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Home Front: Culture Wars
Upset vet gives back his medals (In Empty Gesture™)
2006-05-08
EFL - pathetic spotlight on a loser and his medals protest
And now what? He had protested. He had become president of the San Diego chapter of Veterans For Peace. He had helped put up thousands of white crosses around San Diego County to mark the dead in a solemn display called “Arlington West.” And still . . . .

The war goes on. Three years, two months. With more than 2,300 U.S. soldiers and Marines dead. What more could David Patterson, an electronics technician from Ramona, do about it?
get publicity and "fame" in the UT rag for basically doing a PR stunt?
There was this: He could give up his military medals. Send them directly to President Bush, care of the White House. Patterson, 53, got the idea from a friend, who e-mailed him about a Navy veteran in Orlando, Fla., who had done just that.

The action struck Patterson. What a powerful, personal statement. Here, take these back. I don't want them anymore.

So in March, the mild-mannered Air Force veteran with graying hair sat down and wrote to the President of the United States of America: “I am saddened to give up my hard earned medals. But the hate, torture and death you have instrumented in this world tarnish the symbolism they carry.”

Patterson doesn't know if his gesture will do any good.
Nope...
He hasn't heard back from the White House. And his action has received little media attention. Til now
Still, he feels good about taking his anti-war crusade a step further. Patterson had to order the medals because he didn't have them at hand. The military doesn't award most medals when troops are discharged – just ribbons, he said. It cost him $38 to get the actual ones. He didn't do anything John Wayne-like to earn the honors, he readily admits. Didn't take out an enemy machine-gun nest or rescue a wounded buddy.

He jokes that he got the Good Conduct Medal simply because he stayed out of jail for the four years in the early 1970s when he served as a weapons systems technician. He also got the National Defense Service Medal and the Philippine Republic Presidential Unit Citation. But the medals do mean something to him. He served. And proudly so, he adds.

But then came this war. “A bunch of people are dying for no reason,” Patterson said.
Meaning he has no clue and shuts his eyes, ears to the facts
Returning medals is no easy thing to do emotionally. People earn them for defending their country – an honor that has few equals. But Joe DuRocher, for one, figured it had to be done. DuRocher is the Orlando law professor who sent back his aviator wings and shoulder boards and inspired Patterson to do the same. “They don't hand Navy wings out of Cracker Jack boxes,” DuRocher said in a recent telephone interview.

Like Patterson, DuRocher is quick to say he did nothing particularly heroic in his military career. As a Navy helicopter pilot he took part in the blockade of Cuba. And he was part of the recovery team that retrieved John Glenn, the first American to orbit the globe, from the ocean.
.....possibly one of the biggest pieces of crap story to be published in the SD UT. I let the Editors know the same. If you'd like to do the same: Letters@Uniontrib.com, include your name and complete address, tel phone number
Posted by:Frank G

#18  my letter to the editor:

what? Was it a day of good news from Iraq? How hard did you have to dig and humiliate yourselves to find an anti-Bush, anti-war story? A guy whose claim is that he served, but had to order his medals so he could send them back? Good conduct medal? Jeepers! You oughta be ashamed to have that spread over a page in your newspaper, and Mr. Patterson should (but won't) be ashamed at his desperate plea for 15 minutes of fame or relevancy. If you had an ombudsman with any ethics this would have someone fired for lack of balance and perspective
Frank G****
Posted by: Frank G   2006-05-08 21:47  

#17  ...Actually, I'm rather proud of my NDM - it's the one award my father and I share. Having said that, this clod seems to be relying on the MSM's total lack of knowledge of things military to pull this off. Ignore him.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2006-05-08 21:34  

#16  Yep, I got a "Geedunk" Medal when I enlisted in '66, since they gave them to anyone and everyone they were considered worthless.
They wern't earned, just handed out.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2006-05-08 19:12  

#15  The guy is a poseur.
Posted by: RWV   2006-05-08 19:10  

#14  Pointless gestures are the hallmark of fools.

Q: Why does he think he's special?
A: He chooses to live in an echo chamber.

Waste of skin and waste of space.
Posted by: Thrailing Ebbort7863   2006-05-08 19:06  

#13  I think the Air Farce gives the Good Conduct Medal to officers, too

No.
Posted by: lotp   2006-05-08 19:00  

#12  Thanks for earning them and appreciating the sentiment they represent from the people, not the politicians.
Posted by: John OHara   2006-05-08 18:37  

#11  Those are cheapo medals. And if he had a real service record, he'd have had the real medals.

I have mine, a few of which I cannot discuss the citations (but at least I get to display them), and medals I think I'll be able to display in another 11 years. Yep, MI.

I don't care how bad the President gets whoever is in there - I am proud of my citations & medals and I earned every f'ing one of them. Maybe thats why he sent his in - he didn't pay much of a price for them at all. I paid for mine. Hard.

What is it with these REMFS slamming our warriors today?

Somone needs to go down and toal some sense into his idiot ignorant baby-boomer ass.
Posted by: OldSpook   2006-05-08 18:07  

#10  The guy's full of crap. He probably lost his issue medals. The Air Force ALWAYS gave me the award I was given - Commendation Medal, Achievement Medal, Good Conduct Medal, National Defense, Vietnam Service Medal, etc. The only awards I received that I only got a ribbon for (which I did have to buy for myself, but they usually cost under 30c) were AWARDS - Outstanding Unit, Honor Graduate, Foreign Service, etc.

Wonder if he pulled a Kerry - bought a second set to throw over the fence, while keeping the originals. Wouldn't surprise me - as someone said, loons of a feather.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2006-05-08 17:04  

#9  That day he was positively giddy

Beware of "giddy" MI officers.
Posted by: Besoeker   2006-05-08 15:59  

#8  This reminds me of a still active duty MI LTC I met once. For some reason or other, his entire 201 file had been classified, and was only very slowly being declassified.

That day he was positively giddy, because after a long time of wearing almost nothing on his uniform, he had finally been authorized to wear his Airborne wings, that very afternoon.

The best comment came from a Major in his office, who just said, "His poor wife..."
Posted by: Anonymoose   2006-05-08 15:57  

#7  sorry, or SHUT THE FUCK UP
Posted by: Greamp Elmavinter1163   2006-05-08 14:36  

#6  i AGREE 49 pan, let's see the money order or check for the full asmount in about a week
Posted by: Greamp Elmavinter1163   2006-05-08 14:36  

#5  The Good Conduct medal reminds me of a guy I knew in Ft. Hood who spent his entire month's pay on heroin ( so he said ) and then next ten days shooting up, then spent the following 20 days trying to "keep up with the joneses."

He got a Good Conduct medal, or so I was told.
Posted by: badanov   2006-05-08 14:33  

#4  Loons of a feather......
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2006-05-08 14:27  

#3  Sounds like ol David spent his career at Clark Air Base drinkin too much Rum and sleepin with the smiley girls in Angeles. When he tears up his VA loan and pays back his GI bill money then I might take note. But a $38 dollar letter to Bush is just dumb!
Posted by: 49 Pan   2006-05-08 14:26  

#2  The National Defense Service Medal was awarded to EVERYONE who served during a given period. It used to be called the "alive in 65" medal, or in Navy terms, the "gedunk medal". The Good Conduct Medal is awarded to any enlisted person who doesn't screw up too badly (I think the Air Farce gives the Good Conduct Medal to officers, too. In the Navy, it was just assumed that an officer would be well behaved).

What a hoser.

Commander, US Naval Reserve (Retired)
Posted by: Rambler   2006-05-08 14:24  

#1  bad graphic choice PIMF
Posted by: Frank G   2006-05-08 14:23  

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