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Originally posted by RRconservative
You are so right! Your chances of surviving this type of combat, are the same chances you take when you get in your car to take a ride. Throw in drunk drivers, idiots who continue to use cell phones while driving, murder rates in Metro areas, and random acts of nature, he might have been better off in Iraq!
Originally posted by niteboy82
Originally posted by RRconservative
You are so right! Your chances of surviving this type of combat, are the same chances you take when you get in your car to take a ride. Throw in drunk drivers, idiots who continue to use cell phones while driving, murder rates in Metro areas, and random acts of nature, he might have been better off in Iraq!
So is your motto "stay safe, go to Iraq!"
Weren't you asked in another thread to provide statistics to prove this? Also, if you can't see the difference between fighting in Iraq, and going to Langenstein's grocery, then I'm really worried. I'll stick with going to the grocery, and I am sure that when I come back alive, I will not think, "whoa, that was scary, I would have felt so much safer in Iraq."
Originally posted by clearwater
It doesn't say it anywhere in the article, but I'll bet you 20 to 1 that guy was drinking and/or using drugs. Maybe he had post traumatic stress as a result of his previous deployment that exacerbated a pre-disposition to addiction.
Originally posted by RRconservative
You are so right! Your chances of surviving this type of combat, are the same chances you take when you get in your car to take a ride. Throw in drunk drivers, idiots who continue to use cell phones while driving, murder rates in Metro areas, and random acts of nature, he might have been better off in Iraq!
[edit on 29-12-2006 by RRconservative]
Originally posted by SkyWay
That is why we shouldn't be in other countries, such as Iraq and Afghanistan, trying to fix their problems,
Besides, they couldn't take any chances with a soldier who had won a medal for shooting Afghan insurgents.
If the officers' priority was to get Dean out safely, the family wanted to know,
1)why were the people he trusted not allowed to talk to him?
2)Why was his cellphone service cut off when he was trying to call his grandmother's house?
3)Why were they pushing him closer to the edge by pumping noxious gas into the house
(4) and breaking the windows?
Originally posted by 2stepsfromtop
Originally posted by SkyWay
That is why we shouldn't be in other countries, such as Iraq and Afghanistan, trying to fix their problems,
We are NOT trying to fix their problems ... The United States Military is being USED to Control the OIL flow.
These countries were NO threat to the United States except for the possibility that TexASS Oil Interests could not get full control of the OIL.
Originally posted by crisko
Originally posted by resistancia
I do not understand why a Reservist would have to go to a theatre of war, are reservists not given a choice in the US ? Is the US running out of enlisted manpower ???
Reservists tend to go first - ahead of the regular forces.
No - the reservists do not have a choice - they made the decision when they joined the reserves.
Originally posted by PlausibleDeniability
Obviously he has other mental issues,
I feel that his up and coming tour in Iraq played only a small part in his suicide and that this story is blatant one sided propaganda.
Originally posted by crisko
Originally posted by resistancia
I do not understand why a Reservist would have to go to a theatre of war, are reservists not given a choice in the US ? Is the US running out of enlisted manpower ???
Reservists tend to go first - ahead of the regular forces.
No - the reservists do not have a choice - they made the decision when they joined the reserves.
Originally posted by SkyWay
That's heartbreaking. After surviving a year and a half in combat in Afghanistan he returns home to and gets killed. His own country proved to be a bigger threat to his life than foreign forces he faced in Afghanistan.