Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gould,
You need to take a long breath and calm down, tell me where I used any vile or hateful words in my discussion of the Kent State tragedy? When did I say the Guardsman were acting in self defense? I said a bunch of scared kids made a tragic mistake. that is not vile, hateful or inaccurate. Your exact words we * Harry are you talking about those bunch of scared kids who were surrounded by 1000's of anger protestor throwing rocks and bottles? Unfortunately a small group of the guardsmen feeling in danger of their life, freaked out and shot into the crowd trying to disperse the angry students. * There are no "vile words" in the paragraph, only a vile distortion of the truth. The statement "surrounded by 1000's of angry protestors throwing rocks and bottles" is by no means ambivalent, nor is it open to subjective intepretation. You have stated there were at least 2 x 1000 protestors, surrounding the guardsmen, and throwing rocks and bottles. The statement is hateful in that it dismisses an entire class of people (the protestors) based solely upon the isolated actions of a very few. Thousands of protestors throwing rocks and bottles is a far different scenario from one or two people in a generally peaceful crowd throwing a rock, or a bottle, or even tossing a fuming gas cannister back at the cops. (That was SOP in the 60's. had to happen 1000 times in the space of a few years, and nobody else felt that it required shooting Americans for exercising their first amendment rights). It would be equally hateful for one of my liberal brothers to say, "The KKK lynched a guy down in Alabama, and thousands of local conservatives turned out to cheer that justice had been done." Maybe *a* conservative turned out to cheer......but exaggerating the number for effect or to distort reality would be a hateful act placing political rhetoric above any attempt to live harmoniously with folks holding different opinions. You implied the Guardsmen were acting in self defense when you stated they were surrounded by thousands of rock and bottle throwing protestors. Any reasonable person would agree, that had thousands of protestors surrounded the squad and proceded to pelt it with rocks and bottles some sort of response would be justified in self defense. *If*. But that's not the way it happened. I appreciate that you have acknowledged your mischaracterization of the events at Kent State. As I said, a real man would do so- so congrats. :-) Sorry if I reacted strongly. There's still a scab on a few wounds from that era. If you lived through it, you can understand why so many people are nervous about the current tone the divisive rhetoric is taking in America at this time. A busted country is serious schlitz, and extremist positions from either side saying "it's my way or the highway", "you either support the president or you're a traitor", or "conservatives all think money is more important than life or justice" won't do. The situation is different now that it was this time last year. We are more polarized. The country is ready to come apart. Now, about that "armed FBI informant" that the Guard Commander mentioned in the letter to the senator......coupled with the tough talk from the governor the night before I suspect the FBI was hoping to incite just the sort of incident that developed. "We'll show these liberal traitors that it doesn't pay to question the president!" Kent State helped galvanize opposition to Nixon and to the war in Viet Nam, so I guess somebody showed somebody something. We're lucky there weren't a lot more incidents of this kind. I can tell you for a fact that during some anti-war protests in Seattle at that time, the FBI had snipers on rooftops. Just in case, apparently. (My father had a job at that time that required him to provide the FBI access to the roof of some publicly owned buildings.) As two antogonists say at signoff..... "peace be upon you" and "peace on you too" :-) |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gould,
Your interpretation of my post in no way reflects what I intended to convey. I definitely did not intend to distort he truth. There were 1000's of students. Some students were throwing rocks and bottles, many were yelling at the Guardsmen. By no stretch of the imagination was this a peaceful demonstration. I must be a real wuss, if I was facing 1000's of students right after a crowd of students had burned down the ROTC building, and attacked the firemen who arrived to put out the fire, I would have been very scared. The May 4 web site, conveyed to me, that this was a extremely tense situation for all involved. What I have a hard time believing is that any of the Guardsman fired on the students because they were conducting an antiwar protest. May 4. was tragic. Kent State and the Vietnam War are very sensitive to anyone alive during this period. For Don said the Guardsman murdered the students, that is as vile and as asinine as the protestors who called the returning Vietnam soldiers "baby killers". "Gould 0738" wrote in message ... Gould, You need to take a long breath and calm down, tell me where I used any vile or hateful words in my discussion of the Kent State tragedy? When did I say the Guardsman were acting in self defense? I said a bunch of scared kids made a tragic mistake. that is not vile, hateful or inaccurate. Your exact words we * Harry are you talking about those bunch of scared kids who were surrounded by 1000's of anger protestor throwing rocks and bottles? Unfortunately a small group of the guardsmen feeling in danger of their life, freaked out and shot into the crowd trying to disperse the angry students. * There are no "vile words" in the paragraph, only a vile distortion of the truth. The statement "surrounded by 1000's of angry protestors throwing rocks and bottles" is by no means ambivalent, nor is it open to subjective intepretation. You have stated there were at least 2 x 1000 protestors, surrounding the guardsmen, and throwing rocks and bottles. The statement is hateful in that it dismisses an entire class of people (the protestors) based solely upon the isolated actions of a very few. Thousands of protestors throwing rocks and bottles is a far different scenario from one or two people in a generally peaceful crowd throwing a rock, or a bottle, or even tossing a fuming gas cannister back at the cops. (That was SOP in the 60's. had to happen 1000 times in the space of a few years, and nobody else felt that it required shooting Americans for exercising their first amendment rights). It would be equally hateful for one of my liberal brothers to say, "The KKK lynched a guy down in Alabama, and thousands of local conservatives turned out to cheer that justice had been done." Maybe *a* conservative turned out to cheer......but exaggerating the number for effect or to distort reality would be a hateful act placing political rhetoric above any attempt to live harmoniously with folks holding different opinions. You implied the Guardsmen were acting in self defense when you stated they were surrounded by thousands of rock and bottle throwing protestors. Any reasonable person would agree, that had thousands of protestors surrounded the squad and proceded to pelt it with rocks and bottles some sort of response would be justified in self defense. *If*. But that's not the way it happened. I appreciate that you have acknowledged your mischaracterization of the events at Kent State. As I said, a real man would do so- so congrats. :-) Sorry if I reacted strongly. There's still a scab on a few wounds from that era. If you lived through it, you can understand why so many people are nervous about the current tone the divisive rhetoric is taking in America at this time. A busted country is serious schlitz, and extremist positions from either side saying "it's my way or the highway", "you either support the president or you're a traitor", or "conservatives all think money is more important than life or justice" won't do. The situation is different now that it was this time last year. We are more polarized. The country is ready to come apart. Now, about that "armed FBI informant" that the Guard Commander mentioned in the letter to the senator......coupled with the tough talk from the governor the night before I suspect the FBI was hoping to incite just the sort of incident that developed. "We'll show these liberal traitors that it doesn't pay to question the president!" Kent State helped galvanize opposition to Nixon and to the war in Viet Nam, so I guess somebody showed somebody something. We're lucky there weren't a lot more incidents of this kind. I can tell you for a fact that during some anti-war protests in Seattle at that time, the FBI had snipers on rooftops. Just in case, apparently. (My father had a job at that time that required him to provide the FBI access to the roof of some publicly owned buildings.) As two antogonists say at signoff..... "peace be upon you" and "peace on you too" :-) |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Dolphin/Wahoo Management Plan Approved for Atlantic | General |