http://educate-yourself.org/lte/draftsupporter28mar04.shtml
March 28, 2004
----- Original Message -----
From:Chuck Kunaniec <lost_bro@yahoo.com>
To: Editor@educate-yourself.org
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 9:09 AM
Subject: the draft
I grew up in the era of the draft. I was draft age during the Vietnam War
but didnt get called because I was married and had a kid. I actually wanted
to go in the service but had kids way too soon. Anyway, I dont see any problem
with the draft, at least for males. I dont think women belong in the military
for the most part anyway, especially in combat, so on that basis I am concerned
by the bills, but I wish they had never stopped the draft. I noticed your
list of people to complain to included radical feminist congresswomen, so
I am not surprised. Women just dont understand the whole male role; warriors,
hunters, etc. and really should just butt out.
Chuck Kunaniec
Lancaster PA
----- Original Message -----
From: Editor
To: Chuck Kunaniec
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 1:57 PM
Subject: Re: the draft
Hello Chuck,
Do you remember Paul Simon's hit song with the verse, " Still crazy,
after all these years"? Maybe that's the kind of nostalgic feeling you
get when you think about that lost opportunity to do the warrior thing during
the Vietnam War. I can see from your letter that you feel you missed out on
something because you had to stay home and provide for young children.
A lot of other guys have undoubtedly felt that way as well about other wars
that America had fought in. God knows, they were eager to line up for a chance
to get 'over there' to France and do the Two Step with Kaiser's Boys before
it was 'too late'. Ernest Hemingway wrote all about it in A Farewell to
Arms and The Sun Also Rises. Ironically, I read those novels
while I was in the military and stationed in southeast Asia, of all places.
I spent a year over there and I remember seeing those black body bags lined
up daily on the tarmac, ready to be loaded onto KC-135 cargo planes for the
final trip home.
I also took my first college course on base with the Maryland Far East Extension
University. It was an English literature class and I remember well the dramatic
manner in which our teacher read a poem written by a famous writer who had
died in the trenches of World War I.
I can't recall the poet's name right now, but I do remember that the first
line of the poem began with the word, "Gas!". The teacher read that
first word in such a dramatic way that he held our attention immediately.
He extended the 's' sound of the word 'gas' with a long, sibilant hissing
sound so as to covey the eerie sound of escaping gas after the mustard gas
shell had exploded in the trench. So many American men were burned and blinded
for life by poison gas during World War I. Of course, the majority died a
horrendous death, gasping for air.
When I was a kid during the 50's , there was nothing I enjoyed more that
watching war movies late at night over CBS on 'The Late Show' (out of New
York), which was a staple of late night TV during that decade. John Wayne
was the most inspiring Marine that America could possibly hope for when he
battled the 'Japs' on Okinawa or in the Philippines or in the Pacific with
They Were Expendable. Mrs Miniver with Greer Garson and
Walter Pidgeon was moving beyond words. John Garfield held out until the very
last man mounting the machine gun in Back to Bataan and Gary Cooper
had everyone cheering for our side in Sergeant York. The Five Sullivan
Boys really got to me as did the magnificent Air Force with
Harry Carey Sr. I loved those movies and was really inspired by them. Fighting
the evil enemy seemed to make life so damn exciting. It was obviously dangerous,
but we were on the side of justice, virtue, and freedom and we just knew
we were going to win because good will always tiumph over evil and there was
no doubt that "we" were the good guys.
At the time, with all of the confidence and strength of youth, I really bought
the whole propaganda package, hook, line, and sinker. I bought it along with
millions and millions and millions of other young American men. You did too.
You just did it a little later than me.
The big difference between you and I today, however, is one of perception.
You are still mesmerized by the illusions of war which you forged
in your mind because you were conditioned to feel that way by comic
books, games, competitive sports and most of all, by movies of the type that
I mentioned above. Movies are powerful vehicles for manipulatingemotions, and every salesman who's worth his salt knows that EMOTIONS
are what sells product, not the product itself.
I too am opposed to women being included in a draft. It's an outrage to propose
such a thing, but that's par for course with the satanic traitors who control
the levers of power in this country. Greater grief, more death, more suffering,
more horror.. that's the way the Boys of Arihman like it!
I'm equally opposed to young, naive men being included in the draft. They
don't know that war is filthy, that war is exhausitng, that war is lonely,
that war is nerve and psyche shattering, that war will cause you to have nighmares
over and over, and that war will leave you broken and scarred for the rest
of your life, assuming you are lucky enough to survive it. Young men don't
know that wars are unnecessary and that wars are the product of lies, deception,
and behind -the-scenes orchestration by powerful and rich men who never suffer,
but rather gain monstrously, from their machinations to create war. Wars are
money makers and the currency employed is the blood of young, naive men who
are so condiitoned and manipulated in this country that they actually want
to be a part of the horror and wish to support mandatory legislation that
will force other men, who don't want to die for nothing, to join them in the
killing fields.
I fervently hope that someday Chuck, you will come to a different understanding
and come to realize the truth about war and those who engineer them and support
them. I hope that happens before YOUR children become the next generation
of statistics and victims of the military meat grinder.
Sincerely, Ken
----- Original Message -----
From:Chuck Kunaniec <lost_bro@yahoo.com>
To: Editor
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 5:15 PM
Subject: Re: the draft
That was all very dramatic, but I still think you are wrong. I used to unload
the body bags at the airport where i worked from 1964 to 74. Many of my friends
were in Vietnam and some died there. I think that war was wrong but others
had to be fought. I don't see anything wrong with having the conviction to
die for something. Your family, your faith, and even to protect your way of
life. You have become far too cynical. I can't believe that anyone in this
day and age doesnt realize the horror that war can be before they enlist.
