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#41
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In article sezWc.49145$X12.26094@edtnps84,
m II wrote: clifto wrote: m II wrote: Not at all. The BBC is a broadcaster, the USA is a violent, corporate run fascist state. See the difference? You need to escape and seek asylum in an understanding nation like Cuba. Nope. I hate totalitarian states with dictatorships. It's disgusting to see how little regard you have for your Bill of Rights and Constitution. Your freedoms are being eroded quicker than ever before. Everything your founding fathers warned against is being done to you Now and from within. Wake up! What the hell do you know about being awake since you just in some drug induced dream in the New York city area. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#42
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On Sun, 22 Aug 2004 20:18:01 -0400, dxAce wrote:
LewBob wrote: "Mike Terry" wrote in message ... Cuban-American lawmakers cheered Saturday as U.S. military aircraft transmitted Radio and TV Martí to Cuban audiences -- one of the Bush administration's new tactics to undermine the Castro regime. ''For the people of Cuba to get an unfiltered transmission of information is a great thing,'' said U.S. Senate candidate Mel Martínez, who co-chaired the presidential commission that recommended the flights. Martínez said White House staffers called to deliver the news that C-130 cargo planes had managed to override jamming efforts by the island's communist government. President Bush allocated $18 million in May to pay for the flights, though lawmakers said the frequency and timing of future broadcasts would remain classified. ''It's a wonderful day for the enslaved Cuban people, and I'm sure Castro is enraged and finding new and devious ways to block the transmissions,'' said U.S. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Miami. http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/9463711.htm?1c I expect that there are a lot of Americans, descendents of slaves, who would question whether the Cuban people are "enslaved." They may be poor, some even impoverished, and they live under Communist rule, but they are not enslaved. Semantics perhaps, but they are indeed 'enslaved' to Fidel's Communist rule. They cannot come and go freely, whenever and wherever they choose. They cannot operate freely in the global marketplace. I'm guessing that internet activity is also tightly controlled. Please, tell us what your definition of 'enslavement' is, so that we might pick both it and you apart. Walk through any US airport. If you can't see it, you're not looking. Take a picture of a tall building. Feel the boot on your neck? dxAce |
#44
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Telamon wrote:
Everything your founding fathers warned against is being done to you Now and from within. Wake up! What the hell do you know about being awake since you just in some drug induced dream in the New York city area. I hate it when I'm found out. Keep up the good work. mike |
#45
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Mike Pearson see .sig wrote:
clifto wrote: From the book: "John Kerry's service record indicates that on February 18, 1966, he enlisted in the United States Naval Reserves, status 'inactive', not in the U.S. Navy. These details are conveniently left out of all pro-Kerry biographies. Douglas Brinkley records that Kerry entered Offer Candidate School in Newport, Rhode Island; however, again he fails to note that Kerry was seeking to be an officer of the U.S. Naval Reserve." So he took part in a "delayed enlistment program", where you sign up, are placed on inactive reserve status, and several months to a year later go to active duty. Why are these guys making such a big deal of it? Because Kerry's Viet Nam record is replete with reports of him doing whatever he could to minimize his proximity to battle. I have no problem with that in itself, but if he's then going to criticize Bush for joining the National Guard to avoid battle, he's a hypocrite. Personally, if I'd had a ghost of a chance of being able to fly the world's best airframes like Bush did, I'd have joined the Podunk Possum Posse to get in the pilot's seat. -- If Kerry can't cope with the "Republican Attack Machine", how can he hope to deal with Al Qaeda? |
#46
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clifto wrote:
Mike Pearson see .sig wrote: clifto wrote: From the book: "John Kerry's service record indicates that on February 18, 1966, he enlisted in the United States Naval Reserves, status 'inactive', not in the U.S. Navy. These details are conveniently left out of all pro-Kerry biographies. Douglas Brinkley records that Kerry entered Offer Candidate School in Newport, Rhode Island; however, again he fails to note that Kerry was seeking to be an officer of the U.S. Naval Reserve." So he took part in a "delayed enlistment program", where you sign up, are placed on inactive reserve status, and several months to a year later go to active duty. Why are these guys making such a big deal of it? Because Kerry's Viet Nam record is replete with reports of him doing whatever he could to minimize his proximity to battle. I have no problem with that in itself, but if he's then going to criticize Bush for joining the National Guard to avoid battle, he's a hypocrite. But the delayed enlistment has absolutely *nothing* to do with anything; the authors of that book are, as usual, raising a red-herring and making is sound like something sinister. How does Kerry's volunteering to go back to Vietnam for a 2nd tour and asking for swift boat duty on that tour constitute "minimizing his proximity to battle"? Compare that to GWB's "NO" box checked next to the "Volunteer for overseas duty?" box on his paperwork. Personally, if I'd had a ghost of a chance of being able to fly the world's best airframes like Bush did, I'd have joined the Podunk Possum Posse to get in the pilot's seat. Of the 875 F-102A production models that entered service, 259 were lost in accidents that killed 70 Air Force and ANG pilots, an accident rate far above the other aircraft in service at the time. By December of 1969 all F102's had been removed from service in Southeast Asia (they had been flown as a part of the ANG's "Palace Alert" program) and were used for domestic air defense by the ANG. It was hardly the state-of-the-art machine that you think it was at that time. -- Mike NAR #70953 - Sr/HPR Level-1 ~ BEMRC - NAR Section #627 NO Junk Email, please! Real email to: amphoto [at] blarg [dot] net. WANTED: Experienced Kamikaze Pilot |
#47
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#48
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Mike Pearson see .sig wrote:
Of the 875 F-102A production models that entered service, 259 were lost in accidents that killed 70 Air Force and ANG pilots, an accident rate far above the other aircraft in service at the time. By December of 1969 all F102's had been removed from service in Southeast Asia (they had been flown as a part of the ANG's "Palace Alert" program) and were used for domestic air defense by the ANG. It was hardly the state-of-the-art machine that you think it was at that time. The f-104 was pretty bad too. Almost three hundred of them crashed. It earned the nickname the 'Widowmaker'. Is that the price of the lowest bidder winning or a case of delivering faulty goods? mike |
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