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(OT) : GREG - FWIW - Nixon and Agnew are both Dead - JUST LIKE 'your' LIBERAL "HATE NIXON" 1960s THINKING ! - Once Again 'you' Prove You Are A Sock-Puppet For The Democrat Party of the USA !
Greg wrote:
BTW, what did you conservatives do before the Internet? Haven't you heard of William F. Buckley and National Review? George Will? Cal Thomas? There's three, against how many thousand liberal TV news commentators, how many thousand liberal newspaper writers, how many thousand liberal magazine writers, and so on? Let's be honest, the average college graduate can't follow Buckley without a copy of the Oxford on his lap. He uses the language beautifully, but that's no good for communicating with Joe Average. -- If John McCain gets the 2008 Republican Presidential nomination, my vote for President will be a write-in for Jiang Zemin. |
Planting phony stories
From: clifto Organization: Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy Newsgroups: rec.radio.shortwave Date: Mon, 05 Dec 2005 12:47:53 -0600 Subject: Planting phony stories Greg wrote: From: clifto Greg wrote: From: clifto Greg wrote: Or maybe red white & blue would be more appropriate, since our founding fathers were so adamant about keeping a free press in our new democracy that they incorporated its protection in the very First Amendment. Let's treat it the same as we treat that other thing protected even before free press in the First Amendment (religion). You can have a free press, but your press people can't do their thing on public property or in schools, and they can't offer the paper for sale in public, it has to be sought out quietly by those who want it. School is not the place to promote conformity to the majority religion. Or to the majority press. Neither are government offices. Same here. If they can't accommodate ALL the press, they shouldn't be accommodating ANY of the press. And churches, religious groups can offer their services for sale just like everyone else. Hell, no. You can buy a newspaper in the Federal Building; you can't practice religion there. They should restrict the press the same way they restrict that other thing that was protected first by the First Amendment. Well you can't practice skeet shooting there either. But selling newspapers isn't the same as holding a religious service. If you want to hold a religious service, why don't you do it in a church? Most do. We're talking about things like an occasional prayer, or a bible study, things that aren't all-out religious service. And to parallel it, selling newspapers, something that's not an all-out free-speech event with real speeches. If you can't do the one in public, you shouldn't be able to do the other in public either. If you should be able to do one but not the other, then it should be the one mentioned first in the First Amendment. And you can pray anywhere you want. Bullswozzle. You can't pray in school. No, not even all by yourself where people can't see you. And you'd better not pray on public property where any ACLU people can see you. Paranoia. I've documented it here in this newsgroup and I know you've seen it. The irony here is that you would criticize those newspapers for telling the truth. No, when the NYT or LAT tells the truth, all you'll see out of us is amazed silence. Amazed silence? That would be sweet! But the subject of this thread was the placing of paid propaganda in so-called "independent newspapers" in Iraq. Are you saying that isn't true? I've yet to see evidence that anything untrue was in those articles. Until then, it's no worse than the liberal American press spreading the propaganda of the Democratic Party. No one said the articles were untrue. The lie is in the fact that the material is partisan propaganda (and propaganda can be true), not independent reporting. Show me. Oh, wait, you can't. No one here knows what articles were "bought". No one has seen one. You're judging them sight unseen. I see. You believe they MUST be false because... DOWN DOWN BUSH! DOWN DOWN BUSH! DOWN DOWN BUSH! Now calm down Clifto, you're starting to foam a little around the mouth. I'm judging what has been reported in print media and television and admitted to by the military: The US military produced "reports" and hired a consultant to bribe Iraqi newspapers to run them, at least some of them without attribution. The reports may be factual, but deceitful as to the source and motive. In this case the truth is that the Bush administration, while bragging about the "free and independent" news sources springing