Honor
Duty
Country
by Amy Branham
January 30, 2007
HONOR
DUTY
COUNTRY
These three words may
be only words to you and to me, ordinary citizens of the United
States of America. To our Servicemen and women, however, they
are a code to live by as they serve our country. They live with
honor. They do their duty and they serve their country.
These words are the
words I had inscribed on my son's headstone three years ago next
month. They are the code he lived by, the words that helped to
make him the fine young man he had become.
Honor. Duty. Country.
They are the words, the code of honor and ethics they every person
who serves this country, whether in the military or as elected
representatives, should live by.
Today I am here to
call upon the elected representatives of the United States of
America to listen to the American people. We want the war in Iraq
to end. We want our soldiers to come home. The American people
have spoken, and we have told you loud and clear that we do not
support this ill-begotten war. We do not trust our Commander in
Chief any longer.
I realize that many
of our elected officials are riding the fence on this issue. Some,
such as John Cornyn and Kay Bailey-Hutchison, are still firmly
behind the President and support him for reasons I cannot understand.
Maybe they are fearful of losing their jobs, of backing away from
a fellow Texan, of cutting rank.
It is to these people
that I speak. I tell you that it is time to muster up what courage
you can find - and believe me, you can do it when you have to
-- and take a stand against this war. You must take a stand and
say that it is wrong. You must end this hideous nightmare and
bring our troops home.
Let me tell you about
courage. In doing so, I hope you will find even half the courage
I tell you about.
All over this country
tonight there are mothers and fathers who have kissed and hugged
their beloved sons and daughters goodbye, wiped away their tears,
and sent them off to battle. One of these mothers that I am friends
with does not want to leave her home because she is afraid she
will miss a phone call from her son who has been gone so long
from his loving family. Another friend, when asked how her son
was doing in Iraq had to answer, "I don't know. I don't know
whether he is dead or alive". This past week I received an
email, forwarded from a colleague, from the wife of a helicopter
pilot who was in the same unit as the helicopter that was shot
down last weekend. She didn't know if her husband was dead or
alive and was terrified. It took days before she finally learned
that he is alive. Many others were not so lucky. This takes a
tremendous amount of courage. If the families of the soldiers
you have sent into battle can live through sending their loved
ones off into harm's way, fearful every moment for their safety,
you can find the courage to stand up against this war.
Let's talk about the
soldiers who do not know, sometimes, who the enemy is. Yet day
after day, they put on the gear and go out onto the streets of
Baghdad, Sadr City, and other parts of Iraq. They are doing the
bidding of their Country, of their Commander in Chief who knows
nothing of courage, honor, duty or integrity. These fine men and
women in our military serve our country and do their duty in spite
of everything. I know they are afraid. They are tired and battle
weary. Yet they continue to do their duty day after day under
circumstances which you can only have nightmares about. If the
soldiers can courageously put their lives on the line every single
moment of every single day for months, and in some cases, years,
then you can and must find the courage to bring them home.
We can talk about the
vets who return home from Iraq, only to be called upon to return
time after time, again putting their lives on hold, their families
and careers on the backburner. Many of them do not want to go,
yet they go because duty calls. Or because their buddies are there.
They go because they are people of honor and integrity the likes
of which most of us will never again see in our lifetimes.
Let's talk about the
courage it takes to live the rest of your life after you have
buried your only son who died so needlessly in this fool's war.
At first you do not believe that the person you spent the majority
of your adult life rearing is dead. But you have to pick out the
casket. You have to find a funeral home and a cemetery and make
funeral arrangements. You have to write an obituary and make terrible
phone calls that you know will crush the person on the other end
of the line. And then you have to figure out how in the hell to
make sense out of something that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.
The President has asked
us to give his plan a chance. I say he has run out of chances.
The President thinks we should trust him. His trust ran out a
long time ago.
The Bush Administration
told us that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. Turns out they
had none.
The Bush Administration
told us that Hussein had ties to Bin Laden and al Qaeda. Turns
out that was a bold-faced lie.
The Bush Administration
told us that we were going to Iraq to help the Iraqi people and
bring about "regime change". Saddam is now dead.
The Bush Administration
told us that we needed to bring freedom and democracy to Iraq.
They have had their elections. However, Iraq is in much worse
shape now that it was before we, the American military and private
civilian contractors, arrived.
We have accomplished
the things that the President, his administration and the Republican
controlled government said we should do. Now, it's time for all
of you to listen to We, the People of the United States of America,
to end this war and to bring our soldiers home. You can find the
courage and the strength to do this. It is your responsibility
and your duty to listen to us and do the right thing by our brave
men and women. Cut off funding for the war. Leave enough money
for the speedy withdrawal of our troops and bring our sons and
daughters home. They have done their duty for you. Now it's time
you did your duty for them.
HONOR
DUTY
COUNTRY
Three words to live by.