I Believe In What The Constitution Stands For | November 23rd, 2009

I am a 24 year retired Viet Nam combat pilot/officer of the USAF. Took an oath to uphold the constitution when I received my commission and still believe in the constitution.


I am a 24 year retired Viet Nam combat pilot/officer of the USAF. Took an oath to uphold the constitution when I received my commission and still believe in the constitution.

I am so proud of the fine folks of this Nation who have decided now is the time to draw that line in the dirt against those publicly elected and privately behind the scenes who wish to subvert our Constitution and our basic rights of Liberty and Freedom.

Long accustomed to foreign enemies, we now face a new challenge. To meet it effectively, we must close ranks and firmly remind our elected leaders that they are bound by the same oath.

I took my oath 37 years ago and just because I am retired the oath isn’t. This organization is a God send as I have been feeling the same way as the other members

I first took the Oath in 1986 at the age of 18 when I joined the USMC Reserves, at the time I did not really know how important it was. I again took the Oath in 1990 when I was hired as a Law Enforcement Officer. I am now a retired Detective Corporal from a large Department in New Jersey.

I will no longer be quiet. I am a tax paying citizen, veteran and patriot to this country. I’ll keep my Money, Guns, Liberty, Freedom and exercise my right to vote. I will abide by the ten orders we will not obey. I will remain steadfast to my oath.

I took my oath to defend the Constitution of the United States of America, I was serious about that oath then, and I am serious about it now.

That’s quite an assumption there. Both in their characterization of the group and in what they say Acosta is doing. Their purpose is not to be anti-Obama. It is to uphold their oath to the Constitution. When Obama upholds his, Oath Keepers will be behind him. Founder Stewart Rhodes gets some on-camera face time, and naturally the subject of guns comes up. Acosta seems incredulous when he asks Rhodes who is talking about taking guns away.

I swore my oath in June 1983 as a Special Deputy Sheriff, before County Judge Rice, a deputy and the county clerk of courts. To protect and serve the community.

I not only protect the coast and waterways but the people of the United States of America. This means I protect their freedoms as well as their safety.

For 23 years I swore this oath to Defend The Constitution of The United States against all enemies, Foreign and Domestic. I do not take this oath lightly. I have served in a number of combat zones trying to defend the freedoms of my fellow citizens only to return finding that my Country had changed drastically.

I first took the oath when I enlisted in the USAF in 1958, and lived it until I retired in 1979. I still believe in it, and I’ll die believing in it. I believe in our Constitution; ALL of it

Now that I am older and have studied the works of these Fathers of ours I find that they were truly inspired by our Maker to bring forth these self evident “Truths” that have held and solidified our country to make it the best and most free country in the world.

I took the oath in 1968 in front of a podium at the AFEES office in Newark, NJ. This was a time when being gung ho was not cool. My father was a marine in Korea. My grandfather served in the invasion of Europe. They taught me how important serving our country was.

we encourage you to visit Daily Paul, and participate in their Oath Keepers OK4TROOPS.COM fundraiser; a money bomb set for November 17. Daily Paul, as stated on their home page, is “Dedicated to restoring Constitutional government to the United States of America”. We could not agree more, and we thank everyone at DP for supporting or Constitutional Care Packages for the Troops drive.

As a 17 year old young man, I left home to join the Army. I was young and very wild in those days, and looking back on the experience, I would do many things differently now than I did them then. The oath I took upon entering the military, did not at the time, hit [...]

I took the oath when I enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1983. Coming from a family with a military background, my only thought at the time was keeping the tradition going.