Subject: A doctor tells it like it is
This
was written by a doctor in Texas and is very good, please read.
I
was just reading Yahoo news and the San Antonio Express newspaper.
You know what upsets me? People with absolutely nothing to do with their
lives, so they complain on how the U.S. is treating the prisoners or
"Detainees" from Afghanistan.
Do
you know why they are complaining? They
see a picture on the news or the Internet and they see someone who is shackled
and blindfolded and walking with two armed guards behind razor wire.
This picture tells them they are treated unfairly.
Here
is what I see....
I
see a thin, sickly looking person who under severe mental duress from being
bombed, was cleaned up, given a haircut to prevent infestation of parasites, and
given new clothes and shoes to wear. I
see a person who is given three nutritious meals per day and a bed to sleep in,
in a tropical climate, not the cold desert floor of Afghanistan, eating worms,
bugs, and goat. I see a person who
will be able to get relief from their pains and illnesses without paying a dime
for medical expenses. They will get
rest, educated, and their mental stress levels will have dropped tremendously
because they were taken out of a combat area and will not be shot at again.
I
see these people blindfolded and shackled behind razor wire.
I have the intellectual ability to understand why they are this way.
For those that do not have this ability let me explain it to you.
They are blindfolded to protect OUR U.S. SOLDIERS from further harm.
These people can not plan to destroy something if they can not see it.
They are shackled because these same people have proven they will easily
give up their lives to kill just ONE AMERICAN.
We are protecting their life as well as our own.
The razor wire is a mental deterrent; just like the little alarm company
warning signs most of you out there have on your home, but don't have the actual
alarm system. You would think many
times over before actually trying to cross that razor wire. For all of you
people out there thinking how bad these poor detainees have it under such strict
guard, you need to do a lot more thinking about other things in your life.
I
was born on September 11th, 1966, and every birthday I have from now on will
never be a happy one. Why, do you
ask? Because as I am out somewhere
trying to have a nice dinner, someone will have a candle or a ribbon or
something, crying about the anniversary of a national tragedy.
And then I will think, about how insignificant my one little birthday
actually is compared to everything else that had happened on that one day.
It
boggles my mind that there are actually people out there in this world, in
leadership positions, head of companies that actually think that we are doing
something wrong when it comes to protecting our nation and our people.
These
same people will be the first ones to complain about something that happens to
them when they are vacationing outside this country.
They will ask why the U.S. does not do anything about their misfortune.
These are the same people that complain about taxes and how bad their
lives actually are.
If
you receive this email, please pass it on to everyone in your address book.
I am not afraid or ashamed to speak my peace. I
am an American; my father fought for this country, and was willing to die for
it.
Dr.
Steven Tomaselli
Uvalde, Texas
United States of America