You mean like the false outrage you showed because a representative could not name the last man soldier from her district who had died ? Are you still as outraged now that we find out the story was mostly bogus? Doesn’t it outrage you that they drug this soldiers. name out to score cheap political points. How do you think his family felt to see him use the in a political gotcha game-a gotcha game played on a representative that wasn’t even theirs?
How was the story ‘bogus’? She didn’t know the name, she didn’t know an approximate count. Had she known it, or even recalled the name just prior (or any name), she would have looked concerned and legit. She did not.
Bogus would be, oh, “Swiftboat Veterens for Truth”, who lied about their service records. If you have any legitimate outrage for soldiers, why did you feel no outrage for John Kerry? Does service from only the ‘right’ sort count? If that is the case, shouldn’t we check the political views of the soldier named in this incident before deciding if he is worthy of your outrage?
Face it, the uproar about the MoveOn ad is utterly hypocritcal. Max Cleland lost nearly half his body in Vietnam, but I didn’t see any hand wringing when his Republican rival not only belittled his military service in a campaign ad, but also included pictures of Sadam and Bin Ladin to compare him to.
If you want to disagree, fine, but it seems to me that if someone is more concerned about a newspaper ad than real soldiers in a real war, their priorities are screwed up. Having that pointed out in public is going to be embarassing because, well, most people would agree with me.
Similiarly, if someone is only concerned about newspaper ads that run contrary to their own beliefs and are content with vile tactics otherwise, I think they are a shameless hypocrit. As such, I am going to take their hand wringing with a grain of salt.
Case in point, you are talking about a poor soldier’s family, but in the same breath declaring my concern and outrage to be obviously false. But, on what basis?
I’ve seen an 18 year old die in combat. Heard him wimper in pain as I held his lower intestines in my hands. Rolled what was left of him in a poncho. I’ve never lost a child, so I would not presume to claim to know what his family felt, or the holes in hearts I know his death still leaves today. But I’ve lost a friend (co-pilot in one of the last A-6’s lost) and watched his MIA status (later reclassified KIA) drive his mom to an early grave, leave a daughter whose only memories of her father are pictures and stories from strangers like me, and shred at the very fabric of his family. So if you would really like to test my sincerity on the subject, be my guest.