Thank you for serving, now move along

Yesterday I posted an article I read from the Voice of San Diego to Facebook. Following up an earlier expose on the rejection of a housing project in Poway for low-income veterans,  it irritates me to think how my neighbors to the north look on themselves as a privileged class.   I think posting the original article is very instructive on the social biases of affluent people who often want the Government to do something to help people but NIMBY (Not In My BackYard).  Poway is home to large businesses, Defense contractors, and expensive homes.   Sadly, many of these residents depend on the military residents who pay taxes, shop in their businesses, send their children to local schools and attend their churches.  With land that is mandated for low-income residential use — home ownership and not a transient rental population is overlooked because of mistrust, ignorance and fear.   Is this just an unwilling city to put money where its mouth is?  When houses in the county average a half-million and condos $300K, what exactly does low-income veteran housing look like?

We Do Not Owe Them a House in Poway’
Posted By Maya Srikrishnan On December 29, 2016

After the Poway City Council denied a low-income veterans housing project in November, residents opposed to the project rejected suggestions that they were “anti-veteran.”

They are right. The opposition to the Habitat for Humanity veterans project had nothing to do with veterans.

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Thanks Pepsi, I’ll still drink Dr. Pepper

9c871-perfect-harmony
Coke: Nobody opposed singing  

One of the bloggers I follow posted on the recent Pepsi ad that features Jenner and scenes that bring up all the controversial issues in the USA today.  I appreciate reason and tolerance.   Some people are ‘offended’ by everything from colors to messages.  As a retired Navy Chief,  happily heterosexual man, a disciple of Jesus, and a California-born, social conservative, I probably offend some who have never met me.   Though educated by world -travel, technical and university scholarship, and nearly six decades of examining human behavior,  I lament the end to civility, tolerance, and nationalism.

The rub is to tolerate differing opinion – without shutting down the one who differs. That’s the real underlying message of the media and school programs which seek uniformity of thought along the guidelines they establish.  Pepsi and other companies, will test the wind and see that ‘inclusion’ is the marketing tool of today.

May I use pitbull dogs as a metaphor for the messages in that ad?   Some will hate that breed regardless of evidence.  If there are a million dogs that have some Staffordshire Terrier in whole or part, perhaps ten thousand have been exposed to dog-fighting abuse. Some people will examine each animal  individually, to see what they were exposed to and whether they can be placed with children or other pets.  Some want to exploit fear and doubt of the breed for power.   Some will see dogs abused to kill and maim as misunderstood.   Some will adopt pitties and then neglect them.   And if a community legally forces everyone to adapt by banning ‘pitbull’ ownership; by fining disobedience and by teaching that anyone who believes differently is maladjusted, can we still sing of “land of the free, and home of the brave”?

And so corporations – Pepsi, NCAA, NBA, and socialist governments- especially, the California legislature —  do not try to force my thinking or my life into your determination of ‘inclusion’.   While I will render to Caesar what is Caesars, I will not spend discretionary money on you.  I will follow Thoreau and Civil Disobedience.   I will join like-minded voters and oppose policies by the process we initiated in 1789 and worked well for 230 years.

Impressionable

When Al Qaeda terrorists attacked on September 11, 2001,  I was a 42 year old reservist; I was absolutely willing to go if called up.  One of my mentors while I was on Commander, Third Fleet staff (1997-99),  had been killed when the Pentagon was attacked.   While my unit’s signals analysts were mobilized,  as an electronics maintenance supervisor, I was not.   As the war continued, members of our larger community went into harm’s way and some died in combat.

While many young Americans today have been conditioned to think we are aggressors in many places,  they have no firsthand experience with people or places outside North America.   My peers and I have firsthand experience of the difficult, dirty, dangerous and often violent world people live in.  Twenty years ago, I had conversations and developed acquaintances while traveling around the Mediterranean, Bulgaria, Russia, Turkey,  Egypt, Israel,  Central America,  South America, and Asia.  Most of these relationships may have lapsed but people I know who still travel to those places know that the same struggles continue.   Every week we are witness to violence that occurs in the name of a religion or a faction that Westerners want to blame on secular causes.  Military members have been often marginalized by critics including academics and journalists for behavior or biases that may be exacerbated by tours in those regions.  I trust military service members understand  better than noisy college protesters and  Facebook ranters who complain from the comfort of the United States.

