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#1
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: Yup. Either Kerry told the truth and should be prosecuted for war
: crimes, or he lied and should be prosecuted for perjury. : :Bush is an idiot, period. : :Stan K. : :Yes, Stank, I stand in awe of the profound logic contained within your :rebuttal. I can see the Court TV coverage now: : :Judge (to Kerry): On the charges of murder in the first degree, and :the other crimes against humanity, how do you plead? : :Attorney for Kerry: Bush is an idiot. The defense rests. : : :My first thought when I read a statement such as "Bush is an idiot, period" :is...If Bush is such an Idiot and you are so damn smart, why aren't you the :President? I'd settle for "what top 3 business school did you get your MBA from?" I have noticed that a majority of people seem to equate the smooth talking of someone like Clinton with having superior intellect. My own experiece over the last half century is just the opposite. Some of the smartest people I have ever met had great difficulty with public speaking. I remember one kid I went to school with who had a severe stutter and was constantly being called dummy by all the other kids. He graduated top of our class and went on to do the same at MIT. Bob Reed www.kisbuild.r-a-reed-assoc.com (KIS Builders Site) KIS Cruiser in progress...Slow but steady progress.... "Ladies and Gentlemen, take my advice, pull down your pants and Slide on the Ice!" (M.A.S.H. Sidney Freedman) |
#2
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![]() :I'd settle for "what top 3 business school did you get your MBA from?" : : :I have noticed that a majority of people seem to equate the smooth talking of :someone like Clinton with having superior intellect. My own experiece over the :last half century is just the opposite. Some of the smartest people I have :ever met had great difficulty with public speaking. I remember one kid I went :to school with who had a severe stutter and was constantly being called dummy :by all the other kids. He graduated top of our class and went on to do the :same at MIT. I agree. Since my first degree is actually in public speaking (just an AA) I won't say that intelligence and speaking ability are mutually exclusive, but any relationship is coincidental. The best public speakers around are actors. Some of the stupidest people you've ever met are actors. A small percentage of actors are actually brilliant people. In my day job I've been working a lot with Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, guitarist from the Doobie Brothers and Steely Dan. Brilliant musician, and a consultant on defense and homeland security. It's hard to imagine Jeff Beck, Kieth Richards or Eddie Van Halen, giving a brief to Condoleezza Rice, but Baxter has. After 9/11 I realized one of the things that bugged me in our society is how we confuse clever with intelligent. There were plenty of snarky, snide writers around that would address an issue with clever wordplay instead of an actual, supported, argued point of view. As if alliteration, a few phrases of French and a pun about someone's name was important. That last part goes hand in hand with the people that will read some article by some obscure author and suddenly it's the gospel. It doesn't matter if the author is an expert or coming straight out of the local nut house. Most of the crap that I have read over the last twenty years seems to be totally biased and lacking of any logical analysis. They start with a predetermined point of view and then construct the facts to support that view. Bob Reed www.kisbuild.r-a-reed-assoc.com (KIS Builders Site) KIS Cruiser in progress...Slow but steady progress.... "Ladies and Gentlemen, take my advice, pull down your pants and Slide on the Ice!" (M.A.S.H. Sidney Freedman) |
#3
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On Mon, 23 Aug 2004 17:14:57 -0700, Richard Riley
wrote: After 9/11 I realized one of the things that bugged me in our society is how we confuse clever with intelligent. Or brazeness with bravery. ================================================== == Del Rawlins-- Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website: http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/ Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply |
#5
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![]() I have noticed that a majority of people seem to equate the smooth talking of someone like Clinton with having superior intellect. My own experiece over the last half century is just the opposite. Some of the smartest people I have ever met had great difficulty with public speaking. I remember one kid I went to school with who had a severe stutter and was constantly being called dummy by all the other kids. He graduated top of our class and went on to do the same at MIT. Bob Reed Yeah, Bob. A lot of data exists that fortifies your position on this. Verbal skills are completely different than aptitude for problem solving. There are many geniuses who are dyslexic, can't speak without a stutter, can't spell and write poorly. Believe me, I went to school with many of them in the physics departments of the universities I attended. You wonder how they got to class that day but at the end of the semester, they have all the points. BWB |
#6
