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June 15, 2006
'Brokeback Zarqawi' - Simply Awesome
Topics: IraqFar from "broken," as Jack Murtha claims, our military is kicking tail and taking names, and it has done this for 200 years.
From Youtube. Warning : X-rated for language.
Maybe not total victory, yet, but it's bound to come:
... there are several characteristics of American fighting forces -- some of them unique to us, some common to most Western nations -- that make it difficult for us to lose. Our soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines, all free individuals in a volunteer force, come from a remarkably typical cross-section of American society, and always have. Whether it was the free men of color, Indians, and Baratarian pirates who fought under Andy Jackson or the special-ops forces riding horses to rain down precision-guided munitions on the Taliban, our military has generally represented our society almost perfectly. "It ain't me, I ain't no senator's son," sang Creedence Clearwater Revival, but in fact the modern military has a higher proportion of sons and daughters of our elected officials than from the population as a whole; and zip-code studies have shown that virtually every zip code is represented pretty proportionally, including the infamous 90210. (Note to John Kerry: The Northeast has, except for the Civil War and the Revolution, been notoriously underrepresented in our wars).
Hat tip - Muslihoon
Posted by Richard at June 15, 2006 12:10 PM
Articles Related to Iraq:
- 'Brokeback Zarqawi' - Simply Awesome - Jun 15, 2006






... there are several characteristics of American fighting forces -- some of them unique to us, some common to most Western nations -- that make it difficult for us to lose. Our soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines, all free individuals in a volunteer force, come from a remarkably typical cross-section of American society, and always have. Whether it was the free men of color, Indians, and Baratarian pirates who fought under Andy Jackson or the special-ops forces riding horses to rain down precision-guided munitions on the Taliban, our military has generally represented our society almost perfectly. "It ain't me, I ain't no senator's son," sang Creedence Clearwater Revival, but in fact the modern military has a higher proportion of sons and daughters of our elected officials than from the population as a whole; and zip-code studies have shown that virtually every zip code is represented pretty proportionally, including the infamous 90210. (Note to John Kerry: The Northeast has, except for the Civil War and the Revolution, been notoriously underrepresented in our wars). 










