View Full Version : Leaving the community
David Brooks
November 3rd 04, 06:55 PM
One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I had
a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
religious man, but telling and apt.
But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a weak,
hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad sweep
and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48% who
didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home, into
the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
pilot.
-- David Brooks
OtisWinslow
November 3rd 04, 07:16 PM
Bye.
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
> had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
> weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
> sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
> who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
> into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
Mike Rapoport
November 3rd 04, 07:22 PM
If you step back you will find that not much has changed. The republicans
gained ground in a senate that they already controlled but still lack the 60
votes needed to put anything radical through. They also continue to control
the house and presidency just like yesterday. The democrats maneuvered
themselves out of the running by incorporating ideas into their platform
(gay marrige) that did not gain them a single vote but cost them many. They
fronted a candidate that came across as arogant and spoiled. They will
figure out these errors and try to correct them. In two years there will be
another election for the house and some senate seats which will preclude the
republicans from doing anything to wild.
It is unfortunate when either side controls all three levers but it has
happened before and we will get through this time too.
Mike
MU-2
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
> had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
> weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
> sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
> who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
> into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
Jim Fisher
November 3rd 04, 07:30 PM
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit.
Well, for those that can't mix the two, that is. There are those rare folks
that are so set in their ways that there is no possible means of even
agreeing to disagree. I feel for those kinda people.
Some folks can chew cornbread and walk at the same time. Some can dip a
wing and still fly straight. Some can pat their head and rub their tummy at
the same time. I swear - I've seen all of this done!
Most folks can even have an occasional off-topic political conversation with
cyber-friends and remain friends.
And some . . . Can't do any of those. I hate it, David, but it's your loss,
bub.
--
Jim Fisher
Newps
November 3rd 04, 07:32 PM
Mike Rapoport wrote:
They will
> figure out these errors and try to correct them.
I doubt it. Substitute Kerry for Gore. Same result. The country just
doesn't believe the same things Kerry does. Look at the 11 states that
had gay marriage on the ballot. All 11 passed and it wasn't even close,
double digits in most states. One state not only passed that but
eliminated civil unions.
Fidel Perez
November 3rd 04, 07:34 PM
See ya.
Perhaps France will serve you better.
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
> had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
> weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
> sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
> who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
> into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
kontiki
November 3rd 04, 07:36 PM
Oh puhleeze.... spare us the piety. Now that "the nation has, albeit by a
slim margin, re-elected a weak, hypocritical, murderous coward" you are gonna
take your toys and go home.
Well good riddance. America was built by human beings of far stronger
character than you. Don't let the door hit you in the ass on the way out.
David Brooks wrote:
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48% who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home, into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
John Dukakis
November 3rd 04, 07:58 PM
Don't let the door hit you in the butt on your way out.
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
[whining snipped]
Jack Allison
November 3rd 04, 08:03 PM
David Brooks wrote:
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit.
<snip>
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home, into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
So, politics does not fit in the cockpit. Ok, I'll buy that. So you're
upset about the election results. Ok, I'll buy that too. But...since
you "know" all of us voted for Bush, you're packing up your marbles and
going home? It took you that long to get fed up with the ton of
unnecessary political views expressed here to leave? Um...ok, see ya.
--
Jack Allison
PP-ASEL, plan-to-be-IA-Student, flying club member/co-owner wanna-be
"When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth
with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there
you will always long to return"
- Leonardo Da Vinci
(Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail)
C Kingsbury
November 3rd 04, 09:07 PM
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
Get a $&%@!ing helmet, dude.
I'm a pro-life, pro-gun, low-tax Republican living in Boston, Massachusetts
for the past ten years. Most of the people I know don't understand how an
educated, reasonable person like me could vote for "that chimp." One of my
best friends is a hardcore lesbian environmental journalist who went to
Smith, and I've worked on the staff of one of the alternative newspapers up
here. Let's just say that when I went to the Halloween party this year, all
the goths, gays, trannies, and just plain weirdos looked at me like I was
the freak. Well hey, in Cambridge, I am.
These people are mad Kerry didn't run a liberal campaign and can't stand
that he "was just as pro-war as Bush." Given the choice they'd like us to
pull out of Iraq and beg the UN's forgiveness, raise taxes back to 70% on
income over $200k, tax gas at $3/gallon, ban every gun out there, and make
gay sex a part of grade-school curricula. Need I say that I think their
policies would devastate this country just as terribly as you think W's
policies will?
Still, I've managed to become and remain friends with quite a few of these
people because I realize that they're not actually bad people, just
misguided. Naturally they feel the same about me. Some of them I'm happy to
have long debates with over vast quantities of alcohol, others I only talk
about other topics with. Life goes on and is richer for the company of
people who think differently than I do.
51% of this country did not vote for fascism, they voted for George W. Bush.
There's a difference if you care to see it.
-cwk.
Maule Driver
November 3rd 04, 09:13 PM
It is a sad day but it will look better tomorrow. And some of us try to
keep to the forum topic most of the time.
Welcome to feeling like a disenfrancised minority. But picking up your
marbles and going home really isn't a viable life strategy - especially over
politics (or sex or race).
Get a good night's sleep or 5 and hope to see you again.
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
Jay Honeck
November 3rd 04, 09:16 PM
> Still, I've managed to become and remain friends with quite a few of these
> people because I realize that they're not actually bad people, just
> misguided. Naturally they feel the same about me. Some of them I'm happy
> to
> have long debates with over vast quantities of alcohol, others I only talk
> about other topics with. Life goes on and is richer for the company of
> people who think differently than I do.
Precisely. Well said.
Our best friends are both liberal Democrats. We watched the election
results together last night, much like watching Monday Night Football. We
had the same snacks, the same drinks -- and the same cheering and booing.
For David to take this kind of thing so seriously that he's "leaving the
community" is bizarre to the point of absurdity.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Jay Honeck
November 3rd 04, 09:22 PM
> These people are mad Kerry didn't run a liberal campaign and can't stand
> that he "was just as pro-war as Bush."
That is SO ironic.
If the Democrats has nominated a middle-of-the-road guy to run against
Bush -- say, Dick Gephardt -- this election would not have even been close.
The Democrats would have swept the nation, and never by less than 25
percentage points.
Stupidly, they nominated a guy whose political positions were to the left of
Ted Kennedy's, absolutely ensuring a Bush victory.
There were many traditional Republicans out here -- myself included -- who
would have voted for a conservative Democrat in this election. But there
was just no way for any of us to vote for a guy like Kerry.
The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to run
for president again.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Chuck
November 3rd 04, 09:23 PM
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
<snip>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward.
<snip>
Hey! You must have been misinformed!! Kerry lost!
Go home cry baby...
---
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Peter MacPherson
November 3rd 04, 09:28 PM
Good riddance, hope you enjoy France.
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
> had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
> weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
> sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
> who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
> into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
Nemo l'Ancien
November 3rd 04, 09:30 PM
>
See you in four ytears from now...
And we 'll see your ass...
C Kingsbury
November 3rd 04, 09:34 PM
"Jay Honeck" > wrote in message
news:k_bid.351511$MQ5.252777@attbi_s52...
> > These people are mad Kerry didn't run a liberal campaign and can't stand
> > that he "was just as pro-war as Bush."
>
> The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to run
> for president again.
Hillary Clinton.
With Barack Obama for VP, of course. Too soon for him to run for Prez. but
he's going to get there sooner or later unless he has an intern problem.
2008 will be a slugfest extraordinaire. First in 50 years that you'll have a
completely open race with neither an incumbent nor VP on either ticket.
My dream team is Giuliani-Rice. Not likely to happen but the Red Sox weren't
supposed to beat the Yankees after being down 0-3 either. That team could
put nearly the entire country in play.
-cwk.
Trent Moorehead
November 3rd 04, 09:41 PM
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit.
<snip>
You have to be one of the most intolerant people I have ever heard of. So
you can't hang around people who are (according to your assumptions)
different than you? I used to think that Democrats were the type of people
who were accepting of others, but I have seen over the last few years that
they are not. I am a Democrat, but I voted for Bush. He's not perfect, but
at least he's not a hypocrite.
I sincerely hope you are jus mis-speaking out of frustration. If this is
your true character, then good riddance.
-Trent
PP-ASEL
Jim Burns
November 3rd 04, 09:50 PM
As a flight instructor, I have learned to understand and put up with the
personal politics of just about anyone. That is, after all, their right. I
can politely and quietly listen to unending and asinine arguments made at
nauseam by self important, conceited, myopic, hypocrites who's views I
personally disagree with vehemently.
One thing that I will not listen to, acknowledge, or put up with, even from
my own children, is WHINING!
Taxi to the ramp, I'm letting you out. PLONK!
has been added to your blocked senders
list.
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Will Robinson
November 3rd 04, 10:01 PM
A little cheese with that whine, my dear?
-0-
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
> weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward.
kontiki
November 3rd 04, 10:02 PM
Why wait four "ytears"... you can take a good look at my ass today if you like.
Nemo l'Ancien wrote:
>
>>
> See you in four ytears from now...
> And we 'll see your ass...
Peter R.
November 3rd 04, 10:06 PM
Jim Burns ) wrote:
> Taxi to the ramp, I'm letting you out. PLONK!
Someone's getting a pink slip, no doubt.
--
Peter
kontiki
November 3rd 04, 10:11 PM
Trent Moorehead wrote:
>.... I used to think that Democrats were the type of people
> who were accepting of others, but I have seen over the last few years that
> they are not. I am a Democrat, but I voted for Bush. He's not perfect, but
> at least he's not a hypocrite.
The liberal democrats I have direct experience with always boast that they
are so tolerant and so pro-choice. This only applies to choice in abortions
however, and they do NOT approve of choice when it comes to the following:
1) choice in whether or not someone desirec to own firearms (they are against that)
2) choice in education... they are against anything other than mandatory public schools
3) choice in placing your FICA taxes into anything other than the social [in]security
4) choice in health care... they ultimately want the government in charge of all health
care options.
I could mention more but what stir up the natives.
Bob Chilcoat
November 3rd 04, 10:16 PM
I absolutely agree with you, Jay. Yet again, I had to vote AGAINST a
candidate, rather than FOR one. I just thought Kerry was the least-bad
candidate. When Bush opens his mouth, or just looks at the camera, for that
matter, the back of my hair goes up. What thinking individual could vote
FOR this idiot. I guess my version of the least-bad candidate was the same
as only 49.9% of the rest of the country.
Apparently you can fool 50% of the people, but there is always a noise
function.
--
Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways)
I don't have to like Bush and Cheney (Or Kerry, for that matter) to love
America
"Jay Honeck" > wrote in message
news:k_bid.351511$MQ5.252777@attbi_s52...
> > These people are mad Kerry didn't run a liberal campaign and can't stand
> > that he "was just as pro-war as Bush."
>
> That is SO ironic.
>
> If the Democrats has nominated a middle-of-the-road guy to run against
> Bush -- say, Dick Gephardt -- this election would not have even been
close.
> The Democrats would have swept the nation, and never by less than 25
> percentage points.
>
> Stupidly, they nominated a guy whose political positions were to the left
of
> Ted Kennedy's, absolutely ensuring a Bush victory.
>
> There were many traditional Republicans out here -- myself included -- who
> would have voted for a conservative Democrat in this election. But there
> was just no way for any of us to vote for a guy like Kerry.
>
> The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to run
> for president again.
> --
> Jay Honeck
> Iowa City, IA
> Pathfinder N56993
> www.AlexisParkInn.com
> "Your Aviation Destination"
>
>
Icebound
November 3rd 04, 10:44 PM
"C Kingsbury" > wrote in message
nk.net...
>
> "Jay Honeck" > wrote in message
> news:k_bid.351511$MQ5.252777@attbi_s52...
....snip...
>> The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to run
>> for president again.
>
> Hillary Clinton.
>
....snip...
> My dream team is Giuliani-Rice. ...snip...
It would be interesting to see if the (conservative) country is ready for a
Woman in the White House, or even in the position of "heartbeat away".
That's kind of a "liberal" concept, isn't it???...
Cecil Chapman
November 3rd 04, 10:47 PM
> Stupidly, they nominated a guy whose political positions were to the left
> of Ted Kennedy's, absolutely ensuring a Bush victory.
>
> There were many traditional Republicans out here -- myself included -- who
> would have voted for a conservative Democrat in this election. But there
> was just no way for any of us to vote for a guy like Kerry.
>
> The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to run
> for president again.
I have often wondered how some people come to the conclusions that they do.
Jay,,, for goodness sake you sound like you are a sock-puppet mouthing the
words of his puppeteer (Bush - who was famous for the 'Kerry's just like T.
Kennedy' line). Kerry was far left? How, where? If anything he was as
centrist as Clinton was. You'd think he belonged to the Communist party to
hear the prattle that is coming off of your tongue.
Unlike the man whose words you mouth, Kerry didn't pull special favors to
get into the National Guard to avoid the draft (he VOLUNTEERED for duty),
Kerry was never arrested DUI, nor was he a cocaine user. While our boys
were ducking bullets and embroiled in a hopeless conflict - Bush was having
beer parties with the boys - occasionally remembering to show up for
National Guard duty. Also, I'll bet you never even took the time to watch
the footage of Kerry before the special hearing on Vietnam (which Bush would
refer to often, without even citing a single in-context quote from) when
Kerry spoke most eloquently without political bile of what was wrong with
the Vietnam War and how it was a mistake. He did this AFTER having been
there (something Bush in his petty cowardice, never did). He went there,
saw how things were going and recognized that we (the US) had made a
mistake. There wasn't a single misspoken word in his speech, back then (you
see, unlike you, I took it upon myself to view all the footage of the
hearing - before forming my opinions). Does integrity mean anything to you?
I worry about a country where there are individuals that can be so easily
molded with a political dogma and never bother to question or actively
challenge the ideas that are being presented to them. I've voted for
Democratic candidates, I've voted for Republican,,, you want to know why,
Jay? Because it is the benefit for the country that counts not 'belonging
to a club' and following their 'election charter' like some mindless
automaton.
Your candidate entered a war with an 'enemy' (Saddam) who had not attacked
us while the fellow that directly attacked us is running around, comfortably
making videos and apparently eating well. Bush claimed he was entering the
war to save the people from his cruel tyranny - but what about the massive
genocide that is going on in parts of Africa right now - I haven't heard a
peep from Bush about that, or China's human rights violations, or North
Korea's forming nuclear arsenal ---- Ooops,,,, wait,,,,, I get it
now,,,,,,,, there is no OIL in Africa where innocents are being slaughtered
every day,,, there is no OIL in North Korea.... Isn't it funny,,,, a
president who is against stem cell research (which only the ignorant don't
know) uses embryos and NOT fetuses, has BIG problems with using a frozen
embryo that must be discarded after a certain length of time,,,, BUT he will
NOT hesitate to sacrifice living, breathing, human beings in a war that had
NO business being fought (I'm talking about Iraq here). So, he will put
living human beings (including women and children involved in collateral
damage from bombings that go astray) in body bags,,, but wait! Don't ya
dare touch a frozen embryo in a 'cryogenics' freezer. Can YOU say ,
hypocrisy? God forbid, that you are your loved one needs medical aid that
some new stem cell technology could offer.
If there is any hope for our country, it will be when people learn to
abandon their mindless following of party affiliation and do as I (and
others) do; simply vote for the best man/woman for the job.
But don't let intelligence or logic, pry you away from your blissful
ignorance. I hope one day, people like you will learn to challenge and
learn more about what they are told as fact FROM ANY SOURCE,,, then we will
REALLY have a great Nation.
A mind is truly a terrible thing to waste..........
--
--
=-----
Good Flights!
Cecil
PP-ASEL-IA
Student - CP-ASEL
Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -
Kyle Boatright
November 3rd 04, 10:47 PM
Pitiful.
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
> had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
> weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
> sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
> who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
> into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
Tien Dao
November 3rd 04, 10:48 PM
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
With all due respect, this is the easy way out. Stick with it and it`ll
seem a bit better tomorrow and a bit better the next day. Time will heal
your pain.
I know what you are saying, but quitting is the cowardly thing to do. Stay
here. Voice and defend your opinions. Many more may believe as you do,
many may not. The point is that in life, you have to participate, no matter
how ugly. Standing on the sidelines and bitching about the quarterback is
no way to live a fulfilling and productive life. Come back soon. You will
always be welcomed.
Tien
Newps
November 3rd 04, 10:49 PM
Trent Moorehead wrote:
I used to think that Democrats were the type of people
> who were accepting of others,
They haven't been that for at least 50 years.
Bob Clough
November 3rd 04, 11:05 PM
David -- The virtual door is always open when/if you choose to come back.
Best.
Bob Clough
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
Jay Honeck
November 3rd 04, 11:09 PM
> But don't let intelligence or logic, pry you away from your blissful
> ignorance. I hope one day, people like you will learn to challenge and
> learn more about what they are told as fact FROM ANY SOURCE,,, then we
> will REALLY have a great Nation.
>
> A mind is truly a terrible thing to waste..........
Sorry, Cecil -- I called it as I saw it. I just couldn't vote for Kerry.
And yes, I did watch ALL of the video-taped hearings, just like you.
Let me add the obvious, incendiary words that I was diplomatically trying to
avoid using: The Democrats would own the White House right now, TODAY, if
they had nominated a centrist who didn't back-stab his compatriots during
wartime. Everything else Kerry's done, before or since, pales to
insignificance in the shadow of that action.
It's got to really suck to be Dick Gephardt today, knowing this fact.
Gephardt's no dummy, and now he's too old to run again -- but I'm sure he
knows in his heart that the White House was his for the taking -- if only
his party had given him the chance.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Matt Whiting
November 3rd 04, 11:15 PM
David Brooks wrote:
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
What prompted this outburst?
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48% who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home, into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
What was that comment about being a coward?
Matt
Newps
November 3rd 04, 11:16 PM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
Kerry was far left? How, where?
You can't be serious. Guns, gay marriage, taxes, the UN. His positions
are far left. You may not agree but they are.
Matt Whiting
November 3rd 04, 11:17 PM
Newps wrote:
>
>
> Mike Rapoport wrote:
> They will
>
>> figure out these errors and try to correct them.
>
>
> I doubt it. Substitute Kerry for Gore. Same result. The country just
> doesn't believe the same things Kerry does. Look at the 11 states that
> had gay marriage on the ballot. All 11 passed and it wasn't even close,
> double digits in most states. One state not only passed that but
> eliminated civil unions.
I'm thinking of moving to a state like yours (SD, right?). I've lived
in PA all my life, but it is becoming such a liberal cesspool that I may
have to retire elsewehere. The good thing is that I live in the
northcentral part that still has a grasp on morality and decency, but we
are outnumbered by Philly and Pitt so the overall state vote is a disaster.
Matt
Newps
November 3rd 04, 11:18 PM
Jay Honeck wrote:
>
> It's got to really suck to be Dick Gephardt today, knowing this fact.
> Gephardt's no dummy, and now he's too old to run again -- but I'm sure he
> knows in his heart that the White House was his for the taking -- if only
> his party had given him the chance.
Gephardt isn't the one. You want a centrist Dem, you pick Lieberman.
Matt Whiting
November 3rd 04, 11:22 PM
C Kingsbury wrote:
> My dream team is Giuliani-Rice. Not likely to happen but the Red Sox weren't
> supposed to beat the Yankees after being down 0-3 either. That team could
> put nearly the entire country in play.
Mine is Giuliani-Powell. Nothing against Rice, but I've been impressed
with Powell since he first came on the scene in Desert Storm.
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 3rd 04, 11:33 PM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
>>Stupidly, they nominated a guy whose political positions were to the left
>>of Ted Kennedy's, absolutely ensuring a Bush victory.
>>
>>There were many traditional Republicans out here -- myself included -- who
>>would have voted for a conservative Democrat in this election. But there
>>was just no way for any of us to vote for a guy like Kerry.
>>
>>The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to run
>>for president again.
>
>
> I have often wondered how some people come to the conclusions that they do.
> Jay,,, for goodness sake you sound like you are a sock-puppet mouthing the
> words of his puppeteer (Bush - who was famous for the 'Kerry's just like T.
> Kennedy' line). Kerry was far left? How, where? If anything he was as
> centrist as Clinton was. You'd think he belonged to the Communist party to
> hear the prattle that is coming off of your tongue.
So your definition of puppet is anyone who disagrees with you? He is
far left by almost any definition of the word. Pro nanny state and anti
individual rights.
> Unlike the man whose words you mouth, Kerry didn't pull special favors to
> get into the National Guard to avoid the draft (he VOLUNTEERED for duty),
> Kerry was never arrested DUI, nor was he a cocaine user. While our boys
> were ducking bullets and embroiled in a hopeless conflict - Bush was having
> beer parties with the boys - occasionally remembering to show up for
> National Guard duty. Also, I'll bet you never even took the time to watch
> the footage of Kerry before the special hearing on Vietnam (which Bush would
> refer to often, without even citing a single in-context quote from) when
> Kerry spoke most eloquently without political bile of what was wrong with
> the Vietnam War and how it was a mistake. He did this AFTER having been
> there (something Bush in his petty cowardice, never did). He went there,
> saw how things were going and recognized that we (the US) had made a
> mistake. There wasn't a single misspoken word in his speech, back then (you
> see, unlike you, I took it upon myself to view all the footage of the
> hearing - before forming my opinions). Does integrity mean anything to you?
That's right. He volunteered for duty, took a camera to film himself,
scratched his arm to get back to the states where he could use his film
for political gain. Kind of like Michael Moore with a little more
subterfuge.
> I worry about a country where there are individuals that can be so easily
> molded with a political dogma and never bother to question or actively
> challenge the ideas that are being presented to them. I've voted for
> Democratic candidates, I've voted for Republican,,, you want to know why,
> Jay? Because it is the benefit for the country that counts not 'belonging
> to a club' and following their 'election charter' like some mindless
> automaton.
Me too, but Jay never said that he did that.
> Your candidate entered a war with an 'enemy' (Saddam) who had not attacked
> us while the fellow that directly attacked us is running around, comfortably
> making videos and apparently eating well. Bush claimed he was entering the
> war to save the people from his cruel tyranny - but what about the massive
> genocide that is going on in parts of Africa right now - I haven't heard a
> peep from Bush about that, or China's human rights violations, or North
> Korea's forming nuclear arsenal ---- Ooops,,,, wait,,,,, I get it
> now,,,,,,,, there is no OIL in Africa where innocents are being slaughtered
> every day,,, there is no OIL in North Korea.... Isn't it funny,,,, a
> president who is against stem cell research (which only the ignorant don't
> know) uses embryos and NOT fetuses, has BIG problems with using a frozen
> embryo that must be discarded after a certain length of time,,,, BUT he will
> NOT hesitate to sacrifice living, breathing, human beings in a war that had
> NO business being fought (I'm talking about Iraq here). So, he will put
> living human beings (including women and children involved in collateral
> damage from bombings that go astray) in body bags,,, but wait! Don't ya
> dare touch a frozen embryo in a 'cryogenics' freezer. Can YOU say ,
> hypocrisy? God forbid, that you are your loved one needs medical aid that
> some new stem cell technology could offer.
I tend to agree that we went into Iraq too soon, but then I don't know
what Bush knew or at least thought he knew. I'm amazed that people
think they they know everything the President knows. We won't know for
40 years what REALLY prompted the invasion.
