Can you believe these guys? I got this from Josh:
The 2,600 members of the Minnesota National Guard recently ended a 22-month tour of duty in Iraq, the longest deployment of any ground-combat unit in the Armed Forces. Many of its members returned home, looking forward to using education benefits under the GI bill.
For example, John Hobot, a platoon leader, said, "I would assume, and I would hope, that when I get back from a deployment of 22 months, my senior leadership in Washington, the leadership that extended us in the first place, would take care of us once we got home."
It's not working that way. The Guard troops have been told that in order to be eligible for the education benefits they expect, they had to serve 730 days in Iraq. They served 729.
1 Comments:
I do not say this lighly: THIS IS AN OUTRAGE! I hope that every bullet fired in the so called war misses its mark and lands deep in the frostbitten soil of the arctic soil, where its deposition of elemental metals will do good rather than in the flesh of brave souls where its deposition can do naught but senseless slaughter. A CURSE ON BULLETS! A CURE FOR SOLDIERS! PEACE, I SAY! Lay down guns, lay down bayonets, sleep.
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