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#1 |
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On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C
<tritonrider@verizon.net> wrote: > If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the >left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone >for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question >in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many >others. What is your problem? Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. The reason thet Bushco can't be prosecuted is that the evidence is hidden behind executive privelege, destroyed evidence, a corrupt justice department, etc. |
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On Mon, 26 May 2008 00:33:12 GMT, John Forrest Tomlinson
<usenetremove@jt10000.com> wrote: >On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C ><tritonrider@verizon.net> wrote: > >> If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the >>left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone >>for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question >>in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many >>others. > >What is your problem? Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. > >The reason thet Bushco can't be prosecuted is that the evidence is >hidden behind executive privelege, destroyed evidence, a corrupt >justice department, etc. One other thing Bill -start living in the present and start blaming people who are responsible NOW for what what's going on. Clearly the left really upset you in the past, but you've got to let it go and view the world through current reality. Or, if you don't want to let it go, blame them for whatever they did to you in the past, but stop viewing today through that old lens. |
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On May 25, 8:36*pm, John Forrest Tomlinson <usenetrem...@jt10000.com>
wrote: > On Mon, 26 May 2008 00:33:12 GMT, John Forrest Tomlinson > > <usenetrem...@jt10000.com> wrote: > >On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C > ><tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: > > >> If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the > >>left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone > >>for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question > >>in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many > >>others. > > >What is your problem? *Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. > > >The reason thet Bushco can't be prosecuted is that the evidence is > >hidden behind executive privelege, destroyed evidence, a corrupt > >justice department, etc. > > One other thing Bill -start living in the present and start blaming > people who are responsible NOW for what what's going on. > > Clearly the left really upset you in the past, *but you've got to let > it go and view the world through current reality. * > > Or, if you don't want to let it go, blame them for whatever they did > to you in the past, but stop viewing today through that old lens. The past informs the future JT. How do you seperate people from their past? You can't seperate Africans from being enslaved, you can't seperate Jews from the Holocaust, you can't seperate Progressives from their past either. I think I'm moving on. I can, and do recognize what's happening today. A large part of that has been you in particular moving me on. Bill C |
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On May 25, 9:24*pm, Bill C <tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote:
> On May 25, 8:36*pm, John Forrest Tomlinson <usenetrem...@jt10000.com> > wrote: > > > > > > > On Mon, 26 May 2008 00:33:12 GMT, John Forrest Tomlinson > > > <usenetrem...@jt10000.com> wrote: > > >On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C > > ><tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: > > > >> If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the > > >>left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone > > >>for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question > > >>in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many > > >>others. > > > >What is your problem? *Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. > > > >The reason thet Bushco can't be prosecuted is that the evidence is > > >hidden behind executive privelege, destroyed evidence, a corrupt > > >justice department, etc. > > > One other thing Bill -start living in the present and start blaming > > people who are responsible NOW for what what's going on. > > > Clearly the left really upset you in the past, *but you've got to let > > it go and view the world through current reality. * > > > Or, if you don't want to let it go, blame them for whatever they did > > to you in the past, but stop viewing today through that old lens. > > The past informs the future JT. How do you seperate people from their > past? You can't seperate Africans from being enslaved, you