> If there is any hope for our country, it will be when people learn to
> abandon their mindless following of party affiliation and do as I (and
> others) do; simply vote for the best man/woman for the job.
I agree. Bush was clearly the best candidate of those from which we had
to choose. It didn't even require much brain power to figure that out.
> But don't let intelligence or logic, pry you away from your blissful
> ignorance. I hope one day, people like you will learn to challenge and
> learn more about what they are told as fact FROM ANY SOURCE,,, then we will
> REALLY have a great Nation.
Oh, so know disagreeing with you means one is ignorant rather than a
puppet. You are starting to sound like Kerry.
> A mind is truly a terrible thing to waste..........
Yes, I feel truly sorry for what remains of yours.... :-)
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 3rd 04, 11:38 PM
Jay Honeck wrote:
>>But don't let intelligence or logic, pry you away from your blissful
>>ignorance. I hope one day, people like you will learn to challenge and
>>learn more about what they are told as fact FROM ANY SOURCE,,, then we
>>will REALLY have a great Nation.
>>
>>A mind is truly a terrible thing to waste..........
>
>
> Sorry, Cecil -- I called it as I saw it. I just couldn't vote for Kerry.
>
> And yes, I did watch ALL of the video-taped hearings, just like you.
>
> Let me add the obvious, incendiary words that I was diplomatically trying to
> avoid using: The Democrats would own the White House right now, TODAY, if
> they had nominated a centrist who didn't back-stab his compatriots during
> wartime. Everything else Kerry's done, before or since, pales to
> insignificance in the shadow of that action.
>
> It's got to really suck to be Dick Gephardt today, knowing this fact.
> Gephardt's no dummy, and now he's too old to run again -- but I'm sure he
> knows in his heart that the White House was his for the taking -- if only
> his party had given him the chance.
And even Edwards probably could have won ... being a lawyer
notwithstanding! :-)
I agree that Kerry was simply a bad choice by the Democrats. They had
other choices that could likely have won.
Matt
Richard Hertz
November 3rd 04, 11:48 PM
So sorry to hear that. Let us know how socialism/communism works out for
you. It did wonders for China, Cuba and CCCP.
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
> had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
> weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
> sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
> who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
> into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
Jay Beckman
November 4th 04, 12:16 AM
"C Kingsbury" > wrote in message
nk.net...
> Hillary Clinton.
>
> With Barack Obama for VP, of course. Too soon for him to run for Prez. but
> he's going to get there sooner or later unless he has an intern problem.
>
> 2008 will be a slugfest extraordinaire. First in 50 years that you'll have
> a
> completely open race with neither an incumbent nor VP on either ticket.
>
> My dream team is Giuliani-Rice. Not likely to happen but the Red Sox
> weren't
> supposed to beat the Yankees after being down 0-3 either. That team could
> put nearly the entire country in play.
>
> -cwk.
>
>
Giuliani-Rice might work, but howzabout Colin Powell - Elizabeth Dole?
Either ticket would probably make the loyal oppositon's heads explode.
Jay Beckman
Chandler, AZ
PP-ASEL
Blanche
November 4th 04, 12:17 AM
Matt Whiting > wrote:
>C Kingsbury wrote:
>
>> My dream team is Giuliani-Rice. Not likely to happen but the Red Sox weren't
>> supposed to beat the Yankees after being down 0-3 either. That team could
>> put nearly the entire country in play.
>
>Mine is Giuliani-Powell. Nothing against Rice, but I've been impressed
>with Powell since he first came on the scene in Desert Storm.
Rice has never had an elected position, so I'm rather apprehensive
about that. As for Powell -- very unlikely as his family is very
much against it, and he's stated it.
On the other hand, if Rehnquist resigns, Sandra Day O'Connor is next
in line for Chief Justice of the Supremes! But as one pundit said today,
she's already got huge power as the swing vote all the time.
G.R. Patterson III
November 4th 04, 12:31 AM
Mike Rapoport wrote:
>
> In two years there will be
> another election for the house and some senate seats which will preclude the
> republicans from doing anything to wild.
NPR said today that Bush made a remark about quacking after that election.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
Dan Luke
November 4th 04, 12:44 AM
"David Brooks" wrote:
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can
> no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority,
> I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
> into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a
> better
> pilot.
Aww take it easy, David. I'm appalled that my fellow citizens would
re-elect Bush but, still, some of my best friends are Republicans.
Hell, my business partner is just a hair to the right of Gengis Khan.
Sometimes the hyperbole gets a little too far over the top -- C J is
certainly a prime practitioner of the art -- but don't let it a little
obnoxious bluster run you off.
We can't give up on the idea that America is a nation where people
respect and love one another in spite of diverse political views. If we
do that we are truly lost.
--
Dan
"How can an idiot be a policeman? Answer me that!"
- Chief Inspector Dreyfus
Howard Nelson
November 4th 04, 12:54 AM
Ya know. I think David actually left. Not a bad troll through muddy waters
however.
IMO the election was a contest between the people pulling the wagon and the
people riding in the wagon. Luckily 51% of the people were pulling the wagon
so it will probably keep moving (perfect wagon with no losses to friction
etc.). Once 51% or greater are riding in the wagon then it will only move
downhill.
Howard
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.788 / Virus Database: 533 - Release Date: 11/1/2004
Newps
November 4th 04, 12:56 AM
Matt Whiting wrote:
>
>
> I'm thinking of moving to a state like yours (SD, right?).
Montana. The democrats here couldn't get elected as republicans in
Pennsylvania. They'd be too far to the right.
I've lived
> in PA all my life, but it is becoming such a liberal cesspool that I may
> have to retire elsewehere.
A Wyoming address would be good and even more conservative than here.
No taxes.
Cecil Chapman
November 4th 04, 01:12 AM
>Guns
He's a hunter, I'm pretty sure they use guns for that (he's not a
bowhunter). Just because one doesn't support ownership of AK-47's and
public access to armor-piercing bullets doesn't make one an enemy to gun
ownership. In fact, his record as a senator reveals that he has
consistently supported appropriate gun ownership. I own two shotguns and a
couple of rifles - don't hunt, but skeet and target shoot. Even still, I
just don't think the average citizen needs armor-piercing bullets or AK-47's
(unless you live in remote parts of Alaska <grin>)/.
?, gay marriage
He stated he was against 'gay marriage' - but in favor of civil unions that
allowed long-time gay couples the right to visit their partner in the
hospital, claims to benefits, etc. This is something that I would think any
reasonable person would think a long-time couple would be entitled to
(regardless of the sexual orientation. You know the funny thing about this
kind of bigotry is that it reminds me of what we would hear in the 60's
"Can't let 'coloreds' have any rights and god-forbid they should be allowed
to marry white-folk". Jeesh,,, doesn't anyone EVER learn from the lessons
of the past.
When are we going to remember the line about 'separation of church and
state'. The gay population has become the new 'coloreds' - get over your
bigotry. Live and let live. A gay couple in a civil union or marriage,,,,
whatever,,,, is no threat to my marriage. In the end it is just about two
consenting adults that care about one another and recognizing that they have
pledged to spend the rest of their lives together - that sounds pretty cool
to me. Of course the ignorant 'religious right' will refer to the Bible,
citing that quote regarding the men of Sodom. I will ask these same people
if they have ever done anything wrong with their hand, or sinned by looking
at something and point out if they haven't cut off that hand or plucked out
that eye they have already violated more than a few of the directives in the
Bible. and <GASP> what if your women don't keep their heads covered (as
mentioned in both the Old testament AND in the NEW Testament in some of the
books of the New Testament written by Paul). Don't even get me started on
the absurd Adam and Eve story which (if you are ignorant enough to buy into
the account) makes it necessary for all their progeny to commit incest in
order to procreate - of course that would partly explain why some people
seem to have a 'birth defect' in their unreasoned thinking. <grin>
Regarding the 'gay marriage' issue,,, we need to develop policy based on
fairness and reason, not on some quaint historical book with a cross on it.
Jeesh,,, we might as well just worship rocks and pray to salamanders for all
the similar good it would do. Visit a children's hospital (I have and it
will break your heart),,, the children live and die the same whether they
pray to a 'god' or speak to hamsters... and personally, if there were a
divine being, I can't possibly think of a prayer more worthy of being
granted than the prayer of some dear 4 year old in a cancer ward, just
asking to see their next birthday, hardly ever seems to be 'granted' though.
Of course the 'beauty' of any superstition is that you can go on to make
excuses why it doesn't seem to work all the time, but it is still
superstition; borne from stories of magic, evil and good spirits.
Superstition is great to study, but makes a poor ruler to measure political
policy by and make legislative policy. Let's get out of the dark ages.
,> taxes
Good point,,, you're right Kerry was clearly against tax breaks for the
wealthy, the group that Bush was caught referring to during a private dinner
that was videotaped and to whom he referred to as "My own people" ---- Got
that right, W. Thank goodness there was someone looking out for the common
man (and still is,,,, as a Senator) as John Kerry.
>, the UN.
YIKES! Please tell me that you have most of your teeth and that you don't
play 'Dueling Banjos' along some remote bayou? The United Nations is
LEFTIST? Do you even know the history and original purpose of the United
Nations? Read a book! What was wrong with having a consensus (and some
help) before blundering into Vietnam... OOPS I mean Iraq? Were we under
attack,,,, NO,,,,, I seem to recall Afghanistan had posed that threat but we
never finished trying to get HIM.
> You may not agree but they are.
Well, YOU would know.... After all we 'know' that God is on our
side......... ooops... that's the same thinking of Bin Laden uses
<jeesh>
--
--
=-----
Good Flights!
Cecil
PP-ASEL-IA
Student - CP-ASEL
Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -
Cecil Chapman
November 4th 04, 01:20 AM
> Oh, so know disagreeing with you means one is ignorant rather than a
> puppet. You are starting to sound like Kerry.
Unfortunately Kerry never said that. But, yes,,, one is truly ignorant, if
they mindlessly espouse the words and ideas of others without ever having
challenged those ideas, themselves.
Every thing you wrote was, literally, the same campaign rhetoric we have
heard from Bush.... The Kerry account is absurd,,, I spoke, at length, with
one of the individuals who served under Kerry. How you could defend a draft
dodger, like Bush; cowardly clinging onto the tails of daddy to get him out
of harms way and into the National Guard is something I cannot help.
Of course, some people think cocaine use, alcoholism and DUI are just fine
examples of a human being and would make FINE presidential material and
moral fiber - Obviously, my ethical bar is higher than your standard....
sad,,, but to each his own I suppose.
--
--
=-----
Good Flights!
Cecil
PP-ASEL-IA
Student - CP-ASEL
Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -
Carl Orton
November 4th 04, 01:20 AM
Or change the constitution and let Ahnold run....
"Jay Beckman" > wrote in message
news:8xeid.31576$SW3.26321@fed1read01...
> "C Kingsbury" > wrote in message
> nk.net...
>> Hillary Clinton.
>>
>> With Barack Obama for VP, of course. Too soon for him to run for Prez.
>> but
>> he's going to get there sooner or later unless he has an intern problem.
>>
>> 2008 will be a slugfest extraordinaire. First in 50 years that you'll
>> have a
>> completely open race with neither an incumbent nor VP on either ticket.
>>
>> My dream team is Giuliani-Rice. Not likely to happen but the Red Sox
>> weren't
>> supposed to beat the Yankees after being down 0-3 either. That team could
>> put nearly the entire country in play.
>>
>> -cwk.
>>
>>
>
> Giuliani-Rice might work, but howzabout Colin Powell - Elizabeth Dole?
>
> Either ticket would probably make the loyal oppositon's heads explode.
>
> Jay Beckman
> Chandler, AZ
> PP-ASEL
>
Cecil Chapman
November 4th 04, 01:22 AM
P.S. You're right, we should all thank Mr. Bush for turning a hard-earned
surplus budget (earned under Clinton's rule) into a 4.3 trillion dollar
DEFICIT.
--
--
=-----
Good Flights!
Cecil
PP-ASEL-IA
Student - CP-ASEL
Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -
Mike Rapoport
November 4th 04, 01:33 AM
The problem isn't so much that he is too far left, Kerry is simply
unlikable. The republicans often have a similiar problem in CA, the only
candidates that can win the nomination are too far right to win the election
Mike
MU-2
"Jay Honeck" > wrote in message
news:k_bid.351511$MQ5.252777@attbi_s52...
>> These people are mad Kerry didn't run a liberal campaign and can't stand
>> that he "was just as pro-war as Bush."
>
> That is SO ironic.
>
> If the Democrats has nominated a middle-of-the-road guy to run against
> Bush -- say, Dick Gephardt -- this election would not have even been
> close. The Democrats would have swept the nation, and never by less than
> 25 percentage points.
>
> Stupidly, they nominated a guy whose political positions were to the left
> of Ted Kennedy's, absolutely ensuring a Bush victory.
>
> There were many traditional Republicans out here -- myself included -- who
> would have voted for a conservative Democrat in this election. But there
> was just no way for any of us to vote for a guy like Kerry.
>
> The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to run
> for president again.
> --
> Jay Honeck
> Iowa City, IA
> Pathfinder N56993
> www.AlexisParkInn.com
> "Your Aviation Destination"
>
Mike Rapoport
November 4th 04, 01:39 AM
To be fair, the only reason that there was a surplus is because the country
got caught up in a technology stock mania. The market was generating
trillions of short term gains and taxes on those gains is what swelled
federal and state coffers. Bush entered the white house with millions of
taxpayers carrying forward losses.
Mike
MU-2
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
m...
> P.S. You're right, we should all thank Mr. Bush for turning a hard-earned
> surplus budget (earned under Clinton's rule) into a 4.3 trillion dollar
> DEFICIT.
>
> --
> --
> =-----
> Good Flights!
>
> Cecil
> PP-ASEL-IA
> Student - CP-ASEL
>
> Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
> checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
> Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
>
> "I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
> - Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
>
> "We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
> this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
> - Cecil Day Lewis -
>
Cecil Chapman
November 4th 04, 01:43 AM
Awww David, hang around! Lots of good stuff to be learned here. I've lived
on the earth long enough to recognize that living amongst Cro-Magnons can be
amusing. Yeah, they unfortunately have the right to vote,,,, but they make
a few grunts and run in the wall a few times and next thing we know, they
are running back to 'us' for advice and help.
I, too, am worried about the direction the country will take. For instance,
I never thought I'd see the day that something like the "Patriot Act" would
be put into place. Whenever we strip away the very core constitutional
rights of our people, we do a great harm to our nation and allow the
terrorists to exact an even more telling blow on our country. Fortunately,
there are enough men and women of reason who have actively gone after things
like the Patriot Act, aiding in disabling its' most sinister provisions. It
will be men and women of reason and good conscience that will bring things
around, again. I DO believe Kerry was one of those people, but thankfully
there are many like him - congressmen and women that won't allow those
precious and hard-fought-for documents to be attacked at their very heart;
The Constitution of The United States and The Bill of Rights - never EVER
letting us forget that our Constitution begins with those words; "WE, the
people......"
Though I can't say I believe in a divine being or UFO's (so, in my opinion,
we can't depend on extraterrestrials to help us, either) <grin>, I can say
that I have always believed that in times of dire circumstance that people
of good conscience will always overcome, persevere and succeed - even when
things look to be their darkest. This country will have it's time to shine,
again! :0) I believe that with all my heart! You should too!!! ;)
Stay with us! :O)
--
--
=-----
Good Flights!
Cecil
PP-ASEL-IA
Student - CP-ASEL
Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -
Mike Rapoport
November 4th 04, 01:43 AM
What is your point supposed to be?
Mike
MU-2
"Peter MacPherson" > wrote in message
news:p4cid.564741$8_6.102644@attbi_s04...
> Good riddance, hope you enjoy France.
>
john smith
November 4th 04, 01:48 AM
Liddy Dole???
You haven't been in aviation long, have you?
Liddy Dole is the only individual to unite all the aviation alphabets
for a common purpose... her removal from the post of Secretary of
Transportation during the Reagan administration.
Liddy Dole, single-handedly, set aviation back 20 years during her three
year tenure.
Her most famous quote of the time, "I want to be the "Safety" Secretary!"
The woman has never held a public sector job.
The only reason she got the job as head of the Red Cross was for fund
raising. Her husband's political connections to the big money people
were used to replenish a diminished Red Cross bank account.
Jay Beckman wrote:
> Giuliani-Rice might work, but howzabout Colin Powell - Elizabeth Dole?
J Haggerty
November 4th 04, 01:58 AM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
>
> If there is any hope for our country, it will be when people learn to
> abandon their mindless following of party affiliation and do as I (and
> others) do; simply vote for the best man/woman for the job.
I did! He won!
JPH
Cecil Chapman
November 4th 04, 02:03 AM
> I'm a pro-life, pro-gun, low-tax Republican living in Boston,
> Massachusetts
Is the carnage that takes place in an unnecessary war like Iraq, pro-life?
Is there something I don't know and are their pro-life bullets and bombs
that don't kill? Oh wait,,, you DO believe in killing,,,, or don't you???
Oh wait,,, I get it,,,, only if it allows you to control the actions of
women,,, no problem,,, REALLY I understand, now.
> 51% of this country did not vote for fascism
Then please tell me what 'HOMELAND' (sounds like FATHERland) to me and the
Patriot Act are about. Let's not forget the TSA, an agency that can put law
into place WITHOUT POSSIBILITY FOR PUBLIC COMMENT. Tell me what detaining
individuals at G. Bay, for close to two years without even telling them what
they are being accused of and not allowing them access to attorneys sounds
like? (this of course is changing due to court challenges). I'm pretty sure
we pledge, "With liberty and justice for ALL",,, that's what I remember,
Jay. Do you do a different Pledge of Allegiance in Iowa?
> gay sex a part of grade-school curricula.
When grade schoolers study traditional marriage in their schools, do those
courses talk about the various sexual positions the man and women get in,
and who gets to be on-top and the like? Of course, not. Mentioning that
Paul may love Sandy or Sandy may Love Jill and be a couple is all that's
mentioned - it's called tolerance for differences Jay. Remember similar
arguments about black people and civil rights? God forbid, back then, if
there was a kids book showing an interracial couple <mock gasp>.
Lastly, Jay,,,, being around a gay person won't 'make' you gay. Otherwise
Cheney would be 'flaming' (he has a lesbian daughter, don't ya know),,, by
the way,,,, when Cheney was asked he said that he couldn't answer for the
president, but for himself he felt that their SHOULD be an opportunity for
the same things that straight married couples (including civil
union/marriage) have and it was clear that he loved his daughter very much.
.." One of my
> best friends is a hardcore lesbian environmental journalist
and you STILL are clueless????
who went to
> Smith, and I've worked on the staff of one of the alternative newspapers
> up
> here.
Yikes, Jay,, that makes you gay, then! ;)
> Let's just say that when I went to the Halloween party this year, all
> the goths, gays, trannies, and just plain weirdoes looked at me like I was
> the freak.
Yeah, and one can imagine that it's not fun for the gay/lesbian population
to be walking around amongst us straights and be looked at like weird
freaks...... See this is what I mean about people like yourself,,, they
don't see the connections between their own observations.
--
--
=-----
Good Flights!
Cecil
PP-ASEL-IA
Student - CP-ASEL
Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -
"C Kingsbury" > wrote in message
link.net...
>
> "David Brooks" > wrote in message
> ...
>>
>> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
>> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
>> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
> into
>> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> Get a $&%@!ing helmet, dude.
>
> for the past ten years. Most of the people I know don't understand how an
> educated, reasonable person like me could vote for "that chimp>
> These people are mad Kerry didn't run a liberal campaign and can't stand
> that he "was just as pro-war as Bush." Given the choice they'd like us to
> pull out of Iraq and beg the UN's forgiveness, raise taxes back to 70% on
Need I say that I think their
> policies would devastate this country just as terribly as you think W's
> policies will?
>
> Still, I've managed to become and remain friends with quite a few of these
> people because I realize that they're not actually bad people, just
> misguided. Naturally they feel the same about me. Some of them I'm happy
> to
> have long debates with over vast quantities of alcohol, others I only talk
> about other topics with. Life goes on and is richer for the company of
> people who think differently than I do.
>
, they voted for George W. Bush.
> There's a difference if you care to see it.
>
> -cwk.
>
>
J Haggerty
November 4th 04, 02:03 AM
Hey! Check your oxygen, you're showing symptoms of hypoxia!
JPH
David Brooks wrote:
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48% who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home, into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
NewsgroupUser
November 4th 04, 02:09 AM
Wow I did too - and he won (must be a conspiracy : )
On Wed, 03 Nov 2004 19:58:50 -0600, J Haggerty
> wrote:
>
>
>Cecil Chapman wrote:
>
>
>>
>> If there is any hope for our country, it will be when people learn to
>> abandon their mindless following of party affiliation and do as I (and
>> others) do; simply vote for the best man/woman for the job.
>
>I did! He won!
>
>JPH
Cecil Chapman
November 4th 04, 02:13 AM
Naw, I think he is just feeling a little frustrated. Personally I am just
grateful that Bush clearly had the popular vote (even if slim) so it wasn't
like 2000, made it a little easier to take. Though he still looks like a
chimp <grin> ;) My candidate at least resembled a humanoid; Herman Munster
<GRIN>
--
--
=-----
Good Flights!
Cecil
PP-ASEL-IA
Student - CP-ASEL
Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -
"Trent Moorehead" > wrote in message
...
G.R. Patterson III
November 4th 04, 02:15 AM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
>
> >Guns
> He's a hunter, I'm pretty sure they use guns for that (he's not a
> bowhunter).
He's opposed to private ownership of any firearm except shotguns plugged to three
shells. And just where in the Constitution exactly is hunting mentioned? He prattles
about "military-style assault weapons" while trying to ban semi-automatics, knowing
full well that no military-style assault weapon is semi-automatic.
I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm concerned, that
includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried to ban that,
and we aren't talking anything armor-piercing here.
One of the most frustrating things is that Kerry, Kennedy, and their ilk have people
like you convinced that the laws they want to pass will ban access to modern military
weapons and armour-piercing ammo. They won't. Laws to do that were passed in FDR's
time.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
Wizard of Draws
November 4th 04, 02:15 AM
On 11/3/04 7:17 PM, in article , "Blanche"
> wrote:
>
> On the other hand, if Rehnquist resigns, Sandra Day O'Connor is next
> in line for Chief Justice of the Supremes! But as one pundit said today,
> she's already got huge power as the swing vote all the time.
>
>
Chief Justice is designated by the President, and is not always the one with
the longest tenure. I wouldn't set my hopes on a Chief Justice O'Connor if I
were you. Since she's already in her 70's, I'd put my money on one that will
be around a bit longer.
--
Jeff 'The Wizard of Draws' Bucchino
Cartoons with a Touch of Magic
http://www.wizardofdraws.com
http://www.cartoonclipart.com
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 02:17 AM
Newps wrote:
>
>
> Matt Whiting wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> I'm thinking of moving to a state like yours (SD, right?).
>
>
> Montana. The democrats here couldn't get elected as republicans in
> Pennsylvania. They'd be too far to the right.
>
>
> I've lived
>
>> in PA all my life, but it is becoming such a liberal cesspool that I
>> may have to retire elsewehere.
>
>
> A Wyoming address would be good and even more conservative than here. No
> taxes.