up in Iraq, seeks to control what those sources report. Control? No. Persuade them to print some good stuff about us? Sure, in the ages-old way of persuasion in the middle east; we crease their palms with silver. Agreed. But dishonest, nontheless, when it's done covertly. It gives the impression that the story was generated by independent observers. What "covertly"? No one asked and there was no reason to tell them. Have you criticized the toilet facilities over there? Have you even asked what they're like? So why are you criticizing our government doing business their way when you don't criticize our citizens going there and doing toilet duty their way? Facts is facts; you can go back to movies of the 1940's and see characterizations of arab people demanding to have their palms creased with silver to do a favor, there's certainly nothing new about it in the 21st century. Covertly in that the Iraqi people didn't know their newspapers were a tool of the US Army propaganda machine, and neither did the American people, and, if they are telling the truth, neither did the Pentagon or the White House. The people over there know that the press will print anything that comes with a few dinars under the table, just as nearly anyone in nearly any occupation over there will do special work for a little grease. And you still haven't proven there's anything untrue about the material. I never claimed the material was untrue. And if everything they do over there is corrupt, it's okay fer us to participate? A free press has always been anathema to the Bush administration because of all the administration's devious pursuits and corrupt practices that don't hold up well to public scrutiny. The truly free press, which has originated with the Internet and other available forms of mass communication not controlled by traditional media, has been the best thing for Bush and the conservative movement in general since the founding fathers created the Constitution. It's really anathema to liberal lies. And that ****es you off, doesn't it? No, I enjoy the give and take available to all of us on the Internet. But there is a lot of crap, and you really have to examine what is offered as factual. And I don't see how Bush is being helped by the Internet. Sure, there are a lot of conservatives venting their rage against "Liberal Neo-Communists", but so what? News gets around. We now get details on stuff we'd never have had any idea had ever happened, like Gore causing an international incident by telling racist jokes in Indonesia, or getting lost ten feet into the woods while taking a leak, or someone forging evidence against Bush and someone else going ahead with it even knowing it was forged. Before conservatives developed means of communication that didn't depend on the traditional media, we were stuck with whatever the liberal press wanted us spoon-fed. Yes, it's fun to read the gossip. And the Bush papers business is an Internet coup for sure. Although, it's doubtful those documents would have held up under the inevitable scrutiny, Internet or no. No one person outed those documents. It was several people expressing doubts and talking them through that started the whole research project. If there wasn't that element of interactive communication, as was the case ten years ago before enough people knew about the 'net, the documents would probably be the linchpin of a massive liberal-media hate Bush campaign. If John McCain gets the 2008 Republican Presidential nomination, my vote for President will be a write-in for Jiang Zemin. Please do. It could happen. Hopefully the Repubs won't be so foolish. Okay, I'll bite, what's your case with McCain? He's a liberal Democrat who somehow managed to get onto a Republican ticket. He's already betrayed his party publicly by bypassing the party's workings and co-founding this "gang of 14". Too bad that "liberal Democrat" wants to send more troops to Iraq to do the job right. I guess he just doesn't have the military chops that Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld have. You would think he would have deserted the Republican party after the Carl Roves's dirty tricks in S. Carolina in the 2000 campaign. But the man keeps working away in the Senate, following his conscience rather than carrying water for the Republican leadership. Certainly not the kind of man we would want in the White House. -- Greg |
(OT) : GREG - FWIW - Nixon and Agnew are both Dead - JUSTLIKE 'your' LIBERAL "HATE NIXON" 1960s THINKING ! - Once Again 'you' ProveYou Are A Sock-Puppet For The Democrat Party of the USA !
