>> Time to go away for a while it seems...<<
I suppose that's the only thing to do. I imagine they'd eventually get tired of seeing which one of them hates America the most.
Y'all are forgetting a few things.
1. Mike is not a citizen of the United States. Why you expect him to salute everything USA is a little surprising to me.
2. Wars are rarely black and white, friend and enemy, good versus evil. We might wish that they were, but often times both sides have good cases for their struggles and poor arguments as well. Wars come with atrocities, death, loss of limbs, and often many indescribable horrors. They are often fought by a mixed bag of people, some are gung-ho, others want to be anywhere else, many are scared kids between 18 and 22.
3. Not everyone who serves is a hero or a great person. Some people just could not function anywhere else in society but the armed forces. There are wife abusers, thieves, rapists, loan sharks, and some of the worst human beings you'd never want to meet in the military. On the other hand, there are some really great people as well. The truth is that any of them may do something very heroic on the spur of the moment - not for their country, God, or the President - but typically for their fellow soldiers in the field.
I disagree with Mike. Many of the soldiers aren't gung-ho, Rambo assholes. Most are just people doing their job. They are a foreign policy tool. I had a grandfather fight on both sides of World War II. One fought the Soviets on ther Eastern Front for Germany. The other fought at Okinawa for the United States. The former was a draftee, the latter a volunteer.
I never knew my German Grandfather (Opa). He died when my mom was only eleven. He returned from the war a different man. He became an alcoholic and was abusive to his wife and children. He only talked about the war to my mom's uncle, who was in France for the war. He witnessed many horrors in Eastern Europe and took much of it to his grave - a haunted and shattered individual.
He was no Nazi. Indeed, my grandmother voted SPD her entire life (with one notable exception where she didn't vote). They were extremely poor and Nazi conscription made no room for conscientious objection (just ask the Seventh Day Adventists who went to the Death Camps).
So, I don't think most American Soldiers are fascists or anything of the sort. They are mostly young people who are used as tools to implement American foreign policy. It is that foreign policy that has been most troubling.