Why are all of the conservatives states in places that are cold in the
winter? My grandfather always said that the cold winters "kept the
riff-raff out" and I'm beginning to think he was right. :-)
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 02:20 AM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
> >Guns
> He's a hunter, I'm pretty sure they use guns for that (he's not a
> bowhunter). Just because one doesn't support ownership of AK-47's and
> public access to armor-piercing bullets doesn't make one an enemy to gun
> ownership. In fact, his record as a senator reveals that he has
> consistently supported appropriate gun ownership. I own two shotguns and a
> couple of rifles - don't hunt, but skeet and target shoot. Even still, I
> just don't think the average citizen needs armor-piercing bullets or AK-47's
> (unless you live in remote parts of Alaska <grin>)/.
He's only a hunter when there is a camera around. His comments about
hunting show that he hasn't a clue about hunting. Funny, I don't recall
the second amendment ever mentioning hunting, or "appropriate" gun
ownership. You must have a different constitution than I have.
Kerry is so hypocritical he makes even Bill Clinton look like an honest man.
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 02:22 AM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
>>Oh, so know disagreeing with you means one is ignorant rather than a
>>puppet. You are starting to sound like Kerry.
>
>
> Unfortunately Kerry never said that. But, yes,,, one is truly ignorant, if
> they mindlessly espouse the words and ideas of others without ever having
> challenged those ideas, themselves.
>
> Every thing you wrote was, literally, the same campaign rhetoric we have
> heard from Bush.... The Kerry account is absurd,,, I spoke, at length, with
> one of the individuals who served under Kerry. How you could defend a draft
> dodger, like Bush; cowardly clinging onto the tails of daddy to get him out
> of harms way and into the National Guard is something I cannot help.
I never defended Bushes military record. I simply stated my opinion of
Kerry's.
> Of course, some people think cocaine use, alcoholism and DUI are just fine
> examples of a human being and would make FINE presidential material and
> moral fiber - Obviously, my ethical bar is higher than your standard....
> sad,,, but to each his own I suppose.
Yes, but Kerry didn't get elected so we don't have to worry about any of
the above with respect to our president.
Matt
Cecil Chapman
November 4th 04, 02:27 AM
> He's opposed to private ownership of any firearm except shotguns plugged
> to three
> shells. And just where in the Constitution exactly is hunting mentioned?
> He prattles
> about "military-style assault weapons" while trying to ban
> semi-automatics, knowing
> full well that no military-style assault weapon is semi-automatic.
Have you actually read his voting record and what types of weapons each
respective legislation was referring to? Evidently, not!
--
--
=-----
Good Flights!
Cecil
PP-ASEL-IA
Student - CP-ASEL
Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -
Cecil Chapman
November 4th 04, 02:35 AM
> I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm concerned,
> that
> includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried to
> ban that,
I almost forgot,,,,what for goodness sake do you need to be firing
ammunition as large as the type that the Mauser uses? Are the deer BIGGER
where you live,,, home protection, if that's what you are thinking, favors a
shotgun (that's per some cop friends, who would know).
But PLEASE tell me that you aren't one of those crazies that thinks that if
the "government takes over" its' citizens, you are going to be there like
Rambo to prevent it - if that's it,,, don't want to have to tell ya bub, but
you'll be easily outgunned and outmanned and be planted in the ground in
your tracks, faster than you can blink.
Then there are the Freudian possibilities regarding the subconscious need to
have BIG cartridges <grin>
--
--
=-----
Good Flights!
Cecil
PP-ASEL-IA
Student - CP-ASEL
Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -
Judah
November 4th 04, 02:40 AM
I'm not sure I agree... I think Gephardt lost out because of nothing
short of a lack of charisma. I don't think people were paying that much
attention to positions or character during the primaries, and there were
way too many people on the list to go very deep. But if he wasn't
charismatic enough to beat Kerry on the Primaries, I'm not sure he would
have had what it took to beat Bush either. After all, Gore lost on
charisma too.
I think where Kerry blew it worst is that he never really recovered from
the whole "flip-flop" persona. He had opportunities to. But basically,
his only comeback was to say that he misspoke when he talked about
"voting for it before voting against it." From a public perception, he
was saying that he made a mistake by poorly describing his flip-flopping,
but never actually addressed the issue of flip-flopping itself.
He didn't focus (as I think he should have) on the reality that
sometimes it is better to change your opinion in light of new facts than
to hold firm to a lie. He could have very easily turned the whole thing
around and put Bush in a defensive position - either the President of the
United States had the wool pulled over his eyes by his own intelligence
agency and is incompetent, or he had hidden motives and went into Iraq
based on a lie and pulled the wool over the eyes of the American people
and is undeserving. Instead, he left his own trustworthiness unaddressed,
and the public just didn't trust him. It didn't help, either, that he
constantly spoke about how he had a "better plan" for Iraq, but never
really qualified that with what the plan was... Basically it left his
credibility completely in question.
Either way, I think this is a much more serious issue than stem cell
research, or Gay Marraige. I strongly suspect that what the news media is
labelling "Moral Values" is not about the latter issues nearly as much as
about just general credibility. I guess liberals like me prefer to give
Kerry a chance, rather than let Bush go on pulling the wool over our eyes
(or allowing it to be pulled over our eyes by his staff). Where
conservatives would rather have someone they are comfortable with in
office than give the new, unpredictable guy a chance, especially if he
has shown he might not be perfect either.
No, I think the biggest problem in this election was simply that there
was not much difference at all between the two candidates, or if there
was, it was so clouded by nonessential issues that the general public was
left to vote on whether they are more comfortable with or without change,
and not much else.
"Jay Honeck" > wrote in
news:k_bid.351511$MQ5.252777@attbi_s52:
>> These people are mad Kerry didn't run a liberal campaign and can't
>> stand that he "was just as pro-war as Bush."
>
> That is SO ironic.
>
> If the Democrats has nominated a middle-of-the-road guy to run against
> Bush -- say, Dick Gephardt -- this election would not have even been
> close. The Democrats would have swept the nation, and never by less
> than 25 percentage points.
>
> Stupidly, they nominated a guy whose political positions were to the
> left of Ted Kennedy's, absolutely ensuring a Bush victory.
>
> There were many traditional Republicans out here -- myself included --
> who would have voted for a conservative Democrat in this election. But
> there was just no way for any of us to vote for a guy like Kerry.
>
> The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to
> run for president again.
Laura Clayton
November 4th 04, 02:56 AM
Bob Chilcoat wrote:
> I absolutely agree with you, Jay. Yet again, I had to vote AGAINST a
> candidate, rather than FOR one. I just thought Kerry was the least-bad
> candidate. When Bush opens his mouth, or just looks at the camera, for that
> matter, the back of my hair goes up. What thinking individual could vote
> FOR this idiot. I guess my version of the least-bad candidate was the same
> as only 49.9% of the rest of the country.
>
> Apparently you can fool 50% of the people, but there is always a noise
> function.
I've often wondered why some people feel the need to insult the intelligence of
their fellow voters who simply do not agree with their world views. Different
people have different experiences in their life, and some people even study
macroeconomics in depth. :) And the same treatment is given to candidates.
Although he has his moments, everyone knows Bush isn't a great orator, but he
sure isn't an idiot either.
Finally, the notion that somebody can't share in a newsgroup because some other
people in the same group have a different political leaning is reminiscent of
early childhood mentality. Hopefully this person will reconsider, perhaps after
sleeping on it.
Capt.Doug
November 4th 04, 02:59 AM
>"Bob Chilcoat" wrote in message -
>Yet again, I had to vote AGAINST a
> candidate, rather than FOR one.
Many people didn't vote for Bush as much as they voted against Edwards.
Having a trial lawyer a heartbeat away from the presidency was the greater
evil for many voters. As I recall, it was trial lawyers that managed to wipe
out piston-engine airplane production for over a decade.
D.
Peter R.
November 4th 04, 03:00 AM
Capt.Doug ) wrote:
> Many people didn't vote for Bush as much as they voted against Edwards.
> Having a trial lawyer a heartbeat away from the presidency was the greater
> evil for many voters. As I recall, it was trial lawyers that managed to wipe
> out piston-engine airplane production for over a decade.
Amen to that.
--
Peter
Judah
November 4th 04, 03:10 AM
Actually, come to think of it, where Kerry really went wrong was by taking
all of the spotlight away from Edwards after the "pat on the ass" incident.
Had he plastered Edwards' face on the front of the ticket prominently next
to his, he would have gotten more of the women and gay men to come out and
vote for him - enough to win several of those borderline states!
Judah > wrote in
:
> I'm not sure I agree... I think Gephardt lost out because of nothing
> short of a lack of charisma. I don't think people were paying that much
> attention to positions or character during the primaries, and there
> were way too many people on the list to go very deep. But if he wasn't
> charismatic enough to beat Kerry on the Primaries, I'm not sure he
> would have had what it took to beat Bush either. After all, Gore lost
> on charisma too.
>
> I think where Kerry blew it worst is that he never really recovered
> from the whole "flip-flop" persona. He had opportunities to. But
> basically, his only comeback was to say that he misspoke when he talked
> about "voting for it before voting against it." From a public
> perception, he was saying that he made a mistake by poorly describing
> his flip-flopping, but never actually addressed the issue of
> flip-flopping itself.
>
> He didn't focus (as I think he should have) on the reality that
> sometimes it is better to change your opinion in light of new facts
> than to hold firm to a lie. He could have very easily turned the whole
> thing around and put Bush in a defensive position - either the
> President of the United States had the wool pulled over his eyes by his
> own intelligence agency and is incompetent, or he had hidden motives
> and went into Iraq based on a lie and pulled the wool over the eyes of
> the American people and is undeserving. Instead, he left his own
> trustworthiness unaddressed, and the public just didn't trust him. It
> didn't help, either, that he constantly spoke about how he had a
> "better plan" for Iraq, but never really qualified that with what the
> plan was... Basically it left his credibility completely in question.
>
> Either way, I think this is a much more serious issue than stem cell
> research, or Gay Marraige. I strongly suspect that what the news media
> is labelling "Moral Values" is not about the latter issues nearly as
> much as about just general credibility. I guess liberals like me prefer
> to give Kerry a chance, rather than let Bush go on pulling the wool
> over our eyes (or allowing it to be pulled over our eyes by his staff).
> Where conservatives would rather have someone they are comfortable with
> in office than give the new, unpredictable guy a chance, especially if
> he has shown he might not be perfect either.
>
>
> No, I think the biggest problem in this election was simply that there
> was not much difference at all between the two candidates, or if there
> was, it was so clouded by nonessential issues that the general public
> was left to vote on whether they are more comfortable with or without
> change, and not much else.
>
>
> "Jay Honeck" > wrote in
> news:k_bid.351511$MQ5.252777@attbi_s52:
>
>>> These people are mad Kerry didn't run a liberal campaign and can't
>>> stand that he "was just as pro-war as Bush."
>>
>> That is SO ironic.
>>
>> If the Democrats has nominated a middle-of-the-road guy to run against
>> Bush -- say, Dick Gephardt -- this election would not have even been
>> close. The Democrats would have swept the nation, and never by less
>> than 25 percentage points.
>>
>> Stupidly, they nominated a guy whose political positions were to the
>> left of Ted Kennedy's, absolutely ensuring a Bush victory.
>>
>> There were many traditional Republicans out here -- myself included --
>> who would have voted for a conservative Democrat in this election.
>> But there was just no way for any of us to vote for a guy like Kerry.
>>
>> The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to
>> run for president again.
>
>
Richard Hertz
November 4th 04, 03:46 AM
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
m...
>> I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm concerned,
>> that
>> includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried to
>> ban that,
>
> I almost forgot,,,,what for goodness sake do you need to be firing
> ammunition as large as the type that the Mauser uses? Are the deer BIGGER
> where you live,,, home protection, if that's what you are thinking, favors
> a shotgun (that's per some cop friends, who would know).
>
> But PLEASE tell me that you aren't one of those crazies that thinks that
> if the "government takes over" its' citizens, you are going to be there
> like Rambo to prevent it - if that's it,,, don't want to have to tell ya
> bub, but you'll be easily outgunned and outmanned and be planted in the
> ground in your tracks, faster than you can blink.
>
> Then there are the Freudian possibilities regarding the subconscious need
> to have BIG cartridges <grin>
Please, the 2nd ammendment says I have the right to firearms, not just the
ones that some folks say are ok.
>
> --
> --
> =-----
> Good Flights!
>
> Cecil
> PP-ASEL-IA
> Student - CP-ASEL
>
> Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
> checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
> Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
>
> "I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
> - Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
>
> "We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
> this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
> - Cecil Day Lewis -
>
Richard Hertz
November 4th 04, 03:49 AM
"kontiki" > wrote in message
...
> Trent Moorehead wrote:[i]
> >.... I used to think that Democrats were the type of people
>> who were accepting of others, but I have seen over the last few years
>> that
>> they are not. I am a Democrat, but I voted for Bush. He's not perfect,
>> but
>> at least he's not a hypocrite.
>
> The liberal democrats I have direct experience with always boast that they
> are so tolerant and so pro-choice. This only applies to choice in
> abortions
> however, and they do NOT approve of choice when it comes to the following:
>
> 1) choice in whether or not someone desirec to own firearms (they are
> against that)
> 2) choice in education... they are against anything other than mandatory
> public schools
> 3) choice in placing your FICA taxes into anything other than the social
> security
> 4) choice in health care... they ultimately want the government in charge
> of all health care options.
>
> I could mention more but what stir up the natives.
>
>
Great response!
Richard Hertz
November 4th 04, 03:52 AM
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
...
> Awww David, hang around! Lots of good stuff to be learned here. I've
> lived on the earth long enough to recognize that living amongst
> Cro-Magnons can be amusing. Yeah, they unfortunately have the right to
> vote,,,, but they make a few grunts and run in the wall a few times and
> next thing we know, they are running back to 'us' for advice and help.
>
> I, too, am worried about the direction the country will take. For
> instance, I never thought I'd see the day that something like the "Patriot
> Act" would be put into place. Whenever we strip away the very core
> constitutional rights of our people, we do a great harm to our nation and
> allow the terrorists to exact an even more telling blow on our country.
> Fortunately, there are enough men and women of reason who have actively
> gone after things like the Patriot Act, aiding in disabling its' most
> sinister provisions. It will be men and women of reason and good
> conscience that will bring things around, again. I DO believe Kerry was
> one of those people, but thankfully there are many like him - congressmen
> and women that won't allow those precious and hard-fought-for documents to
> be attacked at their very heart; The Constitution of The United States and
> The Bill of Rights - never EVER letting us forget that our Constitution
> begins with those words; "WE, the people......"
Like the second ammendment?
>
> Though I can't say I believe in a divine being or UFO's (so, in my
> opinion, we can't depend on extraterrestrials to help us, either) <grin>,
> I can say that I have always believed that in times of dire circumstance
> that people of good conscience will always overcome, persevere and
> succeed - even when things look to be their darkest. This country will
> have it's time to shine, again! :0) I believe that with all my heart!
> You should too!!! ;)
>
> Stay with us! :O)
>
> --
> --
> =-----
> Good Flights!
>
> Cecil
> PP-ASEL-IA
> Student - CP-ASEL
>
> Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
> checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
> Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
>
> "I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
> - Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
>
> "We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
> this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
> - Cecil Day Lewis -
>
mike regish
November 4th 04, 04:01 AM
Couldn't have said it better myself, Cecil.
Thanks for taking the time. Too bad it's all wasted, though.
mike regish
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
m...
>
>
> >Guns
> He's a hunter, I'm pretty sure they use guns for that (he's not a
> bowhunter). Just because one doesn't support ownership of AK-47's and
> public access to armor-piercing bullets doesn't make one an enemy to gun
> ownership. In fact, his record as a senator reveals that he has
> consistently supported appropriate gun ownership. I own two shotguns and
> a couple of rifles - don't hunt, but skeet and target shoot. Even still,
> I just don't think the average citizen needs armor-piercing bullets or
> AK-47's (unless you live in remote parts of Alaska <grin>)/.
>
> ?, gay marriage
>
> He stated he was against 'gay marriage' - but in favor of civil unions
> that allowed long-time gay couples the right to visit their partner in the
> hospital, claims to benefits, etc. This is something that I would think
> any reasonable person would think a long-time couple would be entitled to
> (regardless of the sexual orientation. You know the funny thing about this
> kind of bigotry is that it reminds me of what we would hear in the 60's
> "Can't let 'coloreds' have any rights and god-forbid they should be
> allowed to marry white-folk". Jeesh,,, doesn't anyone EVER learn from the
> lessons of the past.
>
> When are we going to remember the line about 'separation of church and
> state'. The gay population has become the new 'coloreds' - get over your
> bigotry. Live and let live. A gay couple in a civil union or
> marriage,,,, whatever,,,, is no threat to my marriage. In the end it is
> just about two consenting adults that care about one another and
> recognizing that they have pledged to spend the rest of their lives
> together - that sounds pretty cool to me. Of course the ignorant
> 'religious right' will refer to the Bible, citing that quote regarding the
> men of Sodom. I will ask these same people if they have ever done
> anything wrong with their hand, or sinned by looking at something and
> point out if they haven't cut off that hand or plucked out that eye they
> have already violated more than a few of the directives in the Bible. and
> <GASP> what if your women don't keep their heads covered (as mentioned in
> both the Old testament AND in the NEW Testament in some of the books of
> the New Testament written by Paul). Don't even get me started on the
> absurd Adam and Eve story which (if you are ignorant enough to buy into
> the account) makes it necessary for all their progeny to commit incest in
> order to procreate - of course that would partly explain why some people
> seem to have a 'birth defect' in their unreasoned thinking. <grin>
>
> Regarding the 'gay marriage' issue,,, we need to develop policy based on
> fairness and reason, not on some quaint historical book with a cross on
> it. Jeesh,,, we might as well just worship rocks and pray to salamanders
> for all the similar good it would do. Visit a children's hospital (I have
> and it will break your heart),,, the children live and die the same
> whether they pray to a 'god' or speak to hamsters... and personally, if
> there were a divine being, I can't possibly think of a prayer more worthy
> of being granted than the prayer of some dear 4 year old in a cancer ward,
> just asking to see their next birthday, hardly ever seems to be 'granted'
> though. Of course the 'beauty' of any superstition is that you can go on
> to make excuses why it doesn't seem to work all the time, but it is still
> superstition; borne from stories of magic, evil and good spirits.
> Superstition is great to study, but makes a poor ruler to measure
> political policy by and make legislative policy. Let's get out of the
> dark ages.
>
> ,> taxes
>
> Good point,,, you're right Kerry was clearly against tax breaks for the
> wealthy, the group that Bush was caught referring to during a private
> dinner that was videotaped and to whom he referred to as "My own
> eople" ---- Got that right, W. Thank goodness there was someone looking
> out for the common man (and still is,,,, as a Senator) as John Kerry.
>
>>, the UN.
>
> YIKES! Please tell me that you have most of your teeth and that you don't
> play 'Dueling Banjos' along some remote bayou? The United Nations is
> LEFTIST? Do you even know the history and original purpose of the United
> Nations? Read a book! What was wrong with having a consensus (and some
> help) before blundering into Vietnam... OOPS I mean Iraq? Were we under
> attack,,,, NO,,,,, I seem to recall Afghanistan had posed that threat but
> we never finished trying to get HIM.
>
>> You may not agree but they are.
>
> Well, YOU would know.... After all we 'know' that God is on our
> side......... ooops... that's the same thinking of Bin Laden uses
>
> <jeesh>
>
> --
> --
> =-----
> Good Flights!
>
> Cecil
> PP-ASEL-IA
> Student - CP-ASEL
>
> Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
> checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
> Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
>
> "I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
> - Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
>
> "We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
> this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
> - Cecil Day Lewis -
>
Michael 182
November 4th 04, 04:03 AM
Cecil,
Repeat after me. Never, never, never argue second amendment rights in a
newsgroup. If you need frustration try teaching your dog not to chase
rabbits. In fact, you have a better chance of succeeding there than you do
in converting NRA members.
Michael
(A confirmed gun control advocate...)
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
m...
>> He's opposed to private ownership of any firearm except shotguns plugged
>> to three
>> shells. And just where in the Constitution exactly is hunting mentioned?
>> He prattles
>> about "military-style assault weapons" while trying to ban
>> semi-automatics, knowing
>> full well that no military-style assault weapon is semi-automatic.
>
> Have you actually read his voting record and what types of weapons each
> respective legislation was referring to? Evidently, not!
>
> --
> --
> =-----
> Good Flights!
>
> Cecil
> PP-ASEL-IA
> Student - CP-ASEL
>
> Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
> checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
> Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com
>
> "I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
> - Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
>
> "We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
> this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
> - Cecil Day Lewis -
>
Peter Duniho
November 4th 04, 04:05 AM
"Laura Clayton" > wrote in message
...
>> Apparently you can fool 50% of the people, but there is always a noise
>> function.
>
> I've often wondered why some people feel the need to insult the
> intelligence of their fellow voters who simply do not agree with
> their world views.
Actually, according to the Gallup Poll, among Republicans you can fool over
60% of the people.
I can't speak for where Bob's coming from, but the truth remains that for
the most part, people who voted for Bush don't actually have their facts
straight. This is not disputable.
Pete
John T
November 4th 04, 04:06 AM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
>
> Why are all of the conservatives states in places that are cold in the
> winter?
They're not. :)
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
Jay Honeck
November 4th 04, 04:08 AM
> To be fair, the only reason that there was a surplus is because the
> country got caught up in a technology stock mania. The market was
> generating trillions of short term gains and taxes on those gains is what
> swelled federal and state coffers. Bush entered the white house with
> millions of taxpayers carrying forward losses.
Now, hush, Mike.
Don't confuse Cecil with facts like these -- it'll get in the way of his
built-up, hard-earned dander...
;-)
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Rich Lemert
November 4th 04, 04:08 AM
Jay Honeck wrote:
>>These people are mad Kerry didn't run a liberal campaign and can't stand
>>that he "was just as pro-war as Bush."
>
>
> That is SO ironic.
>
> If the Democrats has nominated a middle-of-the-road guy to run against
> Bush -- say, Dick Gephardt -- this election would not have even been close.
> The Democrats would have swept the nation, and never by less than 25
> percentage points.
>
Heck, if Bush was anywhere near the middle of the road, I might have
considered voting for him.
I actually had a very unusual experience this election. One of the
minor statewide offices here (Chairman of the State Agriculture
Commission) had two candidates that had almost identical experience
and who held almost identical views regarding the position they were
running for. What really made it strange, though, was the fact that I
agreed with their positions! It's extremely unusual for there to be
one candidate in a contest that I feel I can vote _for_, but two????
I almost didn't know what to do.
Rich Lemert
Jim Fisher
November 4th 04, 04:08 AM
"Capt.Doug" > wrote in message
> Many people didn't vote for Bush as much as they voted against Edwards.
Just chiming in here but speak for yourself. I voted FOR Bush and utterly
against JOhn KErry.
--
Jim Fisher
Chris E
November 4th 04, 04:08 AM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
> P.S. You're right, we should all thank Mr. Bush for turning a hard-earned
> surplus budget (earned under Clinton's rule) into a 4.3 trillion dollar
> DEFICIT.
