|   CHICKENHAWKS The following information was taken from the website 
                            of the New Hampshire Gazette, http://www.nhgazette.com/chickenhawks.html
 A chickenhawk is a term often applied 
                            to public persons  generally male  who 
                            (1) tend to advocate, or are fervent supporters of 
                            those who advocate, military solutions to political 
                            problems, and who have personally (2) declined to 
                            take advantage of a significant opportunity to serve 
                            in uniform during wartime.  Some individuals may qualify more 
                            for their political associations than for any demonstrated 
                            personal tendency towards bellicosity. Some women 
                            may be included for exceptional bellicosity.  There is another, less savory definition 
                            of the term chickenhawk. It is not relevant to this 
                            discussion; we intend no such associations to be drawn 
                            here.  We encourage every interested American 
                            to feel free to nominate chickenhawks, or to fill 
                            in missing information. Nominations are solicited 
                            from all sources. 
 George W. Bush: Yeah, right. He was 
                            in uniform. Big deal. See http://www.awolbush.com
 Bill Clinton: He 
                            may have launched a few cruise missiles to distract 
                            us from a dalliance with a girl half his age, but 
                            our judges believe he wasn't bellicose enough to make 
                            the cut. Your mileage may vary.  Tom Delay: "DeLay's 
                            excuse for having a yellow streak as wide as the Rio 
                            Grande down his back is truly imaginative, if you 
                            take a delight in the bizarre. The man who believes 
                            Dioxin is good for you (again, we are not making this 
                            up), claims that he volunteered for Vietnam, but all 
                            the spots were taken up by minorities, so he was not 
                            allowed to serve. Clearly all those years of exposure 
                            to toxic chemicals had some serious side effects on 
                            'Ol Tom." - Esther and/or Jeff Clark  Paul Harvey: A 
                            complicated case. We're working on a dossier. Ted Nugent: An 
                            amusing case. We're working on a dossier.  Richard Perle: 
                            We're working on a dossier.  Ronald Reagan: 
                            A complicated case. He remains listed because our 
                            judges believe his bellicosity outweighs his relatively 
                            painless service.  Pat Robertson: 
                            "[His own] libel suit [against fellow former 
                            Marine Pete McCloskey] turned out to be an embarrassment 
                            to Robertson. During depositions, Paul Brosnan, Jr., 
                            a retired university professor who served with Robertson 
                            in Korea, backed up [Congressman Pete] McCloskey's 
                            claim and went even further, asserting that the televangelist 
                            had consorted with prostitutes and had sexually harassed 
                            a Korean cleaning girl who worked in the barracks." 
                            --Rob Boston, The Most Dangerous Man in America, 
                            Prometheus Books, 1996. Our judges feel his remarkable 
                            service in the field of bonehead politics outweighs 
                            the marginal service he provided, particularly given 
                            his acquiescence to his old man's efforts to snatch 
                            his chestnuts out of the fire.  Steven Spielberg: 
                            We read his films as ultimately adding to the glorification 
                            of war. Perhaps we're wrong. This nomination has been 
                            challenged, and is open to debate.  John Wayne: "Another 
                            notable Hollywood faker to consider is Marion Morrison. 
                            Born in 1907, he decided to jump past his competitors 
                            like Jimmy Stewart and Henry Fonda by using his married 
                            status as a reason to avoid volunteering for the cause. 
                            As John Wayne, a phony name for a phony man, he played 
                            a lot of war heroes, while he ran away from anything 
                            resembling patriotism, except the pose. - Ray Duray 
                           Click 
                            here to see the complete chart.  Another Sort of Chickenhawk Altogether 
                            We realized with a shudder today that with all the 
                            noise we've making about "chickenhawks" 
                            - who are in general a less-than inspiring lot - we've 
                            neglected to mention a self-described chickenhawk 
                            of an altogether different sort: Robert Mason.
 
 Robert Mason was an Army helicopter pilot with the 
                            First Cavalry in Vietnam in 1965 and 1966. His best-selling 
                            memoir "Chickenhawk" will likely remain 
                            the definitive portrayal of the war as seen from the 
                            pilot's seat of a Huey.
 
 In 1984, when Mason's "Chickenhawk" was 
                            on the New York Times best seller list, its author 
                            was in prison for trying to sail a boat full of marijuana 
                            into the country. How an ace Army helicopter pilot 
                            became a drug smuggler is revealed in Mason's second 
                            book, "Chickenhawk: Back in the World."
 
 It will come as no surprise to Mason's fellow veterans 
                            that PTSD - Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder  
                            had something to do with the course of his life after 
                            the war. Mason's aptly-named wife Patience wrote a 
                            valuable book of her own, Recovering From the War: 
                            A Guide for all Veterans, Family Members, Friends, 
                            and Therapists, published by Viking in 1990.
 
 The fact that the term "chickenhawk" applies 
                            to belligerent draft dodgers like Saxby Chambliss 
                            and Tom Delay, and to men like Robert Mason, is, as 
                            far as we can tell, simply further proof that if you 
                            follow something to its extreme, you may meet its 
                            opposite.
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