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#981
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"Usual Liberal Disdain?"
wrote:
wrote: wrote: Not much is known about Jim, except the usual liberal disdain for the US military and military members. "usual liberal disdain"? Let's see....some well known "liberals".... There's president Jimmy Carter, who graduated from the US Naval Academy and served in the Navy on submarines. He also won the Nobel Peace Prize, for being instrumental in the only long-term peace agreement in the modern Middle East (the Camp David accords). I recall no Middle East Peace in modern times. Peace *agreement*. Since those accords were signed more than 25 years ago, former enemies Israel and Egypt have had peace between them. Or president John F. Kennedy, who served in the Navy in WW2. He was awarded the Navy and Marine Corps medal for his leadership on the last patrol of PT 109. Indeed he was. George McGovern was in the USAAF (15th Air Force) in WW2, flying 35 missions in B-24 bombers over North Africa and Italy. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. A little before my time. McGovern ran for President in 1972, but lost to Richard Nixon. Nixon later resigned because of the Watergate scandal, in which people operating for the Committee to REElect the President (known by the acronym CREEP) burglarized the DNC Hq to get information about the campaign. McGovern's platform included a strong anti-Vietnam-war plank. Vice president Al Gore enlisted in the Army and served in Vietnam during that conflict, refusing a place in the Tennessee National Guard. Odd. Do most people get to "refuse a place" in their state's National Guard? I don't recall having that "opportunity." Ditto my brother. The Current Occupant had that opportunity - and took it. Most of the time he even showed up. John Kerry served in the US Navy, volunteering for Vietnam duty. He was awarded three Purple Heart medals, a Silver Star and a Bronze Star. After his discharge from the military, he opposed the Vietnam War, having actually been there. Now there's a perfect example of disdain for his fellow military members. How do Kerry's actions show disdain for his fellow military personnel? He went to Vietnam, and fought in that war. He formed the conviction that the war was simply wrong, and that the USA should not be fighting it. When he returned to civilian life, he opposed that war - specifically, the policies of the politicians who gave the orders. How was that "disdain for his fellow military members"? Should he have not said or done anything, even though he had formed the first-hand conviction that the war was wrong? President Franklin Delano Roosevelt never served in any military, Correct. He had polio and was unfit for military service. though he was appointed Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Our military is civilian led. Sometimes led well, sometimes not. See above about John Kerry and Vietnam. He led the USA out of the Depression and through almost all of WW2. He had a priori knowledge of Pearl Harbor and did nothing. Conspiracy theory nonsense. Where's the proof? That just might be considered disdain for the military and military members. The Japanese were able to pull off the Pearl Harbor attack because: 1) The US thought it was impossible for a sizable task force to form up and cross the Pacific without being detected. 2) Radar would spot any incoming attack. And it did - but those in charge ignored the warning from the radar station. 3) It was believed that the water of Pearl Harbor was too shallow for airplane-dropped torpedoes to be used. The Japanese developed torpedoes and attack methods that would work in the relatvely-shallow water. They also used dive bombing. His "New Deal" was considered rather liberal in its time.... Extremely liberal. Yet now most of it is considered a basic social safety net. It was his handling of the Bonus Marchers, veterans of WW 1, that needed their promised pensions that might also be considered disdain for the military and military members. How? The "Bonus Marchers" had been promised military pensions that would be paid in *1945*, but they wanted the pensions 13 years early. (Can I have my retirement benefits 13 years early, please?) Let's see what Wikipedia has to say, in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonus_march "The Bonus Army or Bonus March or Bonus Expeditionary Force was an assemblage of about 20,000 World War I veterans, their families, and other affiliated groups, who demonstrated in Washington, D.C. during the spring and summer of 1932 seeking immediate payment of a "bonus" granted by the Adjusted Service Certificate Law of 1924 for payment in 1945." "The Bonus Army massed at the United States Capitol on June 17 as the U.S. Senate voted on the Patman Bonus Bill, which would have moved forward the date when World War I veterans received a cash bonus. Most of the Bonus Army camped in a Hooverville on the Anacostia Flats, then a swampy, muddy area across the Anacostia River from the federal core of Washington. The protesters had hoped that they could convince Congress