The surplus budget was a scam, since much of that income turned out to be
losses due to technology speculation, rampant unchecked corporate fraud in the
late 90s, and even during the "surplus" social security monies were still
being siphoned off. The Nasdaq market peaked Jan 2000, and NYSE was dropping
steadily after March 2000,well before Bush was in office. Also keep in mind
that Bush had nothing to do with FY 2001 budget, which was in effect through
30 Sep 2001. The deficit did have much to do with an attack that happened on
Sept 2001, you may recall it, and the war on the terrorists. More attacks and
there wouldn't be much of an economy to worry about deficits. I don't recall
FDR holding off entering the WWII after Pearl Harbor because of worrying about
current deficits. We all remember the deficit scare stories from the 1980s,
and as the economy grew and expanded in time, the tax revenue came back in.
Deficits now are not extraordinary when properly compared to GDP, historically
speaking. Current GDP growth is about 4.3%, showing strong growth, especially
when compared with other Western nations, such as Germany, that hope, hope for
GDP growth in the 0.2% range this year.
Also remember a deficit is a flow concept, not a stock concept that can be
inherited.
Chris E
November 4th 04, 04:10 AM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
> > I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm concerned,
> > that
> > includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried to
> > ban that,
>
> I almost forgot,,,,what for goodness sake do you need to be firing
> ammunition as large as the type that the Mauser uses? Are the deer BIGGER
> where you live,,, home protection, if that's what you are thinking, favors a
> shotgun (that's per some cop friends, who would know).
>
> But PLEASE tell me that you aren't one of those crazies that thinks that if
> the "government takes over" its' citizens, you are going to be there like
> Rambo to prevent it - if that's it,,, don't want to have to tell ya bub, but
> you'll be easily outgunned and outmanned and be planted in the ground in
> your tracks, faster than you can blink.
>
> Then there are the Freudian possibilities regarding the subconscious need to
> have BIG cartridges <grin>
The 2nd amendment speaks of the right to bear arms, not the right to bear arms
that are approved by certain folks. Similarily the 1st amendment provides right
to free speech to make remarks about all kinds of issues, not just certain
issues that some folks feel ok.
Jim Fisher
November 4th 04, 04:11 AM
"Mike Rapoport" > wrote in message
ink.net...
> To be fair, the only reason that there was a surplus is because the
> country got caught up in a technology stock mania. The market was
> generating trillions of short term gains and taxes on those gains is what
> swelled federal and state coffers. Bush entered the white house with
> millions of taxpayers carrying forward losses.
Not fair, Mike. That studious observation is waaay to complicated for us
little people to grasp.
--
Jim Fisher
Chris E
November 4th 04, 04:12 AM
Jim Fisher wrote:
> "Capt.Doug" > wrote in message
> > Many people didn't vote for Bush as much as they voted against Edwards.
>
> Just chiming in here but speak for yourself. I voted FOR Bush and utterly
> against JOhn KErry.
I voted for Bush before I voted against John Kerry.
Jay Honeck
November 4th 04, 04:22 AM
> I'm not sure I agree... I think Gephardt lost out because of nothing
> short of a lack of charisma. I don't think people were paying that much
> attention to positions or character during the primaries, and there were
> way too many people on the list to go very deep. But if he wasn't
> charismatic enough to beat Kerry on the Primaries, I'm not sure he would
> have had what it took to beat Bush either. After all, Gore lost on
> charisma too.
I agree with you there, but it's my belief that Bush was ideologically
vulnerable, and that a guy closer to the center (ala Gebhardt) would have at
least grabbed enough of the popular vote (and people like me, who weren't
100% enthused with Bush) to have tipped the scales his way.
But we'll never really know...
The Democrats simply have to figure out a way to select their nominees
better, if they ever want to win the presidency. They've got to find
someone who hones closer to the beliefs of mainstream America, without
alienating their huge (and incredibly vocal) left wing. The Republicans
have figured this out -- I'm surprised the Democrats haven't.
If anything, they seem to be learning precisely the wrong lesson from this
loss, blaming Kerry for not being "Democrat" enough. This seems
ludicrous, given the mood of the nation (at least outside of the big
cities), and how diametrically opposed Kerry's positions were to what most
Americans want and believe.
Mark my words: If they nominate Hillary next time around -- as they appear
to be angling toward -- it will set the Democratic Party back 50 years.
They won't see the White House again in our lifetime.
And now, back to flying!
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Jay Honeck
November 4th 04, 04:26 AM
Methinks you've confused me with another poster, Cecil, as I clearly am NOT
the guy who wrote:
>> I'm a pro-life, pro-gun, low-tax Republican living in Boston,
>> Massachusetts
> When grade schoolers study traditional marriage in their schools, do those
> courses talk about the various sexual positions the man and women get in,
> and who gets to be on-top and the like? Of course, not. Mentioning that
> Paul may love Sandy or Sandy may Love Jill and be a couple is all that's
> mentioned - it's called tolerance for differences Jay.
Ya gotta keep your eye on that top line better...
It 'tweren't me that wrote what you are ascribing to me...
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Jay Honeck
November 4th 04, 04:28 AM
> Naw, I think he is just feeling a little frustrated. Personally I am just
> grateful that Bush clearly had the popular vote (even if slim) so it
> wasn't like 2000, made it a little easier to take. Though he still looks
> like a chimp <grin> ;) My candidate at least resembled a humanoid; Herman
> Munster <GRIN>
THERE you go. That's the ticket.
It's time to laugh about it, have a beer, and get back to flying. This crap
is over for another four years...
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
John T
November 4th 04, 04:36 AM
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
m
>
> When are we going to remember the line about 'separation of church and
> state'.
Where is that line found?
> Good point,,, you're right Kerry was clearly against tax breaks for
> the wealthy, the group that Bush was caught referring to during a
> private dinner that was videotaped and to whom he referred to as "My
> own people" ---- Got that right, W. Thank goodness there was
> someone looking out for the common man (and still is,,,, as a
> Senator) as John Kerry.
Sorry, but you lose points on this issue. Kerry, *the* richest person in
Congress, paid less in 2003 taxes (both in percentage and in raw dollars)
than Bush (whose net worth is a fraction of Kerry's). Feel free to Google
for their 2003 tax returns and do the math. While you're at it, notice the
difference in charitable donations, too.
Face it: The Democrats have no base outside the urban areas of this country
and their values apparently are out of line with a majority of the voters.
They need to reconsider their platform if they want to appeal to American
voters again.
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
Jim Fisher
November 4th 04, 04:38 AM
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message >
The gay population has become the new 'coloreds' - get over your
> bigotry. Live and let live.
You pushed a button, Cecil. I see this kind of statement repeated with
sickening frequency
Comparing gay folks to "colored" people is just utter bullsquat. If I were
black, I'd smack people who say this upside the face. If you weren't such a
generally nice feller, this honkey would wanna smack you.
Black folks suffered brutally for hundreds of years right here in America.
Many still suffer today from generations of whip-toting, slave-owning,
water-cannon-wielding white folks denying them basic, God given,
Constitutional rights to equal treatment by their representative government.
Not one should is denying gay folks their constitutional rights to practice
their behavior in private . . . or even in public. They can vote. They can
get elected to office. They can hold powerful positions in the media and
corporate America.
Hell, they can even fly a high wing airplanes.
But they can't get married and they can't fly low wing planes. That's just
they way it is.
To say that "Denying sexually aberrant citizens 'marital' status is akin to
human rights abuses endured by black Americans" is an affront to my, and
your, intelligence.
--
Jim Fisher
*"Sexually aberrant" is defined as a behavior that is outside the norm.
Homosexuality might become a "normal" behavior in the distant future but for
now it is an aberration, pure and simple.
Roy Epperson
November 4th 04, 04:42 AM
> Michael
> (A confirmed gun control advocate...)
>
Confirmed gun control is using two hands!
Jim Fisher
November 4th 04, 04:43 AM
"Chris E" > wrote in message ...
> Jim Fisher wrote:
>
>> "Capt.Doug" > wrote in message
>> > Many people didn't vote for Bush as much as they voted against Edwards.
>>
>> Just chiming in here but speak for yourself. I voted FOR Bush and
>> utterly
>> against JOhn KErry.
>
> I voted for Bush before I voted against John Kerry.
Snicker!
John T
November 4th 04, 04:52 AM
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
m
>
> But don't let intelligence or logic, pry you away from your blissful
> ignorance.
It's interesting that the vast majority of the people I hear use this line
(and similar bumper stickers like "Think: It's patriotic.") are quite
liberal. As if they're the only ones capable of reason and logic and
challenging assumptions.
Like oil. It would have been far, far cheaper for us to simply buy the oil
from the "oil for food" program than to invade Iraq if oil were our goal.
For that matter, why not Venezuela? If oil were the goal, Venezuela is
*much* closer to the US and has a less imposing military. *Think* for a
moment and tell me it's logical for us to invade a hostile country half a
globe away for oil when we have oil exporters in our own hemisphere.
No, it sounds Moore like you're toeing the party line.
> I hope one day, people like you will learn to challenge
> and learn more about what they are told as fact FROM ANY SOURCE,,,
> then we will REALLY have a great Nation.
Well, at least we can agree that voters should be educated on the issues and
not just follow the party line.
> A mind is truly a terrible thing to waste..........
You just had to throw in that elitist attitude again. Just when you were
showing some reason, too.
Your guy lost. By a significant margin. Get over it and go flying. :)
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
C Kingsbury
November 4th 04, 05:01 AM
I'm the original poster and I approve this response.
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
m...
>
> freaks...... See this is what I mean about people like yourself,,, they
> don't see the connections between their own observations.
No, I just don't see them the same way you do. You can SCREAM in capital
letters all you want and decide that I'm suffering from a terminal case of
cognitive dissonance, but that's not a very mature response, now is it?
Perhaps Republicans in Utah are just as touchy as liberals in Cambridge and
Berkeley. All that ideological conformity makes these places into
ideological veal pens. God forbid you ever have to venture outside that
bubble. Just like David Brooks, who decided he can't even deal with being in
the presence of people who voted for Bush.
Best,
-cwk.
John T
November 4th 04, 05:08 AM
"Roy Epperson" > wrote in message
ink.net
>
> Confirmed gun control is using two hands!
I thought it was "dead center mass"... :)
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
Bob Fry
November 4th 04, 05:09 AM
"Howard Nelson" > writes:
> IMO the election was a contest between the people pulling the wagon and the
> people riding in the wagon.
Mebbe. Mebbe not.
Here's a thought. No doubt many of the people who voted for Dubya
feel strongly about government workers, among other issues. No
increase in government! It's full of incompetents and bozos who never
get rated on their real performance, but just get raises anyway.
Or get re-elected. Dubya--the epitome of everything wrong with the
Government Employee.
Roy Epperson
November 4th 04, 05:13 AM
> I'm not sure I agree... I think Gephardt lost out because of nothing
> short of a lack of charisma. I don't think people were paying that much
When Gephardt and Lieberman and other Democrats who are toward the central
of the political spectrum "dropped" out, there was a feeling the GWB was
unbeatable. When they dropped by the wayside, further left of center to
dominate the selection process.
Unfortunately / fortunately depending on one's political perspective, the
DNC has not put forward a candidate who could pull voters from the center
and right of center except for Kennedy and Clinton. Dukas was a "old style"
Eastern Liberal. Gore was an "heir apparent" because he serviced with
Clinton but move to the left of center during the campaign and lost the
center votes he needed.
No party can win the poplar vote unless they can pull voters from the other
side of center from their base. Be too far to the extremes of the spectrum
and they loose the cross over vote.
Morgans
November 4th 04, 05:27 AM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote
>
> Kerry is so hypocritical he makes even Bill Clinton look like an honest
man.
>
>
> Matt
BINGO!!!
--
Jim in NC
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
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Morgans
November 4th 04, 05:36 AM
> > One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> > flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of
my
> > flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically.
Snip
>
> What prompted this outburst?
Temper tantrum.
--
Jim in NC
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Dave Stadt
November 4th 04, 05:39 AM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
...
> Newps wrote:
> >
> >
> > Matt Whiting wrote:
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> I'm thinking of moving to a state like yours (SD, right?).
> >
> >
> > Montana. The democrats here couldn't get elected as republicans in
> > Pennsylvania. They'd be too far to the right.
> >
> >
> > I've lived
> >
> >> in PA all my life, but it is becoming such a liberal cesspool that I
> >> may have to retire elsewehere.
> >
> >
> > A Wyoming address would be good and even more conservative than here. No
> > taxes.
>
> Why are all of the conservatives states in places that are cold in the
> winter? My grandfather always said that the cold winters "kept the
> riff-raff out" and I'm beginning to think he was right. :-)
>
>
> Matt
Seems half a dozen or so southern states went republican big time yesterday.
Seems the heat is keeping the riff-raff out also.
JF
November 4th 04, 05:49 AM
> I voted for Bush before I voted against John Kerry.
Mayor Daley, that you?
Dave Stadt
November 4th 04, 05:50 AM
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
m...
> > Stupidly, they nominated a guy whose political positions were to the
left
> > of Ted Kennedy's, absolutely ensuring a Bush victory.
> >
> > There were many traditional Republicans out here -- myself included --
who
> > would have voted for a conservative Democrat in this election. But
there
> > was just no way for any of us to vote for a guy like Kerry.
> >
> > The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to
run
> > for president again.
>
> I have often wondered how some people come to the conclusions that they
do.
> Jay,,, for goodness sake you sound like you are a sock-puppet mouthing the
> words of his puppeteer (Bush - who was famous for the 'Kerry's just like
T.
> Kennedy' line). Kerry was far left? How, where? If anything he was as
> centrist as Clinton was. You'd think he belonged to the Communist party
to
> hear the prattle that is coming off of your tongue.
Even democrats describe Kerry as being left of T. Kennedy. It's pretty
lonely that far out.
Brien K. Meehan
November 4th 04, 05:52 AM
Don't forget to take your Kool-Aid with you.
Adam K.
November 4th 04, 06:13 AM
Whoa, Nelly!
Slow down.
I've never voted Republican in my life.
Take me with you.
ak
rls
November 4th 04, 06:45 AM
Cecil, I suggest you read the legislation.
I have a simple .22 rifle. By using a 6" dowel rod, some duct tape, and
the cardboard tube from the center of a roll of toilet paper, I can make it
into a dreaded "assault rifle" of the type addressed in the law that just
expired.
You really should read the law itself, instead of what the Brady people are
saying about it.
Cecil Chapman wrote:
>>He's opposed to private ownership of any firearm except shotguns plugged
>>to three
>>shells. And just where in the Constitution exactly is hunting mentioned?
>>He prattles
>>about "military-style assault weapons" while trying to ban
>>semi-automatics, knowing
>>full well that no military-style assault weapon is semi-automatic.
>
>
> Have you actually read his voting record and what types of weapons each
> respective legislation was referring to? Evidently, not!
>
Steve Fleischer
November 4th 04, 12:01 PM
On Thu, 4 Nov 2004 10:30:05 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
> "A fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity"
Nothing wrong with weapons - it's the folks that carry 'em that scare me.
C'mon, admit it, who wishes the 172 had a ball turret? ;-)
--
Steve
E-mail: steve at flyingtigerwebdesign dot com
Hong Kong, 04/11/2004 19:59:14
Jay Masino
November 4th 04, 12:13 PM
In rec.aviation.piloting Jay Honeck > wrote:
> I agree with you there, but it's my belief that Bush was ideologically
> vulnerable, and that a guy closer to the center (ala Gebhardt) would have at
> least grabbed enough of the popular vote (and people like me, who weren't
> 100% enthused with Bush) to have tipped the scales his way.
I agree, but Gebhardt was never gonna be the answer. He's way too boring.
He has no carisma. There was no way he would have been able to win.
> The Democrats simply have to figure out a way to select their nominees
> better, if they ever want to win the presidency. They've got to find
> someone who hones closer to the beliefs of mainstream America, without
> alienating their huge (and incredibly vocal) left wing. The Republicans
> have figured this out -- I'm surprised the Democrats haven't.
The problem is that the "Party" (ie, the party leadership) doesn't
neccessarily pick the nominee. A group of individuals decide to run, and
then the primaries pick the nominee.
--- Jay
--
__!__
Jay and Teresa Masino ___(_)___
http://www2.ari.net/jmasino ! ! !
http://www.oceancityairport.com
http://www.oc-adolfos.com
John T
November 4th 04, 12:48 PM
"Martin Hotze" > wrote in message
>
>> No, it sounds Moore like you're toeing the party line.
> ^^^^^^^^
>
> Freud at work? :-))
No. I typed exactly what I wanted to appear.
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
kontiki
November 4th 04, 01:07 PM
If you apply any intellectual honesty to the campaign rhetoric out of
the Kerry/Edwards duo you would certainly conclude that the facts were
not in total alignment.
No matter how you slice it however, the endless litany of complaints,
criticisms and Monday morning quarterbacking that cam out of Kerry's
mouth is what turned a lot of people off. Anybody can bitch about stuff.
Kerry had 20 years in the senate to do some constructive things what the
hell was he doing all that time (besides wind-surfing and playing golf).
Peter Duniho wrote:
>
> I can't speak for where Bob's coming from, but the truth remains that for
> the most part, people who voted for Bush don't actually have their facts
> straight. This is not disputable.
>
> Pete
>
>
November 4th 04, 01:35 PM
As someone who also voted for Kerry (not with much enthusiasm, though) my I add
my comment, "Don't let the door hit your ass on the way out."
What a bunch of baby boy crap to post on an IFR flying forum.
David Brooks wrote:
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48% who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home, into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
Richard Russell
November 4th 04, 01:50 PM
On Wed, 3 Nov 2004 17:44:52 -0500, "Icebound"
> wrote:
>
>"C Kingsbury" > wrote in message
nk.net...
>>
>> "Jay Honeck" > wrote in message
>> news:k_bid.351511$MQ5.252777@attbi_s52...
>...snip...
>>> The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to run
>>> for president again.
>>
>> Hillary Clinton.
>>
>...snip...
>> My dream team is Giuliani-Rice. ...snip...
>
>It would be interesting to see if the (conservative) country is ready for a
>Woman in the White House, or even in the position of "heartbeat away".
>
>That's kind of a "liberal" concept, isn't it???...
>
>
This is a sad comment to make in the greatest country in the world,
but my sense is that any party that nominates a woman for president or
vice-president has conceded the election before it starts. For
reasons that I cannot fathom, this country is not even close to being
ready for that scenario. We'll accept female governors, supreme court
justices, CEO's, etc, but not president or vp. We are way behind the
rest of the world in that regard.
Rich Russell
Jay Honeck
November 4th 04, 02:05 PM
> To say that "Denying sexually aberrant citizens 'marital' status is akin
> to human rights abuses endured by black Americans" is an affront to my,
> and your, intelligence.
Well put, Jim.
Black Americans are not comfortable with this comparison, as you state. In
fact, NPR recently did a piece on the "black vote" and discovered a larger
than ever percentage of blacks voting Republican, precisely because of this
issue.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Jay Honeck
November 4th 04, 02:13 PM
> This is a sad comment to make in the greatest country in the world,
> but my sense is that any party that nominates a woman for president or
> vice-president has conceded the election before it starts.
I disagree. I think America is MORE than ready to elect a conservative
Republican woman president/vice-president.
But Hillary? Never. She polarizes everyone she meets -- there is no middle
ground with her, in large part due to her husband's "legacy."
It's kind of a shame, cuz she's a bright woman in many ways.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Bob Chilcoat
November 4th 04, 02:19 PM
Actually, no. The 2nd amendment says "arms". Doesn't mention firearms at
all. So you can have swords, spears, bows and arrows :-)
Even if it's assumed that firearms were intended (and I believe they were),
the founding fathers were thinking of the arms of the time. I have no
problem with anyone owning and bearing all the muzzle loading flintlocks
they want.
I'll even concede percussion-cap muzzle-loaders and paper cartridge
breach-loaders, but no one NEEDs to own an assault rifle or machine gun for
personal use. Uncle supplies those free of charge for the military, which
is now the militia the framers intended; we no longer need an civilian one.
--
Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways)
I don't have to like Bush and Cheney (Or Kerry, for that matter) to love
America
"Richard Hertz" <no one@no one.com> wrote in message
et...
>
> Please, the 2nd ammendment says I have the right to firearms, not just the
> ones that some folks say are ok.
>
John Harlow
November 4th 04, 02:20 PM
> And I tend to be a true liberal......If you ain't hurting anyone and
> want to do it, go for it. Wanna own a full auto assault weapon, fine.
> Just don't murder anyone. (I do and I haven't) Wanna fly, don't fly
> into a building with 500 lbs of TNT. (I do and I don't)
> Have a cigarette!....
> Chug a bottle of Jack Daniels!....
> Smoke a joint!...
> Shoot some heroin!.....
> No Problem, but I don't WANT to pay for your rehab.
> Wanna drive 150 mph, don't crash into a school bus.
> Gay......Keep your f**kin' hands off my ass.
> Etc. Etc. Etc.
>
> "I want" has made this a great country. A true liberal hates all
> regulation of
> anything that does not directly, and absolutely, hurt anyone. Owning
> a Howitzer
> hurts nobody, lobbing a shell into a neighbors house does.
Actually you just described a true "Libertarian".
www.lp.org
Aviv Hod
November 4th 04, 02:28 PM
Howard Nelson wrote:
> Ya know. I think David actually left. Not a bad troll through muddy waters
> however.
>
> IMO the election was a contest between the people pulling the wagon and the
> people riding in the wagon. Luckily 51% of the people were pulling the wagon
> so it will probably keep moving (perfect wagon with no losses to friction
> etc.). Once 51% or greater are riding in the wagon then it will only move
> downhill.
>
> Howard
>
>
> ---
> Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
> Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
> Version: 6.0.788 / Virus Database: 533 - Release Date: 11/1/2004
>
>
What do you base this on? If we analyze the tax receipts of states who
voted for W and the ones that voted for Kerry, we'll see that those darn
Kerry supportin' states are sitting in the wagon waiting for us to pull
them along while generating the VAST MAJORITY of taxes!
I haven't done an analysis for this year yet (obviously, since the year
isn't over and the data isn't there yet) but I do have the numbers for
the 2000 contest. Since we had essentially the same red/blue map, this
is still telling. The bottom line?
Total tax receipts from states that voted for each candidate, in $millions:
Gore: $1,202,891,545
Bush: $873,151,976
SOURCE: 2000 IRS Data Book, Publication 55b. Also Chief Financial
Officer, Revenue Accounting, Office of Revenue Systems N:CFO:R.
Who's pulling the cart?
I have the excel sheet if you'd like to dig in yourself.
What amazes me is that the people in the red states simply haven't
realized how much they are shooting themselves in the foot by supporting
Bush's tax cuts. Most of that money stayed in the blue states!
Unless the people in the red states really think that the money is
distributed according to contribution, they should be careful what they
wish for when they want to "get the gubmint off our back". If the
gubmint does this, they're going to need to provide a hell of a lot more
faith based social services than they are right now. There will be a lot
of destitute farmers, and the suburbanites will NOT like the state of
their highway systems. The urban folks will have even crappier schools
and rising crime rates. But the gubmint won't be on their backs!
It irks me when I hear that this election was decided on values and
morals, suggesting that Bush has a monopoly on morality. In fact, I
argue that the majority of people in the blue states hold moral values
that make financing social programs that improve the poor's situation
more important than lower taxes. They hold moral values that recognize
honesty with the American people on issues of war and peace to be
important. They also hold moral values that place civil rights and due
process in our justice system to be sacred. All moral choices that the
president doesn't agree with me and about half the people that voted.
I am a left leaning centrist on social issues and consider myself to be
a fiscal conservative. When a Republican president irritates me this
much, I really am concerned for the country. After this election there
won't be much in terms of a moderating political force, and historically
that can lead to some pretty hairy situation.