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![]() "Mark Smith" wrote in message ... Richard Riley wrote: On 23 Aug 2004 15:08:55 GMT, osite (RobertR237) wrote: : :I'd settle for "what top 3 business school did you get your MBA from?" : : :I have noticed that a majority of people seem to equate the smooth talking of :someone like Clinton with having superior intellect. My own experiece over the :last half century is just the opposite. Some of the smartest people I have :ever met had great difficulty with public speaking. I remember one kid I went :to school with who had a severe stutter and was constantly being called dummy :by all the other kids. He graduated top of our class and went on to do the :same at MIT. I agree. Since my first degree is actually in public speaking (just an AA) I won't say that intelligence and speaking ability are mutually exclusive, but any relationship is coincidental. The best public speakers around are actors. Some of the stupidest people you've ever met are actors. A small percentage of actors are actually brilliant people. In my day job I've been working a lot with Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, guitarist from the Doobie Brothers and Steely Dan. Brilliant musician, and a consultant on defense and homeland security. It's hard to imagine Jeff Beck, Kieth Richards or Eddie Van Halen, giving a brief to Condoleezza Rice, but Baxter has. After 9/11 I realized one of the things that bugged me in our society is how we confuse clever with intelligent. There were plenty of snarky, snide writers around that would address an issue with clever wordplay instead of an actual, supported, argued point of view. As if alliteration, a few phrases of French and a pun about someone's name was important. as a past participant in the local ToastMasters group, I would surely like to see Bush join a group for a month or two, it would certainly improve his image as a person,,,,,,,,, I wish he had the time to do so,,,,,,,,, I've watched his speeches a few times, and feel a bit sorry for him,,,,,,,, I do feel he has the countries best interests at heart,,,,,,,,, Maybe the "Young Republicans" need to make it part of their sylabus, along with "private speaking". If Jack Kemp could talk to small groups the way he can to big groups, he'd probably be President now. If Dan Quayle could talk to big groups the way he can to small groups, he might be President now. I find it interesting that people this "public" make such poor public (or private) speakers. |
#7
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![]() as a past participant in the local ToastMasters group, I would surely like to see Bush join a group for a month or two, it would certainly improve his image as a person,,,,,,,,, I wish he had the time to do so,,,,,,,,, I've watched his speeches a few times, and feel a bit sorry for him,,,,,,,, I do feel he has the countries best interests at heart,,,,,,,,, So do I. I just think he's a power monger along with it. I watched him last night on CBS when confronted with the negative Kerry bashing. He tried to say that he was against the ads but stuttered and tripped up so badly (because it was extemporaneous) that he appeared to be either lying or at least concealing his real feelings. Unless he practices, he comes across very poorly when hit by the media "on the spot." But, I do agree with you Richard that the Bush baby is a patriot and does have the country's best interests in his mind and agenda. My problem is with this Iraq war. I told many of my friends that I was going to be real ****ed off if they went over there and killed one American soldier and didn't have complete proof of WMD's before they made that commitment. Now it appears they fired John Tenant (head of the CIA) and had no such intel. If you read Bob Woodward's book "Plan of Attack" you'll see that Powel and Bush were backed into a corner by Cheney and Tenant. Bush asked Tenant many times if they had the SIGINT and were positive of WMD. Tenant's reply was always, "It's a slam dunk Mr. President." Why didn't Bush require tables and inventories of the actual WMD? I would have. He got scarred when Cheney and Tenant kept telling him that Saddam could fire a SCUD into Tel Aviv and wipe out Israel at any time which would make the world look upon the U.S. as a paper tiger. They kept hammering Bush about how stupid he was going to look when Iraq fired upon Israel with Anthrax or Vx. Bush got worried. Then the Soviets and Tony Blair jump on the band wagon and tell Bush they have SIGINT that confirms WMD too. So, the rest is history. Well, my question is, where are the WMD? However, one must keep in mind that these devices are small. All of Iraq's WMD could be buried in one sand dune the size of my garage and Saddam could have killed all the people associated with the hiding of them so there would be no intel leaks. And... the satellite intel showed 18 wheelers leaving the backs of palaces as the UN inspectors drove up to the front doors. Saddam was trying to make it look like he had a lot to hide. He was ****ing with the wrong people and it cost him. After reading all the books I can get my hands on about what led up to this, I'm afraid that I would have made the same decision to go take out Saddam that Bush made. That brutal 8th century barbarian needed to be stopped. I just think the price we are paying right now in human life is too high. We need to get the **** out of there and leave that ****-hole to the rats who live there. BWB |
#8
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Mark Smith wrote:
Richard Riley wrote: On 23 Aug 2004 15:08:55 GMT, osite (RobertR237) wrote: : :I'd settle for "what top 3 business school did you get your MBA from?" : : :I have noticed that a majority of people seem to equate the smooth talking of :someone like Clinton with having superior intellect. My own experiece over the :last half century is just the opposite. Some of the smartest people I have :ever met had great difficulty with public speaking. I remember one kid I went :to school with who had a severe stutter and was constantly being called dummy :by all the other kids. He graduated top of our class and went on to do the :same at MIT. I agree. Since my first degree is actually in public speaking (just an AA) I won't say that intelligence and speaking ability are mutually exclusive, but any relationship is coincidental. The best public speakers around are actors. Some of the stupidest people you've ever met are actors. A small percentage of actors are actually brilliant people. In my day job I've been working a lot with Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, guitarist from the