Not The Purple Heart, but it doesn’t matter. Bone spurs Donnie wasn’t awarded it by the military, so it means less to/for him than my grandfather’s purple hearts mean to me. I have them, but that’s just cause I was the only grandchild that served in the military. They don’t confer any benefits to me, and I wouldn’t be caught dead wearing one.
The fact that it can’t be revoked is probably why he’s gotten one of those rather than The Congressional Medal of Honor, which absolutely can be revoked.
Not The Purple Heart, but it doesn’t matter. Bone spurs Donnie wasn’t awarded it by the military, so it means less to/for him than my grandfather’s purple hearts mean to me. I have them, but that’s just cause I was the only grandchild that served in the military. They don’t confer any benefits to me, and I wouldn’t be caught dead wearing one.
The fact that it can’t be revoked is probably why he’s gotten one of those rather than The Congressional Medal of Honor, which absolutely can be revoked.
Meanwhile, back in 1971, John Kerry threw his ribbons on the Capitol Steps in protest of the war in Vietnam he had returned from.
https://www.salon.com/2004/04/28/medals/
John Kerry did not, apparently, have bone spurs.