John Kerry's War
Record
I Just Don't Care
By John D. Turner
You know, this might sound a
bit strange, coming from an admitted conservative who mostly votes
Republican, but I really don’t give a flip about John Kerry’s war
record. And I am tired of hearing about it.
It’s possible that John
Kerry really didn’t “deserve” all of the three Purple Hearts he was
awarded. So what? He has them, no one is going to take them away,
and it’s all water under the bridge anyhow. He wouldn’t be the first
person awarded a Purple Heart for relatively minor wounds suffered
under questionable circumstances, and he won’t be the last.
I have heard stories
(probably apocryphal) about individuals being awarded a Purple Heart
for picking up the clap from what was later determined to be a VC
prostitute. It’s true that some people are awarded Purple Hearts for
some really gruesome injuries that they carry around with them for
the rest of their lives. On the other hand, some received Purple
Hearts for much less. There is no specific criteria for how bad a
wound has to be to receive one, only that it occurred as a result of
combat, or contact with the enemy (in the case of the VC prostitute,
an irregular, deliberately infected, to pass the disease along to
U.S. troops).
There is even a provision in
the official criteria for awarding the Purple Heart allowing an
individual to put themselves in for the award.
I also do not have any
problem with Kerry’s award of the Silver and Bronze Star. It is not
up to us, 35 years later, to play Monday morning quarterback and
decide whether or not he should have received them. Those of us who
have been in the military have most likely seen individuals receive
decorations that probably did not deserve them. And all of us have
seen medal write-ups that have been so embellished that they bear
little resemblance to reality.
And typically, officers
receive higher level decorations than an enlisted person would
receive for the same event. It may not seem “fair”, but it is
certainly true.
So I really don’t care too
much about Kerry’s medals, insofar as how he received them. I do
care about what he did with them afterward (or what he said he did,
or what was reported that he did or said he did). And I also care
about what he did after he returned home from Vietnam and left the
Naval Reserve. But these are different issues, for a different
article.
Likewise, I really don’t
care too much about what George Bush may or may not have done
towards the end of his time in the Texas Air National Guard. My vote
for (or against) George Bush has nothing to do with whether or not
he joined the Guard to get out of going to Vietnam. As a former
draft-dodging Chief Executive once said (supported at the time by
someone who looked very much like Senator Kerry, but may have been a
different iteration of himself), that was a long time ago and is no
longer relevant. It’s time to move on.
So I am officially tired of
all the bickering about who did what during Vietnam. Who cares? In
case everyone has forgotten, we are currently fighting the Global
War on Terrorism (GWOT), not Vietnam.
Has everyone forgotten
al’Qaida? The 3000 dead and destruction of the World Trade Center?
Khobar Towers? Or how about all those kids and others who were
snuffed out in Russia? Or if that is too far in the past for you,
how about all the Iraqi’s killed just last week in terrorist
attacks?
With all that is going on
around us, is the best that John Kerry can do to boast about his
four months of service in Vietnam 35 years ago and berate Mr. Bush
for having served in the Guard? In case no one has noticed, while
Mr. Kerry aspires to be the Commander in Chief, Mr. Bush has held
that post for the past three and a half years. You may have
disagreements concerning what he has done in that position, but to
pretend that he is running for his first term of office instead of
his second is disingenuous.
How about this instead?
Mr. Bush. What do you plan
to do during your second term, and how do you plan to accomplish it?
Mr. Kerry. If elected, what
do you plan to do, and how do you plan to accomplish it?
For each of you, what is
your vision for the future of America? How do you plan to fight the
war on terror? (And Mr. Kerry, simply saying that you plan to win it
conveys no meaningful or useful information.)
Mr. Bush, you say you want
to eliminate the IRS and move to a consumption tax. How do you plan
to accomplish this? Do you have anyone in mind to head up such an
initiative? How will you build Congressional support, particularly
given that the IRS is unlikely to just sit back and allow itself to
be dismantled.
Mr. Kerry, you have assailed
Mr. Bush for spending too much, yet you have proposed a plethora of
new spending. How do you plan to pay for it? Note: eliminating the
Bush tax cuts will be insufficient. What are the specific tax
increases you plan to initiate?
Mr. Kerry, when Mr. Bush
proposed increasing the NASA budget with an eye to eventually
putting astronauts on Mars, you pooh-poohed the idea, stating that
it would cost too much and that we have too many problems we need to
fix on Earth first. What is your vision for this country as far as
space is concerned?
Mr. Bush, you are supposedly
a proponent of smaller government. Yet, under your hand, government
has grown immensely. What happened? How would you reverse this trend
during a second term of office? Will you even try? (And don’t try
and blame it all on 9-11 and the GWOT. Most of your spending has
little or nothing to do with those events.)
Mr. Kerry, how will you
prosecute the war on terror? We have seen how Mr. Bush has done it,
what would you do? Note: “I would get our allies to help” is not a
sufficient response. We tried that the last time. Do you mean that
you would refuse to act without a “mother may I” from the U.N. or
France? You do realize, I hope, that even if you get “buy in” from
the U.N. and our somewhat unwilling “allies”, that the bulk of
troops will still come from the U.S.? It has always been that way,
and will continue to be so.
Mr. Kerry, since you believe
it to be the President’s job to find jobs for Americans (I would
tend to disagree with this personally), and it is your contention
that Mr. Bush is doing a poor job of it (he does have a bit on his
plate, you know), what will you do during your administration to
improve the jobs picture for all of us? Without spending a lot of
money the government does not have (and is not empowered by the
Constitution to spend anyway), and without imposing additional
unfunded mandates on the states and private businesses?
Mr. Bush, you say that you
want to revamp Social Security by privatizing it. While I agree that
this is a good idea, and that it is probably the only way to avoid
massive tax hikes and benefit cuts in the future, exactly how do you
propose to do so while at the same time: fighting the war on terror
(and simultaneously restructuring the military from a Cold-War based
force to a force based on netrocentric warfare), eliminating the
income tax and instituting a consumption tax, and planning and
laying the groundwork for a new space initiative including a future
manned mission to Mars? Any one of these initiatives is large enough
to be a single four year effort, and all of them are sure to require
plenty of political capital to achieve. How do you plan to do all of
them simultaneously?
Mr. Kerry, quit trying to be
the pro-war anti-war candidate, and on all sides of every issue. It
confuses people.
Mr. Bush, it’s ok to admit
making a mistake. Most Americans are not infallible and very few of
us believe or expect that our elected officials are either. Dancing
around issues, however, tends to make us suspicious.
And to both of you;
sometimes there is no easy answer, or at least not one that can be
uttered in a 15 second sound bite, be complete, and make sense. It’s
ok to give more complex answers. Many of us out here are fully
capable of understanding words of more than one syllable and
paragraphs that last longer than 15 seconds. I know the media is
going to chop and edit to make the news fit their paradigm. That’s a
given. There are however other venues, and many of us are making use
of them.
As far as the 527’s are
concerned, you guys are the ones responsible. Mr. Kerry, you helped
pass the legislation. Mr. Bush, you signed that unconstitutional
piece of excrement into law because you were too squeamish to veto
it as you properly should have. Neither of you have any excuse to
complain about what is going on.
There are many questions
that can be asked; questions vital to the future of our country,
questions that are certainly of greater importance than who did what
during the Vietnam War 35 years ago.
Mr. Kerry, Mr. Bush, can we
focus and stay on topic, please?

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