They don't make "John Wayne" type movies anymore, in case you haven't
noticed. In most cases they stilll make the military look bad, but still young
men want to enlist because they believe in something. You should be glad they
do and still have that attitude because if not we wouldnt have policemen,
firemen, and soldies willing to die to protect your sorry butt. I got to do
the warrior thing in another area, by the way, and it didnt change my mind
about anything.
Boys nowadays grow up being taught by women, raised by women for the most
part, and don't even know what it means to be a man. Maybe you dont think
there is a difference. I doubt that Barbara Boxer and the other feminists
do either. You are the one who should re-evaluate your position on this.
----- Original Message -----
From::Chuck Kunaniec <lost_bro@yahoo.com>
To: Editor
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 5:17 PM
Subject: Re: the draft
Think about this too....every other country seems to have people willing
to fight and die to maintain what they believe in. When we stop being willing,
American will cease to exist too. But I have a feeling you really wouldnt
care about that.
----- Original Message -----
From: Editor
To: Chuck Kunaniec <lost_bro@yahoo.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 11:47 PM
Subject: Re: the draft
Hello Chuck,
Well, I could spend a lot of time responding to your statements, but I know
I won't get through, so I'll keep it short.
Sure, there might be many things worth dying for, but giving away your life
for Illuminati jackals is not one of them. You're clinging to the cover story
110% and wrapping yourself in the flag, but you're a victim of brainwashing
and you don't know it. For a guy who's never been in the military or under
enemy fire, you've got some nerve to preach to me about protecting my 'sorry
ass', as if you had something to do with it. Give me a break! I was THERE
pal, while you were trying out for freshmen football, so take your barroom
bravado and shove it. Big mouths like you are a dime a dozen and talk is cheap.
You've got nothing to say here.
You really are simple. You can't distinguish the difference between honoring
the courage that may be required of a fireman for instance, to save the life
of a person in peril and the STUPIDITY of joining the military and throwing
away your life for the gluttonous financial gains of the military/industrial
elites who have the government -YOUR government- in their back pocket and
create wars in order to make money.
I'm all for having a reasonable size military force, free of mind controlled
psychopathic killers, and based strictly on defensive needs and respect for
the US Constitution. But you can't have that until we flush the government
of all the Illuminati parasites and traitors who are presently in the process
of destroying this country; until you close every underground base, kick out
all of the Russian, Chinese, and German military troops that are stationed
here, close down the CIA, NSA, FBI, Fatherland Security, FEMA, and all the
other alphabet agencies that are betraying their own countrymen and restore
the checks and balances that SUPPOSE to exists between the three branches
of federal government. The Executive can no longer play imperial Emperor,
the Legislative must go back to legislating and not bowing to the Emperor,
and the Judicial must return to commenting on what is WRITTEN in the Constitution
and not trying to do the job that was intended for the Legislative branch.
Of course, I realize that you really don't believe or accept it when I say
these things. That's why I said at the top that I knew I couldn't get through
to you. You assume that I'm just spouting leftist slogans. But I'm not a leftist
and I've never been a leftist.
I USED to think I was a conservative, until I realized what's really going
on and I came to understand that the whole political arena is a farce. There
is no real left and there is no real right. There is just the Illuminati puppet
masters and clods like you who can't see the strings.
Today, for the most part, the police don't protect anyone except maybe themselves
as they've been transformed into something closer to thugs with badges serving
the financial interests of their corporate masters (oh, maybe you didn't realize
that cities, states, and the federal governments are today "corporations").
They are some exceptions, of course. I hear from a few of them.
You totally misread my comments about World War II era movies. I wasn't putting
down John Wayne movies; I loved that guy. Unlike the trashy and unbelievable
propaganda movies of today, like Blackhawk Down, which glorifies
the mind controlled assassins who now form the staple of Special Forces, the
movies I alluded to were both empathetic and sincere. That's why they had
such a powerful effect on the entire World War II population of this country.
And that's what made them far more dangerous than the modern stuff. And that's
the part that YOU don't get, and apparently, never will.
Finally, it's fairly obvious from both of your letters, that feminism is
a hot button for you. You keep on addressing me as if I were pro-feminist,
which I am not and never have been. I'm not in favor of the de-masculinzation
of young men, nor the breaking of the nuclear American family through easy,
unilateral divorce and the ensuing bitterness created by child support and
child custody battles which the courts should not be involved with in the
first place, nor the attacks against Christianity, nor using the name of God
in the Pledge of Alliance, nor the secret use of microwave mind manipulation
and mind control against American citizens, nor any of the other hot emotional
buttons that have been brought into the public arena by our scheming friends
at the Tavistock Institute and their distribution outlets.
But it should be obvious to even you that you have to work with the members
of congress who are in office at the time you wish to affect their votes both
in committee positions and on the floor. It's not my desire to have Barbara
Boxer or Diane Feinstein in office, but since they ARE the elected officials
in California, THEY are the ones you have to address your grievances to if
you hope to sway their vote. I have no doubt that they are just as much Illuminati
shills as Bill or Hillary ever were, but 'who you gonna call' , Ghost Busters?
You don't get it: I'm NOT CYNICAL. I'm aware of the subterfuge and betrayal
this is taking place in this country and YOU ARE NOT. That has nothing to
do with cynicism, but everything to do with AWARENESS.
Well, I guess I didn't keep it so short, but that's my two cents.
Over and Out, Ken
PS. By the way, you never said what the substitute 'warrior' thing was. My
guess: "Paint Ball"
All information posted on this web site is
the opinion of the author and is provided for educational purposes only.
It is not to be construed as medical advice. Only a licensed medical doctor
can legally offer medical advice in the United States. Consult the healer
of your choice for medical care and advice.