to make payments that had been granted to veterans immediately, which would have provided relief for the marchers who were unemployed due to the Great Depression. The bill had passed the House of Representatives on June 15 but was blocked in the Senate." Herbert Hoover was president in June 1932. FDR wasn't even elected until November 1932, and did not take office until 1933. "After the defeat of the bill, Congress appropriated funds to pay for the marchers' return home, which some marchers accepted. On July 28, Washington police attempted to remove some remaining Bonus Army protesters from a federal construction site. After police fatally shot two veterans, the protesters assaulted the police with blunt weapons, wounding several of them. After the police retreated, the District of Columbia commissioners informed President Herbert Hoover that they could no longer maintain the peace, whereupon Hoover ordered federal troops to remove the marchers from the general area." "The marchers were cleared and their camps were destroyed by the 12th Infantry Regiment from Fort Howard, Maryland, and the 3rd Cavalry Regiment under the command of MAJ. George S. Patton from Fort Myer, Virginia, under the overall command of General Douglas MacArthur. The Posse Comitatus Act, prohibiting the U.S. military from being used for general law enforcement purposes in most instances, did not apply to Washington, D.C. because it is one of several pieces of federal property under the direct governance of the U.S. Congress (United States Constitution, Article I. Section 8). Dwight D. Eisenhower, as a member of MacArthur's staff, had strong reservations about the operation. Troops carried rifles with unsheathed bayonets and tear gas were sent into the Bonus Army's camps. President Hoover did not want the army to march across the Anacostia River into the protesters' largest encampment, but Douglas MacArthur felt this was a communist attempt to overthrow the government." " Hundreds of veterans were injured, several were killed, including William Hushka and Eric Carlson, a wife of a veteran miscarried, and other casualties were inflicted. The visual image of US armed soldiers confronting poor veterans of the recent great war set the stage for Veteran relief and eventually the Veterans Administration." Neither of which existed at the time - but not due to alleged "liberal disdain for the military". "By the end of the rout: Two veterans had been shot and killed. An 11 week old baby was in critical condition resulting from shock from gas exposure. Two infants had died from gas asphyxiation. An 11 year old boy was partially blinded by tear gas. One bystander was shot in the shoulder. One veteran's ear was severed by a Cavalry saber. One veteran was stabbed in the hip with a bayonet. At least twelve police were injured by the veterans. Over 1,000 men, women, and children were exposed to the tear gas, including police, reporters, residents of Washington D.C., and ambulance drivers." "The army burned down the Bonus Army's tents and shacks, although some reports claim that to spite the government, which had provided much of the shelter in the camp, some veterans torched their own camp dwellings before the troops could set upon the camp. Reports of U.S. soldiers marching against their peers did not help Hoover's re-election efforts; neither did his open opposition to the Bonus Bill due to financial concerns." Were Hoover's actions towards the Bonus Marchers a sign of respect? Herbert Hoover was president in the summer of 1932. Hoover opposed giving the veterans their bonus 13 years early. FDR wasn't even elected until November 1932, and did not take office until 1933. "After the inauguration of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933, some of the Bonus Army regrouped in Washington to restate its claims to the new President." "Roosevelt did not want to pay the bonus early, either, but handled the veterans with more skill when they marched on Washington again the next year. He sent his wife Eleanor to chat with the vets and pour coffee for them, and he persuaded many of them to sign up for jobs making a roadway to the Florida Keys, which was to become the Overseas Highway, the southernmost portion of U.S. Route 1." Instead of sending in the police, tear gas, and federal troops, like conservative Herbert Hoover, FDR sent Eleanor with coffee, and helped the vets find jobs. Is that an example of "disdain"? "A disastrous hurricane swept many of them and their flimsy barracks away in 1935." Did FDR have 2 year advance notice of the hurricane, too? "After seeing more newsreels of veterans giving their lives for a government that had taken them for granted, public sentiment built up so much that Congress could no longer afford to ignore it in an election year (1936). Roosevelt's veto was overridden, making the bonus a reality." Is that 1936 veto the disdain you meant? How does that compare to the non-liberal method of sending in troops with guns, bayonets and fire..... "It can be argued, however, that the Bonus Army's greatest accomplishment was actually the piece of legislation known as the G. I. Bill