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Originally Posted by SmokeyTheBear
his career path was death he got death, he didnt realise it was death at the time , he though it was a great "career" move , and he was wrong..
He doesnt feel anything right now , he is dead. thats my point , and every one of the people he tricked into dying doesnt feel any different, they just feel dead.. doesnt sound like a very wise career in my opinion.. I'm sure he was proud to serve his country , right up until the second before he died. Im proud of people who serve my country , i'm not proud of people who dont stand up and say " i'm not doing that , its wrong "
The whole war is fucked because nobody has the balls to say "stop" , because the military follows a chain of command and everyone must follow the chain regardless of if its right or wrong, and thats just stupid..
The only thing im ashamed of is the useless waste of life protecting nothing..
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You have already proved that you are ignorant.
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Originally Posted by SmokeyTheBear
remember the 2 army recruiters , cruising low income neighbourhoods trying to pickup new marines ?
guess god didnt think that was very funny, he was killed in iraq yesterday
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When did Army Recruiters start recruiting for the Marines?
Now you have compounded your ignorance.
His career move was not death. He chose an honorable career in the service his country...while being fully aware that his service may result in his death. Death is something that no one escapes from. Recruiters do not trick people into anything...they present the opportunities and experieces that are available and the adult makes his or her decision.
The time to say that it is wrong is before you make a "sworn oath". Once you have made that "sworn oath" a person is required to obey that oath and follow the orders of his chain of command...which is not stupid but is the act of an honorable person. Honorable people do not violate a "sworn oath"...period. What job have you ever had that required you to make a "sworn oath".