Doobie Brothers and Steely Dan. Brilliant musician, and a consultant on defense and homeland security. It's hard to imagine Jeff Beck, Kieth Richards or Eddie Van Halen, giving a brief to Condoleezza Rice, but Baxter has. After 9/11 I realized one of the things that bugged me in our society is how we confuse clever with intelligent. There were plenty of snarky, snide writers around that would address an issue with clever wordplay instead of an actual, supported, argued point of view. As if alliteration, a few phrases of French and a pun about someone's name was important. as a past participant in the local ToastMasters group, I would surely like to see Bush join a group for a month or two, it would certainly improve his image as a person,,,,,,,,, I wish he had the time to do so,,,,,,,,, I've watched his speeches a few times, and feel a bit sorry for him,,,,,,,, I do feel he has the countries best interests at heart,,,,,,,,, Is ToastMasters where you were told to punctuate with a series of commas? If you took a course in grammar, it would greatly improve your image as a person... Matt |
#9
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Badwater Bill wrote:
as a past participant in the local ToastMasters group, I would surely like to see Bush join a group for a month or two, it would certainly improve his image as a person,,,,,,,,, I wish he had the time to do so,,,,,,,,, I've watched his speeches a few times, and feel a bit sorry for him,,,,,,,, I do feel he has the countries best interests at heart,,,,,,,,, So do I. I just think he's a power monger along with it. I watched him last night on CBS when confronted with the negative Kerry bashing. He tried to say that he was against the ads but stuttered and tripped up so badly (because it was extemporaneous) that he appeared to be either lying or at least concealing his real feelings. Unless he practices, he comes across very poorly when hit by the media "on the spot." People who aren't power mongers don't aspire to the presidency! :-) And... the satellite intel showed 18 wheelers leaving the backs of palaces as the UN inspectors drove up to the front doors. Saddam was trying to make it look like he had a lot to hide. He was ****ing with the wrong people and it cost him. Yes, I wonder also if he wasn't just staging an elaborate bluff, never dreaming that Bush would call it. After reading all the books I can get my hands on about what led up to this, I'm afraid that I would have made the same decision to go take out Saddam that Bush made. That brutal 8th century barbarian needed to be stopped. I just think the price we are paying right now in human life is too high. We need to get the **** out of there and leave that ****-hole to the rats who live there. I don't know if I would have made the same decision or not, but that is no longer relevant. The trouble is if we cut and run now, it is very probably that one of two things will happen: Another Saddam will emerge and secure power the same way Saddam the first did, or the Islamic clerics will take over as in Iran. Neither outcome is very desirable and would make the war, and all of the lives lost, a complete waste. To me, that is even a higher price to pay than what we are paying now. I just don't see a really good solution in the short term. Matt |
#10
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Matt Whiting wrote:
Mark Smith wrote: Richard Riley wrote: On 23 Aug 2004 15:08:55 GMT, osite (RobertR237) wrote: : :I'd settle for "what top 3 business school did you get your MBA from?" : : :I have noticed that a majority of people seem to equate the smooth talking of :someone like Clinton with having superior intellect. My own experiece over the :last half century is just the opposite. Some of the smartest people I have :ever met had great difficulty with public speaking. I remember one kid I went :to school with who had a severe stutter and was constantly being called dummy :by all the other kids. He graduated top of our class and went on to do the :same at MIT. I agree. Since my first degree is actually in public speaking (just an AA) I won't say that intelligence and speaking ability are mutually exclusive, but any relationship is coincidental. The best public speakers around are actors. Some of the stupidest people you've ever met are actors. A small percentage of actors are actually brilliant people. In my day job I've been working a lot with Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, guitarist from the Doobie Brothers and Steely Dan. Brilliant musician, and a consultant on defense and homeland security. It's hard to imagine Jeff Beck, Kieth Richards or Eddie Van Halen, giving a brief to Condoleezza Rice, but Baxter has. After 9/11 I realized one of the things that bugged me in our society is how we confuse clever with intelligent. There were plenty of snarky, snide writers around that would address an issue with clever wordplay instead of an actual, supported, argued point of view. As if alliteration, a few phrases of French and a pun about someone's name was important. as a past participant in the local ToastMasters group, I would surely like to see Bush join a group for a month or two, it would certainly improve his image as a person,,,,,,,,, I wish he had the time to do so,,,,,,,,, I've watched his speeches a few times, and feel a bit sorry for him,,,,,,,, I do feel he has the countries best interests at heart,,,,,,,,, Is ToastMasters where you were told to punctuate with a series of commas? If you took a course in grammar, it would greatly improve your image as a person... Matt ,,,,,,, and just what does a comma sound like at a ToastMasters meeting ? maybe like this,,,,,,,,,,,,,, or this,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,or this,,,,,,,,,,, ???? please try to keep up,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, -- Mark Smith Tri-State Kite Sales http://www.trikite.com 1121 N Locust St Mt Vernon, IN 47620 1-812-838-6351 |
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