From: clifto Organization: Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy Newsgroups: rec.radio.shortwave Date: Mon, 05 Dec 2005 12:54:18 -0600 Subject: (OT) : GREG - FWIW - Nixon and Agnew are both Dead - JUST LIKE 'your' LIBERAL "HATE NIXON" 1960s THINKING ! - Once Again 'you' Prove You Are A Sock-Puppet For The Democrat Party of the USA ! Greg wrote: BTW, what did you conservatives do before the Internet? Haven't you heard of William F. Buckley and National Review? George Will? Cal Thomas? There's three, against how many thousand liberal TV news commentators, how many thousand liberal newspaper writers, how many thousand liberal magazine writers, and so on? Let's be honest, the average college graduate can't follow Buckley without a copy of the Oxford on his lap. He uses the language beautifully, but that's no good for communicating with Joe Average. -- If John McCain gets the 2008 Republican Presidential nomination, my vote for President will be a write-in for Jiang Zemin. George will usually sends me to the dictionary at least once per column. It's worth the trouble though. Greg |
Planting phony stories
"clifto" wrote in message ... a lot of stuff comparing freedom of the press to freedom of religion Isn't this argument a bit specious? The First Amendment says: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. It's saying that the government can make no law either for or against religion, and no law against freedom of the press, among other things. But let's take these one at a time. 1a Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion This clearly means that the government may not choose a religion to support (i.e. a state religion) 1b or prohibiting the free exercise thereof That the government may not make a law preventing you from practicing any religion you wish in a free and unfettered manner. This part has long been tossed by the wayside for practical purposes which the founding fathers likely never considered at the time, due primarily to the fact that Christianity, in various forms, was about the only religion practiced in the US at the time. I doubt they considered Satan worshipping requiring human sacrifice, or some of the off the wall religions requiring wife swapping, pedophilia or other bizarre or illegal behavior. Add to that the so-called separation of church and state (alluded to to some extent in 1a) having been adjudicated to the point of being ludicrous (a child praying in school has nothing to do with whether the school, a government institution, is recognizing a religion). And for those who gripe about federal recognition of Christmas as a federal holiday.. if nothing else, it's expeditious. Since the government cannot force people to work rather than observe a religious holiday, it makes sense to make it an official federal holiday, allowing the workers time off for it instead of docking their pay. 1c or abridging the freedom of speech Again, this is not an absolute, nor has it ever been. The thing about free speech is that you must bear the responsibility for that speech. If you yell fire in a crowded theater you will be held responsible for damages and casualties due to your use of free speech in that case. If you advocate violence, and violence occurs, you will be held responsible for the consequences. If you threaten the life of the president, you will be arrested and likely go to prison. Technically, free speech is not free. This section of the amendment only says that no one can stop you from making a fool of yourself. 1d or of the press This is much the same as 1c above, with the same caveats. 1e or of the right of the people to peaceably assemble This one took a beating during the last elections.. where people were forced into pens in certain restricted areas to 'peaceably assemble'. 1f and to petition the government for redress of grievances Not sure when this one actually went down in flames, but I do know that now you must get the government's permission to sue them, and under some sections of the Patriot Act, you aren't even allowed to know whether you have any grievances at all. As to the heading of the thread... if the US government wants to plant stories in the Iraqi press, and pay for it.. they should do it the way the rest of us must do, and either buy openly noticed paid space or send it as an editorial, and it should be printed or broadcast as such. I.e. like a paid infomercial. Otherwise, whether truth or lie, it is a manipulation. And doing what has been done in a covert fashion only makes it look like everything MUST be a lie, to those to whom such news is disseminated. |
Planting phony stories
U.S.A.including U.S.fed govt has no official holidays.I have an old
Standard book that dates back to the year 1929 around here somewhere which says so. cuhulin |
(OT) : GREG - FWIW - Nixon and Agnew are both Dead - JUSTLIKE 'your' LIBERAL "HATE NIXON" 1960s THINKING ! - Once Again 'you' ProveYou Are A Sock-Puppet For The Democrat Party of the USA !