-Aviv
kontiki
November 4th 04, 03:07 PM
Oh yeah, I remember photo shoots of Bill Clinton's "hunting trip"
also... in a futile attempt to convince people that he was a "hunter'.
The fact is that the 2nd amendment has nothing to do with hunting. It
does not enumerate a "right to hunt".
Cecil Chapman wrote:
> >Guns
> He's a hunter, I'm pretty sure they use guns for that (he's not a
> bowhunter).
C Kingsbury
November 4th 04, 03:14 PM
"Martin Hotze" > wrote in message
...
> [x-posting deleted]
>
> "C Kingsbury" > wrote:
>
> > Still, I've managed to become and remain friends with quite a few of
these
> > people because I realize that they're not actually bad people, just
> > misguided.
> ^^^^^^^^^^
>
> so they need to pray for their sins? or what? how do you come to the
conclusion
> that they are misguided? and why are they misguided?
>
Example: Social Security reform. They think people like me want to privatize
Social Security because we're greedy rich white men trying to screw the poor
yet again. Then I explain how said privatization actually has its greatest
potential net benefits for lower-class blacks, who the current system screws
terribly much of the time. Much of the time the argument then shifts from
"You're evil" to "But that can't possibly work and here's why."
The first argument is pointless and stupid. The second is politics, and
offers a chance to find common ground.
-cwk.
kontiki
November 4th 04, 03:14 PM
Bob Chilcoat wrote:
> I'll even concede percussion-cap muzzle-loaders and paper cartridge
> breach-loaders, but no one NEEDs to own an assault rifle or machine gun for
> personal use.
Then to apply your logic to aviation "no one NEEDs to own an airplane or
or especially a restored military aircraft for personal use."
The problem with liberals is that they *say* they are for choice and
have the patent on tolerance. That's only true as long as the opposing
views do not conflict with their own.
As a free individual I will be the one to determine what my "needs"
are, and not anyone else. This is one of ther many fundamental differences
between liberals and conservatives.
If you look up the definition of "fascist" you will see that is closely
describes the philosophy of the Democratic party.
kontiki
November 4th 04, 03:18 PM
Then we should require everyone who enters a theater to apply duct tape to
their mouths *in case* some tries to yell "fire".
Liberals always use that argument... except that to make an honest analogy
to restrictions on the 2nd amendment (Vs. the 1st) they would require everyone
who enters a theater to apply duct tape to their mouths *just in case* someone
tried to yell "fire".
Martin Hotze wrote:
>
> So then walk into a crowded theater and shout "fire". Then let's check your
> right to free speech again. :-)
>
>
> #m
Jay Honeck
November 4th 04, 03:25 PM
> If you look up the definition of "fascist" you will see that is closely
> describes the philosophy of the Democratic party.
From Webster's:
Fascist:
1 often capitalized : a political philosophy, movement, or regime (as that
of the Fascisti) that exalts nation and often race above the individual and
that stands for a centralized autocratic government headed by a dictatorial
leader, severe economic and social regimentation, and forcible suppression
of opposition
Hmmmm. Other than the "dictatorial leader" and "forcible suppression" parts
(which are very important points, indeed) I see your point. :-)
However, that's kind of like saying that we are apes, except for the
intelligence and fur. The details are important, and hyperbole like this
isn't going to heal our country.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Jay Honeck
November 4th 04, 03:30 PM
> I haven't done an analysis for this year yet (obviously, since the year
> isn't over and the data isn't there yet) but I do have the numbers for the
> 2000 contest. Since we had essentially the same red/blue map, this is
> still telling. The bottom line?
>
> Total tax receipts from states that voted for each candidate, in
> $millions:
> Gore: $1,202,891,545
> Bush: $873,151,976
The real analysis would be to determine what percentage of each state's tax
receipts were generated by people who work for the government, or who are on
the government dole.
Since people being paid by the government (employees, retirees, what have
you) do not generate any income in the purest sense, the "taxes" they "pay"
are entirely illusory. Same with anyone on the dole.
Re-do your figures, Aviv, taking this into account, and I think you'll see a
DRAMATIC reversal of your numbers.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
kontiki
November 4th 04, 03:31 PM
Actually you are describing the beliefs of a Libertarian not a Liberal.
True Liberals only want someone to be free to do something as long as
it is on their "list" of approved things.
Nomen Nescio wrote:
> And I tend to be a true liberal......If you ain't hurting anyone and want to do it, go for it.
> Wanna own a full auto assault weapon, fine. Just don't murder anyone. (I do and I haven't)
> Wanna fly, don't fly into a building with 500 lbs of TNT. (I do and I don't)
kontiki
November 4th 04, 03:46 PM
Kerry and his wife paid a net 12% tax on their billions in income.
I can only assume that Gore voters are more willing to have the wool
pulled over their eyes.
Aviv Hod wrote:
>
> Total tax receipts from states that voted for each candidate, in $millions:
> Gore: $1,202,891,545
> Bush: $873,151,976
>
Robert M. Gary
November 4th 04, 04:15 PM
I think you WAY over estimate the power a president actually has. Probably
because you actually listen to all they promise. :)
-Robert
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
AES/newspost
November 4th 04, 04:21 PM
In article >,
"G.R. Patterson III" > wrote:
>
> He's opposed to private ownership of any firearm except shotguns plugged to
> three
> shells. And just where in the Constitution exactly is hunting mentioned? He
> prattles
> about "military-style assault weapons" while trying to ban semi-automatics,
> knowing
> full well that no military-style assault weapon is semi-automatic.
>
> I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm concerned,
> that
> includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried to ban
> that,
> and we aren't talking anything armor-piercing here.
>
Want to give us a few details, just for the record, about the "well
regulated militia" to which you, personally, belong? (given your focus
on the Constitution, I assume you do) -- Name, location where it's
registered, number of members, just who it's "well regulated" by, that
sort of thing?
Richard Russell
November 4th 04, 04:22 PM
On Thu, 04 Nov 2004 14:13:47 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
> wrote:
>> This is a sad comment to make in the greatest country in the world,
>> but my sense is that any party that nominates a woman for president or
>> vice-president has conceded the election before it starts.
>
>I disagree. I think America is MORE than ready to elect a conservative
>Republican woman president/vice-president.
>
>But Hillary? Never. She polarizes everyone she meets -- there is no middle
>ground with her, in large part due to her husband's "legacy."
>
>It's kind of a shame, cuz she's a bright woman in many ways.
Well, Jay, I half agree with you. I do not agree that America is
ready to elect a woman president/vp but I absolutely agree that *when*
it finally does happen, it will be a conservative Republican. I also
agree that Hillary is a very intelligent woman who is patently
unelectable (at least in the context of the offices that we're talking
about).
Just so there is no confusion on my position: when I say the country
is not ready, I am not espousing that as my personal position. I
don't have any problem with a woman president.
Rich Russell
Christopher Brian Colohan
November 4th 04, 04:27 PM
kontiki > writes:
> Oh yeah, I remember photo shoots of Bill Clinton's "hunting trip"
> also... in a futile attempt to convince people that he was a "hunter'.
>
>
> The fact is that the 2nd amendment has nothing to do with hunting. It
> does not enumerate a "right to hunt".
If people's concerns about the 2nd amendment _did_ have anything to do
with hunting then Bush would have lost -- Bush is doing a great job at
letting logging and oil companies into wildnerness where they were
previously not allowed, and this tends to reduce the number of
beautiful places where folks can enjoy hunting.
Chris
--
Chris Colohan Email: PGP: finger
Web: www.colohan.com Phone: (412)268-4751
G.R. Patterson III
November 4th 04, 04:32 PM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
>
> I almost forgot,,,,what for goodness sake do you need to be firing
> ammunition as large as the type that the Mauser uses? Are the deer BIGGER
> where you live,,, home protection, if that's what you are thinking, favors a
> shotgun (that's per some cop friends, who would know).
One of the good things about the U.S. is that I don't have to prove a "need" for
something in order to own it. At least that's the way it's supposed to be. In any
case, you obviously have no idea of the capabilities or limitations of an 8mm round
or of deer hunting.
Your police friends are correct about home defense. A shotgun is definitely preferred
over a rifle.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
Terry Bolands
November 4th 04, 04:41 PM
"Jim Fisher" > wrote in message >...
> But they can't get married and they can't fly low wing planes. That's just
> they way it is.
It's not "just the way it is". You can feel it is wrong if you want,
but it's not an innate truism that gay people can't get married.
> To say that "Denying sexually aberrant citizens 'marital' status is akin to
> human rights abuses endured by black Americans" is an affront to my, and
> your, intelligence.
Why call it sexually aberrant? I agree, that is an affront to your
intelligence.
tb
G.R. Patterson III
November 4th 04, 04:42 PM
Bob Chilcoat wrote:
>
> ... no one NEEDs to own an assault rifle or machine gun for
> personal use.
And the typical citizen cannot do so. Assault rifles and machine guns are fully
automatic weapons and are restricted by legislation enacted in 1934. If you want to
own one today, you have to obtain a permit from BATF for each weapon. This requires
that you pass essentially the same investigations necessary to get a top secret
security clearance and pay a hefty fee (in 1981, the fee was $600 per weapon). Many
States also require a separate investigation and permit, and some States will not
allow private citizens to own them at all.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
Terry Bolands
November 4th 04, 04:44 PM
"Mike Rapoport" > wrote in message et>...
> To be fair, the only reason that there was a surplus is because the country
> got caught up in a technology stock mania. The market was generating
> trillions of short term gains and taxes on those gains is what swelled
> federal and state coffers. Bush entered the white house with millions of
> taxpayers carrying forward losses.
Which would explain why he pushed a taxcut package on calculations
based on those surpluses.
tb
G.R. Patterson III
November 4th 04, 04:45 PM
Steve Fleischer wrote:
>
> On Thu, 4 Nov 2004 10:30:05 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>
> > "A fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity"
>
> Nothing wrong with weapons - it's the folks that carry 'em that scare me.
> C'mon, admit it, who wishes the 172 had a ball turret? ;-)
There've been many times I've wished my truck had those little guns that Bond's Aston
Martin had. Even been some times I've felt they should be standard equipment on all
cars traveling the Garden State Parkway.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
kontiki
November 4th 04, 04:50 PM
Martin Hotze wrote:
> I really don't care what you do over there with your guns. You use them for what
> they are designed :-)
> we here in Europe don't have these weapon problems like you have ... there must
> be something wrong with us :-)
You also do not have the freedoms we have. Americans have paid dearly for them
and are not laize fair about giving them up.
Prisons have a ZERO weapons policy yet they are some of the more dangerous
(and depressing) places on earth.
Corky Scott
November 4th 04, 04:51 PM
On Thu, 04 Nov 2004 15:14:39 GMT, kontiki >
wrote:
>Bob Chilcoat wrote:
>> I'll even concede percussion-cap muzzle-loaders and paper cartridge
>> breach-loaders, but no one NEEDs to own an assault rifle or machine gun for
>> personal use.
>
>Then to apply your logic to aviation "no one NEEDs to own an airplane or
>or especially a restored military aircraft for personal use."
Don't think the two can be compared. Guns are for killing, or at
least that's the reason they were invented. Airplanes are for
transportation, or at least that's why they were first invented.
Military airplanes are airplanes first, weapons second: they must fly
(transportation) to where they discharge their weapons.
Corky Scott
kontiki
November 4th 04, 04:58 PM
Then sell your car(s) and your airplane... and your snowmobile... boat too.
Lawnmower and chainsaw while you are at it. Of course you won't need
medicine or anything made of plastic either.
Sell it all and move to the wilderness in a tent and live totally off the
land then I might take your rant seriously. Most American voters felt that
Kerry's campaign speeches (Vs. his actions and lifestyle) demostrated the
same level hypocracy.
Christopher Brian Colohan wrote:
> If people's concerns about the 2nd amendment _did_ have anything to do
> with hunting then Bush would have lost -- Bush is doing a great job at
> letting logging and oil companies into wildnerness where they were
> previously not allowed, and this tends to reduce the number of
> beautiful places where folks can enjoy hunting.
>
> Chris
Frank
November 4th 04, 05:04 PM
Judah wrote:
<snip>
>
>
> No, I think the biggest problem in this election was simply that there
> was not much difference at all between the two candidates, or if there
> was, it was so clouded by nonessential issues that the general public was
> left to vote on whether they are more comfortable with or without change,
> and not much else.
I think you've hit it exactly right.
If there is one thing I that both sides agree on it is the lack of real,
open discourse on real issues. The "two party" system is really just one
big self serving machine.
One thing that will improve the situation is for all of us "we the people"
to work to allow more third party ideas into the debate. It does us all a
great disservice when not all the voices are heard.
I heard some good ideas from several of the third party candidates (and some
pretty looney ones too). Injecting them into the mix might have forced
Kerry/Bush to be more specific. It certainly would go a long way to
"un-polarizing" the country.
<snip>
--
Frank....H
G.R. Patterson III
November 4th 04, 05:25 PM
Christopher Brian Colohan wrote:
>
> If people's concerns about the 2nd amendment _did_ have anything to do
> with hunting then Bush would have lost -- Bush is doing a great job at
> letting logging and oil companies into wildnerness where they were
> previously not allowed, and this tends to reduce the number of
> beautiful places where folks can enjoy hunting.
Well, Kerry has supported several pieces of legislation that closed large areas to
hunting of any sort. In addition, logging tends to open up areas for hunting -- I
used to hunt an area in Georgia that was periodically logged for paper pulp. We used
the logging roads to get in. I expect the hunting would have been pretty lousy for a
few years after they cut, though.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
Frank
November 4th 04, 05:46 PM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
<snip>
>
> ?, gay marriage
>
> He stated he was against 'gay marriage' - but in favor of civil unions
> that allowed long-time gay couples the right to visit their partner in the
> hospital, claims to benefits, etc. This is something that I would think
> any reasonable person would think a long-time couple would be entitled to
> (regardless of the sexual orientation. You know the funny thing about this
> kind of bigotry is that it reminds me of what we would hear in the 60's
> "Can't let 'coloreds' have any rights and god-forbid they should be
> allowed
> to marry white-folk". Jeesh,,, doesn't anyone EVER learn from the lessons
> of the past.
<snip>
You're right in your sentiments but like many, misguided by the hype.
It's time we owned up to the real issue(s). It's not about "gay marriage",
it's about whether or not one should be able to marry the one he/she loves.
It's also about whether or not the government should be in the marriage
business at all.
In that regard the Bush campaign clearly clouded the issue. Kerry never said
he was for "gay marriage". Just for civil unions ( a legitimate role for
government considering the way benefits are doled out) and against a
constitutional ammendment. But, just like the Iraq-9/11 connection, most
people believe what they want to.
--
Frank....H
Jay Beckman
November 4th 04, 05:52 PM
"Martin Hotze" > wrote in message
...
> [x-posting deleted]
>
> Chris E > wrote:
>
>> Similarily the 1st amendment provides right
>> to free speech to make remarks about all kinds of issues, not just
>> certain
>> issues that some folks feel ok.
>
>
> So then walk into a crowded theater and shout "fire". Then let's check
> your
> right to free speech again. :-)
>
That has been the key exception to the rule for a very long time.
Next...
Frank
November 4th 04, 05:55 PM
John T wrote:
> "Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
> m
>>
<snip>
>
>> Good point,,, you're right Kerry was clearly against tax breaks for
>> the wealthy, the group that Bush was caught referring to during a
>> private dinner that was videotaped and to whom he referred to as "My
>> own people" ---- Got that right, W. Thank goodness there was
>> someone looking out for the common man (and still is,,,, as a
>> Senator) as John Kerry.
>
> Sorry, but you lose points on this issue. Kerry, *the* richest person in
> Congress, paid less in 2003 taxes (both in percentage and in raw dollars)
> than Bush (whose net worth is a fraction of Kerry's). Feel free to Google
> for their 2003 tax returns and do the math. While you're at it, notice
> the difference in charitable donations, too.
And clearly stated that he was against the tax cuts even though he benefited
from them. In fact he was, in effect, advocating raising his own taxes.
And while we're on the subject of Kerry's (Theresa's) wealth.... I will
never understand why this was seen as such a negative. He came upon it
honorably. More important, it insulates him from some of the special
interest pressure. After all, how do you bribe a wealthy man?
<snip>
--
Frank....H
Fidel Perez
November 4th 04, 05:56 PM
"Brien K. Meehan" > wrote in message
oups.com...
> Don't forget to take your Kool-Aid with you.
>
Cold-blooded. I like it.
Fidel Perez
November 4th 04, 05:58 PM
"Adam K." > wrote in message
om...
> Whoa, Nelly!
>
> Slow down.
>
> I've never voted Republican in my life.
>
> Take me with you.
>
> ak
You must be one of those "Independents" I keep hearing about.
Frank
November 4th 04, 06:07 PM
Mike Rapoport wrote:
> To be fair, the only reason that there was a surplus is because the
> country
> got caught up in a technology stock mania. The market was generating
> trillions of short term gains and taxes on those gains is what swelled
> federal and state coffers. Bush entered the white house with millions of
> taxpayers carrying forward losses.
But those coffers were swelled. That some were carrying losses is a separate
issue. Unless you think it was up to the government to make those losses go
away.
--
Frank....H
Jim Fisher
November 4th 04, 06:20 PM
"Terry Bolands" > wrote in message
om...
> "Jim Fisher" > wrote in message
> >...
>
>> But they can't get married and they can't fly low wing planes. That's
>> just
>> they way it is.
>
> It's not "just the way it is". You can feel it is wrong if you want,
> but it's not an innate truism that gay people can't get married.
Ahh, but it is a truism if one accept the absolute fact that "marraige" has
been recognized for thousands of years as a religous tenant. We aren't
talking "unions" but marraige. Governemental support of a marraige between
a man and a woman and, thus, protection of the familial unit is supported
and recognized beacause such support has historically contributed to to
overall, long-term survival of governing bodies.
Man+man and woman+woman does NOT a stable family make and does a government
absolutely no good.
This makes it a truism, Terry. You don't have to like it but a rational
person cannot deny it.
>> To say that "Denying sexually aberrant citizens 'marital' status is akin
>> to
>> human rights abuses endured by black Americans" is an affront to my, and
>> your, intelligence.
>
> Why call it sexually aberrant? I agree, that is an affront to your
> intelligence.
"abˇerˇrant (br-nt, -br,-)
adj.
1.. Deviating from the proper or expected course.
2.. Deviating from what is normal; untrue to type.
Man+woman - Expected and even proper.
Man+man - Untrue to type
Gay+high wing: Expected and proper.
Straight+low wing: Expected and proper
Woman+Woman - I don't necessarily have a problem with this (marriage or
adoptive rights-wise) but it is still aberrant.
Until the gay population becomes a significant portion of the population,
gay behavior will be considered "abnormal" and "aberrant." You don't have
to like that fact but it is axiomatic.
--
Jim Fisher
Frank
November 4th 04, 06:22 PM
Laura Clayton wrote:
> Bob Chilcoat wrote:
>
>> I absolutely agree with you, Jay. Yet again, I had to vote AGAINST a
>> candidate, rather than FOR one. I just thought Kerry was the least-bad
>> candidate. When Bush opens his mouth, or just looks at the camera, for
>> that
>> matter, the back of my hair goes up. What thinking individual could vote
>> FOR this idiot. I guess my version of the least-bad candidate was the
>> same as only 49.9% of the rest of the country.
>>
>> Apparently you can fool 50% of the people, but there is always a noise
>> function.
>
> I've often wondered why some people feel the need to insult the
> intelligence of
> their fellow voters who simply do not agree with their world views.
> Different people have different experiences in their life, and some people
> even study
> macroeconomics in depth. :) And the same treatment is given to
> candidates. Although he has his moments, everyone knows Bush isn't a great
> orator, but he sure isn't an idiot either.
I agree it is wrong to insult their intelligence. It is/was very difficult
to make informed decisions given the lack of real journalism available.
But Bush plain old did a bad job and was not held accountable for it. He
bungled Iraq. He pandered to big money special interests. He set new
heights of secrecy in government. But most of all his supporters were
willing to overlook the fact that on 9/12/01 the whole world was with us
and two years later you can hardly find anyone that will talk to us on a
diplomatic level.
--
Frank....H
Frank
November 4th 04, 06:27 PM
Jay Beckman wrote:
>
> Giuliani-Rice might work, but howzabout Colin Powell - Elizabeth Dole?
>
> Either ticket would probably make the loyal oppositon's heads explode.
I would never vote for Bush but I have nothing but respect for Colin Powell,
he is the best asset this administration has (had?). If Powell had led the
ticket in 2000 I doubt it would have been even remotely close.
--
Frank....H
Peter Duniho
November 4th 04, 06:52 PM
"kontiki" > wrote in message
...
> If you apply any intellectual honesty to the campaign rhetoric out of
> the Kerry/Edwards duo you would certainly conclude that the facts were
> not in total alignment.
I'm not really sure what the point of your post is. I have never said, nor
do I believe, that Kerry was all that great a candidate. I am strictly
addressing the *facts* that Bush had his chance to prove what kind of
President he'd be, and he wound up being a lying, war-mongering one.
Maybe Kerry would've been too...who knows? But at least he'd have been a
*different* lying, war-mongering President.
Neither candidate ran what I felt was a "stellar" race. They both said all
sorts of things that were either outright false or only half-true. But only
one of the candidates lied about the conditions under which he'd attack
Iraq, as well as whether and how Iraq had ties to al-Qaeda at all, and then
later continued to lie about whether he'd lied.
But the real issue here is that the people who voted for Bush, on the whole,
simply either refuse to believe the factual reports that contradict
everything Bush claimed and claims, or failed to pay attention to those
reports when they were made. Contrary to what Laura apparently would like
to believe, this isn't just an issue about "fellow voters who simply do not
agree with [someone else's] world views". The "fellow voters" aren't even
in possession of the facts.
I can respect someone that fully understands what Bush did, and still
decides that in the greater scheme of things we're better off with Bush.
That's fine. But when a person simply doesn't know the facts or refuses to
believe the facts, and then bases a decision on *that*, I find that to be a
clear indication of a lack of intelligence. Just as Bob implies, and to
which Laura took (inappropriate) offense.
Pete
Frank Stutzman
November 4th 04, 07:06 PM
In rec.aviation.ifr Jim Fisher > wrote:
> Ahh, but it is a truism if one accept the absolute fact that "marraige" has
> been recognized for thousands of years as a religous tenant.
So True. But arn't we supposed to have a separation of church and state?
If thats the case what's the state doing in the marriage business?
> Governemental support of a marraige between
> a man and a woman and, thus, protection of the familial unit is supported
> and recognized beacause such support has historically contributed to to
> overall, long-term survival of governing bodies.
I've heard this arguement before. It usually infers that marriage needs
to be governmentally supported for the protection of the children in the
marriage. If you agree to this, then do you agree that the hetrosexual
couples who can't/won't have children need to have the licenses revoked?
> Man+man and woman+woman does NOT a stable family make and does a government
> absolutely no good.
Depends upon your definition of stable family.
Its a poor sampling, but right now the divorce rate between legally
married gay couples is a lot less than hetrosexual couples.
--
Frank Stutzman
Bonanza N494B "Hula Girl"
Hood River, OR
John T
November 4th 04, 07:10 PM
Frank wrote:
>
> In fact he was, in effect, advocating raising
> his own taxes.
