HayesGreener
Ronin
I retired from my PD in 2000 and we moved to our ranch where I intended to raise cattle and breed horses.
I was still a reserve agent in Air Force OSI, and was taking some short term assignments from time to time. I was given a week long assignment to give a threat briefing in the midwest to a deploying unit that was supporting Northern Watch over Iraq. I was in process of building a barn and told Mrs Greener this was my last trip of the year. The briefing was on 9/11/01 in the morning and I was to fly home that afternoon. I gave my briefing then walked into the intel office to destroy my classified and go home. As I walked into the intel office I watched the second plane fly into the building on the TV screen. I was immediately mobilized for 16 months, and spent a total of more than 6 years gone on active duty over the next 10 years. I never bought the cattle and never bred the horses. I had to hire someone to put the roof on my barn along with a very long list of things I could not be there to work on.
But my story is not unique. Countless reservists and guardsmen answered the call along with their active duty counterparts. Everyone including civilians was impacted in this country in profound ways. Our world was fundamentally changed by extremists and would never be the same. The great reward to me was the opportunity to serve again, to travel around the world, and to work with so many magnificent patriots serving in our military. Mandatory retirement in 2011 was bittersweet. I miss the people, but it was time.
It is hard to comprehend that it has been 23 years. There are young lieutenants and fighter pilots who were not yet born on 9/11. Advances in technology since then are stunning. Our security is much better in some ways, and worse in others. But the threat is still there-today perhaps greater than ever due to world tensions and millions of illegals in our country. I fear the potential for even greater terrorist attacks and how it might affect my children and grandchildren. We cannot become complacent. To use the words of the late Toby Keith, "Have you forgotten?"
Buy ammo. Teach your grandkids about firearms. Vote wisely.
I was still a reserve agent in Air Force OSI, and was taking some short term assignments from time to time. I was given a week long assignment to give a threat briefing in the midwest to a deploying unit that was supporting Northern Watch over Iraq. I was in process of building a barn and told Mrs Greener this was my last trip of the year. The briefing was on 9/11/01 in the morning and I was to fly home that afternoon. I gave my briefing then walked into the intel office to destroy my classified and go home. As I walked into the intel office I watched the second plane fly into the building on the TV screen. I was immediately mobilized for 16 months, and spent a total of more than 6 years gone on active duty over the next 10 years. I never bought the cattle and never bred the horses. I had to hire someone to put the roof on my barn along with a very long list of things I could not be there to work on.
But my story is not unique. Countless reservists and guardsmen answered the call along with their active duty counterparts. Everyone including civilians was impacted in this country in profound ways. Our world was fundamentally changed by extremists and would never be the same. The great reward to me was the opportunity to serve again, to travel around the world, and to work with so many magnificent patriots serving in our military. Mandatory retirement in 2011 was bittersweet. I miss the people, but it was time.
It is hard to comprehend that it has been 23 years. There are young lieutenants and fighter pilots who were not yet born on 9/11. Advances in technology since then are stunning. Our security is much better in some ways, and worse in others. But the threat is still there-today perhaps greater than ever due to world tensions and millions of illegals in our country. I fear the potential for even greater terrorist attacks and how it might affect my children and grandchildren. We cannot become complacent. To use the words of the late Toby Keith, "Have you forgotten?"
Buy ammo. Teach your grandkids about firearms. Vote wisely.