Interesting how there's no outcries from Bush-defenders about this disrespectful act against a memorial to fallen soldiers set-up near President Bush's Crawford, Texas ranch. I guess they're too busy trying to destroy the reputation of a mother of a fallen Iraqi War soldier who wants to meet with the President. Hypocrites.
Army Veteran Arrested In Destruction Of Soldier Memorial
By Tommy Witherspoon Tribune-Herald staff writer
Wednesday, August 17, 2005
If a 59-year-old Speegleville man had not been arrested Monday night shortly after he reportedly destroyed a roadside memorial to fallen U.S. soldiers near President Bush's ranch, McLennan County Sheriff Larry Lynch would have known where to find him later this week – in Lynch's Sunday School class.
Sheriff's office investigators said Larry Chad Northern drove his pickup truck over hundreds of small wooden crosses bearing the names of soldiers who died in the war that peace activists had placed along Prairie Chapel Road.
Northern was arrested shortly after 9:30 p.m. Monday after he was spotted changing a tire on his pickup, authorities said. Small white crosses were found stuck in the truck's undercarriage, according to sheriff's office reports.
The memorial was set up in an area known as Camp Casey and featured American flags, crucifixes, Islamic Crescents and Stars of David affixed with the names of servicemen killed in Iraq.
At the same time in Louisville, State Treasurer Jonathan Miller along with Congressman Ben Chandler, Indiana Senator Evan Bayh and Republican State Rep. Scott Brinkman, held a press conference to announce their support of expanding rights and benefits to military personnel and their families and veterans.
Push For Military Families' Bill Of Rights
By BRUCE SCHREINER / Associated Press Writer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -- A group of state and federal officials gathered in front of a war monument Wednesday to promote a so-called "Military Families' Bill of Rights" to ensure that soldiers and their families don't suffer for their contributions to country.
The initiative calls for a "safety net" to protect military families from poverty.
"It's about doing what's right, it's about doing what's fair and it's about doing what's moral," said state Treasurer Jonathan Miller, a leading proponent of the initiative, some of which would require passage of state or federal legislation.
Miller, a Democrat, was joined by two Democratic members of Congress -- Rep. Ben Chandler, who represents Kentucky's 6th District, and Sen. Evan Bayh of Indiana, as well as state Rep. Scott Brinkman, a Louisville Republican. Serving as a backdrop to the announcement was a veterans memorial next to the Jefferson County Courthouse in downtown Louisville.
Chandler said that how military families and veterans are treated will play a role in the country's ability to field a strong military in the future.
Brinkman predicted that the provisions requiring state legislation would draw bipartian support in the 2006 General Assembly, which convenes in January. "Support for our men and women in uniform ... should be always above party politics," he said.
Bayh touted his proposals that would compensate Guard and Reserve members who suffered pay cuts as a result of deployments, and to protect military families from foreclosures.
"No American should be forced to choose between doing right by our country and doing right by their families," said Bayh, a possible presidential candidate in 2008.
Among other things, the initiative calls for:
--Access to counseling for military families when a loved one is activated, deployed or killed or disabled in action.
--"Adequate" death benefits for all veterans and members and retirees of the Reserve and National Guard.
--The right to supplemental income for every Guard member or reservist called to active duty, through tax incentives to private employers and state tax deductions for active service.
--Job preferences for veterans, partly through tax incentives to private employers.
--"Reasonable" leave for spouses of service members who have been deployed.
Also, Miller's office will provide financial education and "money mentoring" to military families through private-public partnerships.
Supporters are looking at ways to generate money to create a state fund to help support military families in need, Miller said. The options include creating an income tax checkoff and a special license plate that proclaims support for the military, he said.
The initiative drew support from James Mutter, a retired Marine colonel and past president of the National Military Family Association. Mutter said that military members on duty can be at greater risk when their minds are on hardships at home.
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