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Right wing boss fires employee over bumper sticker
Harry, I don't normally call names, but the above post, from one who was not
even in the military, deserves it. You, sir, are a ****ing liar. John H John- the overwhelming majority of our troops served honorably in VN. But are you saying that anyone who suggests there were any atrocities ever committed, at any time, by anybody there is an f-ing liar? What about the many incidents the military officially acknowledges? Lt. Calle's crew comes to mind right off the bat...(My Lai). |
Gould 0738 wrote:
Harry, I don't normally call names, but the above post, from one who was not even in the military, deserves it. You, sir, are a ****ing liar. John H John- the overwhelming majority of our troops served honorably in VN. But are you saying that anyone who suggests there were any atrocities ever committed, at any time, by anybody there is an f-ing liar? What about the many incidents the military officially acknowledges? Lt. Calle's crew comes to mind right off the bat...(My Lai). In what passes for Herring's mind, our side committed no atrocities in Vietnam. -- Not dead, in jail, or a slave? Thank a liberal! And don't forget to pay your taxes so the rich don't have to! |
Funny how the Republican party was started to free the slaves.
Funnier yet when you consider that such a statement is untrue. Oh, yes, the Republicans wrap themselves in the emancipation flag today, but 140 years ago, that was not the case at all. Republicans fought against the extension of slavery to newly acquired western territories. True. They did this primarily because the southern planters were threatening to shift the base of economic and political power away from highly capitalized, industrial NE by dominating the House of Representatives. In the middle of the 19th Century, slaves and indentured servants were considered 3/5 of a person- so planters with enormous holdings could almost count on controlling a specific congressional district. The greater a state's population, (even at 3/5 per head) the greater the number of congressional districts and representatives. Don't forget what the Republicans proposed to *do* with the freed slaves. "Send 'em back to Africa!" (see the history of Liberia). Things haven't changed all that much, I'm sure there are a lot of folks in the red states who still feel the best solution for dealing with racial diversity would be, "Send 'em back to Africa!" |
"Gould 0738" wrote in message ... Funny how the Republican party was started to free the slaves. Funnier yet when you consider that such a statement is untrue. Oh, yes, the Republicans wrap themselves in the emancipation flag today, but 140 years ago, that was not the case at all. Republicans fought against the extension of slavery to newly acquired western territories. True. They did this primarily because the southern planters were threatening to shift the base of economic and political power away from highly capitalized, industrial NE by dominating the House of Representatives. In the middle of the 19th Century, slaves and indentured servants were considered 3/5 of a person- so planters with enormous holdings could almost count on controlling a specific congressional district. The greater a state's population, (even at 3/5 per head) the greater the number of congressional districts and representatives. Don't forget what the Republicans proposed to *do* with the freed slaves. "Send 'em back to Africa!" (see the history of Liberia). Things haven't changed all that much, I'm sure there are a lot of folks in the red states who still feel the best solution for dealing with racial diversity would be, "Send 'em back to Africa!" Regardless of whether or not this is true, what does it matter? You folks on the left sure seem to like to wrap yourself in old history that has nothing to do with the present. Can you say John Kerry? LOL! |
" jim--" wrote in message ... "Gould 0738" wrote in message ... Funny how the Republican party was started to free the slaves. Funnier yet when you consider that such a statement is untrue. Oh, yes, the Republicans wrap themselves in the emancipation flag today, but 140 years ago, that was not the case at all. Republicans fought against the extension of slavery to newly acquired western territories. True. They did this primarily because the southern planters were threatening to shift the base of economic and political power away from highly capitalized, industrial NE by dominating the House of Representatives. In the middle of the 19th Century, slaves and indentured servants were considered 3/5 of a person- so planters with enormous holdings could almost count on controlling a specific congressional district. The greater a state's population, (even at 3/5 per head) the greater the number of congressional districts and representatives. Don't forget what the Republicans proposed to *do* with the freed slaves. "Send 'em back to Africa!" (see the history of Liberia). Things haven't changed all that much, I'm sure there are a lot of folks in the red states who still feel the best solution for dealing with racial diversity would be, "Send 'em back to Africa!" Regardless of whether or not this is true, what does it matter? You folks on the left sure seem to like to wrap yourself in old history that has nothing to do with the present. Can you say John Kerry? LOL! The Moron Party has spoken. |
"JohnH" wrote in message
... Chuck, there is a difference between saying 'there were atrocities committed' and, "'Such behavior was common in Vietnam..." You are perfectly welcome to believe Harry, and assume that we witnessed atrocities daily, or as a 'commonplace' occurrence. You are even welcome to believe Harry's assertions that I committed atrocities while in Vietnam. I think you may be bumping into a difference of opinion here. If soldiers reasoned that it was a good thing to waste an entire household, they may have been functioning with the best information possible. It was probably done by quite a few soldiers, but perhaps not on the scale of My Lai. Others may consider this an atrocity, but done it anyway because it seemed correct at the moment. |
Almost three million of us committed that one, so you can add it to the list
above. What is your point? Are you, as some did after Kerry's presentation, calling all the soldiers who went to Vietnam, "Baby Killers"? The "Baby Killer" epithet became common after My Lai. The My Lai massacre predated Kerry's testimony before the congressional hearing on war crimes. Why do you suppose there *was* a hearing to investigate war crimes? You can't blame that on Kerry. |
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