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Applause in the airport

Yanuck

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click on the link to watch the video first before reading the article


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mq9yAauMEkA


AgapePress) - Rick from Winona, Mississippi, called my state-wide talk radio program this week. Sometimes, you get a phone call that ought to be read in the broader market.

On the program that day we were discussing the report that some Europeans were disgusted with the Super Bowl commercial of American soldiers getting applause in an airport. The critics thought it too extreme in its patriotism and a possible incitement to further war.

At any rate, Rick (he asked us not to use his full name) called to talk about his experience coming back recently from the fields of war. His words (and they are worth your time reading, only lightly edited):

"I heard you talking about the Super Bowl commercial. I'm a Marine, a re-con Marine. I just got back from overseas, the second week of December, actually. I was injured overseas, so that's why I'm home now.

"But the whole time I was [there, in recovery] we watched the news to see what's going on. And we saw the protests, and we saw what the media was saying about what's going on, and we were worried about what we were actually going to face when we came home. We didn't know what to expect, to be honest with you. From the news media we were seeing, the whole country was basically telling us we're a bunch of jerks.

"I thank God that the troops that are there don't see the news coverage. I thank God every day, because there'd be ten times the number getting killed, just because it would so un-motivate [sic] them.

"Back to the story: there were seven other soldiers that came home with me that day. We flew into JFK, and we were talking on the way back: What's going to happen? What will we be facing? Is it going to be like the Vietnam era, are there going to be people spitting at us?

"We didn't know. We had that much trepidation about it.

"We get into JFK, we step out of the breezeway into the main terminal, and directly in front of us was an elderly gentleman carrying a bag. And he immediately stopped, set his bag down, and the first thing we all thought was, 'Oh, Lord, here we go already.' He just stopped and looked at us for a second, and then tears came to his eyes and he saluted us.

"And -- I'm breaking up now [editor's note: with tears] -- every one of us just started crying like babies. Everybody in the terminal -- I kid you not, at least two to three hundred people -- just started clapping, spontaneously. To me, it was so much worth what we were doing, to realize that people over here actually get what we were doing. We weren't over there because it's fun. We're over there doing a job.

"When I saw the Super Bowl commercial, I just started bawling like a baby again because that was something totally unexpected. We had no idea that people actually appreciated what we're doing, from what we see on the news. We thought we were going to come back and get eggs thrown at us. It was so refreshing to know that what we were seeing on the news is just a bunch of garbage that's being concocted by the media, that 99.9 percent of the country doesn't believe that way.

"I have a couple of more months of recovery. I got hit with a concussion and have some internal damage, but I'm feeling up, doing well, and hopefully I can get back over there with my boys."

It caused some tears in this talk show host's eyes to know there were tears in his. Appreciation, smiles, handclaps -- they can go a long way when a nation is at war, regardless of what the media and some Europeans might think.

Matt Friedeman ([email protected]) is a professor at Wesley Biblical Seminary. Respond to this column at his blog at "In the Fight."
 
I remember the Protests that took place during Vietnam war,I was a young teen but was DISGUSTED by how the soldiers were treated,and the protests against them.

Fast forward to today,it STILL sickens me,these protesters need thier asses kicked BIG TIME.I pray when these boys and girls return from Iraq,they're not treated the way the Vietnam Vets were :cry:
 
Having been in a couple different airports the past couple weeks I can say without a doubt 90% of travelers speak to the soldiers. You see the sign for "Thank you" done over and over again. Even with a 3 hour delay 1 solider always had someone to talk to and food brought to him.

No matter your feeling on the war, it is wonderful these young men and women are being treated so well upon coming home, or just traveling.
 
This should make you double mad! :mad: :mad: :mad:
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Weekend Edition Saturday, March 1, 2008 · Boeing lost a lucrative aircraft contract Friday with the U.S. military. The $40 billion deal was instead awarded to a consortium of businesses that includes Boeing's chief rival, European-owned Airbus. Europeans reacted with glee over the prospect of new jobs and an economic boost.

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What in the hell were they thinking!!! :evil: :evil: :evil:

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"A Boeing tanker contract would support 44,000 jobs — 9,000 in Washington state alone. In addition, Boeing's bid will lead to the hiring of hundreds of subcontractors, spreading the work nationwide.
Noting the subsidies the Airbus group received, Brunell made this point:
If the U.S. government and the Air Force award contracts to companies that receive illegal subsidies and distort the market, then they are turning their backs on the global economy as well as local businesses and punishing those who play by the rules."
----------------------------------------------------

Meanwhile, Senator Hillary Clinton, after attempting to attach the Boeing deal to more general concerns about outsourcing, said she was "deeply concerned" about the contract being awarded "to a team that includes a European firm that our government is simultaneously suing at the WTO for receiving illegal subsidies."
The most flagrantly cynical posturing came from Illinois Representative Rahm Emanuel, who is also Democratic Caucus Chair, the 4th highest-ranking member of the House Democratic Leadership. Emanuel sought to combine an appeal to anti-war sentiment and concern over worsening social conditions in the US with anti-French chauvinism. He claimed, "Having made sure that Iraq gets new schools, roads, bridges and dams that we deny America, now we are making sure that France gets the jobs that Americans used to have."
 
Well i dont go to the airport much but if i did and the troops were there:: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap:
 
How do we change anything? We vote but it seams like when our elected officials get into office they change color. The U. S. is in big trouble. I wonder how much money we send to foreign governments so they will be our friends. And why should we rebuild Iraq. If the U.S. would stop feeding the world fuel prices would fall. OIL FOR FOOD. Just some thoughts from a Viet Nam Veteran who survived to see my son pay the ultimate price while serving out military.
 
How do we change anything? We vote but it seams like when our elected officials get into office they change color. The U. S. is in big trouble. I wonder how much money we send to foreign governments so they will be our friends. And why should we rebuild Iraq. If the U.S. would stop feeding the world fuel prices would fall. OIL FOR FOOD. Just some thoughts from a Viet Nam Veteran who survived to see my son pay the ultimate price while serving our military.
 
Thank you for posting, Yanuck. Our soldiers endure so much that is hard to imagine. There were also other very moving videos listed on the same Utube page of soldiers returning home. But have Kleenex.
 

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