- This topic has 195 replies, 11 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 5 months ago by
Arraya.
-
AuthorPosts
-
July 1, 2009 at 10:26 PM #424451July 1, 2009 at 10:45 PM #423718
Zeitgeist
ParticipantYour father earned his medical care through his service and you also worked for yours. The question you raise about our borders being swarmed with illegals coming here for free care is a significant one. Where do we draw the line? Somewhere between compassion and the realization that providing care for all immigrants regardless of their legal status will eventually bankrupt this country. You would not get free care in Mexico. Thank your father for his service. There are not too many WWII veterans left. I am sure you are very proud of him.
July 1, 2009 at 10:45 PM #423949Zeitgeist
ParticipantYour father earned his medical care through his service and you also worked for yours. The question you raise about our borders being swarmed with illegals coming here for free care is a significant one. Where do we draw the line? Somewhere between compassion and the realization that providing care for all immigrants regardless of their legal status will eventually bankrupt this country. You would not get free care in Mexico. Thank your father for his service. There are not too many WWII veterans left. I am sure you are very proud of him.
July 1, 2009 at 10:45 PM #424229Zeitgeist
ParticipantYour father earned his medical care through his service and you also worked for yours. The question you raise about our borders being swarmed with illegals coming here for free care is a significant one. Where do we draw the line? Somewhere between compassion and the realization that providing care for all immigrants regardless of their legal status will eventually bankrupt this country. You would not get free care in Mexico. Thank your father for his service. There are not too many WWII veterans left. I am sure you are very proud of him.
July 1, 2009 at 10:45 PM #424297Zeitgeist
ParticipantYour father earned his medical care through his service and you also worked for yours. The question you raise about our borders being swarmed with illegals coming here for free care is a significant one. Where do we draw the line? Somewhere between compassion and the realization that providing care for all immigrants regardless of their legal status will eventually bankrupt this country. You would not get free care in Mexico. Thank your father for his service. There are not too many WWII veterans left. I am sure you are very proud of him.
July 1, 2009 at 10:45 PM #424461Zeitgeist
ParticipantYour father earned his medical care through his service and you also worked for yours. The question you raise about our borders being swarmed with illegals coming here for free care is a significant one. Where do we draw the line? Somewhere between compassion and the realization that providing care for all immigrants regardless of their legal status will eventually bankrupt this country. You would not get free care in Mexico. Thank your father for his service. There are not too many WWII veterans left. I am sure you are very proud of him.
July 1, 2009 at 11:04 PM #423738patientrenter
Participantsdgrrl, it’s great to see such thoughtful comments not stuck in one political tribal loyalty or another. Thanks to you for that and to your Dad for his service.
July 1, 2009 at 11:04 PM #423969patientrenter
Participantsdgrrl, it’s great to see such thoughtful comments not stuck in one political tribal loyalty or another. Thanks to you for that and to your Dad for his service.
July 1, 2009 at 11:04 PM #424249patientrenter
Participantsdgrrl, it’s great to see such thoughtful comments not stuck in one political tribal loyalty or another. Thanks to you for that and to your Dad for his service.
July 1, 2009 at 11:04 PM #424317patientrenter
Participantsdgrrl, it’s great to see such thoughtful comments not stuck in one political tribal loyalty or another. Thanks to you for that and to your Dad for his service.
July 1, 2009 at 11:04 PM #424481patientrenter
Participantsdgrrl, it’s great to see such thoughtful comments not stuck in one political tribal loyalty or another. Thanks to you for that and to your Dad for his service.
July 2, 2009 at 12:35 AM #423775sdgrrl
ParticipantMy father passed away 7 years ago, but I thank you for your kind words. I am proud of him and there are not too many people my age that had a parent who lived through The Great Depression, literally traveling the Mother Road as the child of sharecroppers in a Model T. My father was always very honest that he didn’t join the Navy out of a profound patriotic duty. He joined it to eat, have clean clothes, a pair of shoes and have security mixed with youthful excitement.
My father was a staunch Texas Conservative for most of his life, but towards the end he softened as he realized that you can work and plan and work and plan, but things don’t always turn out as you had hoped and that social programs are not too bad when its your turn who needs them.
July 2, 2009 at 12:35 AM #424004sdgrrl
ParticipantMy father passed away 7 years ago, but I thank you for your kind words. I am proud of him and there are not too many people my age that had a parent who lived through The Great Depression, literally traveling the Mother Road as the child of sharecroppers in a Model T. My father was always very honest that he didn’t join the Navy out of a profound patriotic duty. He joined it to eat, have clean clothes, a pair of shoes and have security mixed with youthful excitement.
My father was a staunch Texas Conservative for most of his life, but towards the end he softened as he realized that you can work and plan and work and plan, but things don’t always turn out as you had hoped and that social programs are not too bad when its your turn who needs them.
July 2, 2009 at 12:35 AM #424284sdgrrl
ParticipantMy father passed away 7 years ago, but I thank you for your kind words. I am proud of him and there are not too many people my age that had a parent who lived through The Great Depression, literally traveling the Mother Road as the child of sharecroppers in a Model T. My father was always very honest that he didn’t join the Navy out of a profound patriotic duty. He joined it to eat, have clean clothes, a pair of shoes and have security mixed with youthful excitement.
My father was a staunch Texas Conservative for most of his life, but towards the end he softened as he realized that you can work and plan and work and plan, but things don’t always turn out as you had hoped and that social programs are not too bad when its your turn who needs them.
July 2, 2009 at 12:35 AM #424352sdgrrl
ParticipantMy father passed away 7 years ago, but I thank you for your kind words. I am proud of him and there are not too many people my age that had a parent who lived through The Great Depression, literally traveling the Mother Road as the child of sharecroppers in a Model T. My father was always very honest that he didn’t join the Navy out of a profound patriotic duty. He joined it to eat, have clean clothes, a pair of shoes and have security mixed with youthful excitement.
My father was a staunch Texas Conservative for most of his life, but towards the end he softened as he realized that you can work and plan and work and plan, but things don’t always turn out as you had hoped and that social programs are not too bad when its your turn who needs them.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
