TA, you and I could not be farther apart on most any issue we've posted about so far . . .
But you're dead on the money here.
No matter what you think of how we got there or if we belong there, the American Serviceman on the ground deserves nothing but our respect, gratitude, admiration, and support, until proven that they as an individual specifically do not deserve it.
War demands that doctors, lawyers, teachers, sanitation workers, food workers, etc.... shed the mein of civilization and become warriors. I can't imagine the mindset you have to be trained to and live in 24x7 to be able to pull the trigger and kill someone, but you can't be a soldier without it. It'd be nice if we lived in a world where soldiers weren't needed, but I'm not that naive. My father was a soldier, my wife's grandfather was a soldier, my father-in-law was a soldier, my best friend was a soldier. They are all honorable, decent, loving peope... but they all had to learn to be able to pull that trigger should the time come.
Was the time there for this soldier to pull that trigger? I don't know, I wasn't there. I saw the footage, and I still don't know. It doesn't look good, but I don't know. I'm not over there, The only ones who can truly know are the ones who were there.
If it wasn't a justified shooting, then let the process work it out. If you don't like the results of the process once the facts are out, then voice your opinion about that. But unless you've been standing in that soldier's shoes, anyone rushing to judgement should be asking themselves who they are to judge.
--- saint
why? are they above the law?
No... because they are the guys on the scene, with their lives on the line.
-I- am not so arrogant to think that I, several thousand miles away, have a better assessment of a situation than the guy that was there.
Especially in a combat situation. Have you been in combat?
So, until its actually shown that the guy did something wrong, I'll reserve judgement.