tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1813021039067929455.post4967076367280733332..comments2024-03-05T00:39:13.040-08:00Comments on <br><p align="left"> Random Musings <br><br><br><p align="right">on the world of sports</p></p>: Memorial Day 2010jaymeleehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16840425348675652320noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1813021039067929455.post-1799593415143388352010-06-03T09:56:56.534-07:002010-06-03T09:56:56.534-07:00Jayme is very liberal, but she truly knows what it...Jayme is very liberal, but she truly knows what it means to support the troops. A lot of people on the left and the right say they support the troops because it's the right thing to say. The ones who served can tell within a few seconds of talking to someone if they really do support the troops, or if they are fake. I have run into countless people that thank me for my service, and then go right into the politics of war. Or they ask the question that you NEVER ask someone that has been to war. Did you kill anyone? Usually it's the liberals that will go right into the politics of war, and it's the conservatives that will ask if I have ever killed anyone. These are the people that have a fake support for the troops. Or maybe they just don't know, and need to be educated. When someone thanks me for my service, I always thank them for their support. I thank them for their support to honor the Vietnam vets that were treated so poorly when they came back home. We don't asked to be thanked for what we did. We look at it as a job that had to be done. But when someone thanks me for my service, and truly means it, it does feel good. So for all those people that don't know how to conduct themselves while talking to someone that has served. It's simple, just say thank you, and be on your way.<br /><br />Thank you for your support Jayme.<br /><br />Nick StewartAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com