Do you think having a large military is something to be proud of?
Yosyp
2012/06/12 17:13:17
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10 votes
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3 votes
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4 votes
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4 votes
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Top Opinion
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Hank 2012/06/12 17:17:16None of the above+4Having a large military is not a matter of pride as much as it is a very real necessity ! With that said, I am proud, beyond expression, of those who serve our country. Better to have a strong, well trained military and not need it thant to need a strong military force and NOT have it !!






















From 1776 to Today our Military has kept us free, and secure. A strong military is something to be proud if.
I served 18 months in the (French) Navy, compulsory draft. It was either serving in the military, and being treated basically like a slave, or going to jail. So, "nothing to be proud of".
but i think quantity and quality together is something good
BTW, did he serve in the military?
he was in FAVOR of the Vietnam War but against Fighting himself and he never Served in Combat oh its okay when others fight and die in combat but im Rich i dont need to get down and dirty
Actually it Does say this in the Book of Mormon
What Romney Cares about and Worships
Probably believes that "Black servants" are the ones who should be killed. Not their "masters".
In 1965, Vietnam protests came to Stanford U. when it was announced that 850 students would have to take a Selective Service test. Students occupied the office of the university president.
Mitt was incensed; he attached a large sign to a pole, "SPEAK OUT, DON'T SIT IN." The picture ran the next day in the newspaper with a caption, "Governor's son pickets the pickets. Mitt Romney was one of the pickets who supported the Stanford administration today in opposition to sit-in demonstrators." Mitt was at the forefront of a group of about 350 anti-protestors, who shouted at the antiwar group. "Down with mob rule!" and "Reason, not coercion!" When a university official announced that students participating in the sit-in would be disciplined, Mitt shouted, "Come out of the office and let school continue!"
Mitt had earned a reputation as an organizer and was becoming a political figure in his own right; the image of him holding the sign at the anti-protest protest would linger in classmates' memories.
By serving as a missionary, Romney ensured that he would not be drafted from 1966 until 1969. Romney's draft record from the time describes him as a "minister of religion or divinity student." As the war escalated, the Mormon exemption drew increasing fire.
Romney has denied that he sought to avoid the draft, saying later, "I was supportive of my country. I longed in many respects to actually be in Vietnam and be representing our country there, and in some ways it was frustrating not to feel like I was there as part of the troops that were fighting in Vietnam." But on another occasion he seemed to contradict himself, saying, "I was not planning on signing up for the military. It was not my desire to go off and serve in Vietnam, but nor did I take any actions to remove myself from the pool of young men who were eligible for the draft."
When Romney's deferment ended, his name was put into the lottery; he drew the number 300. He would never serve, voluntarily or otherwise, in the military.
I should tell my story. I'm also unemployed." —Mitt Romney, speaking in 2011 to unemployed people in Florida. Romney's net worth is over $200 million.
PETA is not happy that my dog likes fresh air." —Mitt Romney in 2007, responding to criticism from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals following revelations that he had once put the family dog in a carrier and strapped it to the roof of his car during a 12-hour road trip