posted on Nov, 3 2011 @ 11:30 PM
reply to post by whaaa
Not trying to imply anything. I don't think veteran becomes exclusive to anything other than military service. My attempt was to juxtapose the reality
of Mr. Olsen's beliefs. Did the police officers at the time believe him to be more veteran or more hippy?
Should it matter more when a veteran is protesting than when someone like me is protesting?
Actually I think Yes it should. I've done nothing but lived for my own interests. Anyone who signed those documents promising to give their life if
need be do honestly deserve more respect for that decision no matter why they did it.
Of course the cops had no way actually knowing if he was a veteran, but I don't think that matters either.
I am more interested in how people who are both veterans and police officers feel about knowing that fellow police officers chose to fire into that
crowd and possibly may have destroyed the life of a fellow veteran simply because he chose to exercise his rights.
Rights that he gave more for, than most people are willing to give. Rights that they also gave more for, than most people give.
Doesn't that put them on the same footing with the soldier/cops in a foreign land who fired into crowds of people who gathered to protest so that they
could have democracy and freedom of assembly?
Didn't they just come back from being shot at and or blown up for trying to bring that same freedom to some one else?
What if one of these veteran/cops found out that the officer who fired the teargas round that may or may not have fractured Scotts skull, wasn't a
veteran but was in fact a college cop?
Would that make a difference to them?
edit on 3-11-2011 by Butterbone because: (no reason given)