My final project is based on whether or not it is possible to be a perfect soldier. I hope you enjoy.
The Perfect Soldier
Parker Point of View on "War"
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Thursday, November 14, 2013
A Holiday for Heroes

It’s November, and already lights are going up and Christmas decorations are coming to life in every store. The warm feeling of family and love washes over the world around this time of year. Christmas is just around the corner, and everyone knows it is a time for family and making memories with our loved ones, but what about the soldiers fighting for our freedom overseas? They are oceans away from their families and the traditions they grew up with. How do they survive the holidays so far away, and do they still even celebrate?
Even
though troops are thousands of miles from home, Christmas still finds its way
to them. KTVN reports that troops in
Iraq are getting into the Christmas spirit despite being away from home. Their article “Troops Celebrate
Christmas Early Overseas” explains, “American soldiers at a military outpost in Iraq
sang Christmas carols, lit up the tree, even met with family members over a
video teleconference.” The soldiers are not with their families, but they do
find comfort in the company that they have, which are the men and women fighting alongside them. Benjamin Harmon, and infantryman with Company A,
1st Battalion, 38th Infantry Regiment,
discusses this in the article, “Soldiers Celebrate Christmas in Afghanistan” Harmon states
, “You have your whole platoon which is basically all your best friends. You
don’t do much, you just work and sleep, but you’ve got your best friends to the
right and left of you the whole time during the holidays, so that makes it
pretty easy.” The article also describes
some of the small things soldiers do to celebrate the holiday, like decorating
their rooms, putting up paper trees, and getting to eat a Christmas Eve dinner.
Christmas Eve dinner is very special for the troops. Samuel Bell, a cook for
the 702nd Brigade Support Battalion, points out, “Most of these things can be
described as comfort foods, or they’re things that (the soldiers have) grown up
with, so they bring back feelings of nostalgia, (They are) things that make
them feel like they’re at home … and hopefully take them away out of current
circumstances for a few minutes.” Forgetting their current predicament and
remembering the season helps lift the spirits of the troops.
Soldiers do as much as they can to celebrate and have a holly jolly Christmas while away. They decorate, sing Christmas carols, and put up paper trees, but sometimes there are limits to how much they can do; however, there is something more we can do Between writing letters or sending stockings filled with goodies, there are hundreds of locally or community sponsored fundraisers and food drives for overseas soldiers. A few local organizations in Alabama are Treat the Troops and Soldiers' Angels of Alabama. If you are having trouble finding somewhere to donate your local news will usually advertise close by drop offs around this time of year. The American Red Cross, a reliable and well known charitable organization, expresses, "Once a year, we get the joy of delivering holiday greetings to veterans, military families and active-duty service members at hospitals and installations around the world." They encourage people to sign cards and send them in so they can be delivered to soldiers. They also accept donations to help military families. Friday, November 1, 2013
A Flare for the Fallen
Everyone knows their are casualties in war but are soldiers every really prepared for death on the battle field? These men and women fight side by side and become like family to each other, so
how do they adjust to losing them and how do they mourn for their lost friends
in such a short amount of time?
Everyone has seen
war movies and seen soldiers fall on a fake screen with actors but is that what
really happens? In the documentary Restrepo we get to see the raw feelings of
the soldiers seeing and dealing with death.
The article Restrepo:
Is this the greatest war film ever? reports the movie as being, “No script. No acting. No props. Real blood, real bodies.” The
movie shows a soldier break down over a lost friend but, because his group is in
the middle of a battle, he is not given time to register or accept his death.
When asked how the film maker, Tim Hetherington, managed to film the
emotionally evoking scene, he said, "Yes, it was upsetting, and it's
difficult. The American lines had been overrun by insurgents, people were being
killed at close range, and we were in a state of shock. But you have to go on
to autopilot. I was just doing my job."
In the end soldiers have to do just that: their job. They do not have time to mourn the fallen.
They have to get through and continue to fight or risk getting killed
themselves. The article, Soldiers
Try to Cope with Battlefield Losses , by Corey Flintoff describes an example of this. The article tells the stories a group of soldiers in Iraq as they deal with loss during battle. Flintoff points out, “[They] had no time to mourn or even consider its losses. There were wounded to
treat, houses to search and acres of orange groves where insurgents were known
to camp and stash weapons.” The soldiers have to forget and ignore death in
order to get the mission done.
