Here’s what I think

First, these stories from Representative Murtha’s statement last Thursday:

I have a young fellow in my district who was blinded and he lost his foot. They did everything they could for him at Walter Reed, then they sent him home. His father was in jail. He had nobody at home. Imagine this. A young kid that age, 22, 23 years old, goes home to nobody. VA did everything they could do to help him. He was reaching out.

So they sent him — to make sure that he was a blind, they sent him to Johns Hopkins. Johns Hopkins started sending bills. Then the collection agency started sending bills. Well, when I found out about it, you could imagine they stopped the collection agency and Walter Reed finally paid the bill. But imagine, a young person being blinded, without a foot, and he’s getting bills from a collection agency.

I saw a young soldier who lost two legs and an arm, and his dad was pushing him around.

I go to the mental ward; you know what they say to me? They got battle fatigue. You know what they say? “We don’t get nothing. We get nothing. We’re just as bruised, just as injured as everybody else, but we don’t even get a Purple Heart. We get nothing. We get shunted aside. We get looked at as if there’s something wrong with us.”

Saw a young woman from Notre Dame. Basketball player, right- handed, lost her right hand. You know what she’s worried about? She’s worried about her husband because he lost weight worrying about her. These are great people. These soldiers and people who are serving, they’re marvelous people.

I saw a Seabee lying there with three children. His mother and his wife were there. He was paralyzed from the neck down. There were 18 of them killed in this one mortar attack. And they were all crying because they knew what it would be like in the future.

I saw a Marine rubbing his boy’s hand. He was a Marine in Vietnam, and his son had just come back from Iraq. And he said he wanted his brother to come home. That’s what the father said, because the kid couldn’t speak. He was in a coma.

He kept rubbing his hand.

He didn’t want to come home. I told him the Marine Corps would get him home.

I had one other kid, lost both his hands. Blinded. I was praising him, saying how proud we were of him and how much we appreciate his service to the country. “Anything I can do for you?” His mother said get me a — “Get him a Purple Heart.” I said, “What do you mean, get him a Purple Heart?”

He had been wounded in taking care of bomblets, these bomblets that they drop that they have to dismantle. He had been wounded and lost both his hands. The kid behind him was killed.

His mother said, “Because they’re friendly bomblets, they wouldn’t give him a Purple Heart.”

I met with the commandant. I said, “If you don’t give him a Purple Heart, I’ll give him one of mine.” And they gave him a Purple Heart.

I think we should stop letting this happen to our American warriors. I do care if oil goes to $100 a barrel because Iraq has a civil war, but I care much, much more about continuing to waste our national treasure — human and — on this counter-productive war. Giving the benefit of the doubt to those who began the war, the United States went in to remove Saddam Hussein and his weapons of mass destruction. Hussein is captured; there were no weapons. Mission Accomplished.

Bring the American troops home as quickly as feasible. Murtha says it would take six months; sounds right to me.