of Rights. Passed in 1944, it immensely helped veterans from the Second World War to secure needed assistance from the federal government to help them fit back into civilian life, something the World War I veterans of the Bonus Army had received very little of." FDR *was* president in 1944. "usual liberal disdain"? Yup. Lessee....John Kerry acts on his convictions wrt Vietnam, and that's somehow disdain. FDR sends in his wife rather than troops to deal with protesters, and that's disdain. He helps them get scarce CCC jobs, and that's disdain, too. But when Hoover had them attacked by police and federal troops, that *wasn't* disdain. Is it disdain to send US military personnel to fight in a country because of weapons-of-mass-destruction that do not exist in that country? |
#982
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trolling right along
From: on Sat, Sep 23 2006 6:09 pm
Dave Heil wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: KØHB wrote: wrote: I'm sorry if you were insulted, Hans - that was not my intent. Tsk, you were trying to insult me, not Hans. I wasn't *trying* to insult anyone, Len. I wonder what you would have said if you were actually "trying?" Len feels insulted whenever disagrees with him here, or proves him to be mistaken about something. Equating military service with welfare is about all I can take. Who did that? Not me. I didn't use the word "welfare", Brian. You did. Are subsidies and welfare the same thing to you? Is military service and non-military service the same thing to you? Jimmie was never in the military. He was never a participant. He has never been in government service of any kind. Jimmie has never volunteered to serve his country in anything. Jimmie has never taken that Oath that real veterans took. He is superior. He is an amateur extra morseman. Not much is known about Jim, except the usual liberal disdain for the US military and military members. Hmmm...always in defense of "Jim" comes "Dave." It is like they are "joined" somehow. That might be interesting if it were true. You've fabricated though. Hans fabricated. Take it up with him. Heil will not. He seems to think he must defend this "Jim" by attacking all who THREATEN "Jim." "Threat" being in Heil's definition...about equivalent to NOT heaping gratuitous praise on this "Jim." I've noted no disdain for either the military, its members or its veterans, from Jim. Of course not. You invoke obtuseness at will. Heil is an amateur extra morsemen. They don't "note" anything but "threats" against their fellow morseketeers. They are the elite and cannot be told what to do! :-) And that He thinks his favorite mode should be forced down everyone's throat. That's a fabrication too. Then you won't mind if he tells me that. Oh, Heil "Minds" all the time. "All for one and all for morse" is the morseketeers battle cry! :-) This is too hilarious. :-) |
#983
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trolling right along
From: on Sat, Sep 23 2006 1:29 pm
wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: KØHB wrote: wrote: I wasn't *trying* to insult anyone, Len. I wonder what you would have said if you were actually "trying?" Equating military service with welfare is about all I can take. I'm not "taking" any of it. Jimmie can go over to his nearest military recruitment station and repeat his "subsidy" crack to any military person in there. After that, the "fourth morseketeer" would be absent from RRAP. I disagree. I think your average service person knows that their is a large segment of US society that looks down on them. But they are intelligent enough to know just how wrong that segment of society is. The servicemen and women stand guard without thought to their popularity. Yes, they are what you say, Brian. Nobody's interested in radiotelegraphy. Actually, the olde-tymers seem to love it...especially those who gave up learning the technical side of amateur radio some 30 to 40 years back. Radiotelegraphy reminds them of their youth and youthful dreams of being "top-notch radio ops" of the 1930s in the 1960s. Not even Val Germann who talked a good talk. He sure fooled a lot of people who desperately wanted to believe that a newbie was interested in learning the code. Hi, hi! Heh heh heh. Of course. He got all the regular morseketeers in here almost to a morsegasm. :-) It's still a puzzle why an ex-USN type would be at any Army recruiting office as a civilian...as Robesin once stated. But that can be relegated to just-another-delusional-dream of the Imposter. Robesin is a habitual liar. If he were ever to tell a truth, no one would beleive it. Most true! But, the imposter is going to continue with his lying until this newsgroup becomes moderated. But, from Paul Schleck's information bulletin, WE can't call him a liar any more! That will "violate" some "rules" (of engagement or whatever) wherein no one can speak nasty of others. Doesn't matter if they are military imposters, we won't be able to say much of anything against such posturing liars. It's not "nice." Ptui. |
#984
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"Usual Liberal Disdain?"
