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Liberals HATE America wrote:
Alas, Orville and Wilbur Wright are today pigeon-holed as "dead white males" whom we are supposed to ignore, if not deplore. The author is sadly misinformed. I couldn't care less about "white" or "male". However, "dead" is a Bad Thing. I certainly expend a serious amount of effort to avoid this label myself, and I never take advice given to me by people to whom this label applies...at least advice provided since the label's application. In fact, it can be safely stated that I avoid any conversation at all with people to whom this label applies. If I were to see one of these people walking along the street, I'd be sure to walk on the other side - or perhaps accelerate in the opposite direction. Does that make me a liberal? - Andrew |
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![]() "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message online.com... Liberals HATE America wrote: Alas, Orville and Wilbur Wright are today pigeon-holed as "dead white males" whom we are supposed to ignore, if not deplore. The author is sadly misinformed. I couldn't care less about "white" or "male". However, "dead" is a Bad Thing. I certainly expend a serious amount of effort to avoid this label myself, and I never take advice given to me by people to whom this label applies...at least advice provided since the label's application. In fact, it can be safely stated that I avoid any conversation at all with people to whom this label applies. If I were to see one of these people walking along the street, I'd be sure to walk on the other side - or perhaps accelerate in the opposite direction. Does that make me a liberal? Your previous statements do not support your current claim. As for someone being mistaken; between a genius like Sowell and a dingleberry like yourself, I have to vote for Sowell. |
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Tom wrote:
Your previous statements do not support your current claim. I've made previous statements which indicate to you that I speak to dead people? Interesting. Scary, perhaps, but interesting. - Andrew |
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Alas, Orville and Wilbur Wright are today pigeon-holed as "dead white
males" whom we are supposed to ignore, if not deplore. An adjunct to this theory: Today, while Christmas shopping for my kids, nephews & nieces, I was amazed and saddened to find not a SINGLE toy airplane for sale in K-Mart's expanded toy section. Well, they DID have a single, lonely (but nifty) radio-controlled plane for sale, but that was *it*. No World War II fighters, no modern jets, not even an airport play-set for toddlers! Given that the importance of this year, I would have expected at least one or two "Wright Brothers" toys. Heck, we couldn't even find the usually ubiquitous little die-cast toys... Not that K-Mart is indicative of the entire marketplace, but IMHO this doesn't bode well for the future of general aviation. When kids stop playing with airplanes, they stop dreaming about flying... :-( -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message online.com... Liberals HATE America wrote: The author is sadly misinformed. I couldn't care less about "white" or "male". However, "dead" is a Bad Thing. I certainly expend a serious amount of effort to avoid this label myself, and I never take advice given to me by people to whom this label applies...at least advice provided since the label's application. In fact, it can be safely stated that I avoid any conversation at all with people to whom this label applies. If I were to see one of these people walking along the street, I'd be sure to walk on the other side - or perhaps accelerate in the opposite direction. Does that make me a liberal? - Andrew |
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On Thu, 11 Dec 2003 00:47:08 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: Alas, Orville and Wilbur Wright are today pigeon-holed as "dead white males" whom we are supposed to ignore, if not deplore. An adjunct to this theory: Today, while Christmas shopping for my kids, nephews & nieces, I was amazed and saddened to find not a SINGLE toy airplane for sale in K-Mart's expanded toy section. Go to Target. The Kool Toyz line has a set of 'em. Rob |
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When kids stop playing with airplanes, they stop dreaming about flying... :-(
Jay, I think it's the other way round: When kids stop dreaming about flying, they stop playing with airplanes. Kids play with toys that already interest them, not vice versa. Like it or not, "history marches on." Aviation is not as romantic as it was when I was a kid. Pilots no longer wear helmet, goggles, and a silk scarf. People no longer rush out of their homes to watch airplanes fly over, as they did when I was a kid. Youngsters today have no idea who Lindbergh was, or Jimmy Doolittle, or even Wrong Way Corrigan. The Derring-do exploits of aviators are no longer on the front pages of newspapers. Why should kids be interested in aviation? vince norris |
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vincent p. norris wrote:
Why should kids be interested in aviation? Because it's magic. Modern planes are even more magic than those of the Wright brothers. They looked so light and delicate, it was easy to see the relationship between a child's kite and the larger flying machines. Of course they could fly. But now? Hundreds of tons of metal suspended miles above the earth with nothing to hold it up? Traveling at speeds faster than the earth can rotate beneath it? How about a plane that can fly around the world on one tank of gas? You get the idea. Magic. -- Jeff 'The Wizard of Draws' Bucchino "Cartoons with a Touch of Magic" http://www.wizardofdraws.com http://www.cartoonclipart.com |
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At some point in relatively recent history, many things that we currently
take for granted were Magic... The Light Bulb The Telephone The Car The Computer The Internet Christmas I think for most people nowadays, there isn't much Magic. Nowadays it's always about money. There isn't even much visionary Sci-Fi to lead us to our next dream... We've even got the Cell-Phone as a Star Trek Communicator... At least for most people, anyway. I still enjoy the magic of flying... And even some other things... Although I have become something of a pragmatist - or maybe even a cyncic. (Could you tell?) Maybe we just need some George Orwell meets Gene Roddenberry meets George Lucas style visionaries to come up with the next world-wide fantasy that might be achievable in the next 50 years. And then we need a good leader to declare it the mission... Wizard of Draws wrote in : vincent p. norris wrote: Why should kids be interested in aviation? Because it's magic. Modern planes are even more magic than those of the Wright brothers. They looked so light and delicate, it was easy to see the relationship between a child's kite and the larger flying machines. Of course they could fly. But now? Hundreds of tons of metal suspended miles above the earth with nothing to hold it up? Traveling at speeds faster than the earth can rotate beneath it? How about a plane that can fly around the world on one tank of gas? You get the idea. Magic. |
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"Judah" At some point in relatively recent history,
many things that we currently take for granted were Magic... The Light Bulb The Telephone The Car The Computer The Internet Christmas That's just life... I think for most people nowadays, there isn't much Magic. Nowadays it's always about money. There isn't even much visionary Sci-Fi to lead us to our next dream... We've even got the Cell-Phone as a Star Trek Communicator... ....ut that's overly cynical At least for most people, anyway. I still enjoy the magic of flying... And even some other things... Although I have become something of a pragmatist - or maybe even a cyncic. (Could you tell?) I enjoy it too... and I think you are just getting older. I know that for sure. I watched "Master and Commander" the other night and fantasized about how magical sailing and sailing ships must have been in previous centuries. Sort of like space flight in the last one. The magic of open ocean sailing is still there but so is thousands of other pursuits. We just have some many damn options available to so damn many people. It's great! . |
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Judah,
I think for most people nowadays, there isn't much Magic. Careful with statements like that. At the end of the 19th century, common wisdom was that everything inventable had been invented. Things have changed quite a bit since then... -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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