From: David
Organization: EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net Newsgroups: rec.radio.shortwave Date: Mon, 05 Dec 2005 20:28:43 GMT Subject: (OT) : GREG - FWIW - Nixon and Agnew are both Dead - JUST LIKE 'your' LIBERAL "HATE NIXON" 1960s THINKING ! - Once Again 'you' Prove You Are A Sock-Puppet For The Democrat Party of the USA ! On 4 Dec 2005 11:52:22 -0800, "RHF" wrote: I'd trade Nixon for the current Bozo in an instant. Good choice, because he would surely **** up big time and have to resign in disgrace. Greg |
Planting phony stories
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Planting phony stories
From: "Brenda Ann" Organization: Korea Telecom Newsgroups: rec.radio.shortwave Date: Tue, 6 Dec 2005 08:29:04 +0900 Subject: Planting phony stories "clifto" wrote in message ... a lot of stuff comparing freedom of the press to freedom of religion Isn't this argument a bit specious? The First Amendment says: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. It's saying that the government can make no law either for or against religion, and no law against freedom of the press, among other things. But let's take these one at a time. 1a Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion This clearly means that the government may not choose a religion to support (i.e. a state religion) 1b or prohibiting the free exercise thereof That the government may not make a law preventing you from practicing any religion you wish in a free and unfettered manner. This part has long been tossed by the wayside for practical purposes which the founding fathers likely never considered at the time, due primarily to the fact that Christianity, in various forms, was about the only religion practiced in the US at the time. I doubt they considered Satan worshipping requiring human sacrifice, or some of the off the wall religions requiring wife swapping, pedophilia or other bizarre or illegal behavior. Add to that the so-called separation of church and state (alluded to to some extent in 1a) having been adjudicated to the point of being ludicrous (a child praying in school has nothing to do with whether the school, a government institution, is recognizing a religion). And for those who gripe about federal recognition of Christmas as a federal holiday.. if nothing else, it's expeditious. Since the government cannot force people to work rather than observe a religious holiday, it makes sense to make it an official federal holiday, allowing the workers time off for it instead of docking their pay. 1c or abridging the freedom of speech Again, this is not an absolute, nor has it ever been. The thing about free speech is that you must bear the responsibility for that speech. If you yell fire in a crowded theater you will be held responsible for damages and casualties due to your use of free speech in that case. If you advocate violence, and violence occurs, you will be held responsible for the consequences. If you threaten the life of the president, you will be arrested and likely go to prison. Technically, free speech is not free. This section of the amendment only says that no one can stop you from making a fool of yourself. 1d or of the press This is much the same as 1c above, with the same caveats. 1e or of the right of the people to peaceably assemble This one took a beating during the last elections.. where people were forced into pens in certain restricted areas to 'peaceably assemble'. 1f and to petition the government for redress of grievances Not sure when this one actually went down in flames, but I do know that now you must get the government's permission to sue them, and under some sections of the Patriot Act, you aren't even allowed to know whether you have any grievances at all. As to the heading of the thread... if the US government wants to plant stories in the Iraqi press, and pay for it.. they should do it the way the rest of us must do, and either buy openly noticed paid space or send it as an editorial, and it should be printed or broadcast as such. I.e. like a paid infomercial. Otherwise, whether truth or lie, it is a manipulation. And doing what has been done in a covert fashion only makes it look like everything MUST be a lie, to those to whom such news is disseminated. ....human sacrifice is illegal? oh oh... Greg |
Planting phony stories
Michael Graham was fired because he told the Truth,he said islam is a
terrorist organization.That Gilmore guy in Tennessee just recently got fired.bush said islam is a religion of peace.Who do y'all believe? Spin it any which way y'all want to,but Gilmore and Graham lost their Freedom of Speech. cuhulin |
(OT) : GREG - FWIW - Nixon and Agnew are both Dead - JUST LIKE 'your' LIBERAL "HATE NIXON" 1960s THINKING ! - Once Again 'you' Prove You Are A Sock-Puppet For The Democrat Party of the USA !
DaviD - " At least Nixon was a patriotic American. "
So DaviD - Which of the US President since FDR was Un-Patriotic ? FDR ? Truman ? Eisenhower ? JFK ? LBJ ? Nixon ? Ford ? Carter ? Reagan ? Bush ? Clinton ? G"W"B ? DaviD - Where Do 'you' Stand on Patriotism since 'you' have the habit of encouraging open rebellion against the Duly Elected Government of the USA and continually call for Regime Change in America ? david - the world awaits your list of the un-patriotic us presidents ~ RHF |
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