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Edited on Tue Sep-07-04 11:23 PM by Mortos
1000 Points of Light
“I have spoken of a thousand points of light, of all the community organizations that are spread like stars throughout the Nation, doing good. I will go to the people and the programs that are the brighter points of light, and I will ask every member of my government to become involved. The old ideas are new again because they are not old, they are timeless: duty, sacrifice, commitment, and a patriotism that finds its expression in taking part and pitching in.” -George H. W. Bush 1988
George H. W. Bush put forward an idea in 1988 based on the phrase “1000 points of light” encouraging individual contribution to society. Sixteen years later we have another Bush in the Whitehouse who has contributed another 1000 points of light to our society. These 1000 points of light are shining tonight, Tuesday September 7 2004, on the families; mothers, fathers, spouses, children, siblings and friends of those who mourn the death of a service member killed in the Iraq war.
1000 military men and women killed in combat, friendly fire, helicopter crashes, vehicle accidents, small arms fire, by suicide bombers and roadside bombs. 1000 people who will never spend another day with the ones they love, celebrate birthdays, anniversaries, graduations or holidays. 1000 people who won’t get a chance to vote in the upcoming election. They died in different places and different times. The first died on March 20, 2003:
Maj. Jay Thomas Aubin, 36, of Waterville, Maine
Capt. Ryan Anthony Beaupre, 30, of Bloomington, Ill.
Cpl. Brian Matthew Kennedy, 25, of Houston, Texas
Staff Sgt. Kendall Damon Watersbey, 29, of Baltimore, Md
The 1000th died today:
BAGHDAD - One U.S. Soldier was killed in action at 12:19 p.m. today, when a Multi-National Division - Baghdad patrol was attacked by small arms fire in the western part of the city.
The Soldier was assigned to the 89th Military Police Brigade.
The name of the deceased is being withheld pending next of kin notification
Many conservatives say 1000 troops lost is a small, almost insignificant number. I would argue that one lost in an un-needed war is too many. We lost over fifty thousand in Vietnam and hundreds of thousands in the World Wars they reply. What is a thousand?
Half of all the cities, townships, burroughs, villages and towns in the United States have populations under 1000. Half. Imagine the entire population of any one of 30,000 towns in the United States being gone, the town empty and desolate. That is 1000.
Most of the high schools in this country have total enrollment of less than 1000. Imagine losing every student, staff and faculty member in a large urban high school dead.
To put it in military terminology 1000 is;
100 Squads.
50 Platoons
10 Companies
2 Battalions
1 full Regiment
One full Regiment of service men and women lost. Those losses have to be made up and the military under the command of President Bush is making hard decisions. Decisions to pull 5600 men and women out of the Individual Ready Reserves. People who had served their time and, in many cases, had returned to civilian lives and jobs for many years. Even that may not be enough to stem the tide of losses. Some have suggested a draft may be necessary to replenish a worn and fatigued force.
We have lost, on average, two personnel per day since the fighting began March 20,2003. This occupation will last, by conservative estimates 4-10 more years.
883 troops have given their lives since George W. Bush announced an end to “combat operations” on May 1, 2003.
Our President taunted the enemy on July 2, 2003, daring them to “Bring them on”. 795 of our bravest soldiers have lost their lives since that bold challenge.
The world is safer, we were told on December 13, 2003 after Saddam Hussein was captured. It was not safer for the 588 U. S. service members killed since then.
We were told that there was an imminent threat. That we were in peril. Saddam Hussein, we were warned, was a madman who possessed the ability and intent to wreak havoc and death upon the United States. He also had the motive and will to do it. A mushroom cloud was the smoking gun that awaited us if we did not act. So we did.
We placed our faith in our government and our leaders to protect us from the WMD’s that were perched precariously in a nefarious country waiting to be given away by it’s demonic leader to shadowy enemies who wished us dead.
The President does not declare war lightly. It is the most serious and deadly decision he is faced with. It is a last resort. George W. Bush did not want to go to war, he had to. The overwhelming evidence forced his hand. So he sent soldiers like Sgt. Ryan Campbell, 25 who was killed on April 29th of this year.
Sgt. Campbell wrote his sister shortly before his death:
"We had all been led to believe that Iraq posed a serious threat to America as well as its surrounding nations. We invaded expecting to find weapons of mass destruction and a much more prepared and well-trained Republican Guard waiting for us. It is now a year later, and alas, no weapons of mass destruction or any other real threat, for that matter."
"Just do me one big favor, ok? Don't vote for Bush. No. Just don't do it. I would not be happy with you."
For Sgt. Campbell’s sister Brooke, there is a light shining down on her. There is a light from each of the 1000 dead that lives on and radiates the love and life sacrificed. Individually, I hope they cast a warm peaceful glow on those they left behind. Combined they cast a thousand harsh awful spotlights on our President and his needless war.
There are one thousand words in this piece.
Steven Vincent www.conservativefighter.blogspot.com
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