Representative Alan Grayson (D-FL), famous for his bitter opposition in Congress to private military contractors, was rescued from a life-threatening situation in Niger by guys from Xe Services, formerly Blackwater, and when asked if the experience had changed his views on private military contractors, he said it had not. A similar lack of gratitude occurred when a British pacifist named Norman Kember was kidnapped by terrorists in Iraq in 2006, and had to be rescued by the British SAS, the Special Air Service. Kember not only refused to thank his rescuers, but the pacifist organization to which he belonged refused to give the SAS any information on his whereabouts. Alan Grayson and Norman Kember were and are distinguished by being culturally elitist lefty ideologues, and thus exempt from common courtesies, remaining surly and distinctly ungrateful for being rescued from certain death by people of whom they disapprove. I believe that next time there should be no next time.
If Saul of Tarsus had saved their arses
Would that acceptable be
Or would they squirm and remain firm
To ideology
If Robin Hood before them stood
And nocked his stout longbow
Would they then cry I’d sooner die
Than brutish force to show
Methinks that when such as these men
With arrogance unbound
Believe when they fall in harm’s way
That they must then be found
By folks with whom they have no room
To pass the time of day
It’s time say I to let them die
And leave them where they lay