From: on Sat, Sep 23 2006 6:57 pm
wrote: wrote: Not much is known about Jim, except the usual liberal disdain for the US military and military members. "usual liberal disdain"? Let's see....some well known "liberals".... [ Jimmy not a "known?" Tsk. ] There's president Jimmy Carter, who graduated from the US Naval Academy and served in the Navy on submarines. He also won the Nobel Peace Prize, for being instrumental in the only long-term peace agreement in the modern Middle East (the Camp David accords). I recall no Middle East Peace in modern times. Nor I. Maybe it was for one weekend or something. The military draft ended January 1973 under Nixon's watch. Jimmy had no worries about being drafted after that. However, Carter pardoned most Vietnam War draft evaders in January 1977. Way too liberal an act for my taste. Jimmy still didn't volunteer to serve then. Or president John F. Kennedy, who served in the Navy in WW2. He was awarded the Navy and Marine Corps medal for his leadership on the last patrol of PT 109. Indeed he was. JFK approved the Bay of Pigs fiasco in Cuba. JFK also brought us perilously close to World War III in the Cuban Missle crisis. The first casualty was a U-2 pilot surnamed Anderson. Jimmy was too young to serve then. George McGovern was in the USAAF (15th Air Force) in WW2, flying 35 missions in B-24 bombers over North Africa and Italy. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. A little before my time. Well before Jimmy's time, too. However, McGovern didn't get elected to national office. Vice president Al Gore enlisted in the Army and served in Vietnam during that conflict, refusing a place in the Tennessee National Guard. Odd. Do most people get to "refuse a place" in their state's National Guard? I don't recall having that "opportunity." Ditto my brother. It must be a Tennessee thing. Or Jimmy is confused between National Guard and State Guard. Jimmy never volunteered for any Guard. John Kerry served in the US Navy, volunteering for Vietnam duty. He was awarded three Purple Heart medals, a Silver Star and a Bronze Star. After his discharge from the military, he opposed the Vietnam War, having actually been there. Now there's a perfect example of disdain for his fellow military members. It probably cost him the presidential election. Kerry once tossed his medals. Maybe Robesin caught one? :-) President Franklin Delano Roosevelt never served in any military, Correct. He had polio and was unfit for military service. though he was appointed Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Our military is civilian led. Sometimes led well, sometimes not. Agreed. He led the USA out of the Depression and through almost all of WW2. He had a priori knowledge of Pearl Harbor and did nothing. Not quite. US cryptanalysts had decoded the infamous Japanese multi-part telegram before the Japanese embassy in DC did. It just didn't have any mention of the attack point. That just might be considered disdain for the military and military members. Neither. The US cryptanalysts were a small group of USA and USN personnel on active duty, plus the genius of a civilian, William Friedman, the Army's chief cryptanalyst. Jimmy couldn't help them with a morse code book...he wasn't born yet. His "New Deal" was considered rather liberal in its time.... Extremely liberal. It was his handling of the Bonus Marchers, veterans of WW 1, that needed their promised pensions that might also be considered disdain for the military and military members. That was a not-good situation. The FCC was created under FDR's term. The jury might still be out on that one. :-) "usual liberal disdain"? Yup. Brian, you have to watch out for Jimmy. He wants to "set the stage" and then only argue about His stage settings. When someone else pops in with something different, they are "wrong" or "incorrect." :-) A plain and simple fact: NO USA President NOR president wanna-be since Herbert Hoover has been granted an amateur radio license. Why Jimmy picked only those presidents and wanna-bes is rather strange. Here's a plain and simple fact for Jimmy (who might not get out much these days): There are still millions of Americans who are anti-war, anti-military NOW. The news services just haven't featured them much since 11 Sep 01. They are still there, can be found. Jimmy is one of those that are more quiet, snarling only when provoked but otherwise holding to his precious, elite self with his strange (sometimes insulting) opinions. Here's some more plain and simple facts: Jimmy never served any military in any capacity. Jimmy never served any government in any capacity. He never took that Oath that all us veterans took...but he thinks he "serves his country" by having a hobby license in an amateur radio service. So do some others who can't think for themselves but require the League to tell them what to think. ex-RA16408336 |
