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I’ll sacrifice my whole family

by Open-Publishing - Tuesday 23 August 2005
3 comments

Wars and conflicts International USA

"If I have to sacrifice my whole family for the sake of our whole country and world, other countries that want freedom, I’ll do that."

These are the dramatic words of former Marine Gary Qualls, whose son, Marine Lance Cpl. Louis Wayne Qualls, died in Iraq last fall at the age of 20. Qualls is a friend of Crawford gift shop owner Bill Johnson, who established the pro-Bush/pro-war camp that is now opposing Camp Casey in Crawford, Texas.

Qualls, you’ll recall, is the man who removed the cross with his son’s name from the group crosses set up along the road that leads to Bush’s ranch. Speaking on Air America last week, Cindy Sheehan said that Qualls had been quite friendly with her, had drunk a beer with her, and told her he didn’t share her views, but wanted to make sure his son’s cross was there with the others. The next day, he took it down.

Aside from any feelings we might have about people who support the war in Iraq, there are other issues in this story that bear noting. One is Qualls’ uber-patriarchal presumption that he somehow has the power to "sacrifice" every mmember of his family. He has a 16-year-old son who wants to enlist, and Qualls is solidly behind his son’s desire. One imagines that if the adolescent were eligible, his father would pack his bags for him.

The other item of interest is that the author of this AP article about Qualls, Angela K. Brown, begins by referring to the pro-Bush camp as "patriotic." Reporters and anchorpeople have done this over and over for the last couple of years, and no one stops them.

Qualls is in agreement with Brown. He recently said of the protesters at Camp Casey: "They’re not really very patriotic. They’re trying to bring people down. They’re trying to demoralize the factors of being an American."

I have no idea how you "demoralize a factor," but I do get the part about trying to drag people down. It’s as though the alleged president of the United States were a cheerleader and Sheehan was confronting the empty content of his cheers. The reality is that Bush is a cheerleader—it appears to be the only skill in which he has ever had any training—and it is indeed a real drag to remind the flag-waving patriots that American soldiers are dying for Halliburton and PNAC. Because most of them don’t know what PNAC is. And none of them wants to believe that their children and spouses and brothers and sisters and friends were killed for greed, oil, and a misguided political agenda. Or that the war has made the world, including America, less safe.

Posted by Diane E. Dees on 08/22/05 at 08:52 AM | Comments (0) | E-mail | Print

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Forum posts

  • When I heard this guy make those statements about sacrificing his whole family, I thought, well, this is just what the Bushies want: endless wars and people willing to die in them. As a patriotic freedom-loving American, I applaud Mr. Qualls for speaking his mind while at the same time I say he is totally misguided. Wars, such as we’re waging in Iraq, seldom promote freedom. More often they only promote death. If Mr. Qualls thinks he and his family are somehow willing to fight and die for a noble cause, I encourage him and anybody who thinks like him to go and sign up, get over to Iraq and begin dying for the cause.

    Good grief! The stupidity of Americans never ceases to amaze.

    • If enough of Bush’s stupid supporters sign up and get killed, maybe the average IQ in America will rise enough for the rest of the population to see what is really happening! I recently came across an interesting quote about patriotism from Edward Abbey which I think all the "patriots" ought to think about: "A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government." That is the real patriotism.

    • I’m afraid the two Bush bitches will not sign up.