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Where we find such men
2008-09-28
by Joseph Kinney

Thirty-nine years ago I was shot in an ambush while a Marine on a night patrol in Vietnam. I had potentially fatal wounds to my chest and a serious wound to my right leg. To put matters bluntly, I had never been more terrified in my life. Would I die? And if I died, would I go to heaven?

I also thought about the buddies I was leaving behind. Somehow, I wanted to believe that they would be better off without me to slow them down.

The next morning I woke up at a hospital in Da Nang. The doctors told me that my days as a fighting Marine were over. Somehow, I felt that I had more to give but wouldn't get the chance.

My history is relevant only because there are huge differences between then and now when it comes to our Wounded Warriors. For the past couple of years I have had the privilege of knowing Col. Jack Cox (USA, ret.) who is a stalwart in the Wounded Warrior Program at Fort Bragg. He has been a great friend and mentor, and has taken the time to introduce me to some of this generation's wounded.

There are at least two important differences between my generation and the young men I have seen at Fort Bragg's Womack Hospital which is near where I live.

For openers, the Army acts as if the wounded person is going to remain forever a soldier. That is their basic operating assumption moving forward.

Second, the attitude of these kids is amazing. These brave warriors, no matter how badly wounded they are, believe that they will soon be backwith their units fighting in Iraq or Afghanistan.

Today, there are 17 Marines who are amputees fighting in Iraq. I am certain that there are as many soldiers doing the same for the Army. Recently, I received a widely distributed email from Col (Dr.) Brett Wyrick. He was a trauma surgeon at Balad Air Base in Iraq.

He wrote: "If I ever hear (anyone) griping and complaining, I jump into them pretty quickly, now. Most people over here have nothing to gripe about compared to Marines. Marines are different. They have a different outlook on life.

"One Marine Private was here for several days because he was a lower priority evacuation patient. He insisted on coming to attention and displaying proper military courtesy every morning when I came through on rounds. He was in a great deal of pain, and it was a stressful to watch him work his way off the bed and onto his crutches. I told him he was excused and did not have to come to attention while he was a patient, and he informed me he was a good Marine and would address '. . . Air Force colonels standing on my feet, sir.' I had to turn away so he would not see the tear in my eye. He did not have 'feet' because we amputated his right leg below the knee on the first night he came in.

"I asked a Marine Lance Corporal if there was anything I could get him as I was making rounds one morning. He was an above the knee amputation after an IED blast, and he surprised me when he asked for a trigonometry book.

'You enjoy math do you?' He replied, 'Not particularly, sir. I was never good at it, but I need to get good at it, now.' 'Are you planning on going back to school?' I asked. 'No sir, I am planning on shooting artillery. I will slow an infantry platoon down with just one good leg, but I am going to get good at math and learn how to shoot artillery.' I hope he does.

"I had the sad duty of standing over a young Marine sergeant when he recovered from anesthesia. Despite our best efforts there was just no way to save his left arm, and it had to come off just below the elbow. 'Can I have my arm back, sir?' he asked. 'No, we had to cut it off, we cannot re-attach it,' I said. 'But can I have my arm?' he asked again. 'You see, we had to cut it off.' He interrupted, 'I know you had to cut it off, but I want it back. It must be in a bag or something, sir.' 'Why do you want it?'

I asked. 'I am going to have it stuffed and use it as a club when I get back to my unit.' I must have looked shocked because he tried to comfort me, 'Don't you worry now, colonel. You did a fine job, and I hardly hurt at all; besides I write with my other hand anyway.'

Now, please tell me that these young guys aren't the Greatest Generation that has ever lived.
Posted by:Besoeker

#8  We should assemble an entire unit of disabled soldiers and set them loose in Berkley, kicking hippies.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-09-28 21:05  

#7  my eldest son volunteered for the Army, two years ago, based on 9/11/01, which occurred when he was 13. Don't write our coming generations off. They are volunteering in a hot war to fight America's enemies, knowing full-well what that means.
Posted by: Frank G   2008-09-28 20:26  

#6  Where do they come from? They come from Montana, Idaho, Illinois, Missouri, Kentucky, and the other forty five states and the U.S. territories. Many of them in their youth watched the Twin Towers fall, some at the beginning of their life journey. They chose to defend our country, not for glory but out of a sense of obligation to defend our freedoms, our nation, and our way of life. One day they build roads and visit schools in far away lands. The next they experience the unimaginable horror of close combat with a inhumane enemy. They make sacrifices that our "betters" in Hollywood, on Wall Street, or Martha's Vineyard could not even comprehend. They are the best of us, our sons an daughters who make us better by knowing they are on the gun line manning the walls to keep the barbarians at bay. To quote Winston Churchhill, after reading the U.S. entry into World War II, "I have read of the American Civil War, and I sleep the sleep of the saved." God bless them and their families, may He hold them close to his heart and grant them safe passage. Thank you to all of the veterans and their families here on Rantburg.
Posted by: djh_usmc   2008-09-28 20:21  

#5  While it is laudable that our soldiers are willing to return to battle after losing a limb, even back in the days of the US Civil War, it was noted that such men almost invariably have permanent personality changes, and need to spend a long time to find their new niche where they can perform to their own satisfaction.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2008-09-28 19:37  

#4  "We had been told, on leaving our native soil, that we were going to defend the sacred rights conferred on us by so many of our citizens settled overseas, so many years of our presence, so many benefits brought by us to populations in need of our assistance and our civilization.

"We were able to verify that all this was true, and, because it was true, we did not hesitate to shed our quota of blood, to sacrifice our youth and our hopes. We regretted nothing, but whereas we over here are inspired by this frame of mind, I am told that in Rome factions and conspiracies are rife, that treachery flourishes, and that many people in their uncertainty and confusion lend a ready ear to the dire temptations of relinquishment and vilify our action.

"I cannot believe that all this is true and yet recent wars have shown how pernicious such a state of mind could be and to where it could lead.

"Make haste to reassure me, I beg you, and tell me that our fellow-citizens understand us, support us, and protect us as we ourselves are protecting the glory of the Empire.

"If it should be otherwise, if we should have to leave our bleached bones on these desert sands in vain, then beware of the anger of the Legions!"

Marcus Flavius,
Centurion, 2nd Cohort of the
Augusta Legion, to his cousin
Tertullus in Rome


Jean Larteguy quoted this in his novel, The Centurions, about the Algerian War. We now have a real problem in both Washington and Wall Street. If the Left gets elected in November they'll make it worse. Then this quote comes into play. Men such as this won't take the squandering of their sacrifices lying down, and squandering those sacrifices is exactly what the Left intends to do.

To quote Thomas Jefferson, "I fear for my country when I remember that God is just."
Posted by: Jolutch Mussolini7800   2008-09-28 18:16  

#3  God bless them and watch over them, and bring them all back to those who love them when they've finished the task they set themselves. I am proud to be part of the nation such men and women think worth fighting for.
Posted by: trailing wife   2008-09-28 16:06  

#2  That story does indeed make one well up. Such stories inspire me and make me wonder why I bitch about anything. The story frames what's really important--men such as are in this story and what they stand for--they are the very finest we have.
Posted by: JohnQC   2008-09-28 13:14  

#1  'I am going to have it stuffed and use it as a club when I get back to my unit.'

"... was a centurion with a terrible reputation, Lucilius Fabilus. Nicknamed Cedo Alteram ("Fetch me another") for his habit of breaking his cane on the backs of legionaries he would beat for various infractions..."

I think we see a pattern here.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-09-28 11:56  

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