All he has to do is contribute more. He can start with giving away the
money he saved in tax cuts to a worthy charity. For my own part, I pay
enough in taxes and anybody - wealthy or not - saying I should pay more is
in for a bitter discussion.
> And while we're on the subject of Kerry's (Theresa's) wealth.... I
> will never understand why this was seen as such a negative.
I don't begrudge his wealth at all. I do find it a bit difficult to believe
that the wealthiest individual in the US Congress is "looking out for the
common man". I'm not convinced he knows what the "common man's experience"
really is. What we need in Congress is more "common men" to truly look out
for "the common man".
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
Peter Duniho
November 4th 04, 07:20 PM
"Frank" > wrote in message ...
> I would never vote for Bush but I have nothing but respect for Colin
> Powell
Are you talking about the same Colin Powell that got in front of the UN and
swore up and down that he had incontrovertible evidence of weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq?
> he is the best asset this administration has (had?).
That's probably true. Damning with faint praise though.
Pete
John Galban
November 4th 04, 07:22 PM
"Jay Honeck" > wrote in message news:<K7iid.294493$wV.71039@attbi_s54>...
>
> I agree with you there, but it's my belief that Bush was ideologically
> vulnerable, and that a guy closer to the center (ala Gebhardt) would have at
> least grabbed enough of the popular vote (and people like me, who weren't
> 100% enthused with Bush) to have tipped the scales his way.
If either party is able to nominate a centerist, they have an
excellent shot at the presidency. The problem is that both parties
are largely influenced by their more extreme factions. In the primary
system, these folks are the ones who have the most influence (and
money) to determine who will ultimately represent their party. Also,
look at the difference in voter participation between primaries and
general elections. You know that the hard-core left and right is
going to participate, but I'll wager that the center is
under-represented at that stage. What you end up with in a general
election is usually a choice between the least scary of two extremes.
In this past election, a strong centerist candiate (from either
party) would have resulted in a landslide, rather that what we got.
John Galban=====>N4BQ (PA28-180)
kontiki
November 4th 04, 07:30 PM
I agree with much of what you said except the below assessment:
Peter Duniho wrote:
> But the real issue here is that the people who voted for Bush, on the whole,
> simply either refuse to believe the factual reports that contradict
> everything Bush claimed and claims, or failed to pay attention to those
> reports when they were made.
If this is true, then I submit that people who voted for Kerry and Edwards
refused to believe any factual reports that contradicted many of their claims
as well. Kerry failed to make his case to the vast majority of America.
The exception was the Democratic bastions of the northeast and the left coast.
Those areas of the country would vote for the democratic candidate if it
was Alfred E. Newman, admit it!
When it is all said and done, most Americans felt like they could sleep
better at night voting for Bush (myself included). More of us were voting
*for* a ticket as opposed to *against* one.
Peter Duniho
November 4th 04, 07:40 PM
"kontiki" > wrote in message
...
> If this is true,
It is true. Factual reports provide the facts, polls provide the
information regarding what people believe.
> then I submit that people who voted for Kerry and Edwards
> refused to believe any factual reports that contradicted many of their
> claims as well.
Perhaps. As far as I know, there is no polling data on that. However,
there are "little lies" and there are "big lies". IMHO, "big lies" are the
ones where thousands of people die. Kerry hasn't made any of those "big
lies".
Pete
G.R. Patterson III
November 4th 04, 07:58 PM
AES/newspost wrote:
>
> Want to give us a few details, just for the record, about the "well
> regulated militia" to which you, personally, belong? (given your focus
> on the Constitution, I assume you do) -- Name, location where it's
> registered, number of members, just who it's "well regulated" by, that
> sort of thing?
Using the definitions applicable at the time the Constitution was written, the 2nd
ammendment states that every citizen is allowed to own and carry arms because an
armed citizenry is necessary for the defense of the country. The word "militia" did
not begin to aquire it's current meaning of an adjunct of the U.S. military until the
War Between the States.
Even applying the current meaning of the word "militia", there is no requirement that
a citizen be a member of the militia to own firearms; just a requirement that the
government not prohibit that ownership.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
Michael
November 4th 04, 07:58 PM
You're overreacting - cutting off your nose to spite your face.
This community is a lot more diverse than you think it is. It's just
that some of us make it a point to keep religion and politics out of
it, because this isn't the right place. Everyone (myself included)
loses it sometimes, when something just can't be left unanswered, but
it's a bad idea. Best to leave it unanswered anyway, and killfile the
posters who keep doing it. The group becomes a lot easier to read,
and you don't miss much that's useful.
Speaking plainly, political and religious comments don't belong here,
and posting them here is uncivil at best. The nature of the political
and religious content on these newsgroups is probably less of a
reflection of the community as a whole and more a reflection of the
inability of those who express these ideas here to find the proper
place and keep it there. Any conclusions you might draw between the
tendency to post political and religious beliefs where they are
clearly inappropriate and the nature of those beliefs are up to you.
Michael
G.R. Patterson III
November 4th 04, 08:13 PM
Frank Stutzman wrote:
>
> In rec.aviation.ifr Jim Fisher > wrote:
>
> > Ahh, but it is a truism if one accept the absolute fact that "marraige" has
> > been recognized for thousands of years as a religous tenant.
>
> So True. But arn't we supposed to have a separation of church and state?
Not as far as the Constitution goes. The Constitution simply forbids Congress from
passing any laws related to religion. The actual wording is "Congress shall make no
law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise
thereof;".
> If thats the case what's the state doing in the marriage business?
The state has been "in the marraige business" for well over 1,500 years. Marraige is
a legal contract and has been ever since inheritance rights began to be important and
codified.
> Its a poor sampling, but right now the divorce rate between legally
> married gay couples is a lot less than hetrosexual couples.
Give them time. As you point out, it's a poor sampling. I've known a number of gay
people, but few for very long. The one person that I've known for decades was married
and divorced. She is currently involved in her third lesbian relationship. If
marraige had been an option, she would have married and divorced her first lesbian
partner and be married to the third one now.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
john smith
November 4th 04, 08:39 PM
Personally, I would want a woman with a distinguished military combat
arms command or intel experience. A woman with either of those
backgrounds would eliminate most arguements.
Richard Russell wrote:
> On Thu, 04 Nov 2004 14:13:47 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
> > wrote:
>
>
>>>This is a sad comment to make in the greatest country in the world,
>>>but my sense is that any party that nominates a woman for president or
>>>vice-president has conceded the election before it starts.
>>
>>I disagree. I think America is MORE than ready to elect a conservative
>>Republican woman president/vice-president.
>>
>>But Hillary? Never. She polarizes everyone she meets -- there is no middle
>>ground with her, in large part due to her husband's "legacy."
>>
>>It's kind of a shame, cuz she's a bright woman in many ways.
>
>
> Well, Jay, I half agree with you. I do not agree that America is
> ready to elect a woman president/vp but I absolutely agree that *when*
> it finally does happen, it will be a conservative Republican. I also
> agree that Hillary is a very intelligent woman who is patently
> unelectable (at least in the context of the offices that we're talking
> about).
>
> Just so there is no confusion on my position: when I say the country
> is not ready, I am not espousing that as my personal position. I
> don't have any problem with a woman president.
> Rich Russell
John T
November 4th 04, 08:42 PM
Peter Duniho wrote:
>
> ...polls provide the information regarding what people believe.
Uh huh. Which polls are these? Are they compiled by the same ones
compiling the exit polling data?
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
John T
November 4th 04, 08:56 PM
Peter Duniho wrote:
>
> But the real issue here is that the people who voted for Bush, on the
> whole, simply either refuse to believe the factual reports that
> contradict everything Bush claimed and claims, or failed to pay
> attention to those reports when they were made.
So, just to confirm, you're saying that anybody voting for Bush failed to
pay attention or chose to ignore "the facts". How do you reconcile that
argument with this statement from the same post?:
> I can respect someone that fully understands what Bush did, and still
> decides that in the greater scheme of things we're better off with
> Bush. That's fine.
If "that's fine", then why can't you just admit that 51% of the voters fully
understood what Bush did and still decided we're better off with him than
Kerry?
Man, talk about sour grapes... :)
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
Ron Natalie
November 4th 04, 09:02 PM
G.R. Patterson III wrote:
>
> Using the definitions applicable at the time the Constitution was written, the 2nd
> ammendment states that every citizen is allowed to own and carry arms because an
> armed citizenry is necessary for the defense of the country. The word "militia" did
> not begin to aquire it's current meaning of an adjunct of the U.S. military until the
> War Between the States.
>
Specifically the meaning applicable to the Constitution is the "body of citizens
that might be called to serve in the military." The right to bear arms is
deemed as essential to US readiness.
The term "well regulated" doesn't mean full of government bureaucracy.
The term means ordered, methodical, uniform. It's a common construction
in the English at the time.
Icebound
November 4th 04, 09:13 PM
"Jay Honeck" > wrote in message
news:aWrid.54917$R05.7099@attbi_s53...
....
>
> The real analysis would be to determine what percentage of each state's
> tax receipts were generated by people who work for the government, or who
> are on the government dole.
>
> Since people being paid by the government ... do not generate any income
> in the purest sense...
That is not true.
If the government did not pay a food inspector, it would add substantial
costs for YOU, in order to keep your customers safe. If the government did
not operate an organized welfare system, the destitute would be parked on
your doorstep looking for handouts... or stealing from your customers,
costing you extra security and lost business. If the government didn't
keep the terrorists out, they would obviously be driving up Riverside Drive
right now, with a substantial consequence on your income.
In effect, government payees generate additional income for YOU, by helping
to reduce your costs in many ways. It would cost you a bundle if you tried
to achieve and maintain the same standard of life without any of them.
Jim Fisher
November 4th 04, 09:20 PM
"Frank Stutzman" > wrote in message
...
> In rec.aviation.ifr Jim Fisher > wrote:
>
>> Ahh, but it is a truism if one accept the absolute fact that "marraige"
>> has
>> been recognized for thousands of years as a religous tenant.
>
> So True. But arn't we supposed to have a separation of church and state?
> If thats the case what's the state doing in the marriage business?
No, we don't have a seperation of church and state. What we have is a right
for the people to express their own religous beliefs with no intervention by
the state.
"The People" have inserted religous tenants into virtually every law we
have. The People want marraige recognized by their governement and if the
governemnt didn't do so, The People would revolt.
Gay folks may revolt in the future but they simply don't carry enough
political clout to make changes to our way of life and our Constitution.
With the help of a couple of activist judges and elected folks, they may get
their way . . . In the future.
It damn sure ain't gonn happen during the next four years. ;)
>> Governemental support of a marraige between
>> a man and a woman and, thus, protection of the familial unit is
>> supported
>> and recognized beacause such support has historically contributed to to
>> overall, long-term survival of governing bodies.
>
> I've heard this arguement before. It usually infers that marriage needs
> to be governmentally supported for the protection of the children in the
> marriage. If you agree to this, then do you agree that the hetrosexual
> couples who can't/won't have children need to have the licenses revoked?
No. That would be unenforceable. Besides, that would be my definition of a
"union" (which I don't necessairily have a problem with) instead of a
marraige. Folks usually get married with the intent of having kids. Some
don't. Their loss.
All that said, gay people (as a sociological group) aren't even looking for
the right to get married. They are looking for legitmicy and respectability
of the gay lifestyle. American's are coming around to it but just ain't
ready for that yet and the polls and numbers of laws enacted against it show
it.
>> Man+man and woman+woman does NOT a stable family make and does a
>> government
>> absolutely no good.
>
> Depends upon your definition of stable family.
>
> Its a poor sampling, but right now the divorce rate between legally
> married gay couples is a lot less than hetrosexual couples.
Is that right? The heterosexual divorce rate is about .40 percent. What is
it for homosexual marriages, Frank?
--
Jim Fisher
Roy Epperson
November 4th 04, 09:20 PM
Thank too! :-))
"John T" > wrote in message
m...
> "Roy Epperson" > wrote in message
> ink.net
>>
>> Confirmed gun control is using two hands!
>
> I thought it was "dead center mass"... :)
>
> --
> John T
> http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
> http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
> ____________________
>
>
Peter Duniho
November 4th 04, 09:21 PM
"John T" > wrote in message
m...
>> ...polls provide the information regarding what people believe.
>
> Uh huh. Which polls are these?
A well-known, well-respected polling organization. Gallup. Maybe you've
heard of them?
> Are they compiled by the same ones compiling the exit polling data?
Gallup is, I believe, one of the companies that do exit polling as well.
Pete
Newps
November 4th 04, 09:26 PM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
> >Guns
> He's a hunter,
John Kerry quote. "I take my trusty double barrel 12 gauge, I sneak
around on my belly, I play the wind, you know, I love deer hunting."
Anybody who has actually hunted deer knows what a fool this is.
I'm pretty sure they use guns for that (he's not a
> bowhunter). Just because one doesn't support ownership of AK-47's and
> public access to armor-piercing bullets doesn't make one an enemy to gun
> ownership. In fact, his record as a senator reveals that he has
> consistently supported appropriate gun ownership. I own two shotguns and a
> couple of rifles - don't hunt, but skeet and target shoot. Even still, I
> just don't think the average citizen needs armor-piercing bullets or AK-47's
> (unless you live in remote parts of Alaska <grin>)/.
He has voted against guns every chance he's had.
> ,> taxes
>
> Good point,,, you're right Kerry was clearly against tax breaks for the
> wealthy,
Kerry would whack small businesses with his tax the rich mentality.
>>, the UN.
>
>
> YIKES! Please tell me that you have most of your teeth
All, actually.
and that you don't
> play 'Dueling Banjos' along some remote bayou?
Never been to a bayou.
The United Nations is
> LEFTIST?
Leftist would put it too far to the right. They are communistic.
Do you even know the history and original purpose of the United
> Nations?
Yes, if we could get back to that I would be fine with it.
What was wrong with having a consensus (and some
> help) before blundering into Vietnam... OOPS I mean Iraq?
There's nothing wrong with it. But the right thing to do was go into
Iraq, if the France and Germany still want to screw Iraq on the oil for
food program that's of little consequence to our decision making.
Newps
November 4th 04, 09:31 PM
Matt Whiting wrote:
>
>
> Why are all of the conservatives states in places that are cold in the
> winter?
Montana is over 700 miles from east to west by road. You can move to
any climate you want here, just about. Here in Billings we are in a
bananna belt. Often gets in the 50's during the winter. Go up on the
highline(US2) and it is bitterly cold during winter.
My grandfather always said that the cold winters "kept the
> riff-raff out" and I'm beginning to think he was right. :-)
We have our fair share of riff-raff. Remember the Freemen? The
Unabomber? You can walk into the woods here and disappear.
Peter Duniho
November 4th 04, 09:32 PM
"John T" > wrote in message
m...
> So, just to confirm, you're saying that anybody voting for Bush failed to
> pay attention or chose to ignore "the facts".
I'm not saying at that all. You need reading lessons, I guess.
> If "that's fine", then why can't you just admit that 51% of the voters
> fully > understood what Bush did and still decided we're better off with
> him than Kerry?
Why would I admit something that's not true? 51% did not act as you claim.
Extrapolating from the Gallup data, 18% of the voters fully understood what
Bush did and still decided we're better off with him than Kerry. 33% did
not fully understand what Bush did and yet made the same decision.
Pete
Newps
November 4th 04, 09:32 PM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
>>I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm concerned,
>>that
>>includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried to
>>ban that,
>
>
> I almost forgot,,,,what for goodness sake do you need to be firing
> ammunition as large as the type that the Mauser uses?
Do you even know what a Mauser is?
Newps
November 4th 04, 09:35 PM
Matt Whiting wrote:
>
> He's only a hunter when there is a camera around.
What's really funny was how god damned stupid he looked in his tan color
Carhart coat he wore the last few weeks of the campaign. Trying to pass
himself off as some kind of working stiff. Damn thing was so new and
stiff it would stand up by itself on the floor. He looked like an idiot
in that thing. Like Dukakis in the tank fer christ sake.
Newps
November 4th 04, 09:37 PM
Michael 182 wrote:
> Cecil,
>
> Repeat after me. Never, never, never argue second amendment rights in a
> newsgroup. If you need frustration try teaching your dog not to chase
> rabbits. In fact, you have a better chance of succeeding there than you do
> in converting NRA members.
Right. You would have an easier time banning cars.
Jay Beckman
November 4th 04, 09:38 PM
"Newps" > wrote in message
...
>
>
> Matt Whiting wrote:
>
>
>>
>> He's only a hunter when there is a camera around.
>
> What's really funny was how god damned stupid he looked in his tan color
> Carhart coat he wore the last few weeks of the campaign. Trying to pass
> himself off as some kind of working stiff. Damn thing was so new and
> stiff it would stand up by itself on the floor. He looked like an idiot
> in that thing. Like Dukakis in the tank fer christ sake.
>
If the camera had zoomed out just a little bit, you might have been able to
see the guys in turbans reloading.
Jay Beckman
Chandler, AZ
PP-ASEL
Icebound
November 4th 04, 09:38 PM
"kontiki" > wrote in message
...
> Then sell your car(s) and your airplane... and your snowmobile... boat
> too.
> Lawnmower and chainsaw while you are at it.
In the grand scheme of things, our cars use an amount of gasoline several
magnitudes higher than all our private airplanes, snowmobiles, lawnmowers
and chainsaws combined. Maybe a better urban and inter-urban public transit
system, (and less marketing emphasis on automobile horsepower) would allow
us to dramatically reduce auto fuel-usage and still enjoy our airplanes,
snowmobiles, lawnmowers and chainsaws for many eons to come.
> Of course you won't need
> medicine or anything made of plastic either.
>
We are over-prescribed anyway :-) .
Newps
November 4th 04, 09:42 PM
John T wrote:
>
> Face it: The Democrats have no base outside the urban areas of this country
> and their values apparently are out of line with a majority of the voters.
> They need to reconsider their platform if they want to appeal to American
> voters again.
>
This is driven home by the red/blue map of the country. But get the map
that is divided by county and not just by state. Compare to the same
map for 2000. Another couple of elections like this and the Democratic
party will cease to exist.
Newps
November 4th 04, 09:43 PM
Jim Fisher wrote:
>
> Comparing gay folks to "colored" people is just utter bullsquat. If I were
> black, I'd smack people who say this upside the face. If you weren't such a
> generally nice feller, this honkey would wanna smack you.
Black folks do just that. Look for the vote breakdowns against the gay
marriage bills on the ballot.
Morgans
November 4th 04, 09:49 PM
"G.R. Patterson III" > wrote
If you want to
> own one today, you have to obtain a permit from BATF for each weapon. This
requires
> that you pass essentially the same investigations necessary to get a top
secret
> security clearance and pay a hefty fee (in 1981, the fee was $600 per
weapon). Many
> States also require a separate investigation and permit, and some States
will not
> allow private citizens to own them at all.
>
> George Patterson
Unless you are a crook. You can get all the automatic weapons you want, or
have money to buy, then.
--
Jim in NC
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.788 / Virus Database: 533 - Release Date: 11/1/2004
Morgans
November 4th 04, 10:11 PM
"Michael" > wrote in message
om...
> You're overreacting - cutting off your nose to spite your face.
>
> This community is a lot more diverse than you think it is. It's just
> that some of us make it a point to keep religion and politics out of
> it, because this isn't the right place. Everyone (myself included)
> loses it sometimes, when something just can't be left unanswered, but
> it's a bad idea. Best to leave it unanswered anyway, and killfile the
> posters who keep doing it. The group becomes a lot easier to read,
> and you don't miss much that's useful.
>
> Speaking plainly, political and religious comments don't belong here,
> and posting them here is uncivil at best. The nature of the political
> and religious content on these newsgroups is probably less of a
> reflection of the community as a whole and more a reflection of the
> inability of those who express these ideas here to find the proper
> place and keep it there. Any conclusions you might draw between the
> tendency to post political and religious beliefs where they are
> clearly inappropriate and the nature of those beliefs are up to you.
>
> Michael
Well put.
--
Jim in NC
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
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John T
November 4th 04, 10:14 PM
"Frank" > wrote in message
>
> In fact he was, in effect, advocating raising his own taxes.
Nothing is preventing him from paying more, if that's what he wants. I
recommend he start by giving more money to charities.
> And while we're on the subject of Kerry's (Theresa's) wealth.... I
> will never understand why this was seen as such a negative.
I don't begrudge his wealth at all. I do find it difficult to believe that
*the* richest man in the US Congress is looking out for "the common man." I
doubt he really understands the "common man's" experience. What we need is
more "common men" in Congress looking out for the "common man."
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
Jay Beckman
November 4th 04, 10:14 PM
"Morgans" > wrote in message
...
>
> "G.R. Patterson III" > wrote
>
> If you want to
>> own one today, you have to obtain a permit from BATF for each weapon.
>> This
> requires
>> that you pass essentially the same investigations necessary to get a top
> secret
>> security clearance and pay a hefty fee (in 1981, the fee was $600 per
> weapon). Many
>> States also require a separate investigation and permit, and some States
> will not
>> allow private citizens to own them at all.
>>
>> George Patterson
>
> Unless you are a crook. You can get all the automatic weapons you want,
> or
> have money to buy, then.
> --
> Jim in NC
>
And this is news how?
The bad guys have always been able to aquire whatever they want if there is
enough time and/or money to put to use.
Substitue booze for automatic weapons and you're describing Prohibition.
Jay Beckman
Chandler, AZ
PP-ASEL
Greg Butler
November 4th 04, 10:43 PM
> Uh huh. Which polls are these? Are they compiled by the same ones
> compiling the exit polling data?
This is a prime example of the ignorance of so many people. The exit polls
on election day were actually amazingly accurate. What many people like you
should learn before you start spouting off is what actually happened.
Results from the exit polls was leaked before the polls were complete, i.e.
around 3 or 4 pm, before the polls were closed. The blogging community took
the leak and ran with it. Of course those numbers are not going to be
accurate since the poll is not yet finished! The polling data at the end of
the day was accuate. And yes, the demographic and rationale data is just as
accurate.
Greg Butler
November 4th 04, 10:45 PM
> And yes, I did watch ALL of the video-taped hearings, just like you.
The reason you saw the information differently from him is because he was
looking at the data in order to find something wrong, most Bush voters,
however, look at the data first, then make up their minds.
Greg Butler
November 4th 04, 10:46 PM
> To be fair, the only reason that there was a surplus is because the
> country got caught up in a technology stock mania. The market was
> generating trillions of short term gains and taxes on those gains is what
> swelled federal and state coffers. Bush entered the white house with
> millions of taxpayers carrying forward losses.
Exactly, thats why it was the first surplus in so long.
Greg Butler
November 4th 04, 10:47 PM
Hang on a minute, let me get my violin for some sad music. Better yet let me
get the door for you, then we can play turkey in the straw.
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit. Most of my
> flight instructors have, I know, been to the right of me politically. I
> had
> a most enjoyable flight with CJ - although he has since earned my undying
> enmity by unapologetically using the term "Final Solution" in connection
> with me and people like me, an astonishing thought coming from an avowedly
> religious man, but telling and apt.
>
> But now it seems the nation has, albeit by a slim margin, re-elected a
> weak,
> hypocritical, murderous coward. Three years ago, when some writers on the
> left started talking about fascism, I thought that an absurd stretch. No
> longer. The parallels are not precise - they never are - but the broad
> sweep
> and many of the components of a new fascist state are in place. The 48%
> who
> didn't vote for this disaster keep knocking on my consciousness, but they
> are now feeble and impotent. The thugs are in charge.