can't > seperate Jews from the Holocaust, you can't seperate Progressives from > their past either. > *I think I'm moving on. I can, and do recognize what's happening > today. A large part of that has been you in particular moving me on. > *Bill C- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - JT I'm really happy to see the liberal folks making the suicide rate today a big issue, because it is, but it's not smart strategy on their part. There's a much higher awareness today, better treatment, more support and many less troops than were in Vietnam. Vietnam vets came home to brutal hostility from people on the left who actively supported the enemy. Howard asked if I thought they were all traitors a while ago. I didn't answer then, and I`'ll answer this way today. The VC/NVA knew the couldn't win militarily, and that's from their own words and writings. They needed to break America's will to support South Vietnam. They were counting on the anti-war movement to do that for them. Tet destroyed the VC. They knew it was suicide going in, but also bet that it would be the straw that broke the support and won them the war. It was a tactical disaster, and strategically it won them the war because of what it did for the anti-war movement. If suicide is such a big issue now, how much worse was it then, when they were comning home to be hated and abused by the people who now claim to support them? I'm willing to admit that many of those folks may feel guilty and have changed their attitudes, but that doesn't bring all those vets who made it home and were destroyed by the hatred here back. I can see McCain using this issue, and it's a good one for him. Someone is eventually going to do a detailed study showing a much higher rate from Vietnam, and there's no way for the Progressives to deny their leading role in making a bad situation exponentially worse. Bill C |
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On Sun, 25 May 2008 18:24:27 -0700 (PDT), Bill C
<tritonrider@verizon.net> wrote: > >The past informs the future JT. How do you seperate people from their >past? You can't seperate Africans from being enslaved, you can't >seperate Jews from the Holocaust, you can't seperate Progressives from >their past either. Yeah, that's why I'll never vote Democratic. It was the Republicans that freed the slaves. |
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On Sun, 25 May 2008 19:25:11 -0700 (PDT), Bill C
<tritonrider@verizon.net> wrote: > Vietnam vets came home to brutal hostility from people on the left >who actively supported the enemy. So what? If you want to rag all over those people for what they did then, great. But believing that because, say, progressives in the early 1970s treated veterans badly then means you can't trust a progressives 40 years later even though you agree with them on almost every substantive issue now is just nutty. |
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Bill C wrote:
> On May 25, 9:24 pm, Bill C <tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: > >>On May 25, 8:36 pm, John Forrest Tomlinson <usenetrem...@jt10000.com> >>wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >>>On Mon, 26 May 2008 00:33:12 GMT, John Forrest Tomlinson >> >>><usenetrem...@jt10000.com> wrote: >>> >>>>On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C >>>><tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: >> >>>>>If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the >>>>>left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone >>>>>for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question >>>>>in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many >>>>>others. >> >>>>What is your problem? Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. >> >>>>The reason thet Bushco can't be prosecuted is that the evidence is >>>>hidden behind executive privelege, destroyed evidence, a corrupt >>>>justice department, etc. >> >>>One other thing Bill -start living in the present and start blaming >>>people who are responsible NOW for what what's going on. >> >>>Clearly the left really upset you in the past, but you've got to let >>>it go and view the world through current reality. >> >>>Or, if you don't want to let it go, blame them for whatever they did >>>to you in the past, but stop viewing today through that old lens. >> >>The past informs the future JT. How do you seperate people from their >>past? You can't seperate Africans from being enslaved, you can't >>seperate Jews from the Holocaust, you can't seperate Progressives from >>their past either. >> I think I'm moving on. I can, and do recognize what's happening >>today. A large part of that has been you in particular moving me on. >> Bill C- Hide quoted text - >> >>- Show quoted text - > > > JT I'm really happy to see the liberal folks making the suicide rate > today a big issue, because it is, but it's not smart strategy on their > part. > There's a much higher awareness today, better treatment, more