20/20 and God knows lots of people make the wrong choices for the right reasons. But when the POTUS, hours after the horror of 9/11, asks us to pull out the plastic and go shopping, it's little wonder that the rest of his term was such an exercise in incompetence.

Donnie Marler said...

Anthony,

I think you misinterpreted the gist of my remarks concerning knowing more about the incoming POTUS.

It was a veiled (obviously too veiled) reference to the rumor mill that ties President Elect Obama to everything from Islamic radicalism to kicking small dogs when no one is looking. It was not an attack on Mr. Obama at all.

I don't fear Mr. Obama. I don't think he's a Muslim, a Chicago mobster, or a communist/socialist/terrorist, blah, blah, blah. I don't care if he's black, white, red, yellow, or purple. I don't think he's the Anti-Christ. I think he's a very intelligent and engaging young man who has risen far and fast in the world. I hope he succeeds. God, how I hope he does.

I do believe President Bush faced far more crisis' early in his term than any other modern President. That's not a political statement, that's a fact. Agree with the man or not, that is entirely up to you, but the facts remain what they are.

Did he mismanage on several levels? I would have to say 'yes, he did.' I believe the major fault of Mr. Bush was his loyalty to cabinet appointees that proved incompetent in their posts. Rumsfeld being a key example. I felt that was a major mistake on Mr. Bush's part, the appointment of Donald Rumsfeld as SecDef. I felt, and continue to feel, that General Powell would have been far more successful in that position. Why appoint warriors to oversee diplomats, and diplomats to oversee warriors? Beats the hell out of me.

Let me tell you just a bit about myself, Anthony. I am not a liberal, I'm conservative in my views but realize the need to 'advance in another direction,' as my Marine son would say. I also try to be open-minded and consider all sides of a given debate. One of my most treasured friends is the lady who owns Reclaiming Hope, Rosemary Palmer. We don't see eye to eye on everything but we have had some wide ranging and incredibly respectful debates. She is a lady I love, admire, and respect greatly.

You see, Anthony, I don't love any particular party or worldview. I love this country and my family and friends, and I want to see it prosper once again. I don't give a damn who gets the credit for it, I just want it to happen.