Chiroux not feeling the love in his hometown

| July 9, 2009

IVAW’s Matthis Chiroux was a star this last year when he kept his message in the liberal northeast, but now that he’s tried to take it home to Alabama, it’s a different story. Sure he finds some people to feel for him, mostly journalists. Like Annie Gilbertson of The Auburn Villager;

“I believe Alabama is the most important place to foster an antiwar movement,” said Chiroux. “I’ve found a lot of support from the Alliance for Peace and Justice, the Muslim community, the Quakers, the Baptists and other Christian communities. A lot of churches have it right on and see the core of humanitarian ideas.”

Chiroux is often asked if he will eventually run for office–a career he said he is not planning on now, but one that he would pursue in Alabama if he ever changed his mind.

The folks that know Chiroux tell me that he thinks he’s too urbane for life in Alabama, but he works at the Southern affectations for the locals;

“I’m not a coward,” he said, “I’m not a bad soldier, I’m exactly the kind of soldier this country needs right now.”

Chiroux has forged alliances with organizations such as Iraq Veterans Against the War, CODEPINK, Granny Peace Brigade and the Campus Antiwar Network in hopes of building an antiwar effort.

“I ain’t going, I ain’t running and I am not hiding,” he said. “If we all stood up, we’d have a fighting chance.”

Yup, he’s the kind of soldier we need alright. A soldier who shirks his duties and gets outraged when someone expects him to do what he’s been getting paid to do all along. Yeah, we need a ton of folks like that.

Well, over at OANOW.com, the folks who wrote the story the other day that I linked, found some locals who aren’t being taken in by Chiroux;

“When you hear somebody compare our military to the Fourth Reich, you kind of realize that this guy isn’t really worth listening to,” said Janine Babbitt, whose husband Maj. Erich Babbitt, an active duty Army National Guard member, has been deployed in Afghanistan for about a week.

“What this guy is pitching is the ugly American,” [U.S. Army Capt. David] Van Horn said. “He would be pitching this if there was a cold war or a hot war. I would warn strongly against people buying into anything that hasn’t been seen first hand. Until you’ve been there, you’re not going to know.”

“The army is not trying to make criminals out of people. It falls on deaf ears for someone like me who’s been out there and run the road and seen it. American soldiers aren’t built to be terroristic… It’s not who we are as people. My guys are too damn good,” Van Horn said.

Yeah, I think that Chiroux had planned on mooching off of the locals with his pretty words and grand pronouncements, but it may all end soon and he may have to get an actual job. Make sure you read the comments just to get an idea of how out of step Chiroux is with his homies.

Category: Antiwar crowd, Iraq Veterans Against the War, Phony soldiers, Usual Suspects

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brown neck gaitor

“I believe Alabama is the most important place to foster an antiwar movement,” said Chiroux.

According to IVAW.org, the number of Chapters in Alabama. Zero. Number of Members (with Profiles) that claim Alabama. Six.

BTW, Matthis claims New York.

FreeBirdNavyBrat

That’s funny. Like Jonn said, Matthis considers himself way too urbane for Alabama.

CRaissi

Freaking hilarious. He’s taken to saying “ain’t” in order to pad is Southern credentials.

Country Singer

LMAO!!!! Baptists support him? No way (pardon me) IN HELL. As someone from a line of Baptists that has been not only in this country, but in the SOUTH since around 1743, there is no way Chiroux could walk into a Southern Baptist Church, ESPECIALLY in Alabama, and get away with the crap he spews. I have a lot of family in ‘Bamy, and they’d run his ass out on a rail. Baptists, particularly of the Southern Baptist strain, take an immense pride in being a significant portion of the Warrior Class of this Nation. Trust me, they’d sooner dance while swigging from a fifth of Wild Turkey than put up with his load of horse manure.

Sporkmaster

Really? He is almost right next door. Did he say a datefor this?

j3

“Number of Members (with Profiles) that claim Alabama. Six.”
– Number of the gutless bastards claimed *by* Alabama: Zero.

j3

PS –
“it may all end soon and he may have to get an actual job. ”

Remember the line in Patton? My memory could be off but if I recall it was –
“If your son asks what you did in the war, you won’t have to say, ‘I shovelled shit in Louisiana’.”

Well – maybe we can find a shovel here in Alabama that would fit this scumbag’s lily-white hands.

brown neck gaitor

Country Singer,

“Baptists, particularly of the Southern Baptist strain, take an immense pride in being a significant portion of the Warrior Class of this Nation.”

Dang Skippy! I went to a small Southern Baptist church (about 50 active members). My pastor was an Airborne Chaplain (assigned to the SF) in the Reserves.

There were only 3 of us in the youth group. 1 ended up in the Army, the other 2 the Marines.

jsb29

Being a Southern Baptist from Sweet Home Alabama, narrowed down to Sweet Home AUBURN, Alabama, I can tell you with 100% conviction, if someone walked into a southern baptist church, while this gutless wonder was present would think they had walked into a pentacostal church. As the amount of whooping he would be receiving would look like we were dancing around him. You let me see this idiot back in the loveliest village and I’m gonna need some bail money and a good lawyer. I know that my post is not very Christian like, but what do you expect when I have now been lumped into this mans congregation by no act of my own. To Mr. Chiroux the Elder, you my friend are welcome here anytime, and can run my tab up as high as you like. (Yes, I am one southern baptist that will speek to you in the ABC store.)