support > and many less troops than were in Vietnam. > Vietnam vets came home to brutal hostility from people on the left > who actively supported the enemy. > Howard asked if I thought they were all traitors a while ago. I > didn't answer then, and I`'ll answer this way today. The VC/NVA knew > the couldn't win militarily, and that's from their own words and > writings. They needed to break America's will to support South > Vietnam. They were counting on the anti-war movement to do that for > them. Tet destroyed the VC. They knew it was suicide going in, but > also bet that it would be the straw that broke the support and won > them the war. It was a tactical disaster, and strategically it won > them the war because of what it did for the anti-war movement. > If suicide is such a big issue now, how much worse was it then, when > they were comning home to be hated and abused by the people who now > claim to support them? Soldiers don't commit suicide because citizens oppose a war. You make it sound like when a soldier comes home and goes to Walmart, the customers and cashier are harassing him about the war. And that this goes on 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. In reality, once you take off the uniform, nobody even knows if you fought in a war. How did the public "abuse" soldiers? I remember at Kent State when National Guard killed 4 protesters. But I don't recall any incident of a soldier being killed when they came home from either Vietnam or Iraq. Stop being so melodramatic. Magilla |
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On May 26, 5:52*am, John Forrest Tomlinson <usenetrem...@jt10000.com>
wrote: > On Sun, 25 May 2008 18:24:27 -0700 (PDT), Bill C > > <tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: > > >The past informs the future JT. How do you seperate people from their > >past? You can't seperate Africans from being enslaved, you can't > >seperate Jews from the Holocaust, you can't seperate Progressives from > >their past either. > > Yeah, that's why I'll never vote Democratic. It was the Republicans > that freed the slaves. JT, I never said it's rational. Lots of those 20 something activists in the 70s are now 50 something leaders in the progressive movement. Vets had it massively worse than they do now in the 70s and everyone admits it's a problem now. You're right it's time to move on, and the reality is totally different now, but the lives that were lost after coming home, and those shattered by drugs, and alcohol trying to deal with the experiences of the war, and the homecoming they had to deal with aren't going to be miraculously returned, or repaired. If you can give the folks who made it back home, and then self destructed their lives back, then I won't have a problem with it anymore. I don't trust anyone who was steeped in, and lived an ideology, when they all of a sudden say "I'm not that person anymore." I sure as hell try to give them the benefit of the doubt, but I'm gonna be wary. The best I can do, is what I am now, and recognize that things have changed significantly and say so. The good thing is that our generation should be the last generation this is an issue for. I'm really proud of the fact that almost everyone has learned from the past mistakes on all sides, and aren't repeating them. It's a great thing that people today can seperate the civilian politicians, and their policies from the folks who are stuck carrying it out. I'm proud of the fact that we can have the disagreements, and peaceful protests now without people on either side getting abused. That's what democracy is supposed to be about, and how it's supposed to work. Tha saddest part is that a ton of those kids wanted no part of it, were drafted into it, given next to nothing to prepare them for it, treated like shit by the non-draftee/career types, and then came home to be abused for something they never wanted any part of, and were pretty much totally abandoned by the government that forced them to go fight too. http://www.suicidewall.com/SWStats.html http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpa...756C0A967958260 Vietnam Vets Built Memorial Themselves; The Hostile Reaction Published: May 1, 1991 To the Editor: As a Vietnam veteran who teaches and writes on the war, it was with keen interest and a growing sense of astonishment that I read "The Unforgotten Vietnam Vet" by Eric T. Dean Jr. (Op-Ed, April 18). Mr. Dean's thesis is that American society, contrary to conventional wisdom, has been obsessed with welcoming home the Vietnam veterans. Vietnam veterans, he argues, were neither unpopular nor neglected. Since I have never met a Vietnam veteran who does not say that coming home was one of the most difficult and wrenching aspects of the entire experience, this thesis deserves further comment. <<snipped>> I doubt that Mr. Dean ever experienced as an undergraduate, as I did at the University of Massachusetts in 1973, a professor ordering him in a class