Posted on Sep 28, 2017
Picture of man kneeling during taps at Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is sparking outrage following...
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Posted 7 y ago
Responses: 11
While this cretin has a right to protest - I also have a right to view that protest as abhorrent and divisive. Would I confront this miscreant and render an on the spot correction? Let me relate a story: In the fall of 1968 my neighbor returned from Nam in a casket. He was killed by a B-40 rocket and it was to be a closed casket funeral. I accompanied my Dad and his Father to the airport to escort the body home. As we were going through the airport a Vietnam War Protester spit on the casket. I looked at my Dad and I saw the hatred and yet sadness in his eyes. I decided NOT to punch this puke's lights out and it took every once of strength that I had to just move on. So in answer to my own query - I would walk away from this puke. Like I said he may have the right to protest but NO LAW IN AMERICAN compels me to respect this maggot nor continence his disrespect for those who gave their last full measure of devotion in the defense of this nation.
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SFC Mark Bailey
I am truly saddened by your story and honored by your actions that day.
We have less and less Honor these days and more and more people out for nothing but something more for themselves.
We both gave our lifetime to the US Military, to the fellow service-members around us, and to the Nation itself, so that this misguided malcontent could protest something so sacred to all of us....
We have less and less Honor these days and more and more people out for nothing but something more for themselves.
We both gave our lifetime to the US Military, to the fellow service-members around us, and to the Nation itself, so that this misguided malcontent could protest something so sacred to all of us....
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Of course, this "protest" has nothing to do with the flag or our military...uh huh.
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