http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDk6Qal2DCI
From Duncan on, the antiwar soldiers could not make their peace with
the cynical use of torture and the elimination of women, children and
civilians in accordance with what one of them called a "kill them all,
sort it out later" philosophy. Louis Font, who felt Vietnam was a war
of aggression, became the first West Point graduate in history to
refuse war service, and Dave Cline, wondering why a man he just killed
was dead while Cline was alive, came to feel that continued silence was
"part of keeping the lie going."
One of the least-told stories of the Vietnam War is that of the antiwar struggle within the American military. The current presumption is that war protests started on college
campuses, but they were actually sparked by the soldiers themselves. Sir! No Sir!" recounts the struggles of the men and women who
audaciously challenged the American government and its reasons for
remaining in Southeast Asia for so long. Our brave military struggled each day with the orders handed down to them to kill innocent people, women and children. Our Vietnam soldiers could not. They rebelled against their commanding officer's and began one of the biggest protests of all time. Many American's believe that the Vietnam protests started on college campus's but in fact, they started within our military structures in Vietnam. Our soldiers knew they did not belong there, so that fought, fought against our government to get out. Sir no Sir, was a great depiction of their heartfelt stories. It sheds a light on what really happened in Vietnam.