to explain what it felt like to "murder innocent peasants in Southeast Asia." Or being told by a fellow student that she had "a real moral dilemma" over whether to invite him to a party at her home. Or countless other demonstrations of animosity that do not show up in polls. More reading there, and welcome to Happy Valley here. I'm tired of being told that this never happened and I'm making it up. Segregation happened, women as second class citizens happened, bias against just about every type of immigrant happened and still is, etc... The only way to deal with any of this stuff is to admit it, talk about all aspects of it, and learn from each other Denial doesn't help. You don't do that, and I really appreciate and respect that. While we may disagree I really respect you, and your arguments, and thank you, and others here for showing me your view of things in a positive fashion. I know it makes me a better person. The blanket garbage that gets spewed around today about Liberal/Progressives being un-patriotic/un- American is ridiculous. The people are supposed to challenge and question the folks in Washington. We're also supposed to be able to get rid of them fairly easily if we disagree with them and their actions What's blatantly un-American is the rigging of the system, done by incumbents, so that incumbents are protected, and have a massive advantage over anyone opposing them. Spouting ditto, and blindly waving a flag, don't make you a patriot. Questioning the government, and protesting their actions right up to violence, or violating people's rights doesn't make you un-American. Seems to me that's the foundation of the American tradition. Doesn't matter what you think of her, and her arguments, until Cindy Sheehan starts doing radio spots for Al-Qaeda she's acting in the true American tradition and is jst as patriotic as those attacking her. I'd be hard pressed to think of anything more patriotic, in the true sense, than dissenting from the government, within the Constitution, and fighting to limit the power of the federal government and protect our freedoms from the government. I think it'd be easier to get past if there were more , not even apologies, but concessions that maybe they could've treated folks coming home better, maybe seperated the people in uniform from those making the policy, or that they made mistakes too, but I really haven't seen much of that. I could've missed it, and Fonda's "apology" was only for posing on the anti-aircraft gun that was killing American pilots, not for her support for the cause. I'm sure you can see the difference between disagreeing, and protesting our actions, and active support for an enemy. It's the latter that I object to. That's why I wont call the vast majority of the anti-Vietnam war folks, or those opposing the current mess un- American, traitors, or anything like that. They aren't, and weren't actively working for, and supporting the enemy. Those are far, and few, in between. Their actions may help the enemy inadvertantly, but so does our not cutting as much petroleum out as possible because people like the Saudis channel some of that money directly to the terrorists, and enemy. What's worse? Bill C |
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On May 26, 7:41*am, MagillaGorilla <magi...@zoo.com> wrote:
> Bill C wrote: > > On May 25, 9:24 pm, Bill C <tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: > > >>On May 25, 8:36 pm, John Forrest Tomlinson <usenetrem...@jt10000.com> > >>wrote: > > >>>On Mon, 26 May 2008 00:33:12 GMT, John Forrest Tomlinson > > >>><usenetrem...@jt10000.com> wrote: > > >>>>On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C > >>>><tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: > > >>>>>If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the > >>>>>left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone > >>>>>for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question > >>>>>in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many > >>>>>others. > > >>>>What is your problem? *Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. > > >>>>The reason thet Bushco can't be prosecuted is that the evidence is > >>>>hidden behind executive privelege, destroyed evidence, a corrupt > >>>>justice department, etc. > > >>>One other thing Bill -start living in the present and start blaming > >>>people who are responsible NOW for what what's going on. > > >>>Clearly the left really upset you in the past, *but you've got to let > >>>it go and view the world through current reality. * > > >>>Or, if you don't want to let it go, blame them for whatever they did > >>>to you in the past, but stop viewing today through that old lens. > > >>The past informs the future JT. How do you seperate people from their > >>past? You can't seperate Africans from being enslaved, you can't > >>seperate Jews from the Holocaust, you can't seperate Progressives from > >>their past either. > >> I think I'm moving on. I can, and