- United States
- Ind.
- Letter
Dear Representative,
I am writing as a constituent to express my deep outrage at the treatment of disabled American veterans and other citizens who peacefully gathered at the Capitol to oppose military action in Iran.
These men and women did not protest out of ignorance. They served. They carry the physical and psychological weight of that service every day. Their opposition to this conflict deserves respect and serious consideration — not force, dismissal, or political theater.
The people who know the true cost of war are the ones who’ve lived it.
Not in budget projections or
committee hearings — but in missing limbs, broken families, and years of recovery that no one televises. When veterans speak against war, we are obligated to listen.
I am also compelled to raise the generational dimension of this decision.
The Baby Boomer and early Gen X political class — who largely avoided the draft, built wealth during periods of historically low taxation, and inherited a growing economy — are now positioning the next generation to absorb another decade of fiscal and human consequences from military conflict.
That is not leadership. That is extraction.
My generation and those younger will pay this bill — in taxes, in deployments, in deferred prosperity, and in the social costs of another generation of veterans coming home to inadequate care.
I am asking you directly:
• What is your position on the treatment of the veterans who protested?
• What oversight are you exercising over the authorization and cost structure of military action in Iran?
• What protections are you fighting for to ensure the next generation of service members receives care commensurate with what we are asking of them?
Your constituents are watching. We expect accountability, not party alignment.
Respectfully