"I am very happy that Obama has ‘come out against SOPA and PIPA’. I was also very happy when Obama was against the NDAA, Guantanamo Bay, prosecuting Medical Marijuana, and escalating conflicts in the Persian Gulf."

NeoRotain, Reddit.com, 1-14-2012

Wasn’t he oppose to the Patriot Act too?

(Source: reddit.com)

Carla Buyes touches the coffin holding Marine Cpl. Adam Buyes during a memorial service for her son at New Hope Foursquare Church in Salem, Ore. on December 10, 2011. The 21-year-old was killed December 26 while conducting combat operations in Afghanistan. (Thomas Patterson/Statesman Journal/Associated Press)

This is how the war in Iran will end if started. 

In 2009, U.S. Marines launched a major helicopter assault on a Taliban stronghold in southern Afghanistan. Within hours of being dropped deep behind enemy lines, 25-year-old Sergeant Nathan Harris’s unit (US Marines Echo Company, 2nd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment) is attacked from all sides. Cut off and surrounded, the Marines fight a ghostlike enemy and experience immense hostility from displaced villagers caught in the middle.

In immense physical pain, Sergeant Harris grows addicted to his medication. His agony deepens as he attempts to reconcile the gulf between his experience of war and the terrifying normalcy of life at home. The two realities seamlessly intertwine to communicate both the extraordinary drama of war and, for a generation of soldiers, the no less difficult experience of returning home.

Embedded in Echo Company during the assault, photojournalist and filmmaker Danfung Dennis captures the frontline action with visceral immediacy. When Sergeant Harris returns home to North Carolina after a life-threatening injury in battle, the film evolves from stunning war reportage to the story of one man’s personal apocalypse. With the love and support of his wife, Ashley, Harris struggles to overcome the difficulties of transitioning back to civilian life.

Had to post this as a soldier and a film student headed to Afghanistan myself.