do recognize what's happening > >>today. A large part of that has been you in particular moving me on. > >> Bill C- Hide quoted text - > > >>- Show quoted text - > > > JT I'm really happy to see the liberal folks making the suicide rate > > today a big issue, because it is, but it's not smart strategy on their > > part. > > *There's a much higher awareness today, better treatment, more support > > and many less troops than were in Vietnam. > > *Vietnam vets came home to brutal hostility from people on the left > > who actively supported the enemy. > > *Howard asked if I thought they were all traitors a while ago. I > > didn't answer then, and I`'ll answer this way today. The VC/NVA knew > > the couldn't win militarily, and that's from their own words and > > writings. They needed to break America's will to support South > > Vietnam. They were counting on the anti-war movement to do that for > > them. Tet destroyed the VC. They knew it was suicide going in, but > > also bet that it would be the straw that broke the support and won > > them the war. It was a tactical disaster, and strategically it won > > them the war because of what it did for the anti-war movement. > > *If suicide is such a big issue now, how much worse was it then, when > > they were comning home to be hated and abused by the people who now > > claim to support them? > > Soldiers don't commit suicide because citizens oppose a war. *You make > it sound like when a soldier comes home and goes to Walmart, the > customers and cashier are harassing him about the war. *And that this > goes on 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. > > In reality, once you take off the uniform, nobody even knows if you > fought in a war. > > How did the public "abuse" soldiers? > > I remember at Kent State when National Guard killed 4 protesters. *But I > don't recall any incident of a soldier being killed when they came home > from either Vietnam or Iraq. > > Stop being so melodramatic. > > Magilla- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - Go to your local Veterans hospital, or Vietnam vets support group and talk to people, and listen to their stories. Just got back from doing the round of the cemetaries. Bill C |
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Bill C wrote:
> On May 26, 7:41 am, MagillaGorilla <magi...@zoo.com> wrote: > >>Bill C wrote: >> >>>On May 25, 9:24 pm, Bill C <tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: >> >>>>On May 25, 8:36 pm, John Forrest Tomlinson <usenetrem...@jt10000.com> >>>>wrote: >> >>>>>On Mon, 26 May 2008 00:33:12 GMT, John Forrest Tomlinson >> >>>>><usenetrem...@jt10000.com> wrote: >> >>>>>>On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C >>>>>><tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: >> >>>>>>>If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the >>>>>>>left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone >>>>>>>for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question >>>>>>>in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many >>>>>>>others. >> >>>>>>What is your problem? Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. >> >>>>>>The reason thet Bushco can't be prosecuted is that the evidence is >>>>>>hidden behind executive privelege, destroyed evidence, a corrupt >>>>>>justice department, etc. >> >>>>>One other thing Bill -start living in the present and start blaming >>>>>people who are responsible NOW for what what's going on. >> >>>>>Clearly the left really upset you in the past, but you've got to let >>>>>it go and view the world through current reality. >> >>>>>Or, if you don't want to let it go, blame them for whatever they did >>>>>to you in the past, but stop viewing today through that old lens. >> >>>>The past informs the future JT. How do you seperate people from their >>>>past? You can't seperate Africans from being enslaved, you can't >>>>seperate Jews from the Holocaust, you can't seperate Progressives from >>>>their past either. >>>>I think I'm moving on. I can, and do recognize what's happening >>>>today. A large part of that has been you in particular moving me on. >>>>Bill C- Hide quoted text - >> >>>>- Show quoted text - >> >>>JT I'm really happy to see the liberal folks making the suicide rate >>>today a big issue, because it is, but it's not smart strategy on their >>>part. >>> There's a much higher awareness today, better treatment, more support >>>and many less troops than were in Vietnam. >>> Vietnam vets came home to brutal hostility from people on the left >>>who actively supported the enemy. >>> Howard asked if I thought they were all traitors a while ago. I >>>didn't answer then, and I`'ll answer this way today. The VC/NVA knew >>>the couldn't win militarily, and that's from their own words and >>>writings. They needed to break America's will to support South >>>Vietnam. They were counting on the anti-war movement to do that for >>>them. Tet destroyed the VC. They knew it was suicide going