So how do soldier
deal with death after battle? The web site army medical gives
steps to helping soldiers cope with loss. These steps include going through the
five basic steps of mourning, which include denial, anger, bargaining,
depression, and acceptance. The web site
stresses that soldiers need to have reasonable time to grieve the death of
friends or other soldiers. It reports that, “Many of the mental health professionals now
treating combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorders feel that too
often the soldiers didn't allow themselves to grieve for their buddies at the
time (or soon after), and so are still haunted by them today.” But sometimes
this is just not possible because all people grieve in their own way and take
different amounts of time. War does not always allow them this time. We also see
this in Restrepo as one of the leaders of the group speaks to the soldiers
about having to get over the large loss within another group of soldiers. He
tells them they need to mourn and then get over it and do their jobs. They get a moment of silence to remember and
pray and are then sent to go along their business as usual.
Soldiers have to
learn how to deal with death because sooner or later in war it’s going to
happen. When it does happen in battle they have to try and continue to fight
and do their job. Afterwards they are
often not given enough time to cope with the losses, which could sometimes lead
to PTSD. However, soldiers do find ways to remember those who died. In Restrepo
the soldiers set off flares to remember the anniversary of a lost friend and named their outpost after him. There are also web sites such as Military Times that are
dedicated to honoring the fallen. Even
though they may not get to mourn the traditional way; they can always find ways
to show their respect for those who died
fighting alongside them. Thursday, October 17, 2013
Pigeons at War
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| http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/mi5-planned-to-use-remote-controlled-homing-1399501 |
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| http://www.war44.com |
Homing pigeons are remarkable in the way they can return to their home loft. They can fly for long distances and periods of time. They are also quick birds, which made shooting them down very difficult. According to Pigeons In War, “Pigeons carried their messages either in special message containers on their legs or small pouches looped over their backs.” Soldiers carried the pigeons in baskets or portable lofts. During WWI over 100,000 pigeons were used for messaging and in WWII over 250,000. They were used because man-made communication technologies were still basic and not very reliable. Amazingly, the article Pigeons and World War One reports that these winged messengers reached their destination ninety five percent of the time.
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| http://www.pigeonsincombat.com/film.html |
These pigeons were remarkable animals. They were reliable and delivered messages very quickly. Also some pigeons, even when shot and injured, still got their message to the destination. Because of the extreme conditions, some of the pigeons deliveries were acknowledged with medals of valiantly. While it seems like such a simple and rudimentary was to communicate they were actually dependable. Could you imagine sending an animal most people consider not very intelligent with life or death information into a war zone?
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Lost the Battle, Lose the War?
The movie Black Hawk Down tells the story of the
Battle of Mogadishu, which was considered a huge military failure. According to Military History Online , “Expecting a two-hour
daylight mission, the Rangers ignored Murphy's Law, ‘Anything that can go wrong
will go wrong.’ Leaving behind night vision devices (NVD's), body armor and
even water, they opted to carry extra ammunition. This decision proved fatal to
many.” Over assumptions of victory made this mission seem like a complete
failure. In the end two black hawk
helicopters went down and nineteen American soldiers lost their lives. However,
the mission was actually a success in some ways. Mickey Kaus states in his article What Black Hawk Leaves Out, “The Rangers in fact succeeded in snatching and imprisoning
the two Somali clan officials they were after.” This fact is often overlooked due to American casualties
being so much higher than expected
The press
used this battle as a catalyst for pulling America out of the war in Somalia. Newspapers
printed pictures of soldier’s bodies being mutilated and dragged through the
streets. Dominic Tierney from the The Atlantic reported, “Press coverage was dominated by visceral images
of mutilated American corpses. Journalists sometimes ignored the bigger
picture, including pro-American demonstrations in Somalia, and successful
efforts to save lives and restore order outside of the capital.” These pictures infuriated the nation and made
people question why we were even in Somalia. Because of the negative view of
The Battle of Mogadishu, Washington pulled soldiers out of Somalia.
The way Americans
viewed the war in Somalia affected our involvement in other countries. The book,
Black
Hawk Down Mogadishu 1993 makes the statement, “After the Mogadishu raid, America withdrew
largely from Africa and became more skeptical of direct involvement in unstable
nations. The fight for Mogadishu literally changed American foreign policy,
especially in Africa, for years.” Somalia was used as an example for
what could happen when military was sent into unknown countries. America continues
to second guess interfering in other countries wars.
Before the Battle of Mogadishu the war in
Somalia was going well. Tierney continued to testify that soldiers were
achieving their goals of ending the famine. They were training local police and
building and repairing public places. The Battle of Mogadishu destroyed all
hopes of the humanitarian efforts in Somalia. After one lost battle soldiers
were pulled out and Somalia was left to figure things out on their own. Somalia
would also continue to be a reference for future America involvement in other
countries.
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Letters from Home
The song Letters from Home ,by
John Michal Montgomery, is about a soldier receiving letters from his family
members. It talks about him getting his letters and reading them to all his
buddies. These letters from his loved
ones kept him driving on. It is quite the same for all soldiers. Nothing is
better than getting a letter from someone you love telling them all about the
normal stuff going on around their home town.
