[QUOTE=DanGong;117537]Em th́ binh nh́ hoặc sĩ quan đều coi ngang hàng nhau. Coi trọng hơn hay rẻ hơn tuỳ theo lời ăn nói của mỗi người. Động một chút là chụp mũ th́ không nên?[/QUOTE]
Ông này bị chửi lâu rồi .
Vào search trong google th́ ra 1 số bài viết về ông này , kể cả bài của phóng viên Mỹ đăng trên báo địa phương về việc ông này từng bị cộng đồng lên tiếng phản đối và tẩy chay , thậm chí biểu t́nh
Published Tuesday, December 8, 1998, in the San Jose Mercury News
Protesters deliver demands to county
[B]Vietnamese group calls for director's ouster [/B]BY EDWIN GARCIA Mercury News Staff Writer
A raucous group of Vietnamese emigres demanding the resignation of a refugee resettlement agency director took its ongoing protest Monday to the Santa Clara County Government Center. Yelling into bullhorns and marching with cardboard signs outside the West Hedding Street plaza, [B][COLOR="#FF0000"]about 125 protesters urged the county to discontinue funding of the Indochinese Resettlement and Cultural Center, a non-profit agency headed by longtime executive director Vu Van Loc. They allege that Loc, himself a refugee, is a communist who misuses agency funds[/COLOR][/B]. Loc has denied the allegations since they first surfaced in Bay Area Vietnamese-language newspapers two months ago.
A county official said a thorough review in the past two weeks of the agency's operations could find no evidence of financial wrongdoing. Alette Lundeberg, who directs the county's disbursement of federal money for refugee programs, said the review by the Department of Social Services included interviews with agency clients and staff members.
It also included a detailed study of the agency's financial records, she said. That report was forwarded to the county board of supervisors late Monday, she said. The protesters, some of whom staged a hunger strike in front of the agency's office on West San Carlos Street two weeks ago, shouted and chanted in English and Vietnamese the same messages carried on some of their signs: ``No more tax money to IRCC, no involvement of IRCC administrators in politics, we need justice, give us liberty or death.'' About 25 percent of the agency's funding comes from the county. The money goes toward job placement programs and English classes, an agency spokesman said.
The two-hour protest ended when county Supervisor Pete McHugh addressed the crowd and accepted the protesters' ``petition for a full investigation,'' a packet signed by more than 4,000 members of a group called the Vietnamese American Community of Northern California. The petition letter includes seven allegations, centered on the alleged abuse of agency funds, against Loc and his family, but it offers no examples to support those accusations. Protest leaders refused to be interviewed by the Mercury News. In accepting the petition on behalf of the board of supervisors, McHugh told the crowd he was saddened that the protesters were dividing the Vietnamese-American community -- many of whom either support Loc and the agency or remain neutral.
The protesters, meanwhile, agreed to halt their protest for one week, until the board has had time to review the allegations.
[URL="http://www.viet-nam.org/Com-News/protest.htm"]http://www.viet-nam.org/Com-News/protest.htm[/URL]