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Another thing the good, decent Dems might take careful notice of is what
happened to Kerry. I think he's an asshole and wasn't and isn't fit to be the President of the US, but there's no sensible person who could honestly and seriously claim his "stupid" remarks were an intentional slap at troops (I'll leave the Freudian aspects alone) rather than a screwed-up attempt at a lame joke. Yet, a fair number of Dems not only didn't support him, they ran away as fast as they could while simultaneously claiming they were absolutely confident they were gonna win by huge margins. And I'd offer that those decent Dems might wish to compare those who dumped Kerry with those that dumped Lieberman and those who might have be involved in sending Obama to stump for Ford. TC, R |
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Scott Seidman wrote in
. 1.4: How is this any more demoralizing for our troops than, say, promising a Rumsfeld reign over the Pentagon until the day Bush leaves office. Wow!! Ask and ye shall receive. Rumsfeld seems to have announced his resignation. Our military is already better off than it was yesterday. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
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On 8 Nov 2006 17:56:10 GMT, Scott Seidman
wrote: wrote in news:ba54l25vj1bq6gb1b0elvaph3r5p1u84b3@ 4ax.com: but there's no sensible person who could honestly and seriously claim his "stupid" remarks were an intentional slap at troops (I'll leave the Freudian aspects alone) rather than a screwed-up attempt at a lame joke. Ya know, if anyone has a right to comment on the troops, its him. I think Kerry is a asshole with less charisma than your average little brown ring, but I haven't seen anyone actually challenge his statement based upon facts, like the education level of the troops, or anything like that. Er, did you read, see, or accidentally overhear anything in the days after his remark? So, asking you now, what percentage of those serving in Iraq right now are college grads? Roughly extrapolating, I'd say something like 1 in about 7.something. If its low, why is it forbidden to point this out? It isn't. Generally speaking as above, there are something on the order of about 7 enlisted men for each commissioned officer. It's not hard to figure out, and as such, it would be impossible to "forbid" anyone from pointing it out. How is this any more demoralizing for our troops than, say, promising a Rumsfeld reign over the Pentagon until the day Bush leaves office. Saying that there are, by definition, not as many college grads as non-grads isn't demoralizing. Calling those who choose to serve "stupid" or similar is, well, stupid. That said, I don't think Kerry intentionally called anyone stupid - I think he screwed up a stupid, politically-dangerous joke (and again, I'll leave any possible Freudian aspects out of the discussion as they'd not be material to the discussion at hand). Not to say that the troops aren't selfless heros, but I'd wager that the super-educated shy away from the military. Your connecting "intelligence" with "education level" and moreso, "college grad" is telling. FWIW, many use the military as a way to get a college degree, and IAC, given the structure of the military (18-21 y.o. initial enlistment, officers with degrees, etc.), the majority of the military wouldn't have college degrees. That doesn't make them "stupid," or even of low intelligence. As to the "super-educated" shying away from the military, it'd be a small minority that _could_ get "super-educated" prior to joining the military (depending on the definition of "super-educated"), limited to educations one can get by about 26-27 years old or MDs, JDs, etc., so "shying away" really isn't an applicable term. But there are a fair share of generally well-educated people in the military, and an even larger share of smart, well-trained technical people proudly serving. "I support the troops" is a statement that is very easy to make, and push comes to shove, means little. I'm not sure what you intend to convey. TC, R |
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#6
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![]() "Scott Seidman" wrote in message . 1.4... wrote in news:bf74l25rl7l51olcs71gj71vi3fdse5u63@ 4ax.com: Your connecting "intelligence" with "education level" and moreso, "college grad" is telling. That seems to be the context of Kerry's statement in front of the college audience he was addressing, though. FWIW, many use the military as a way to get a college degree, Yes. Unfortunately, the student aid structure is such that a college education, because of loan interest, cost a poor person considerably more than a rich person. The army is a fantastic way for a person of little means to pursue an education without mounting large debts. and IAC, given the structure of the military (18-21 y.o. initial enlistment, officers with degrees, etc.), the majority of the military wouldn't have college degrees. That doesn't make them "stupid," or even of low intelligence. No, it of course doesn't. -- Scott Reverse name to reply Despite the fact that we have disagreed in the past, Richard hit the mark here.I served 8+ years as a Marine and 8 years after that am finally using the G.I. Bill to go to school. The G.I. Bill isn't the only higher education opportunity afforded to those that serve. There are professional advancement programs for most branches that are not only required for promotion, but transfer to college credits. While I was in, our base worked with the local community college to start a degree program for NCO's. Free to the Marines that qualified. Most service members are bright young people with the potential for greatness. The military often serves as a transition into the real world and provides some guidance while these kids mature enough to be independent later in life. Jeremy Moe |
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![]() Dawn Moe wrote: ...Most service members are bright young people with the potential for greatness. Well, I was right there with you up to this point. You know better.....and/or you should.....and/or you don't care....and/or you're a liar.....and/or any number of other things. Regardless......pick any combination you like.....it's horse****. The military often serves as a transition into the real world and provides some guidance while these kids mature enough to be independent later in life. Ah!.....back on track. Good. Wolfgang who knows that MOST people from any sample group (yeah, even engineers) aren't particularly stupid......nor are they (yeah, even rocket scientists.......or double-naught spies) particularly bright. |
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Rumsfeld is thrown on the barbie.
/daytripper (spin *that* ;-) |
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On Wed, 08 Nov 2006 13:02:01 -0500, daytripper
wrote: Rumsfeld is thrown on the barbie. /daytripper (spin *that* ;-) Nothing to spin. He's gone, and that's that. Hopefully, if Gates is the guy, he'll do a good job. I'd offer others might be a better choice, particularly Schwarzkopf or perhaps Honore, but time will tell. TC, R |
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