>
> That being so, and despite what should be an apolitical setting, I can no
> longer in good faith keep company with a group of which the majority, I
> know, has elected to deliver the country I love, and chose as my home,
> into
> the hands of Bush and his repressive, regressive masters.
>
> So long. Thanks for all the conversations. You guys have made me a better
> pilot.
>
> -- David Brooks
>
>
Greg Butler
November 4th 04, 10:48 PM
> David -- The virtual door is always open when/if you choose to come back.
Let me get my welder, we can fix that.
Greg Butler
November 4th 04, 10:49 PM
> Awww David, hang around! Lots of good stuff to be learned here. I've
> lived
> on the earth long enough to recognize that living amongst Cro-Magnons can
> be amusing. Yeah, they unfortunately have the right to vote,,,, but they
> make a few grunts and run in the wall a few times and next thing we know,
> they are running back to 'us' for advice and help.
>
> I, too, am worried about the direction the country will take. For
> instance, I never thought I'd see the day that something like the "Patriot
> Act" would be put into place. Whenever we strip away the very core
> constitutional rights of our people, we do a great harm to our nation and
> allow the terrorists to exact an even more telling blow on our country.
> Fortunately, there are enough men and women of reason who have actively
> gone after things like the Patriot Act, aiding in disabling its' most
> sinister provisions. It will be men and women of reason and good
> conscience that will bring things around, again. I DO believe Kerry was
> one of those people, but thankfully there are many like him - congressmen
> and women that won't allow those precious and hard-fought-for documents to
> be attacked at their very heart; The Constitution of The United States and
> The Bill of Rights - never EVER letting us forget that our Constitution
> begins with those words; "WE, the people......"
>
> Though I can't say I believe in a divine being or UFO's (so, in my
> opinion, we can't depend on extraterrestrials to help us, either) <grin>,
> I can say that I have always believed that in times of dire circumstance
> that people of good conscience will always overcome, persevere and
> succeed - even when things look to be their darkest. This country will
> have it's time to shine, again! :0) I believe that with all my heart!
> You should too!!! ;)
>
> Stay with us! :O)
This is what he is sitting at work wanting to see, pity. Well there is none
from me or 99% of the other posters.
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 10:51 PM
Cecil Chapman wrote:
>>I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm concerned,
>>that
>>includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried to
>>ban that,
>
>
> I almost forgot,,,,what for goodness sake do you need to be firing
> ammunition as large as the type that the Mauser uses? Are the deer BIGGER
> where you live,,, home protection, if that's what you are thinking, favors a
> shotgun (that's per some cop friends, who would know).
Mauser is a type of rifle design, not a caliber. Get a clue.
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 11:03 PM
Peter Duniho wrote:
> "Laura Clayton" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>>Apparently you can fool 50% of the people, but there is always a noise
>>>function.
>>
>>I've often wondered why some people feel the need to insult the
>>intelligence of their fellow voters who simply do not agree with
>>their world views.
>
>
> Actually, according to the Gallup Poll, among Republicans you can fool over
> 60% of the people.
>
> I can't speak for where Bob's coming from, but the truth remains that for
> the most part, people who voted for Bush don't actually have their facts
> straight. This is not disputable.
This is hilarious. Do you think that people who voted for Kerry had
their facts any more straight?
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 11:03 PM
John T wrote:
> "Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
>
>
>>Why are all of the conservatives states in places that are cold in the
>>winter?
>
>
> They're not. :)
>
Such as?
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 11:05 PM
Chris E wrote:
> Cecil Chapman wrote:
>
>
>>P.S. You're right, we should all thank Mr. Bush for turning a hard-earned
>>surplus budget (earned under Clinton's rule) into a 4.3 trillion dollar
>>DEFICIT.
>
>
> The surplus budget was a scam, since much of that income turned out to be
> losses due to technology speculation, rampant unchecked corporate fraud in the
> late 90s, and even during the "surplus" social security monies were still
> being siphoned off. The Nasdaq market peaked Jan 2000, and NYSE was dropping
> steadily after March 2000,well before Bush was in office. Also keep in mind
> that Bush had nothing to do with FY 2001 budget, which was in effect through
> 30 Sep 2001. The deficit did have much to do with an attack that happened on
> Sept 2001, you may recall it, and the war on the terrorists. More attacks and
> there wouldn't be much of an economy to worry about deficits. I don't recall
> FDR holding off entering the WWII after Pearl Harbor because of worrying about
> current deficits. We all remember the deficit scare stories from the 1980s,
> and as the economy grew and expanded in time, the tax revenue came back in.
> Deficits now are not extraordinary when properly compared to GDP, historically
> speaking. Current GDP growth is about 4.3%, showing strong growth, especially
> when compared with other Western nations, such as Germany, that hope, hope for
> GDP growth in the 0.2% range this year.
>
> Also remember a deficit is a flow concept, not a stock concept that can be
> inherited.
>
True, but the national debt is passed along.
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 11:06 PM
Jay Honeck wrote:
> Mark my words: If they nominate Hillary next time around -- as they appear
> to be angling toward -- it will set the Democratic Party back 50 years.
> They won't see the White House again in our lifetime.
>
> And now, back to flying!
I agree on both counts! Now if it just wasn't so cold here in PA already.
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 11:08 PM
Roy Epperson wrote:
>>Michael
>>(A confirmed gun control advocate...)
>>
>
> Confirmed gun control is using two hands!
>
>
No, it's hitting your target. Many folks can't do that even using both
hands.
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 11:11 PM
Dave Stadt wrote:
> "Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>Newps wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>Matt Whiting wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>>I'm thinking of moving to a state like yours (SD, right?).
>>>
>>>
>>>Montana. The democrats here couldn't get elected as republicans in
>>>Pennsylvania. They'd be too far to the right.
>>>
>>>
>>> I've lived
>>>
>>>
>>>>in PA all my life, but it is becoming such a liberal cesspool that I
>>>>may have to retire elsewehere.
>>>
>>>
>>>A Wyoming address would be good and even more conservative than here. No
>>>taxes.
>>
>>Why are all of the conservatives states in places that are cold in the
>>winter? My grandfather always said that the cold winters "kept the
>>riff-raff out" and I'm beginning to think he was right. :-)
>>
>>
>>Matt
>
>
> Seems half a dozen or so southern states went republican big time yesterday.
> Seems the heat is keeping the riff-raff out also.
>
>
Good point! I can't take a hot climate so I guess I'm stuck with
Montana and Wyoming... :-) At least the airways shouldn't be so
congested there as here in the northeast.
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 11:17 PM
AES/newspost wrote:
> In article >,
> "G.R. Patterson III" > wrote:
>
>
>>He's opposed to private ownership of any firearm except shotguns plugged to
>>three
>>shells. And just where in the Constitution exactly is hunting mentioned? He
>>prattles
>>about "military-style assault weapons" while trying to ban semi-automatics,
>>knowing
>>full well that no military-style assault weapon is semi-automatic.
>>
>>I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm concerned,
>>that
>>includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried to ban
>>that,
>>and we aren't talking anything armor-piercing here.
>>
>
>
> Want to give us a few details, just for the record, about the "well
> regulated militia" to which you, personally, belong? (given your focus
> on the Constitution, I assume you do) -- Name, location where it's
> registered, number of members, just who it's "well regulated" by, that
> sort of thing?
You better go back and learn what "well regulated" meant in the time
when the Constitution was written. And while you are at it, learn what
militia meant at that time as well. Hint, the meanings aren't at all
the same as the generally accepted meanings today.
Matt
Peter Duniho
November 4th 04, 11:20 PM
"Greg Butler" > wrote in message
. ..
> [...] most Bush voters, however, look at the data first, then make up
> their minds.
Which Bush voters? The 64% that still believe that Saddam Hussein was
involved in the 9/11 attacks?
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 11:25 PM
Jim Fisher wrote:
> Gay+high wing: Expected and proper.
> Straight+low wing: Expected and proper
You got this half wrong. Birds are high wing, therefore high wing is
natural and proper. :-)
Matt
Peter Duniho
November 4th 04, 11:27 PM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
...
> This is hilarious. Do you think that people who voted for Kerry had their
> facts any more straight?
Yes. The Gallup poll shows that to be the case, at least with respect to
Bush's statements.
Matt Whiting
November 4th 04, 11:41 PM
Peter Duniho wrote:
> "Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>This is hilarious. Do you think that people who voted for Kerry had their
>>facts any more straight?
>
>
> Yes. The Gallup poll shows that to be the case, at least with respect to
> Bush's statements.
>
>
Have you been this deluded for a long time or is it something that
happened recently? Polls are statistics, not facts.
Matt
Greg Butler
November 5th 04, 12:16 AM
> No, it's not "spouting off." Those exit polls are what are routinely
> released to various news outlets *during* the polling.
Thats not true. The do not release any of the data to anyone because it
would sway the remaining votes one way.
If it were a matter
> of waiting until the polls closed, there'd be little value to an exit poll
> since the ballots would soon be counted, anyway.
That's how it worked in the 70's and early 80's, but not today. Today the
exit polls are used after the polls have closed so that they do not have to
wait on all the precincts to report in which can take an hour at the least.
With the exit polls, it allows them to call the state as soon as the polls
close.
Greg Butler
November 5th 04, 12:18 AM
> But the real issue here is that the people who voted for Bush, on the
> whole,
> simply either refuse to believe the factual reports that contradict
> everything Bush claimed and claims, or failed to pay attention to those
> reports when they were made.
If you are talking about the iraq-terrorism connection then you are dead
wrong. Try reading the 911 commission report before making wild claims.
Greg Butler
November 5th 04, 12:19 AM
> Which Bush voters? The 64% that still believe that Saddam Hussein was
> involved in the 9/11 attacks?
Read the 911 commission report and you will understand.
jls
November 5th 04, 12:37 AM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
...
> Cecil Chapman wrote:
>
> >>I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm
concerned,
> >>that
> >>includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried
to
> >>ban that,
> >
> >
> > I almost forgot,,,,what for goodness sake do you need to be firing
> > ammunition as large as the type that the Mauser uses? Are the deer
BIGGER
> > where you live,,, home protection, if that's what you are thinking,
favors a
> > shotgun (that's per some cop friends, who would know).
>
> Mauser is a type of rifle design, not a caliber. Get a clue.
>
>
> Matt
It's an ACTION design. YOU get a clue.
jls
November 5th 04, 12:59 AM
"Martin Hotze" > wrote in message
...
> [x-posting deleted]
>
> Chris E > wrote:
>
> > Similarily the 1st amendment provides right
> > to free speech to make remarks about all kinds of issues, not just
certain
> > issues that some folks feel ok.
>
>
> So then walk into a crowded theater and shout "fire". Then let's check
your
> right to free speech again. :-)
It would be legitimate speech if there really were a fire. Yelling "Fire!"
in a crowded theater, however, has no value in communication other than to
cause a stampede and probable violence and personal injury. Unless, of
course, there's a fire.
Let's take the example of students mooning a deputy sheriff in NC. They
were arrested, charged, and convicted. The judge who sentenced them said
in opposition to their argument of free speech that there were exceptions
and this was one. But on appeal the higher court overruled the trial court
and stated that the students could not be tried under any criminal theory,
including indecent exposure.
>
>
> #m
> --
> Buck Fush! ---- Oh, wouldn't I like to Blush Fush.
Matt Whiting
November 5th 04, 12:59 AM
jls wrote:
> "Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>Cecil Chapman wrote:
>>
>>
>>>>I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm
>
> concerned,
>
>>>>that
>>>>includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried
>
> to
>
>>>>ban that,
>>>
>>>
>>>I almost forgot,,,,what for goodness sake do you need to be firing
>>>ammunition as large as the type that the Mauser uses? Are the deer
>
> BIGGER
>
>>>where you live,,, home protection, if that's what you are thinking,
>
> favors a
>
>>>shotgun (that's per some cop friends, who would know).
>>
>>Mauser is a type of rifle design, not a caliber. Get a clue.
>>
>>
>>Matt
>
>
> It's an ACTION design. YOU get a clue.
>
>
The Mauser brothers designed a complete rifle. See
http://store.aetv.com/html/product/index.jhtml?id=42655&browseCategoryId=
True, several attributes of the action design are what remains most
memorable and copied to this day, however, it is equally correct to say
that Mauser was a rifle design. It certainly wasn't a caliber, which is
what was the OP implied, and if you had have a brain you would have
known that.
Matt
Newps
November 5th 04, 01:09 AM
Matt Whiting wrote:
>
> Good point! I can't take a hot climate so I guess I'm stuck with
> Montana and Wyoming... :-) At least the airways shouldn't be so
> congested there as here in the northeast.
I have been flying since 1996. In my 1000 hours I have seen an
airplane, not in the vicinity of an airport, maybe 10 times.
Peter Duniho
November 5th 04, 01:11 AM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
...
> Have you been this deluded for a long time or is it something that
> happened recently? Polls are statistics, not facts.
Polls are facts about statistics.
Are you claiming that the Gallup poll does NOT substantially describe the
working knowledge of people who supported Bush? If so, you're attempting to
contradict centuries of well-established statistical science.
Sounds to me like it's you that's deluded.
Matt Whiting
November 5th 04, 01:21 AM
Newps wrote:
>
>
> Matt Whiting wrote:
>
>>
>> Good point! I can't take a hot climate so I guess I'm stuck with
>> Montana and Wyoming... :-) At least the airways shouldn't be so
>> congested there as here in the northeast.
>
>
> I have been flying since 1996. In my 1000 hours I have seen an
> airplane, not in the vicinity of an airport, maybe 10 times.
Wow, I've flown south along the west edge of the Washington area
(probably 40 miles from Dulles) and had that many planes called out on
one flight!
Matt
Matt Whiting
November 5th 04, 01:24 AM
Peter Duniho wrote:
> "Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>Have you been this deluded for a long time or is it something that
>>happened recently? Polls are statistics, not facts.
>
>
> Polls are facts about statistics.
I'd say just the opposite. Polls are statistics about facts.
> Are you claiming that the Gallup poll does NOT substantially describe the
> working knowledge of people who supported Bush? If so, you're attempting to
> contradict centuries of well-established statistical science.
Yes, most of these polls have significant biases.
> Sounds to me like it's you that's deluded.
You need a new hearing aid then.
Matt
Greg Butler
November 5th 04, 01:30 AM
> He said "OF COURSE the exit polls showed Kerry ahead early in the day --
> all
> the Republicans work for a living, and couldn't vote till after 6 PM!"
The funny part is that is exactly right.
Wizard of Draws
November 5th 04, 01:59 AM
On 11/4/04 11:21 AM, in article
, "AES/newspost"
> wrote:
>>
>
> Want to give us a few details, just for the record, about the "well
> regulated militia" to which you, personally, belong? (given your focus
> on the Constitution, I assume you do) -- Name, location where it's
> registered, number of members, just who it's "well regulated" by, that
> sort of thing?
Your interpretation of "well-regulated" has been the subject of many
debates, and is very likely wrong. Google the term a bit and you'll see what
I mean.
--
Jeff 'The Wizard of Draws' Bucchino
Cartoons with a Touch of Magic
http://www.wizardofdraws.com
http://www.cartoonclipart.com
John T
November 5th 04, 01:59 AM
"Greg Butler" > wrote in message
>
> This is a prime example of the ignorance of so many people. The exit
> polls on election day were actually amazingly accurate. What many
> people like you should learn before you start spouting off is what
> actually happened. Results from the exit polls was leaked before the
> polls were complete, i.e. around 3 or 4 pm, before the polls were
> closed.
No, it's not "spouting off." Those exit polls are what are routinely
released to various news outlets *during* the polling. If it were a matter
of waiting until the polls closed, there'd be little value to an exit poll
since the ballots would soon be counted, anyway.
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
John T
November 5th 04, 02:04 AM
"Peter Duniho" > wrote in message
>
> I'm not saying at that all. You need reading lessons, I guess.
Perhaps. Would you kindly parse this for me and let me know what you really
meant, then?:
<quote>
But the real issue here is that the people who voted for Bush, on the whole,
simply either refuse to believe the factual reports that contradict
everything Bush claimed and claims, or failed to pay attention to those
reports when they were made.
</quote>
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
Newps
November 5th 04, 02:35 AM
Peter Duniho wrote:
>
>
> Polls are facts about statistics.
A poll isn't a fact about anything except the people who participated.
It is an educated guess about some particular subject. The results may
or may not be factual.
J Haggerty
November 5th 04, 02:47 AM
Peter Duniho wrote:
>
> Which Bush voters? The 64% that still believe that Saddam Hussein was
> involved in the 9/11 attacks?
>
What survey are you talking about? I find this number hard to believe.
JPH
Howard Nelson
November 5th 04, 03:15 AM
After all, how do you bribe a wealthy man?
>
> <snip>
> --
> Frank....H
With unbridled power. And if that doesn't frighten you then what will? Until
the democrats get out of the business of promoting a nanny state they
probably will stay out of power.
I think an interesting question is why the majority of major urban areas are
"blue" and the remainder of the country is "red". Any thoughts? Are the
people in the "blue" areas: Smarter? More Dependent? More Caring?
Need more services?
Howard
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.788 / Virus Database: 533 - Release Date: 11/1/2004
Bob Fry
November 5th 04, 03:15 AM
"Jay Honeck" > writes:
> Since people being paid by the government (employees, retirees, what have
> you) do not generate any income in the purest sense, the "taxes" they "pay"
> are entirely illusory. Same with anyone on the dole.
A perfect example, Jay, of why your "olive branch" of yesterday is
just horse feathers, glued together with spit and bull****.
You--and many others--equate government workers with people on the
dole.
So let's see. The many government researchers who conceived of and
created the ARPAnet--later to become the Internet, which you use
now--are no better than welfare recipients. Or Albert Einstein who
was on the "dole" not only in the US, but Europe! Damn parasite.
Or maybe the trash collectors, or city engineers, or the zillion
others--they don't generate any income, eh? How about the soldiers
carrying Dumya's personal little war--oops, I meant, protecting the
Homeland. No real income generation there!
Do you? Really, all you do is take people's hard-earned money and
give them a very temporary, ephemeral product--a night's sleep--in
return. Hardly what I would call income, in the purest sense, that
is. Maybe the Enrons of the world, would that be real income and real
taxes?
Of course not. Anyone or any company that adds value to an individual
or group in the form of a product or service, and receives money for
that added value, that's income. And if they pay taxes on it, they're
real taxes. The source of the income is irrelevant.
The original poster, assuming his basic figures were correct, was
right. The blue states are carrying the parasitic red states. Here in
California, we are forced to add ethanol to our gasoline for one
purpose: to bail out Midwest corn farmers. Another burden on the
hard-working, efficient blue workers, whether private or public
sector.
Jeez, no wonder Dumya won. The biggest product this country makes is
religious fanatics and fuzzy thinkers, and they seem to be collected
in the Midwest and South.
Bob Fry
November 5th 04, 03:21 AM
kontiki > writes:
> You also do not have the freedoms we have. Americans have paid dearly for them
> and are not laize fair about giving them up.
I just got back from a vacation in Montreal (that's in Canada, for
those who haven't traveled farther away than your 1st cousins). Lots
of vacation ads to guess where? Cuba. Why are Canadians free to
travel wherever they want, while I, an American, cannot?
G.R. Patterson III
November 5th 04, 03:38 AM
Newps wrote:
>
> I have been flying since 1996. In my 1000 hours I have seen an
> airplane, not in the vicinity of an airport, maybe 10 times.
I'm based in New Jersey. I've seen at least that many in the last 50 hours of flight
time. You could probably see at least five just running the Hudson VFR corridor once.
Probably get five more doing a low-level run down the coast during banner-towing
season. But even if you avoid known high-traffic areas like those, you'll see plenty
of aircraft.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
G.R. Patterson III
November 5th 04, 03:48 AM
jls wrote:
>
> It's an ACTION design. YOU get a clue.
No, this is a K-98 rifle, manufactured by the Mauser Fabrikwerk in 1943 and
sporterized in Suhl, Germany sometime after the war. Mauser rifles do, of course,
have Mauser actions.
George Patterson
If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have
been looking for it.
Richard Hertz
November 5th 04, 03:50 AM
"Michael 182" > wrote in message
news:aShid.352868$3l3.45461@attbi_s03...
> Cecil,
>
> Repeat after me. Never, never, never argue second amendment rights in a
> newsgroup. If you need frustration try teaching your dog not to chase
> rabbits. In fact, you have a better chance of succeeding there than you do
> in converting NRA members.
>
> Michael
> (A confirmed gun control advocate...)
Shame on you. (not about the admonishment - rather being a gun control
nazi)
Dudley Henriques
November 5th 04, 03:54 AM
"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit.
> -- David Brooks
And neither does reading War and Peace between the outer marker and
decision height.................So for THIS reason you decided to post
this idiotic nonsense and bring politics into the cockpit right?
You know Brooks; I had a job once pushing a D18 Beech into Washington
National every night. While I was on vacation, they hired me a new co
pilot. After I got back, I walked into the flight office and everybody
was jabbering about something they thought was real cute. Before I had a
chance to meet the new guy, they pulled me into a side office and asked
me if I minded flying with this new guy because he was black. You know
what I told them? I said I didn't give a rat's ass if he was purple as
long as he could fly!
Flying is flying...period. You'd be well advised if you intend hanging
around this business for any length of time to get this kind of crap
right out of your head. There's no place for it here, and no place for
it in any airplane I'm flying, I'll tell you that. But you're right,
this kind of thinking has absolutely no place even near an airplane. If
you can't handle it on a simple newsgroup, I'd hate to think of you
flying with some co-pilot someday whose politics you didn't agree with!
Man, this is not a healthy attitude for a pilot.
Dudley Henriques
International Fighter Pilots Fellowship
for email; take out the trash
Richard Hertz
November 5th 04, 03:59 AM
"Jim Fisher" > wrote in message
...
> "Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message >
> The gay population has become the new 'coloreds' - get over your
>> bigotry. Live and let live.
>
> You pushed a button, Cecil. I see this kind of statement repeated with
> sickening frequency
>
> Comparing gay folks to "colored" people is just utter bullsquat. If I
> were black, I'd smack people who say this upside the face. If you weren't
> such a generally nice feller, this honkey would wanna smack you.
>
> Black folks suffered brutally for hundreds of years right here in America.
> Many still suffer today from generations of whip-toting, slave-owning,
> water-cannon-wielding white folks denying them basic, God given,
> Constitutional rights to equal treatment by their representative
> government.
>
> Not one should is denying gay folks their constitutional rights to
> practice their behavior in private . . . or even in public. They can
> vote. They can get elected to office. They can hold powerful positions
> in the media and corporate America.
>
> Hell, they can even fly a high wing airplanes.
>
> But they can't get married and they can't fly low wing planes. That's
> just they way it is.
>
> To say that "Denying sexually aberrant citizens 'marital' status is akin
> to human rights abuses endured by black Americans" is an affront to my,
> and your, intelligence.
Bull**** - why shouldn't they have a right to take advantage of "marriage?"
Also, the gays/queers/fags have suffered brutally. They are still routinely
victims of hate crimes. Now, here I am sounding like a liberal, but tht is
not the case. I would never vote for the socialist, I mean democratic
party, but for all love, why this unbending rule against "marriage" for
queers?
