Booman Tribune

Optruth Letter 2 Crawford Memorial Desecrator

by lapin
Thu Aug 18th, 2005 at 02:27:56 AM EST

This is truly a must read.  Perry Jeffries from Operation Truth wrote an e-mail to Larry Northern, the guy who attached chain and pipe to his pickup truck and ran down the memorial placed by Sheehan et al at Crawford.  This writing is the best expression of why what Northern did was not only a political act, but an act of dishonoring the soldiers represented by those crosses.

Mr. Northern:

I am a Veteran of the Iraq war, having served with the 4th Infantry Division on the initial invasion with Force Package One.

While I was in Iraq,a very good friend of mine, Christopher Cutchall,was killed in an unarmoredHMMWV outside of Baghdad. He was a cavalry scout serving with the 3d ID.Once he had declined the award of a medal because Soldiers assigned to him did not receive similar awards that he had recommended. He left two sons and awonderful wife. On Monday night, August 16, you ran down the memorial cross erected for him by Arlington West.

More...

One of my Soldiers in Iraq was Roger Turner. We gave him a hard time because he always wore all of his protective equipment, including three pairs of glasses or goggles. He did this because he wanted to make sure that he returned home to his family. He rode a bicycle to work every day to make sure that he was able to save enough money on his Army salary to send his son to college. At Camp Anaconda, where the squadron briefly stayed, a rocket landed inside a tent, sending a piece of debris or fragment into him and killed him. On Monday night, August 16, you ran down the memorial cross erected for him by Arlington West.

One of my Soldiers was Henry Bacon. He was one of the finest men I ever met. He was in perfect shape for a man over forty, working hard at night. He told me that he did that because he didn't have much money to buy nice things for his wife, who he loved so much, so he had to be in good shape for her. He was like a father to many young men in his section of maintenance mechanics. They fixed our vehicles with almost no support and fabricated parts and made repairs that kept our squadron rolling on the longest, fastest armor advance ever made under fire. He was so very proud of his son-in-law that married the beautiful daughter so well raised by Henry. His son-in-law was a helicopter pilot with the 1st Cavalry Division, who died last year. Henry stopped to rescue a vehicle belonging to another unit on what was to be his last day in Iraq. He could have kept rolling - he was headed to Kuwait after a year's tour. But he stopped. He could have sent others to do the work, but he was on the ground, leading by example, when he was killed. On Monday night, August 16, you took it upon yourself to go out in the country, where a peaceful group was exercising their constitutional rights, and harming no one, and you ran down the memorial cross erected for Henry and for his son-in-law by Arlington West.

Mr. Northern - I know little about Cindy Sheehan except that she is a grieving mother, a gentle soul, and wants to bring harm to no one. I know little about you except that you found your way to Crawford on Monday night in August with chains and a pipe attached to your truck for the sole purpose of dishonoring a memorial erected for my friends and lost Soldiers and hundreds of others that served this nation when they were called. I find it disheartening that good men like these have died so that people like you can threaten a mother who lost a child with your actions. I hope that you are ashamed of yourself.

Perry Jefferies, First Sergeant, USA (retired)

Thanks Perry.  That was beautiful.  You've relayed the human cost of this disaster to Mr Northern in way that would be difficult for anyone not to grasp.

Randi Rhodes read this on air today.  It caught me off guard.



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I read through this letter and choked up with tears in my eyes. I re-read it and cried for the lost soldiers and their friends and families.

We need to send this letter and a link to OpTruth to everyone we know.


by SallyCat on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 08:17:05 PM EST
For those in the west where it's still late afternoon I suggest that people take this with them to the nearest vigil this evening and if appropriate, read it aloud.

If press are likely to show up, take copies for them.

I used the MoveOn site to find the time and place of a vigil in my area. (There are two.)

  http://www.moveonpac.org/event/events/index.html?action_id=24
 

"The end of all intelligent analysis is to clear the way for synthesis." H.G. Wells "It's not dark yet, but it's getting there." Bob Dylan

by Captain Future (captainfuture is at sbcglobal.net) on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 08:21:48 PM EST
Fine idea.
by lapin on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 08:23:03 PM EST
[ Parent ]
laying on the ground and for the life of me I couldn't figure out what the guy who mowed them down was trying to say!

PMS Purchase More Shoes
by Militarytracy on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 08:38:03 PM EST
I want to attach to you my feelings here...When those crosses were mowed down like that, all I could personally feel was anger, hurt, betrayed and more that I shant mention here for they are not very good things to feel.

As a veteran, I felt this man was shaming all that died.  That what he did was too far beyond any comprehension of mankind.

If he were to do that in Arlington where the other crosses are streched for miles on end, he would have been put away for the rest of his natural life...this is the same thing..those crosses are the same as if in Arlington proper.

This man has had no forethought as to his actions or his morals when he did that, I am sure...but this is the bitterment of those like bush that have nothing but hate in their hearts...I really mean that...and as far as I am concerned, he better get in touch with his maker, for the veteran community will not take kindly to him in the future.,,,of this I am sure.

by BrendaStewart (stormyweather1@hotmail.com) on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 08:47:19 PM EST
Wow.  That's what an American should be, a compassionate, understanding, caring person like Sergeant Paul Jefferies.

Thanks, Sergeant, for showing what we are really like... especially after our self-image has been sorely tried by Larry Northern.

by Aaron Barlow on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 08:47:29 PM EST
Where did Larry learn his manners? Maybe the same place Bushi-poo learned his?
This is so distressing to me-since when is disrespect acceptable?
Oh wait- Newt Gingrich made it an art.
Elizabeth Drew wrote a book about it-- the total lack of respect that drove all the honorable people out of Congress.
by shycat (painebillATHotmail) on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 08:49:15 PM EST
This is the most powerful thing I have ever read.  Thank you from the bottom of my deepest heart for your service, for your courage and your amazing ethics.  

Tears won't allow me to say more. . .But We all love you. and thanks.

don't miss ~ Matters of Spirit and Expanded Views

by shirlstars (shirlstarsw@aol.com) on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 09:29:25 PM EST
drive his pickup truck through a field of crosses, maybe he should try driving a Humvee in Iraq.

Kudos to a true American hero, in the vein of Paul Hackett and all those who were willing to serve an undeserving Administration...

"Mr. Bush, you do not own this country!" -- Keith Olbermann, 1/2/07

by Cali Scribe on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 09:30:07 PM EST
OpTruth is great ... when we showed that movie about John Kerry in Vietnam -- in October 2004, at the public library -- we asked for donations and sent it all to OpTruth.

It would have been too complicated to send it to the Kerry campaign, we learned, and we felt that OpTruth is doing great work for veterans.

Hickok: "You know the sound of thunder. Can you imagine that sound if I ask you to? Ma'am, listen to the thunder."

by susanhu (susanhuatearthlinkdotnet) on Wed Aug 17th, 2005 at 10:19:08 PM EST
by mythmother (mythmother (at) gmail.com) on Thu Aug 18th, 2005 at 12:34:13 PM EST


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