Liz wrote: But what does it mean to the Military to lose a few innocent American lives? It happens every day, doesn't it?
That is pathetic, Liz. You yourself suggested it was better to lose a few innocent Americans to Iranian aggression rather than fight back and have a war with Iran. You snide little snipe at the military is pathetic and you ought to be ashamed...but then as a leftist I doubt you are familiar with the idea of shame...
As for what to send in care packages...
Baby wipes are, as mentioned, popular...especially the smaller packages that a Soldier can slip into his pocket. They are used not just for showers but in the place of toilet paper...
Beef Jerky and trail mix are also extremely popular items. basically, any small, compact, and easily transported food items. Stuff like energy bars, individual servings of the pull top canned items, and the small tubes of drink mix for putting in a water bottle are all extremely popular. In short, anything a Soldier can slip in his pocket and take on a mission and use compeltely when he has a minute or two to do so.
Batteries are also popular items...most common are AA and AAA. However, also very popular, and hard to get, are the 3 or 3.5 volt lithium camera batteries. Soldiers use them in their SureFire flash lights and they can literally be life savers. Batteries are of course expensive...
Paperback books are also popular, as are DVDs, CDs, and cards. You can sometimes find battery powered push lights...sort of like a dome light from a car. Camping stores have them. They are popular because military vehicles seldom have much in the way of interior lights and they are more useful than a flash light in that regard. Similarly, the headlamps you see are popular, you know, the kind that you wear on a strap around your head. They are used when moving around on the FOBs during the night...for obvious reasons the FOBs are not normally well lit.
Silly string is a niche item...the average Soldier is not going to use it for anything other than spraying his friends. It is useful for certain things, like raiding a building. The strings are shot into rooms in several directions and they reveal the presence of any trip wires along the floors and in doorways. However, this is not something that most Soldiers will do in iraq. As for the comments...the military, specifically the Marine Corp, had tons of the stuff shipped to theater. The military did not ban the shipping or the using of the stuff. The postal service, because of its own rules, has restricted the shipping of aerosal cans. Why the rush to castigate the military? Merely on the basis of Liz's unsupported--and untrue--allegation?