Only point that matters i don't see how people can really be upset that we
got rid of saddam.

Well if some people miss him so much maybe you should watch history channel
more and realize what he did to those people.

Figure this is as good a time as any to send scotts next letter

Now while some people are atheists and such it still means more to me
then some nameless report once again critizing the united states.

*******************************************************************

Our country did a good thing here.

Our battles were not with the citizens of Iraq, rather they were against an
evil that had consumed their government.

I volunteered to come here because I still believe the words "In God We
Trust" printed on our currency.

I truly believe that we are indeed, "One Nation Under God".

I believe that we are also a blessed nation and that we were called upon by
God to assist in fighting an evil that was growing.

I have been humbled beyond words and I feel blessed to have been allowed to
have been a part of God's plan for this region of the world. I have also
felt God's presence - when I asked for his protection before battle and when
I called out to him during battle. And now, I feel very blessed to be coming
home, alive and in one piece to be a witness to God's work. I want to tell
you about an experience I had:

When we were in one of the smaller towns south of Al Kut, I had an
opportunity to meet a man named Hida Hessen. Hida has five children, three
boys the oldest 10 and two daughters, the oldest 14. Hida and I spent many
hours "talking" about his country. Our discussions were more drawings on MRE
cases, animated hand and arms, and very broken English.
At times our discussions were very emotional as he cried while telling me
about the suffering his family incurred under Saddam's henchmen. He talked
about the lack of food and medical care. He showed me the scars on his son
from breaking a bone that was not treated. He showed me the cloths that his
children wear, and the crude stitching that holds them together, because
there were no new cloths for purchase for the children under Saddam. I knew
they had suffered greatly as I saw firsthand how his loyalists had shielded
themselves behind women and children as they shot at us.
We also talked about positive things. He expressed his excitement for the
new democracy that was coming to his country and his concerns regarding the
economy. I could see hope building in his eyes when I explained to him that
Iraq was for the people of Iraq and that the oil belonged to the Iraqi
people. I explained that the oil and democracy together would be good for
his country.

He then told me that he had prayed that America would come and save his
country from Saddam and he thanked me again.

Then something happened that I will never forget for the rest of my life.

We started talking about God. He explained to me what he knows about Allah
and Muhammad, and he asked me about Jesus. After we talked for a little bit
he told me, in the way that I will never forget that he felt that there was
only one God over all of the heavens and earth. It was a very simple
statement that based upon our discussions that he believed that we shared
the same God.

Now you have to understand that this was not a discussion between two
highly educated theologians who could logically argue the technicalities
that separate our beliefs and how we worship. This was just two simple men
coming to an agreement that there was far more in common between us then
different because we share the same God. With that, Hida took out his prayer
rug and showed me how he prays. After that, I knelt to one knee, bowed my
head, and closed my eyes and showed Hida and his children how I pray. Then,
without words, we prayed together for the same things. We prayed for success
for his democracy, and we prayed for God's protection for our families and
the Marines that were outside his home.

I know in my heart that God was still listening to both of us.

Major Scott Hawkins, USMCR
Forward Air Controller, 2 MEB, A Co., 8th Tanks

*********************************************************************





"When I came back from Korea, I had no money, no skills. Sure, I was good
with a bayonet, but you can't put that on a resume - it puts people off!"
Frank Barone, "Everybody Loves Raymond"
----- Original Message -----
From: "Larry C. Lyons" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "CF-Community" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 28, 2003 8:58 AM
Subject: Re: Operation Iraqi Eradication


> Reminds me of the proverbial saying "Eat dung, a trillion flies cannot all
> be wrong."
>
> A majority opinion is not necessarily right.
>
> larry
>
> At 11:38 PM 5/27/2003 -0500, Kevin Schmidt wrote:
> >Date: Tue, 27 May 2003 23:38:28 -0500
> >From: "Kevin Schmidt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >Subject: Re: Operation Iraqi Eradication
> >To: CF-Community <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >
> >We'll let the poll numbers speak for themself....
> >from CBS News/NYT poll on 5/13/2003
> >
> >EVALUATIONS OF GEORGE W. BUSH
> >Overall
> >  67%
> >Handling Iraq
> >  74%
> >Handling foreign policy (not Iraq)
> >  54%
> >
> >THINK BUSH IS A STRONG LEADER
> >Now
> >  70%
> >9/2001
> >  83%
> >6/2001
> >  54%
> >
> >Developing a plan to protect the country from terrorism
> >A lot/Some
> >  86%
> >Not much/None
> >  11%
> >
> >How does it feel to be in the minority?
>
> 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
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