#985
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trolling right along
From: on Sat, Sep 23 2006 6:38 pm
Dave Heil wrote: wrote: There's a parallel in amateur radio recruiting. From the ARRL down, the higher-ups love to look down on aspirants as dummies in radio...as if their lofty elite positions made them "expert." These self-proclaimed gods of radio then wonder why there isn't more participation and - especially - why there's so little love for their self-righteous precious, noble, best-of-all-possible-modes (in their minds), radiotelegraphy. I move Best of Luck. Don't forget that the job's not finished until the paper work is done. Hopefully it is to a galaxy far, far away. World's Greatest DXer would fit right in there, maybe even "stand guard" with a light saber! that we amend our military regulations so that each recruit to the enlisted ranks would enter military service at the E-9 grade. This would result in more participation by our citizenry and would prevent harm to anyone's self-esteem. We could also do away with military technical schools and the necessity for passing any exam which the new recruit might view as hazing. Calling any recruit a "dummy" would be banned. It looks like the World's Greatest DXer can't tell the diff between military service and a cool hobby. He sure can't. Well, we gotta cut him some slack. It might be some kind of shell shock he suffered in a "country at war." "Incoming! Incoming! Hey, Heil, lots of Marsgrams incoming!" Do all amateur radio license applicants have to swear an oath to defend the US Constitution? With their LIVES if necessary? I think Heil got a bit too delusional there... |
#986
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trolling right along
From: on Sat, Sep 23 2006 6:32 pm
Dave Heil wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: Equating military service with welfare is about all I can take. I'm not "taking" any of it. Jimmie can go over to his nearest military recruitment station and repeat his "subsidy" crack to any military person in there. After that, the "fourth morseketeer" would be absent from RRAP. I disagree. I think your average service person knows that their is a large segment of US society that looks down on them. But they are intelligent enough to know just how wrong that segment of society is. You're weaving another marvelous tale out of whole cloth. Who is it you believe to be looking down on military service members, Brian? Millions of them, really. The descendants of the "hell no, we won't go" generation...the "anti-war" people with their "peace" symbols. They've quieted down a bit after 11 Sep 01...or the press has quit featuring them on video news. Heil doesn't get out much, apparently. He might go over to Jimmy's house to admire all his things, though, just like Jimmy's other friend and neighbor. The servicemen and women stand guard without thought to their popularity. I stood guard in basic training. Wow! Did Heil get a medal for meritorious guard standing? I was too busy working or sleeping to stand guard during the remainder of my four years. Oh, yes, Heil was "IN" a country at war! Did he directly engage "Charlie?" Get in lots of firefights? Or just fights? I never entered any popularity contests. Just as well. Heil was unlikely to win any... And so you think very little of your military service. Welp, at least you served. Jimmy never served. In other words, Jim would be perfectly safe in any recruiter's office, though his visit might be short. Unless he wound up in Robesin's dads recruiter office... I noted Len's silly threat, made on behalf of others. You know and I know and even Len knows that such a thing would never happen. Yes, I know Jimmy is too chicken to go to one. He might actually LEARN something and NOT tell everyone "you are wrong!" :-) But, the Korporal uf ze Guard thinks I made a "THREAT!" :-) Wow! Think of that: A no-code-test advocate "threatening" one of the famous morseketeers! Lamebrains are not chosen as recruiters. Any recruiter who acted in such a manner would not only not be a recruiter for very long, he'd be in the slammer. Only AFTER appropriate military action by the Judge Advocate General Corps and one of two possible courts martial (not the third, the highest one). Heil hasn't touched on our angry USMC imposter's father's alleged "recruiting" for the Army AFTER he got out of the USN. Odd, considering said imposter is also an amateur extra morseman... Jim hasn't made any disparaging remarks directed at the military and I doubt he spends a lot of time in or near recruiting offices. We've just been treated to more of Len's (not very ably assisted by you) diversionary mumbo-jumbo. I guess 6M has closed to France? He probably doesn't have the latest "firmware download" for his Orion. :-) |
#987
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"Usual Liberal Disdain?"
