![]() |
1st off...fuck off....2nd off, it's not gotten any better :/
...when you're willing to put your life on the line for 'anything' I'm then willing to listen...other than that you're a fucking whiney spectator of historical events in the world... EDIT: that being said...I'm glad that someone has noticed this issue... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Those not willing to step up but are willing to talk trash are some of the __________________________________...I'll let it be cuz there's too many superlatives for 'piece of shit' that I can come up with to fill that line. |
I've always noticed those so quick to throw judgement are the ones who would never be in the service themselves (not just meant to anyone personally in this thread but in general having served myself and being in several heated discussions on the subject)
|
Quote:
It's ok to be blunt and not sugar coat it......there are those willing to step up and sound off like they have a pair, both... men AND women...and then there the others we can confidently refer to as 'bitches'... |
Quote:
Read the fucking report where they got their stats from. 1995 - 2005 a ten year study ! I did over 20 years in the military and we studied this pretty hard and one of the reasons veterans kill themselves at a higher percentage then the population is because they lose their sense of purpose. A young guy has great responsibility after they get a few stripes and then when they get out some of them find it hard to find a meaning to life in the civilian world. Another age group that off themselves at a higher rate are senior enlisted and officers who retire. They had this huge responsibility for many years and then poof it's gone and they lose their reason for living. |
Quote:
You nailed the analogy I failed to put my finger on. |
Go back to fucking your camel.
Quote:
|
Quote:
Sorry to hear about your friend... But that is as far as it goes. |
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Lincoln, 1863: Long experience has shown that armies can not be maintained unless desertion shall be punished by the severe penalty of death. The case requires, and the law and the Constitution, sanction this punishment-- Must I shoot a simple-minded soldier boy who deserts, while I must not touch a hair of a wiley agitator who induces him to desert? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
i dont think anyone can expect the average american to have a handle on every foreign countries weapons capabilities.. yes i think if the president tells you he knows there are wmd's and here they are that theres a cer6tain amount of trust involved that we have come to expect. Quote:
Quote:
Your reverse logic is so basically flawed it's silly. You can't honestly believe that stopping a war is desertion ? that "not attacking" something is desertion..? what your trying to say is that not agreeing with a war = desertion , thus any war suggested must be valid and finished or you are deserters. :Oh crap |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
http://www.suicidewall.com/SWStats.html
According to a study by Tim A. Bullman and Han K. Yang in the Federal Practitioner 12 (3) : 9-13 (March 1995), "...no more than 20,000 Vietnam Veterans died of suicide from the time of discharge through the end of 1993". However there are others that claim that many more veterans have died of suicide since the Vietnam War. In Chuck Deans' book, Nam Vet., printed in 1990 by Multnomah Press, Portland, Oregon, 97226, the author states that "Fifty-eight thousand plus died in the Vietnam War. Over 150,000 have committed suicide since the war ended". According to this book, Chuck Dean is a Vietnam Veteran who served in the 173rd Airborne, arriving in Vietnam in 1965. At the time the book was written, Mr. Dean was the executive director of Point Man International, a Seattle based, non-profit support organization dedicated to healing the war wounds of Vietnam Veterans. While doing research for his novel, Suicide Wall, Alexander Paul contacted Point Man International and was given the name of a retired VA doctor, and conducted a phone interview with him. In that interview, the doctor related that his estimate of the number of Vietnam Veteran suicides was 200,000 men, and that the reason the official suicide statistics were so much lower was that in many cases the suicides were documented as accidents, primarily single-car drunk driving accidents and self inflicted gunshot wounds that were not accompanied by a suicide note or statement. According to the doctor, the under reporting of suicides was primarily an act of kindness to the surviving relatives. If the estimate of over 150,000 veterans of the Vietnam War having committed suicide since returning home is true, the figure would be almost three times the number killed in the war. When these deaths are added to the 50,000 plus Vietnam War casualties, the number approaches the 292,000 American casualties of World War II. |
| All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:33 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123