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#21
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Ron wrote:
Hindsight is wonderful in providing insight, providing one is willing to learn from it. Those unwilling to learn from it are doomed to repeat the experience. The current batch of Kerry bashers haven't figured out yet that he was right and the rest of us who thought at the time that we belonged in that dogfight were wrong. George Z. But he was not right in labeling vets as war criminals acting like Genghis Khan, or his dubious throwing the medals story of which there are at least 4 versions given by him, or when his group he headed was sending fake vets to testify about war crimes and atrocities. If we can forgive Cong. Henry Hyde (R-Ohio) his self-styled "youthful indiscretion" for a five year long affair with a married mother at the age of 45 that destroyed her family, we Christian Conservatives ought to be able to forgive Kerry for overloading his mouth when he was in his early 20s. I seriously doubt that there are very many of us who haven't said things in our younger days that we didn't later regret. Those who deny that they ever did such things are merely short on memory. George Z. |
#22
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George wrote:
If we can forgive Cong. Henry Hyde (R-Ohio) his self-styled "youthful indiscretion" for a five year long affair with a married mother at the age of 45 that destroyed her family, we Christian Conservatives ought to be able to forgive Kerry for overloading his mouth when he was in his early 20s. I seriously doubt that there are very many of us who haven't said things in our younger days that we didn't later regret. Those who deny that they ever did such things are merely short on memory. It isn't Kerry's words of 30 years that bother me so much. I probably have been wrong as many times if not more. What does bother me about Kerry is his inconsistency and those damn shoes he wears....the flip flops. oxmoron MFE |
#23
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OXMORON1 wrote:
George wrote: If we can forgive Cong. Henry Hyde (R-Ohio) his self-styled "youthful indiscretion" for a five year long affair with a married mother at the age of 45 that destroyed her family, we Christian Conservatives ought to be able to forgive Kerry for overloading his mouth when he was in his early 20s. I seriously doubt that there are very many of us who haven't said things in our younger days that we didn't later regret. Those who deny that they ever did such things are merely short on memory. It isn't Kerry's words of 30 years that bother me so much. I probably have been wrong as many times if not more. What does bother me about Kerry is his inconsistency and those damn shoes he wears....the flip flops. If flip flops are what bothers you, you need to take a close look at our president because he's made far more of them than Kerry ever did, even if he hasn't been on the national scene nearly as long. Do you need a list, or are you curious enough to do your own searching? George Z. oxmoron MFE |
#24
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I think the foreigner he was referring to was himself, not Maya Lin.
"Cub Driver" wrote in message news ![]() For a foreigner, it did its job. Maya Lin was born in Athens, Ohio. Can't get more American than that! She was a student at Yale when she won the Vietnam Memorial competition. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) The Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com The Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com |
#25
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Billy Beck wrote:
That Memorial is *always* the top item on my to-do list whenever I have a spare moment in Washington. And I've seen it at every hour of the day, but it is never so powerful as in the middle of the night. Billy http://www.two--four.net/weblog.php I'll agree with you. It's always on my list. The most moving visit was just after the dedication. The memorial sidewalks were not completed. We walked on wooden planking to see the memorial. It was a foggy night and the city lights disappeared as we descended towards the center of the wall. Someone was reading the names on the wall in a measured pace. All I remember was a disembodied voice Williams, Charles R Roberts, Thomas C Frederichs, Allan P ----------------- Another moving experience is to walk into Arlington Cemetary from the visitor's center towards the Tomb of the Unknowns. If the wind is carrying from the west, you hear the footsteps of the guard for quite a distance. It drifts over the rows of stones. -------------- MAH |
#26
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On Fri, 04 Jun 2004 06:25:26 -0500, mah wrote:
Billy Beck wrote: That Memorial is *always* the top item on my to-do list whenever I have a spare moment in Washington. And I've seen it at every hour of the day, but it is never so powerful as in the middle of the night. Billy http://www.two--four.net/weblog.php I'll agree with you. It's always on my list. The most moving visit was just after the dedication. The memorial sidewalks were not completed. We walked on wooden planking to see the memorial. It was a foggy night and the city lights disappeared as we descended towards the center of the wall. Someone was reading the names on the wall in a measured pace. All I remember was a disembodied voice Williams, Charles R Roberts, Thomas C Frederichs, Allan P ----------------- Another moving experience is to walk into Arlington Cemetary from the visitor's center towards the Tomb of the Unknowns. If the wind is carrying from the west, you hear the footsteps of the guard for quite a distance. It drifts over the rows of stones. -------------- MAH A visit to the Punch Bowl brings tears to my eyes every time. I used to go there whenever we were in port at Pearl and when I was "just passin' through". Al Minyard |
#27
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![]() So what do you guys think of the statues? The first time I was at the Wall, there were no statues. The second time, the three soldiers. I was there most recently in January, when presumably the nurse(s?) had been added, but apparently I didn't notice. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) The Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com The Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com |
#28
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In message , Cub Driver
writes So what do you guys think of the statues? The first time I was at the Wall, there were no statues. The second time, the three soldiers. I was there most recently in January, when presumably the nurse(s?) had been added, but apparently I didn't notice. The soldiers were there in late 2000 when we visited. Don't recall any nurses, but there was a bronze of three soldiers facing the Wall when I was there. I liked them and they were good work, but the Wall was what grabbed and held the attention. On the other hand, the statues were a reminder that every one of those names had a face. I'm not much on artistic analysis; I just know that the Vietnam Memorial moved me deeply. (The Korean memorial got to me as well, mind you) -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
#29
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On Sat, 05 Jun 2004 05:29:04 -0400, Cub Driver
wrote: So what do you guys think of the statues? The first time I was at the Wall, there were no statues. The second time, the three soldiers. I was there most recently in January, when presumably the nurse(s?) had been added, but apparently I didn't notice. The statues are extraneous at best--the addy little to the impact of the memorial, and politically correct at worst. The implication that the losses were shared equitably among the races and exclusively by the Army is wrong. Might want to consider Burkitt's "Stolen Valor" for the stats on much of this. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
#30
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![]() "Paul J. Adam" wrote in message ... I'm not much on artistic analysis; I just know that the Vietnam Memorial moved me deeply. (The Korean memorial got to me as well, mind you) I've not been to DC for nearly 30 years, so I've obviously not seen the Vietnam Memorial. The Washington Monument was interesting as a structure. The Lincoln memorial was impressive and moving, Jefferson's "right". Arlington, well, quieting. But I was by Mt Rushmore some years back and it moved me in a way beyond any thing I expected or can understand even now. |
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