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"Any of those guys that get hurt while they're over there, would they not rate a Purple Heart?" The air in the American Legion lounge in Hinesville, Ga., was also heavy with skepticism. Bartender Lacey Russell switched the television from the Weather Channel to Obama's speech, only to get buffeted by howls of protest from grizzled regulars happily ignoring the "No Vulgar Language" sign beside the TV. "You want to see it?" one of Russell's patrons cried out incredulously. "Yes," the 23-year-old bartender shot back. "I'd like to know if my husband is going back to Iraq." Obama's not very popular in this die-hard military community. Those sipping Budweiser and Jack Daniels either turned their attention to the Atlanta Braves game on the TV at the opposite end of the bar, or kept up their bellyaching at seeing an Obama speech at their watering hole. "This is not a political bar! Not the American Legion!" one barfly howled. "All I can say is, go Bush!" another shouted. Russell finally gave up and changed the channel. "For my own selfish reasons, to keep my husband home, I'm going to say it's good," Russell said during a cigarette break outside. "Do I agree that we're going to leave and everybody there will be great, like America? No. They've been fighting each other since Jesus." The president said his pronouncement was a milestone, a turning point. But this was not a date Kirk Morris planned to put down in a calendar for future celebrations. The Gurnee, Ill., man sat emotionless as the president spoke. Draped over the couch beside him was a quilt made from his son Geoffrey's old clothes, including some bits of camouflage. Marine Pvt. Geoffrey Morris was just 19 when a rocket-propelled grenade ended his life in 2004. It was the fifth anniversary of his mother's death. Kirk Morris, 52, scoffed when Obama segued from the war in Iraq to his efforts to jump-start the economy. Whatever he thinks of the president's fiscal policies, Morris has to believe that his son died for a worthy cause. "The sacrifices of my son and 4,000 others was an opportunity for that country to be a beacon of hope in the region," he said. Morris's youngest son, Dylan, 12, says he wants to join the Marines. The father worries that we will still be at war in the Middle East, and it is only then that his voice begins to crack. "He's gonna be a darn, darn good Marine," he said. "But serving in our armed forces is a dangerous, dangerous business."
[Associated
Press;
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