Jin-tae: Look at me. Trust me.
Jin-tae: [tears up the last will that Jin-seok was writing] Wills are for dying people. You've got to be strong.
American GI Cook: Up bright and early, General? Uh, breakfast? Patton: Am I to understand that my officers have already finished eating? American GI Cook: Uh, well, we're open from six to eight. Most of the men are just coming in now. [Indicates two ...
There are perhaps many causes worth dying for, but to me, certainly, there are none worth killing for.
Young-shin: [while trying to decide what to take along as they evacuate the house upon declaration of war] There's Kimchi pots buried in the yard. What will happen to them?
Jin-tae: [pulls out Jin-seok's pen that he lost] I found this in the fire. I've been holding onto this for you. Jin-seok: Give it to me... when I see you again.
Jin-seok: I wish this was all just a dream. I want to wake up in my bed, and over breakfast, I'd tell you that I had a strange dream. Then I would go to school, and you and mom would go to work.
American GIs don't fight this unjust immoral and illegal war of Johnson's.
I thought we stopped using grunts as guinea pigs decades ago. Even the Nazis didn't run medical experiments on their own troops in combat. This book explodes like a grenade in the Pentagon's privy. Red it and weep; better yet, get mad." Col. David H....
Our program for American GIs can be heard at 1630 hours.
Because the GIs were sent massively to South Vietnam, maybe it's a good idea to have a broadcast for them.
Miep Gies: You are the heroes. You are heroes every day.
I had the notion that I wanted to write the great dirty American novel, so I went to Roanoke College on the GI Bill.
The next thing I knew, I was out of the service and making movies again. My first picture was called, GI Blues. I thought I was still in the army.
Until spring training in 1946, the only time I pitched was in 1945 in the GI World Series.
The most ruthless of all humans are the ones cornered in by death.
The idea of photographing an Arab man naked and having him simulate homosexual activity, and having an American GI woman in the photographs, is the end of society in their eyes.
I was with a special services unit in the Korean war, and when I got out, the biggest thing I got was a GI scholarship.
I went to college and law school with the help of the GI Bill. That experience moved me so much, I dedicated the rest of my life to serving this great country and helping others succeed.
Miep Gies: But even an ordinary secretary or a housewife or a teenager can, within their own small ways, turn on a small light in a dark room.
I thought you were more like GI Joe, but now that I know about the cape, you sound more like Superman." Mia Kensington to Colby Winters