From: on Sun, Sep 24 2006 4:41 am
wrote: wrote: wrote: Not much is known about Jim, except the usual liberal disdain for the US military and military members. "usual liberal disdain"? Let's see....some well known "liberals".... NONE of whom were granted amateur radio licenses... There's president Jimmy Carter, who graduated from the US Naval Academy and served in the Navy on submarines. James Earl Carter SERVED the USN, Jimmy. He *IS* a veteran. Of all living presidents he served the military the longest. Jimmy has never served the US military. Brian has, I have, but Jimmy has NOT. Here's some Presidents who ARE/WERE military veterans since I've been alive: Harry Truman (WW1), Dwight Eisenhower, John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush (the elder). Bill Clinton is NOT. Shrub was in the National Guard but wanted to be a "war leader." None of them have been granted amateur radio licenses. I recall no Middle East Peace in modern times. Peace *agreement*. Since those accords were signed more than 25 years ago, former enemies Israel and Egypt have had peace between them. A plain and simple fact: The "Middle East" is NOT confined to Israel and Egypt. Another plain and simple fact: There has NOT been "peace" in the MIDDLE EAST since 1948. George McGovern was in the USAAF (15th Air Force) in WW2, flying 35 Geogre McGovern didn't have an amateur radio license. Vice president Al Gore enlisted in the Army and served in Vietnam Albert Gore didn't have an amateur radio license. John Kerry served in the US Navy, volunteering for Vietnam duty. He was John Kerry didn't have an amateur radio license. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt never served in any military, FDR didn't have an amateur radio license. Jimmy has an amateur radio license. Jimmy never served. Jimmy never volunteered. Jimmy will never serve. He had a priori knowledge of Pearl Harbor and did nothing. Conspiracy theory nonsense. Where's the proof? The "proof" is in hundreds of pages of testimony before a congressional committee following the end of WW2. The USA *did* have prior knowledge that an attack by Japan was imminent...Army-Navy cryptanalysts *did* decode the infamous telegram the Japanese diplomats were to deliver to the USA *before* the Japanese Embassy code clerks could decode and type up their copy. The English translation of that multi-part telegram can be found in several textbooks available in public libraries. The US Government Printing Office printed up the entire testimony of the Congressional Committee. NO "conspiracy theory nonsense" in that. The "Bonus Marchers" had been promised military pensions that would be paid in *1945*, but they wanted the pensions 13 years early. (Can I have my retirement benefits 13 years early, please?) Jimmy will never march as a VETERAN. Jimmy only marches to the beat of morse code. Jimmy never served. Jimmy never volunteered to serve. Jimmy will never serve. Jimmy serves his country by having an amateur radio license. Herbert Hoover was president in the summer of 1932. Hoover opposed giving the veterans their bonus 13 years early. Didn't Herbert Hoover have an amateur radio license? Hoover's birthplace is now a national park. My wife and I have been there. It is preserved intact in before-the- 1900-year state. Quaint. A better quaintness than manual telegraphy mode, though...no telegraphy station is visible at that park. FDR wasn't even elected until November 1932, and did not take office until 1933. FDR initiated the FCC with the Communications Act of 1934. A copy of the letter to Congress can be found at the FCC website. 1932 is SEVENTY-FOUR YEARS AGO, Jimmy. Is that 1936 veto the disdain you meant? How does that compare to the non-liberal method of sending in troops with guns, bayonets and fire..... Jimmy doesn't know guns or bayonets. Jimmy never served at any time. Jimmy has never volunteered to serve. Jimmy will never serve. Jimmy thinks all can be solved by some coffee and chatting? Gosh, and a licensed radio amateur did the thing with the "guns and bayonets?" How awful..."threats!" FDR *was* president in 1944. 1944 is SIXTY-TWO YEARS AGO, Jimmy. US Amateur radio operations were forbidden in 1944. Is it disdain to send US military personnel to fight in a country because of weapons-of-mass-destruction that do not exist in that country? Would Jimmy prefer Shrub sending in Laura with coffee and friendly chatting with Saddam Hussein? Would Saddam get a "bonus?" Why Jimmy get all hot and bothered about CURRENT EVENTS? Jimmy has never served in the military. Jimmy has never volunteered for any military service. Jimmy is not a military veteran. Jimmy will never be a military veteran. Jimmy serves his country by being an amateur extra morseman, fighting terrorists with his code key. Jimmy doesn't like no-code-test advocate veterans accusing him of disdain for the military. Jimmy is superior because of his hobby "service." Jimmy angry over not receiving "subsidy" for his "service?" Beep, beep, |
#988
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"Usual Liberal Disdain?"
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#989
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trolling right along
Arf! Arf! wrote: More flatus from the resident gas bag. Anony-mousie, you shouldn't talk that way about James Miccolis... |
#990
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trolling right along
More flatus from the resident gas bag.
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