"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
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"RCE" wrote in message
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"basskisser" wrote in message
ups.com...
JIMinFL wrote:
"Don White" wrote in message
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JIMinFL wrote:
http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/natio...ers040908.html
What's your point?
If they helped bring that war to an early close shouldn't they be
honoured?
Honoring cowardly acts is not the American way. I'm surprised that
Canada
feels differently.
Cowardice had nothing to do with it. People went because they had the
balls to stand up to their political, religious and personal
convictions. They didn't like the reasoning for the war, realized it
was absurd that we were there, and didn't just lemming-like join
because everyone tells them that it's honorable to your country to go
kill a bunch of innocent people.
It had nothing to do with "joining". It was draft evasion. Those that
violated the law and ran to Canada or elsewhere were in the minority, for
sure, but they caused others to be called up to replace them who
otherwise may not have been called. If one was willing to take the time
to prove being a true conscientious objector, there were programs to
allow you to serve the country in other ways other than the military.
Even those of us in the military had limited options. My best friend
served in the fleet marines as a Navy corpsman, caring for the injured
and saving lives. He never carried a rifle. This was by choice because
he didn't believe in killing.
Most of us that were subject to the draft during the 60's were products
of the American culture of the 50's. That culture taught us that military
service was an honorable duty, along with patriotism and a sense of unity
of purpose. By the late 60's things had changed. The drug culture was in
full bloom, the sexual revolution was well underway and the overall
thinking was "me" rather than "us". So, I don't buy all the crap about
draft dodgers being generally categorized as being spiritually and/or
morally opposed to the Vietnam War or our government's actions. They
were, with some exceptions, more interested in themselves and their
personal interests. In a sense this selfish philosophy produced a whole
new group of lemmings.
RCE
If you (and I mean specifically YOU, not some theoretical "other") were
absolutely sure that a war was wrong, would you still serve?
At the time .... yes. It was a duty, not a choice.
RCE