My column on Gen. John Kelly and whether previous presidents always made condolence calls to the families of fallen soldiers produced an outpouring of both praise for Kelly and vitriol for his criticism of a Florida congresswoman.

Yet a note from a Colorado woman, Julie Schrock, stands out in the crowd. Her Marine son, Cpl. Max Donahue, was severely injured in Afghanistan in 2010, and died. He was 23. Here is what she wrote:

“I’m a Gold Star mother and it pains me to see what is happening. The media bias is obvious to anyone willing to dig a little deeper than just believing what they hear on the news.

“When my son died, then President Obama not only made no effort to reach out, but the condolence letter we received was signed by a computer. He didn’t even sign the letter!

“Then, when I received multiple copies of the letter, I was told there was a computer ‘glitch’ that wasn’t fixed yet so more would probably keep coming and I should just throw them away. Not even a Sorry!

“I anonymously reported this to our local news station, which ran it one time versus the three days of Trump mishandling of a Gold star condolence. Sad and hurtful to say the least.”

A final point: Schrock is incensed at NFL protests during the national anthem, and wants them to stop. In an open letter to Denver players, she wrote that each time they kneel, it disrespects “my son, his service, his death and his family.”