How do these letters affect soldiers, and what new technology is used to
help soldiers stay in contact with their home and those who mean the most to
them?
Writing a letter
sounds simple and is almost obsolete in America today; however, for soldiers
overseas a simple letter can mean so much to them. In an article by The
Collegian, soldiers reported that receiving letters and care
packages was a great moral booster. It also states that the soldiers change in
attitude because of getting letters was the best reason to write to them. Getting
a letter is a big deal to a soldier, it means that someone is thinking about
them and supports them. These people are not always family however; letters
from strangers are almost as important to them. They show the support and love
the country has for their soldiers overseas. Soldiers’ Angels is a nonprofit
organization centered on writing to soldiers who are fighting. On the Soldiers
‘Angel’s web site there is a section dedicated to Testimonials. This page is full of accounts of soldiers telling stories of how letters they received helped them make it through war. Just as the song says, the letters keep them
driving on waiting on their letters from home.
Letters do not
just boost morale. There is a study that soldiers who receive letters and
packages from home are less likely to have post traumatic stress disorder after
returning home. The Journal of Traumatic
Stress states, “ After studying information from 193 married male
Army soldiers who returned from military deployment within the past year,
investigators found that more frequent spousal communication through ‘delayed’ communication
such as letters, care packages, and emails was linked with lower PTSD symptoms
after deployment.” This basically means that those who obtain care packages and
letters have an easier time transitioning to normal life when they are sent home.
There have
been great strides in technology in the past few years. Letters are not the
only way to communicate with soldiers anymore.
Now you can email, talk on the phone, and video chat. A soldier in
Afghanistan was able to witness the birth of his first son on Skype reported The Desert News.
Social
media such as Facebook and Twitter has made staying connected with home much
easier for soldiers. In Mary
Grace Keller’s piece of writing she relays
that, “technology has paved the way for a new form
of communication among military families today, and the emotion and connection
is just as strong.” Not everyone agrees with this. The Journal of Traumatic
Stress continues to stress that, "When you receive letters, they can be
read again and again, and when you write them, it can be therapeutic." In
the song the man mentions folding the letter up and keeping them in his pocket,
you cannot hold an email or carry a video chat in your pocket. There is
something about knowing that someone took the time to sit down and write a
letter that is meaningful.
![]() |
| Soldier seeing his baby for the first time. From The Desert News |
Writing
letters to soldiers, whether you know them or not, is a wonderful thing. It
helps boost their morale, and it gives them a reason to continue to fight. Receiving
letters can also lead them to have an easier time adjusting after returning
home and have a lesser chance of post traumatic stress. Technology has given us
many options of communication but a hand written letter from the heart will
always be welcomed by any soldier.
| Soldiers receiving mail. From Soldiers' Angel's web site |
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Who is Parker?
Hi everyone, if your reading this you might be interested in who exactly Parker is. My name is Destiny Parker. Since the 5th or 4th grade everyone has just called me Parker, which I really like so its stuck ever since. Ok so from now on I am Parker but enough about that. So I am going to tell you a little about my self. First of all I may seem quiet at first but if you get to know me you will find out I am actually very crazy and lots of fun.
That is my favorite quote in the world. It describes me so much because to most people I am pretty crazy and I am very proud of that fact. I love nerdy things and weird things so to most people that seems pretty crazy but to me... well thats my everyday life.
Alright now can tell you a little about what I like and the stuff I enjoy. I am a proud redneck and I love mud ridding. Yes that picture is me and I was scared to death at the moment but I love it so much. I have an amazing boyfriend (that's him driving in the picture above) who I have been dating for over a year and a half. I could talk all day about him but I will cut it short for today. If anyone wants to hear stories ask me I have some good ones. I love shooting stars and cooking. I enjoy ghost hunting and investigating the strange and unusual. I absolutely love Tim Burton movies and singing along to musicals. There is so much more to tell but that's all your getting for now but I will leave you with a clip from my favorite movie.
That is my favorite quote in the world. It describes me so much because to most people I am pretty crazy and I am very proud of that fact. I love nerdy things and weird things so to most people that seems pretty crazy but to me... well thats my everyday life.
Alright now can tell you a little about what I like and the stuff I enjoy. I am a proud redneck and I love mud ridding. Yes that picture is me and I was scared to death at the moment but I love it so much. I have an amazing boyfriend (that's him driving in the picture above) who I have been dating for over a year and a half. I could talk all day about him but I will cut it short for today. If anyone wants to hear stories ask me I have some good ones. I love shooting stars and cooking. I enjoy ghost hunting and investigating the strange and unusual. I absolutely love Tim Burton movies and singing along to musicals. There is so much more to tell but that's all your getting for now but I will leave you with a clip from my favorite movie.
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