in, but >>>also bet that it would be the straw that broke the support and won >>>them the war. It was a tactical disaster, and strategically it won >>>them the war because of what it did for the anti-war movement. >>> If suicide is such a big issue now, how much worse was it then, when >>>they were comning home to be hated and abused by the people who now >>>claim to support them? >> >>Soldiers don't commit suicide because citizens oppose a war. You make >>it sound like when a soldier comes home and goes to Walmart, the >>customers and cashier are harassing him about the war. And that this >>goes on 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. >> >>In reality, once you take off the uniform, nobody even knows if you >>fought in a war. >> >>How did the public "abuse" soldiers? >> >>I remember at Kent State when National Guard killed 4 protesters. But I >>don't recall any incident of a soldier being killed when they came home >>from either Vietnam or Iraq. >> >>Stop being so melodramatic. >> >>Magilla- Hide quoted text - >> >>- Show quoted text - > > > Go to your local Veterans hospital, or Vietnam vets support group and > talk to people, and listen to their stories. > Just got back from doing the round of the cemetaries. > > Bill C I'm not sure I consider a citizen's opposition to a war to be the equivalent of "soldier abuse" regardless of whether or not soldiers perceive it to be that way or not. A soldier shouldn't be looking for public support when they come back from an unjust war. You're asking too much from the public. Magilla |
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Bill C wrote:
> On May 26, 7:41 am, MagillaGorilla <magi...@zoo.com> wrote: >> Bill C wrote: >>> On May 25, 9:24 pm, Bill C <tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: >>>> On May 25, 8:36 pm, John Forrest Tomlinson <usenetrem...@jt10000.com> >>>> wrote: >>>>> On Mon, 26 May 2008 00:33:12 GMT, John Forrest Tomlinson >>>>> <usenetrem...@jt10000.com> wrote: >>>>>> On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C >>>>>> <tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: >>>>>>> If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the >>>>>>> left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone >>>>>>> for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question >>>>>>> in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many >>>>>>> others. >>>>>> What is your problem? Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. >>>>>> The reason thet Bushco can't be prosecuted is that the evidence is >>>>>> hidden behind executive privelege, destroyed evidence, a corrupt >>>>>> justice department, etc. >>>>> One other thing Bill -start living in the present and start blaming >>>>> people who are responsible NOW for what what's going on. >>>>> Clearly the left really upset you in the past, but you've got to let >>>>> it go and view the world through current reality. >>>>> Or, if you don't want to let it go, blame them for whatever they did >>>>> to you in the past, but stop viewing today through that old lens. >>>> The past informs the future JT. How do you seperate people from their >>>> past? You can't seperate Africans from being enslaved, you can't >>>> seperate Jews from the Holocaust, you can't seperate Progressives from >>>> their past either. >>>> I think I'm moving on. I can, and do recognize what's happening >>>> today. A large part of that has been you in particular moving me on. >>>> Bill C- Hide quoted text - >>>> - Show quoted text - >>> JT I'm really happy to see the liberal folks making the suicide rate >>> today a big issue, because it is, but it's not smart strategy on their >>> part. >>> There's a much higher awareness today, better treatment, more support >>> and many less troops than were in Vietnam. >>> Vietnam vets came home to brutal hostility from people on the left >>> who actively supported the enemy. >>> Howard asked if I thought they were all traitors a while ago. I >>> didn't answer then, and I`'ll answer this way today. The VC/NVA knew >>> the couldn't win militarily, and that's from their own words and >>> writings. They needed to break America's will to support South >>> Vietnam. They were counting on the anti-war movement to do that for >>> them. Tet destroyed the VC. They knew it was suicide going in, but >>> also bet that it would be the straw that broke the support and won >>> them the war. It was a tactical disaster, and strategically it won >>> them the war because of what it did for the anti-war movement. >>> If suicide is such a big issue now, how much worse was it then, when >>> they were comning home to be hated and abused by the people who now >>> claim to support them? >> Soldiers don't commit suicide because citizens oppose a war. You make >> it sound like when a soldier comes home and goes to Walmart, the >> customers and cashier are harassing him about the war. And that this >> goes on 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. >> >> In