I’m first to admit that I don’t have boots on the ground exposure to the war in Afghanistan or Iraq.   My service in the operational theater aboard a Spruance -class destroyer occurred over 20 years ago following the combat phase of the Gulf War.  I was there when we launched 15 Tomahawks to destroy Saddam’s Intel center; it was retaliation for plotting to kill former President G.H.W. Bush.   But every IED, every homicide attacker against our troops and against civilians since the 1990s has been funded and armed, directly or through proxies, by the Iranians.  Some terrorists have used US arms we stupidly provided to extremists because the “enemy of my enemy is my friend”.  Today we are rejuvenating a relationship with the one democracy there – Israel.  Those politicians will not admit that just about every Islamic group we have given arms to in the past 40 years has at one time or another been used against civilians or against us.  When the terrorists were not Sunnis killing Shia or Shia killing Sunnis, they were blowing up soldiers, sailors, contractors, police and aid workers.  Only through constant training and force was any semblance of peace being fostered there.  And today, while we consider adding to the presence in that region, the entire Western European and Arab worlds are succumbing to a misguided and poorly implemented influx of refugees.   In the 1990s, we named the breakdown into factions and groups unwilling to assimilate into the culture of the host countries “Balkanization”.  This has certainly been seen to exist in many nations where the influx of Islamists have not assimilated.

Combat veterans have a unique position to support, refute, or respond to policies of the United States that engage us in conflict; however,   I think all veterans have a moral duty to protest when policies or bureaucrats fail to support those who returned from a conflict.   For more than thirty years, my friendship with a Vietnam combat veteran and scholar, whose acerbic commentary on all things involving politicians,  military affairs & particularly anything that can be ascribed to failures of the Republican Party – has continued as I respect someone who has been at the “pointy end of the spear”.   Another veteran, a retired USMC Colonel also has acerbic commentary, but would likely be diametrically in opposition to the other combat veteran.  This continues to keep me mentally sharp to engage in debate.

I hope to add my voice and watchful eyes to call the Government to account for many shabby incidents of treatment for honorably serving veterans.    I am hopeful that a website for combat veterans,  The War Horse,  started by a combat veteran of this most recent conflict will help veterans.   I have a son serving in the Army today and know that the culture in the military often puts the military family at odds with young people who have not experienced military service.    I am also leery of the biases and motivations of journalists and academics who generally have been critical on all things American, who now promote a combat veteran’s experience toward journalism and academics.    Yet I will add this to my reading list on conflict, coping with the aftermath, and the promises kept and broken by the nation that sent them to war.

 

 

40, 7 and 2: lucky numbers

I moved my first attempt at blogging from Blogger to WordPress today.  My other blog  are observations of daily life mostly reflected in adventures and sometimes misadventures of my two dogs.   This blog,  Truths, Half-truths and Sea Stories,   I hope you will find entertaining and thought-provoking.    It is my second blog hosted on WordPress, and expresses more salty insight into daily events.

I retired in April 2010 ( 7 years ago),  after combined Active, Retired, and Inactive service of more than 32 years in the United States Navy.   I took my initial ASVAB aptitude test while the Vietnam War was all but ended ( 1975), entered bootcamp when Jimmy Carter was President (1977), and then re-enlisted into Active Duty after George H. W. Bush succeeded Ronald Reagan as President.  Since I retired as a Reservist,  I am eligible to claim a pension starting at age 60 ( 2 years from now).

 

 

What is Your "Why"?

Leave it to an evangelist to publish positive messages and motivation on his FB feed.

At lunch I was looking online at social media, and blogs of people I follow.  One topic that captured my attention was that of failure and success, in that a person succeeds in not giving up after setbacks.  The world we live in is at odds at every turn it seems.    In a world that is wracked with suffering –  there are as many if not more – moments touched by God.  Look closely – a mother gives birth to quadruplets, it is national puppies day, a child rescues another from the clutches of a would-be kidnapper, and an elderly veteran wins the lottery ( the last may be more of a curse than a windfall but remains to be seen).    When the world knocks you down, and against the odds, you determine to stand back up and fight; a fight you will win if you know “your why”.

Freedom is not free- Remembering September 11th 2001

My shipmate and mentor, CDR Dan Shanower died at the Pentagon on the morning of September 11th, 2001. I served with him on the Staff of COMMANDER THIRD FLEET in San Diego until 2000, when I left Active Duty for the Navy Reserve. At start of the work day, we used to greet each other with “Greetings, Warrior”, and some small talk before delving into the issues of the day. When I joined the Reserve in 2000 soon after leaving Active Duty, I was more interested in preserving my investment of 14 years service. Over the next several months I met Chiefs and Officers serving in the Reserve who were no less professionals in uniform than in civilian life. These Chiefs became my mentors. In the last 8 years, many of the Sailors they mentored left their jobs and families to serve in this Global War on Terror. Across the nation, while some cowered and some capitulated, others decided this nation is worth defending.

From the beginning, when our men and women in uniform went into harms way – they did so with the knowledge that preserving freedom comes with a price. Politicians, pundits, “journalists”, anarchists, the homeless as well as the best that America has produced, are all protected by the Warriors: our military, police, and emergency responders. In times of crisis, the best of people offset the worst that people are capable of. Thank you, Warriors, for your service. And in my opinion, if there is anyone who has the right to be critical of , or to be praising this nation’s policies and culture, it is the Warrior. Hail, Warrior, Rest in Peace. Your Brothers and Sisters Stand the Watch.

Read the full text of CDR Shanower’s essay published in Proceedings.
http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=95001317