I dare you to read it all....  :>)

This puts it all into perspective

Subject: MAj Gen Brady (Medal of honor winner)

General Brady retired in' 93 as one of the most decorated officers on active 
duty----Medal of Honor, two Distinguished Service Cross (valorous award), 5 
Distinguished Flying Crosses (valorous award) and several Purple Hearts, etc, etc.  A 
Medical Service Corps. pilot whose call sign in '63-'64 was "DUSTOFF 
Six"----------eventually all Medevac missions were referred to as Dustoffs----A super 
soldier and a great American.

The following are his comments found in a recent op-ed piece he wrote.

America has no kings or queens but we do have nobility - our nobility is called 
Veterans. That nobility is responsible for the bounty that is America but tragically 
their influence has faded in recent years and the values they died for are under 
attack. But this election year they are back in demand and some have said the veteran 
vote could decide this election. It may have put Bush in the White House. With this in 
mind, John Kerry is seldom seen without his band of brothers and constantly plays the" 
hero" card as a cornerstone of his bid for president, indeed, as the definition of who 
he is. Kerry defines patriotism as "keeping faith with those who wear the uniform of 
this country. He also brags that he "defended this country as a young man". If 
Missouri is the show me state, Veterans are the show me voters - we are not much for 
words, deeds are our stock in trade. Lets look at Kerry's deeds.

Before Kerry played his "hero" card, he played the atrocity card. When Kerry came back 
from Vietnam he joined with Jane Fonda and in 1971 denounced "those who wear the 
uniform" as terrorists-like rapists and assassins who "cut off heads, taped wires ... 
to human genitals and turned up the power, cut off limbs, shot at civilians, razed 
villages, shot cattle and dogs for fun, poisoned food stocks" ... and said he 
"committed the same kinds of atrocities as thousands of others". He made these charges 
under oath. Kerry says today that he would have framed some of what he said in 1971 
differently. But he does not say he lied, which he did, nor does he apologize. How can 
one properly frame the denunciations of ones comrades in arms as modern day Genghis 
Khans?

The very day that Kerry was calling Vietnam veterans' war criminals the family of one 
of those "war criminals", Michael Blanchfield, was posthumously receiving the Medal of 
Honor for Michael who had thrown himself on a grenade to save the lives of his 
comrades. How different from Kerry was the way this man kept faith with those who wore 
the uniform with him. How different from Kerry was the manner Michael defended his 
country.

He could have attacked the war without attacking the warrior. He could have questioned 
policy without supporting the communists' claim that our soldiers were war criminals. 
He could have kept faith with those who wore the uniform with him. But he did not and 
he should be held accountable.

By every measure, the Vietnam veteran has been an exceptional citizen; but there is 
one disturbing statistic -- their suicide rate. In the first 5 years after discharge 
the rate was 1.7 times higher than non-veterans. After 5 years it was less. This may 
have been due to the treatment the Vietnam veteran received from the media - and the 
anti war movement led by Kerry -- in the early years after the war. Living with the 
scars of war is difficult, for some unbearable, but all veterans suffer. The Vietnam 
veteran suffered physically as much, perhaps more than any veteran of the past 
century, but no veteran has suffered the mental agony of that veteran.

What Kerry/Fonda and the media elite did to the Vietnam veteran and his family is 
deplorable. They opened a gash in his psyche and then rubbed salt in it. Not just the 
living but also those who died and their families who questioned if a loved one is a 
war criminal. And the POWs some who believed the Kerry/Fonda cartel extended the war, 
increased their torture and filled more body bags. Whether Kerry and Fonda have blood 
on their hands is debatable but there is no doubt they have salt on them.

Kerry's "hero" card is based on medals he received in Vietnam and is much celebrated, 
and unchallenged, by the mainstream media. I know many Medal of Honor recipients who 
have received less publicity for their medal than Kerry has for his. But medals don't 
make a hero. It is how one uses medals that make a hero. Every honest soldier knows 
that medals are a function of circumstance, even happenstance, but most of all the 
support of ones fellow warriors.

I was awarded the Medal of Honor; but my fellow soldiers who supported me in the 
actions and took the time to write it up earned it. I wear it for them, they own my 
medals. And every Medal of Honor recipient and hero I know believes as I do. Medals 
should be a sign of patriotism, a symbol of sacrifice, support and defense of a great 
nation. The highest form of patriotism is service to our youth; heroes also wear their 
medal for them to signal the importance of courage. Heroes do not use their medals for 
personal political gain. As I said they are not theirs to use.

Senator Kerry threw his medals away (or ribbons, they are symbolically the same), a 
political act very difficult for any veteran to understand. He must have been proud of 
them for he wore them even on his fatigues, in violation of all regulations. But they 
were not his. They belonged to those who he served. By that act he symbolically 
denounced his fellow veterans -- again. Does one keep faith with those who wear the 
uniform by throwing away their medals?

But perhaps most telling of his leadership qualities is his use of his Purple hearts 
to abandon his band of brothers, his command, on a technicality. Kerry may be the only 
person in history who took advantage of a Navy regulation that allowed him to leave 
his command after 4 months for 3 purple hearts none of which ever caused him to miss a 
day of duty. In my experience men fought to stay with their band of brothers, 
especially commanders. All the commanders I know would get out of a hospital bed to be 
with their men. Someone had to take his place; someone probably less experienced who 
would have to learn the ropes. That put his command more at risk than if he stayed. It 
is not hard to understand why those who stayed in combat for the full year are upset 
with Kerry.

And veterans today would be upset with Kerry's support of Flag Burning, his 
non-support of weapons systems, and his 12 votes against military pay raises. But his 
use of veterans and misuse of his medals should bring into serious question his 
loyalty, integrity and character all of which equal leadership. He is not fit for 
command.
_______

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