reality, once you take off the uniform, nobody even knows if you >> fought in a war. >> >> How did the public "abuse" soldiers? >> >> I remember at Kent State when National Guard killed 4 protesters. But I >> don't recall any incident of a soldier being killed when they came home >> from either Vietnam or Iraq. >> >> Stop being so melodramatic. >> >> Magilla- Hide quoted text - >> >> - Show quoted text - > > Go to your local Veterans hospital, or Vietnam vets support group and > talk to people, and listen to their stories. A large percentage of human beings, generally, enjoy playing the role of "victim". It absolves them of responsibility for their actions and the results of their own choices. Most of the veterans I know tend to be human beings. |
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On Mon, 26 May 2008 08:34:57 -0700 (PDT), Bill C
<tritonrider@verizon.net> wrote: >On May 26, 5:52*am, John Forrest Tomlinson <usenetrem...@jt10000.com> >wrote: >> On Sun, 25 May 2008 18:24:27 -0700 (PDT), Bill C >> >> <tritonri...@verizon.net> wrote: >> >> >The past informs the future JT. How do you seperate people from their >> >past? You can't seperate Africans from being enslaved, you can't >> >seperate Jews from the Holocaust, you can't seperate Progressives from >> >their past either. >> >> Yeah, that's why I'll never vote Democratic. It was the Republicans >> that freed the slaves. > >JT, I never said it's rational. Lots of those 20 something activists >in the 70s are now 50 something leaders in the progressive movement. >Vets had it massively worse than they do now in the 70s and everyone >admits it's a problem now. You're right it's time to move on, Then move on. Don't let your emotions about something keep making you incapable of making good political choices now. Don't let your emotions about one thing cause you to vote in a way that might contribute to more soldiers dying/being wounded. > I don't trust anyone who was steeped in, and lived an ideology, when >they all of a sudden say "I'm not that person anymore." You've been duped by the right. To suggest that any of the curent holders of major national office in the US from either party are "steeped" in ideology to screw vets is just not true. You've been played by the right wing. I'll bet you watched a handful of clips Reverand Wright videos and think Obama has the potential to get all radical if he becomes president. You've totally been played. Dude - look at politicans actions and judg them by it. Look at their actions in the last five or ten years. Judge them by that. Do you think Obama or Clinton or Edwards or Dean are some sort of sleeper-cell 70s radicals who are going to screw veterans any worse than the current government if Democratics win the next presidential election. Get a grip. JT PS - I'm personally embarrassed when I'm irrational and try to overcome it, not wallow in it. |
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John Forrest Tomlinson wrote:
> On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C > <tritonrider@verizon.net> wrote: > >> If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the >> left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone >> for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question >> in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many >> others. > > What is your problem? Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. What is YOUR problem? It's handy to have a scapegoat. My wife left me because of Jane Fonda. Those damned Democrats took my money. Liberals made me fat. |
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#14 |
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In article <9eCdnWxg8dI3l6bVnZ2dnUVZ_gadnZ2d@comcast.com>,
Fred Fredburger <Fred.Fredburger@Where.Are.The.Nachos.Huh> wrote: > John Forrest Tomlinson wrote: > > On Sun, 25 May 2008 15:18:42 -0700 (PDT), Bill C > > <tritonrider@verizon.net> wrote: > > > >> If Bush and company aren't guilty of treason it's only because the > >> left fought so hard to make it almost impossible to prosecute someone > >> for this, but they did that in self defense since there's no question > >> in my mind Hanoi Jane, at least, was guilty of it along with many > >> others. > > > > What is your problem? Everything has a bugaboo leftie behind it. > > What is YOUR problem? It's handy to have a scapegoat. My wife left me > because of Jane Fonda. You had an affair with Jane Fonda? > Those damned Democrats took my money. Liberals > made me fat. I heard the liberals have a plan to slim you down. -- Michael Press |
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#15 |
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Fred Fredburger wrote:
>> Those damned Democrats took my money. Liberals made me fat. Michael Press wrote: > I heard the liberals have a plan to slim you down. The Fredburgers are not 3rd world; 2nd rate perhaps but not 3rd world. |
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