Uncle Sam ain't no woman
Oh he sure can take your man
I'm begging you please Mr. President
Oh send me back home again
Yes I love my country
But leaving you was so hard
I never did get the notion
To burn up my draft card
I like to hug my pack and rifle
And make-believe it is you
Until we can be together again baby
It is the best thing that I can do
Oh he sure can take your man
I'm begging you please Mr. President
Oh send me back home again
Yes I love my country
But leaving you was so hard
I never did get the notion
To burn up my draft card
I like to hug my pack and rifle
And make-believe it is you
Until we can be together again baby
It is the best thing that I can do
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The track "Please Mr. President" (Kent Records # K 45x446) by the blues man King Soloman, apparently based on the West Coast, recording with the Los Angeles label Kent (this is a different artist than the well-known soul singer Solomon Burke, ending with a "mon" rather than "man", also sometimes referred to as "King Solomon"). Released in 1966 with Lyndon Baines Johnson in the White House, the narrator of the song bitterly complained to the president about being sent to Vietnam. He loved his country and "never did get the notion to burn up my draft card", yet he warned the women of American that "Uncle Sam...sure can take your man". At the end of the song the soldier takes to hugging his pack and rifle to comfort him.
Vietnam War Songs Project