By bp Submitted by bp Date: 2014 Jul 11 Comment on this Work [[2014.07.11.11.40.12179]] |
The Slow-Bullet by bp In the early days of Viet Nam the American draft was going strong. Young men in their prime of life, were forced and herded into world strife. A generation of Americas best, were then brought home and laid to rest. Wall Street smiled, the money flowed the fat Cats called it money owed. In towns and cities big and small, families waited, worried, and cried. Groups appeared, dissention grew. "Mothers grab your sons and hide." There were those who felt their duty strong, to take the leap toward blood and strife with McNamara herding them along. Known to the grunts as Mac the Knife. The madness grew to a global scale with those that were for and those against. In bombing, selective targets became the norm keeping the rest of the world from harm. Half an effort to fight a war was not the way to go, the enemy knew just where to hide. Back home families helplessly waited and watched, with so many innocent young lives on the line. With those who didnt feel their duty strong, a path to the north they took. They packed what they could, burned their cards and paused for one last look. With this some parents felt relief, while others felt the disgrace. Of seeing the grief so many went through after having their futures erased. The war took over 58,000 Americans lives; men and women both, (before we flew away.) Wall Street got their wages for blood, with broken lives in pain many thousands more would pay. With thousands more that were yet to be lost, after returning home. Physically and mentally scarred, even those seeming perfectly whole. Then saying good-by to the ones they loved in their own special way. They stoically waited for the slow-bullet to come to finally take them away Suicide has taken 3 or 4 times the lives than the war took. My heart cries for every last one of them Robert G. Page, Viet Nam Vet. 66-67. |