Padawanbater2
Well-Known Member
On the documentary 'Restrepo', this is one soldier's response;
"I have never had the nerve to watch this documentary, but I am looking for something I can have a few family members watch. They are the stereotypical middle-aged rural "tough guy" types that have nothing but a high school education and years of unskilled labor under their belts. They think they know everything about war and patriotism because they watch a bunch of Hollywood movies that are one part John Wayne, three parts American exceptionalism, and sprinkled with some very loose "based on a true story". They think combat turns people into goddamn action heroes and I haven't been able to get through to them. Being treated like a movie hero that can take care of anything thrown at me just adds to the weight that I already carry.
I want to show them something that can convey coming home with 17 fewer brothers. I want them to have some understanding of what it is like to watch three of those men die. I want them to have some understanding of the helplessness that is felt while watching and waiting for a friend's body to die over a six hour period after he took an RPG to the head. I want them to contemplate the emotions that go along with a driving need to put a bullet in your own friend to end his suffering during all those hours.
I want them to understand the sacrifices our interpreters make. At least eight of mine were killed between 2003 and 2010. Many of their family members were killed too.
I want them to understand the biggest losers are the civilians caught in the middle. I can remember the number of people I killed and I can remember the number of people I lost, but I stopped counting civilians at 60. I want them to attempt to understand what it is like to watch a mother picking up the pieces of her three year old girl after a mortar meant for us falls short and kills her kids kicking a soccer ball behind her home. I want them to have some understanding of the sights, smells, and sounds after a major car bomb goes off in Baghdad killing dozens. I want them to imagine pulling the charred bodies of innocent men, women, and children out of the burned husks of vehicles. I want my family to understand that I see those children every time one of them suggests that we should bomb or execute every Muslim so we can finally "win". I want my family to understand I want to beat the everliving shit out of them every time they so callously suggest murdering civilians so they can have their "win".
I want them to understand that I don't care about being the person they think I should be. I have been to hell and back and realized that I just don't have the energy to pretend to be normal so they can feel comfortable and sleep at night.
Will this documentary convey any of this to my family?"
https://np.reddit.com/r/Documentari...cumentary_about_us_soldiers/d1dspwr?context=3
"I have never had the nerve to watch this documentary, but I am looking for something I can have a few family members watch. They are the stereotypical middle-aged rural "tough guy" types that have nothing but a high school education and years of unskilled labor under their belts. They think they know everything about war and patriotism because they watch a bunch of Hollywood movies that are one part John Wayne, three parts American exceptionalism, and sprinkled with some very loose "based on a true story". They think combat turns people into goddamn action heroes and I haven't been able to get through to them. Being treated like a movie hero that can take care of anything thrown at me just adds to the weight that I already carry.
I want to show them something that can convey coming home with 17 fewer brothers. I want them to have some understanding of what it is like to watch three of those men die. I want them to have some understanding of the helplessness that is felt while watching and waiting for a friend's body to die over a six hour period after he took an RPG to the head. I want them to contemplate the emotions that go along with a driving need to put a bullet in your own friend to end his suffering during all those hours.
I want them to understand the sacrifices our interpreters make. At least eight of mine were killed between 2003 and 2010. Many of their family members were killed too.
I want them to understand the biggest losers are the civilians caught in the middle. I can remember the number of people I killed and I can remember the number of people I lost, but I stopped counting civilians at 60. I want them to attempt to understand what it is like to watch a mother picking up the pieces of her three year old girl after a mortar meant for us falls short and kills her kids kicking a soccer ball behind her home. I want them to have some understanding of the sights, smells, and sounds after a major car bomb goes off in Baghdad killing dozens. I want them to imagine pulling the charred bodies of innocent men, women, and children out of the burned husks of vehicles. I want my family to understand that I see those children every time one of them suggests that we should bomb or execute every Muslim so we can finally "win". I want my family to understand I want to beat the everliving shit out of them every time they so callously suggest murdering civilians so they can have their "win".
I want them to understand that I don't care about being the person they think I should be. I have been to hell and back and realized that I just don't have the energy to pretend to be normal so they can feel comfortable and sleep at night.
Will this documentary convey any of this to my family?"
https://np.reddit.com/r/Documentari...cumentary_about_us_soldiers/d1dspwr?context=3