Perhaps that analogy is not quite right, but there is no excuse for the
gubment to take moral stands and deny certain status to some citizens that
are routinely granted to others?
>
> --
> Jim Fisher
>
> *"Sexually aberrant" is defined as a behavior that is outside the norm.
> Homosexuality might become a "normal" behavior in the distant future but
> for now it is an aberration, pure and simple.
>
Jay Honeck
November 5th 04, 04:14 AM
>> Uh huh. Which polls are these? Are they compiled by the same ones
>> compiling the exit polling data?
>
> This is a prime example of the ignorance of so many people. The exit polls
> on election day were actually amazingly accurate. What many people like
> you should learn before you start spouting off is what actually happened.
> Results from the exit polls was leaked before the polls were complete,
> i.e. around 3 or 4 pm, before the polls were closed.
I heard a terrific explanation of this exit polling phenomenon at the
airport today, from an old gray-head sitting in the terminal building...
He said "OF COURSE the exit polls showed Kerry ahead early in the day -- all
the Republicans work for a living, and couldn't vote till after 6 PM!"
:-)
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Jay Honeck
November 5th 04, 04:17 AM
> In effect, government payees generate additional income for YOU, by
> helping to reduce your costs in many ways. It would cost you a bundle if
> you tried to achieve and maintain the same standard of life without any of
> them.
While that's 100% true, it has nothing to do with my statement.
People who work for the government generate no real income, create no real
wealth, and pay no real taxes. This is different from saying that they
aren't doing some necessary things.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Andrew Sarangan
November 5th 04, 04:22 AM
Cecil, very eloquently written. Partisanship has almost become a
religion that gets passed down through the generations. Both republicans
and democrats are guilty of this. This is exactly what needs to change
in our country. It would be easy for a fascist to manipulate this
undying devotion to a political party and get into power.
"Cecil Chapman" > wrote in
m:
>> Stupidly, they nominated a guy whose political positions were to the
>> left of Ted Kennedy's, absolutely ensuring a Bush victory.
>>
>> There were many traditional Republicans out here -- myself included
>> -- who would have voted for a conservative Democrat in this election.
>> But there was just no way for any of us to vote for a guy like
>> Kerry.
>>
>> The moral for the Democrats: Don't ever nominate an ultra liberal to
>> run for president again.
>
> I have often wondered how some people come to the conclusions that
> they do. Jay,,, for goodness sake you sound like you are a sock-puppet
> mouthing the words of his puppeteer (Bush - who was famous for the
> 'Kerry's just like T. Kennedy' line). Kerry was far left? How,
> where? If anything he was as centrist as Clinton was. You'd think he
> belonged to the Communist party to hear the prattle that is coming off
> of your tongue.
>
> Unlike the man whose words you mouth, Kerry didn't pull special favors
> to get into the National Guard to avoid the draft (he VOLUNTEERED for
> duty), Kerry was never arrested DUI, nor was he a cocaine user. While
> our boys were ducking bullets and embroiled in a hopeless conflict -
> Bush was having beer parties with the boys - occasionally remembering
> to show up for National Guard duty. Also, I'll bet you never even
> took the time to watch the footage of Kerry before the special hearing
> on Vietnam (which Bush would refer to often, without even citing a
> single in-context quote from) when Kerry spoke most eloquently without
> political bile of what was wrong with the Vietnam War and how it was a
> mistake. He did this AFTER having been there (something Bush in his
> petty cowardice, never did). He went there, saw how things were going
> and recognized that we (the US) had made a mistake. There wasn't a
> single misspoken word in his speech, back then (you see, unlike you, I
> took it upon myself to view all the footage of the hearing - before
> forming my opinions). Does integrity mean anything to you?
>
> I worry about a country where there are individuals that can be so
> easily molded with a political dogma and never bother to question or
> actively challenge the ideas that are being presented to them. I've
> voted for Democratic candidates, I've voted for Republican,,, you want
> to know why, Jay? Because it is the benefit for the country that
> counts not 'belonging to a club' and following their 'election
> charter' like some mindless automaton.
>
> Your candidate entered a war with an 'enemy' (Saddam) who had not
> attacked us while the fellow that directly attacked us is running
> around, comfortably making videos and apparently eating well. Bush
> claimed he was entering the war to save the people from his cruel
> tyranny - but what about the massive genocide that is going on in
> parts of Africa right now - I haven't heard a peep from Bush about
> that, or China's human rights violations, or North Korea's forming
> nuclear arsenal ---- Ooops,,,, wait,,,,, I get it now,,,,,,,, there
> is no OIL in Africa where innocents are being slaughtered every day,,,
> there is no OIL in North Korea.... Isn't it funny,,,, a president who
> is against stem cell research (which only the ignorant don't know)
> uses embryos and NOT fetuses, has BIG problems with using a frozen
> embryo that must be discarded after a certain length of time,,,, BUT
> he will NOT hesitate to sacrifice living, breathing, human beings in a
> war that had NO business being fought (I'm talking about Iraq here).
> So, he will put living human beings (including women and children
> involved in collateral damage from bombings that go astray) in body
> bags,,, but wait! Don't ya dare touch a frozen embryo in a
> 'cryogenics' freezer. Can YOU say , hypocrisy? God forbid, that you
> are your loved one needs medical aid that some new stem cell
> technology could offer.
>
> If there is any hope for our country, it will be when people learn to
> abandon their mindless following of party affiliation and do as I (and
> others) do; simply vote for the best man/woman for the job.
>
> But don't let intelligence or logic, pry you away from your blissful
> ignorance. I hope one day, people like you will learn to challenge
> and learn more about what they are told as fact FROM ANY SOURCE,,,
> then we will REALLY have a great Nation.
>
> A mind is truly a terrible thing to waste..........
>
>
Jay Honeck
November 5th 04, 04:28 AM
>> Since people being paid by the government (employees, retirees, what have
>> you) do not generate any income in the purest sense, the "taxes" they
>> "pay"
>> are entirely illusory. Same with anyone on the dole.
>
> A perfect example, Jay, of why your "olive branch" of yesterday is
> just horse feathers, glued together with spit and bull****.
>
> You--and many others--equate government workers with people on the
> dole.
No, they are NOT the same.
However, it is nevertheless true that neither group generates real income,
creates real wealth, or pays taxes in any real sense.
Just think about it a minute, and it will make more sense. It is only the
people working OUTSIDE the government that can create wealth or pay taxes.
How can a government worker pay taxes? The money they are "paying" in
taxes is made from taxes in the first place!
Deducting taxes from government employee's paychecks is quite literally an
illusion. But it's an essential lie that keeps everyone else subdued about
the incredible rip-off we call our "tax code."
You might consider taking a few economics courses at your local community
college. These facts will be covered in the first month or so.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Jay Honeck
November 5th 04, 04:29 AM
> I just got back from a vacation in Montreal (that's in Canada, for
> those who haven't traveled farther away than your 1st cousins). Lots
> of vacation ads to guess where? Cuba. Why are Canadians free to
> travel wherever they want, while I, an American, cannot?
What, Jamaica's not good enough for you?
;-)
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Roger
November 5th 04, 04:32 AM
On Wed, 3 Nov 2004 10:55:51 -0800, "David Brooks"
> wrote:
>One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
>flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit.
<snip>
Nor does it belong in newsgroups not devoted to it.
If this was meant as a troll, it sure worked. 181 posts so far.
I agree with Michael (Damn! Did I just say that?). Politics and
religion belong on their own groups. Often it's difficult to keep
quiet when some one makes a strong statement as to one or the other
and that is what creates threads with 181 posts. I have to plead
guilty to having retorted to a few political posts on the groups this
year, but not many. At least not many compared to the number of on
topic posts I make.
Most of us get along quite well on here *most* of the time, although
probably a lot fewer would be able to get along in real life, or IRL
as the simmers call it.<:-))
I try to remember that what ever my religious and political views,
there are probably as least as many who would take the other side of
the argument.
Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member)
(N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com
Dave Stadt
November 5th 04, 04:51 AM
"Morgans" > wrote in message
...
>
> "G.R. Patterson III" > wrote
>
> If you want to
> > own one today, you have to obtain a permit from BATF for each weapon.
This
> requires
> > that you pass essentially the same investigations necessary to get a top
> secret
> > security clearance and pay a hefty fee (in 1981, the fee was $600 per
> weapon). Many
> > States also require a separate investigation and permit, and some States
> will not
> > allow private citizens to own them at all.
> >
> > George Patterson
>
> Unless you are a crook. You can get all the automatic weapons you want,
or
> have money to buy, then.
And that won't change no matter how many gun laws are passed.
> --
> Jim in NC
>
>
> ---
> Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
> Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
> Version: 6.0.788 / Virus Database: 533 - Release Date: 11/1/2004
>
>
Dave Stadt
November 5th 04, 04:56 AM
"Aviv Hod" > wrote in message
...
> It irks me when I hear that this election was decided on values and
> morals, suggesting that Bush has a monopoly on morality. In fact, I
> argue that the majority of people in the blue states hold moral values
> that make financing social programs that improve the poor's situation
> more important than lower taxes.
Quite a few of those programs are solidly in the immoral category and are in
place simply to garner liberals votes come election day.
John T
November 5th 04, 05:01 AM
"Greg Butler" > wrote in message
>
>> But the real issue here is that the people who voted for Bush, on the
>> whole,
>> simply either refuse to believe the factual reports that contradict
>> everything Bush claimed and claims, or failed to pay attention to
>> those reports when they were made.
>
> If you are talking about the iraq-terrorism connection then you are
> dead wrong. Try reading the 911 commission report before making wild
> claims.
That was Peter's statement, not mine. I've made no claims one way or
another about Saddam/9-11.
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
Greg Butler
November 5th 04, 05:03 AM
"John T" > wrote in message>>
> That was Peter's statement, not mine. I've made no claims one way or
> another about Saddam/9-11.
That was bad quoting on my part. I knew it was his, put it on the wrong
thread I guess.
Dave Stadt
November 5th 04, 05:11 AM
"Frank" > wrote in message ...
> John T wrote:
>
> > "Cecil Chapman" > wrote in message
> > m
> >>
> <snip>
> >
> >> Good point,,, you're right Kerry was clearly against tax breaks for
> >> the wealthy, the group that Bush was caught referring to during a
> >> private dinner that was videotaped and to whom he referred to as "My
> >> own people" ---- Got that right, W. Thank goodness there was
> >> someone looking out for the common man (and still is,,,, as a
> >> Senator) as John Kerry.
> >
> > Sorry, but you lose points on this issue. Kerry, *the* richest person
in
> > Congress, paid less in 2003 taxes (both in percentage and in raw
dollars)
> > than Bush (whose net worth is a fraction of Kerry's). Feel free to
Google
> > for their 2003 tax returns and do the math. While you're at it, notice
> > the difference in charitable donations, too.
>
> And clearly stated that he was against the tax cuts even though he
benefited
> from them. In fact he was, in effect, advocating raising his own taxes.
>
> And while we're on the subject of Kerry's (Theresa's) wealth.... I will
> never understand why this was seen as such a negative. He came upon it
> honorably. More important, it insulates him from some of the special
> interest pressure. After all, how do you bribe a wealthy man?
The same way you bribe a poor man.
>
> <snip>
> --
> Frank....H
John T
November 5th 04, 05:16 AM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
>
>> They're not. :)
>
> Such as?
Assuming you were looking for states that weren't quite so cold in the
winter there's Georgia, for starters.
Then there's Alabama, Mississippi, South Carolina, North Carolina,
Tennessee, Kentucky, Louisiana, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona - even Florida
(at least away from Miami/Ft. Lauderdale/Palm Beach).
If you're looking for a conservative home that's not hot in the summer, you
might consider splitting time between Alaska and one of the Southern states.
:)
--
John T
http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer
http://www.pocketgear.com/products_search.asp?developerid=4415
____________________
Dave Stadt
November 5th 04, 05:17 AM
"Greg Butler" > wrote in message
. ..
>
> > He said "OF COURSE the exit polls showed Kerry ahead early in the day --
> > all
> > the Republicans work for a living, and couldn't vote till after 6 PM!"
>
> The funny part is that is exactly right.
Now wait a minute.........it's hard work sitting at home waiting for the
government check to show up.
Dave Stadt
November 5th 04, 05:25 AM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
...
> John T wrote:
>
> > "Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
> >
> >
> >>Why are all of the conservatives states in places that are cold in the
> >>winter?
> >
> >
> > They're not. :)
> >
>
> Such as?
Most of the south?
>
>
> Matt
>
Steve Fleischer
November 5th 04, 05:48 AM
On Thu, 04 Nov 2004 14:32:43 -0700, Newps wrote:
> Do you even know what a Mauser is?
A cat that keeps the rodent population down? ;-)
--
Steve
E-mail: steve at flyingtigerwebdesign dot com
Hong Kong, 05/11/2004 13:48:10
Peter Duniho
November 5th 04, 06:01 AM
"John T" > wrote in message
m...
> Perhaps. Would you kindly parse this for me and let me know what you
> really > meant, then?
I meant exactly what I wrote. Nowhere in the statement that you quoted is
anything that could be construed as meaning "anybody voting for Bush failed
to pay attention or chose to ignore the facts". As I've stated elsewhere,
some 36% of the people voting for Bush did apparently have the facts.
"Anybody voting for Bush" would imply 0%, and I've not once said that.
Pete
Peter Duniho
November 5th 04, 06:02 AM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
...
>> Polls are facts about statistics.
>
> I'd say just the opposite. Polls are statistics about facts.
Statistics are always about facts. Polls are the facts about the
statistics.
> Yes, most of these polls have significant biases.
Such as?
Peter Duniho
November 5th 04, 06:05 AM
"Newps" > wrote in message
...
>> Polls are facts about statistics.
>
> A poll isn't a fact about anything except the people who participated.
The poll itself is a fact about the statistical sample taken. Which is
exactly what I said (though apparently not in a verbose enough way for some
of you).
If you feel you have some good reason to dispite the Gallup poll results,
I'm all ears. If all you can come up with is "well, there's a 0.000000001%
chance that the poll is incorrect", then while that may be perfectly true,
it's a pretty useless statement.
The FACT remains that there's a much larger chance that the poll correctly
describes the overall electorate than that it doesn't.
Pete
Peter Duniho
November 5th 04, 06:07 AM
"J Haggerty" > wrote in message
news:8RBid.98486$tU4.72620@okepread06...
> What survey are you talking about? I find this number hard to believe.
Sorry, you're right. I misremembered. It's "only" 62%. Anywhere, here's
one article:
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1000653667
Google can easily find you as many other references to the poll as you'd
like to see.
Roger
November 5th 04, 07:58 AM
On Fri, 05 Nov 2004 03:54:37 GMT, "Dudley Henriques"
> wrote:
>
>"David Brooks" > wrote in message
...
>
>> One thing - one of so very many things - I learned in my five years of
>> flying is that partisan politics does not fit into the cockpit.
>> -- David Brooks
>
>And neither does reading War and Peace between the outer marker and
>decision height.................So for THIS reason you decided to post
>this idiotic nonsense and bring politics into the cockpit right?
<snip>
> But you're right,
>this kind of thinking has absolutely no place even near an airplane. If
>you can't handle it on a simple newsgroup, I'd hate to think of you
>flying with some co-pilot someday whose politics you didn't agree with!
>Man, this is not a healthy attitude for a pilot.
That's a lot of good common sense Dudley, but with his attitude, I
think he probably made his statement and then left so he wouldn't hear
any rational rebuttals.
I do agree, that any one with that attitude should not be doing
something that requires calm and rational thinking under pressure such
as flying.
Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member)
(N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com
>Dudley Henriques
>International Fighter Pilots Fellowship
>for email; take out the trash
>
>
Thomas Borchert
November 5th 04, 08:24 AM
Peter,
> Are you talking about the same Colin Powell that got in front of the UN and
> swore up and down that he had incontrovertible evidence of weapons of mass
> destruction in Iraq?
>
Hey, claiming stuff like that is what's getting presidents re-elected in the
land of the free, so it must be right...
--
Thomas Borchert (EDDH)
Earl Grieda
November 5th 04, 09:21 AM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
...
> AES/newspost wrote:
>
> > In article >,
> > "G.R. Patterson III" > wrote:
> >
> >
> >>He's opposed to private ownership of any firearm except shotguns plugged
to
> >>three
> >>shells. And just where in the Constitution exactly is hunting mentioned?
He
> >>prattles
> >>about "military-style assault weapons" while trying to ban
semi-automatics,
> >>knowing
> >>full well that no military-style assault weapon is semi-automatic.
> >>
> >>I have the right to own and fire my Mauser, and, as far as I'm
concerned,
> >>that
> >>includes the right to be allowed to buy ammunition for it. Kerry tried
to ban
> >>that,
> >>and we aren't talking anything armor-piercing here.
> >>
> >
> >
> > Want to give us a few details, just for the record, about the "well
> > regulated militia" to which you, personally, belong? (given your focus
> > on the Constitution, I assume you do) -- Name, location where it's
> > registered, number of members, just who it's "well regulated" by, that
> > sort of thing?
>
> You better go back and learn what "well regulated" meant in the time
> when the Constitution was written. And while you are at it, learn what
> militia meant at that time as well. Hint, the meanings aren't at all
> the same as the generally accepted meanings today.
>
>
Please provide a referance to back up your etymological evolution of these
terms.
Earl G.
Steve Fleischer
November 5th 04, 11:47 AM
On Fri, 05 Nov 2004 02:58:32 -0500, Roger wrote:
> That's a lot of good common sense Dudley
I thought so too.
--
Steve
E-mail: steve at flyingtigerwebdesign dot com
Hong Kong, 05/11/2004 19:47:44
Bob Noel
November 5th 04, 12:17 PM
In article >, "Peter Duniho"
> wrote:
> The FACT remains that there's a much larger chance that the poll
> correctly
> describes the overall electorate than that it doesn't.
you have much more faith in polls than I do.
--
Bob Noel
Seen on Kerry's campaign airplane: "the real deal"
oh yeah baby.
Bob Noel
November 5th 04, 12:28 PM
In article <7kDid.56196$R05.33927@attbi_s53>, "Jay Honeck"
> wrote:
> Just think about it a minute, and it will make more sense. It is only
> the
> people working OUTSIDE the government that can create wealth or pay
> taxes.
> How can a government worker pay taxes? The money they are "paying" in
> taxes is made from taxes in the first place!
so, the money you earn at your hotel isn't weath if it was from people
who work for the government? What about the people who work for
companies working government contracts?
--
Bob Noel
Seen on Kerry's campaign airplane: "the real deal"
oh yeah baby.
Dave Stadt
November 5th 04, 01:47 PM
"Peter Duniho" > wrote in message
...
> "Newps" > wrote in message
> ...
> >> Polls are facts about statistics.
> >
> > A poll isn't a fact about anything except the people who participated.
>
> The poll itself is a fact about the statistical sample taken. Which is
> exactly what I said (though apparently not in a verbose enough way for
some
> of you).
>
> If you feel you have some good reason to dispite the Gallup poll results,
> I'm all ears. If all you can come up with is "well, there's a
0.000000001%
> chance that the poll is incorrect", then while that may be perfectly true,
> it's a pretty useless statement.
>
> The FACT remains that there's a much larger chance that the poll correctly
> describes the overall electorate than that it doesn't.
You would be hard pressed to prove that. Polls are at best one step above a
WAG.
> Pete
>
>
Jay Honeck
November 5th 04, 02:17 PM
> so, the money you earn at your hotel isn't weath if it was from people
> who work for the government? What about the people who work for
> companies working government contracts?
Ah, now things get fuzzy, don't they?
Pretty soon we'll be talking about whether wealth really exists at all,
which quickly descends into a "and does it matter, we'll all be dead in a
hundred years" argument anyway.
Since I've already got a headache, I'll pass on this one. Suffice it to say
that real taxes can only be paid by people who, by definition, do not work
in the government. Everything else is merely an illusion.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Terry Bolands
November 5th 04, 02:29 PM
"Jim Fisher" > wrote
> "Terry Bolands" > wrote
>> "Jim Fisher" > wrote
>>
>>> But they can't get married and they can't fly low wing
>>> planes. That's just they way it is.
>>
>> It's not "just the way it is". You can feel it is wrong if
>> you want, but it's not an innate truism that gay people can't
>> get married.
>
> Ahh, but it is a truism if one accept the absolute fact that
> "marraige" has been recognized for thousands of years as a
> religous tenant. We aren't talking "unions" but marraige.
That doesn't make it a truism at all. There are plenty of
non-religious individuals who still believe in the institution of
marriage. Civil servants can perform marriages.
> Governemental support of a marraige between a man and a woman
> and, thus, protection of the familial unit is supported and
> recognized beacause such support has historically contributed
> to to overall, long-term survival of governing bodies.
> Man+man and woman+woman does NOT a stable family make and does
> a government absolutely no good.
You presenting this as a fact, but it is only an opinion.
> This makes it a truism, Terry. You don't have to like it but
> a rational person cannot deny it.
I disagree. This is a debatable issue, and debatable by fully
rational persons.
Beyond this, doesn't the practice of same-sex marriages in some
European countries prove that it isn't a truism?
I think the line between the religious and civil role is fairly
vague. I, personally, am in favor of same-sex marriage, but I
think I could be in favor a situation in which marriage is soley
a religious rite and civil unions are a, well, civil
distinction. Marriage would only have a religious significance
and civil unions would have legal/financial/etc significance.
Any given religion coud define marriage however they liked, but
any two people could get a civil union.
>>> To say that "Denying sexually aberrant citizens 'marital'
>>> status is akin to human rights abuses endured by black
>>> Americans" is an affront to my, and your, intelligence.
>>
>> Why call it sexually aberrant? I agree, that is an affront
>> to your intelligence.
>
> "abeeeeeeerrrrrrrrant (br-nt, -br,-)
> adj.
> 1.. Deviating from the proper or expected course.
> 2.. Deviating from what is normal; untrue to type.
> Man+woman - Expected and even proper.
> Man+man - Untrue to type
>
> Gay+high wing: Expected and proper.
> Straight+low wing: Expected and proper
>
> Woman+Woman - I don't necessarily have a problem with this
> (marriage or adoptive rights-wise) but it is still aberrant.
>
> Until the gay population becomes a significant portion of the
> population, gay behavior will be considered "abnormal" and
> "aberrant." You don't have to like that fact but it is
> axiomatic.
No, it is just different. Calling it aberrant puts the judgment
of 'improper' on it. Your opinions aren't axiomatic, Jim. Most
people in the US used to look on interracial marriage as
aberrant. Opinions have changed...not axiomatic.
tb
Matt Barrow
November 5th 04, 03:05 PM
"Bob Noel" > wrote in message
...
> In article <7kDid.56196$R05.33927@attbi_s53>, "Jay Honeck"
> > wrote:
>
> > Just think about it a minute, and it will make more sense. It is only
> > the
> > people working OUTSIDE the government that can create wealth or pay
> > taxes.
> > How can a government worker pay taxes? The money they are "paying" in
> > taxes is made from taxes in the first place!
>
> so, the money you earn at your hotel isn't weath if it was from people
> who work for the government? What about the people who work for
> companies working government contracts?
>
No, it isn't Bob; you're misconstruing the meaning of "wealth", particularly
"wealth creation".
--
Matt
---------------------
Matthew W. Barrow
Site-Fill Homes, LLC.
Montrose, CO
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