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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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Hehehe.....Selectrics do the TH in superscript (if you have the right
ball) which foils at least half their premise. Can't remember exactly but I seem to remember the better models did have variable spacing (kerning) of the text (my memory only, not guaranteed). I believe that was one of the selling points to pay the big bucks for a selectric rather than the other brand. And...the premise that one could print out in MS word and the size match would be exact is laughable. That thing has been copied so many times that one could only match relative sizes, not overall size....anyone who has been re-faxed their own fax knows the size changes and there are distortions with each scan and reproduction. Not saying whether they are fakes or not (didn't see the article) but the arguments used in this website are preaching to the chior...only believable if you really want to believe anyway. We'll never really know as Mr Bush's records from the military seem to have mostly disappeared to the same black hole as his Texas driving records and (alleged) convictions and arrests. Koz Jim Stewart wrote: Slashdot had a link to this site: http://shapeofdays.typepad.com/the_s...are_quest.html WTF? |
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On Thu, 09 Sep 2004 16:28:51 -0700, Koz
wrote: Hehehe.....Selectrics do the TH in superscript (if you have the right ball) which foils at least half their premise. Can't remember exactly but I seem to remember the better models did have variable spacing (kerning) of the text (my memory only, not guaranteed). I believe that was one of the selling points to pay the big bucks for a selectric rather than the other brand. 1. Were Selectrics common in military offices at that time? 2. Are there any other documents from that same office at the same time to compare? I believe at this time..the answer to both, is no. Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
#4
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In article ,
Gunner wrote: On Thu, 09 Sep 2004 16:28:51 -0700, Koz wrote: Hehehe.....Selectrics do the TH in superscript (if you have the right ball) which foils at least half their premise. Can't remember exactly but I seem to remember the better models did have variable spacing (kerning) of the text (my memory only, not guaranteed). I believe that was one of the selling points to pay the big bucks for a selectric rather than the other brand. 1. Were Selectrics common in military offices at that time? If they were the most expensive model availiable, probably. -- Free men own guns, slaves don't www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/5357/ |
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I would assume that the Texas Guard did. We had Selectrics all over the 48th
Aromored HQ here in the Georgia Guard back in '66 and the Texas Guard had a lot more budget that we did. We only had Royal electrics at my office so whenever I needed to type up a really nice letter I would run down to the Guard Hq and use one of their Selectrics. I used a Times Roman ball too. Got yelled at by the Sgt once for not changing back to the san sertif ball he used for his reports. "Gunner" wrote in message ... On Thu, 09 Sep 2004 16:28:51 -0700, Koz wrote: Hehehe.....Selectrics do the TH in superscript (if you have the right ball) which foils at least half their premise. Can't remember exactly but I seem to remember the better models did have variable spacing (kerning) of the text (my memory only, not guaranteed). I believe that was one of the selling points to pay the big bucks for a selectric rather than the other brand. 1. Were Selectrics common in military offices at that time? 2. Are there any other documents from that same office at the same time to compare? I believe at this time..the answer to both, is no. Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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First, The culture of the memo is 20 years too late. If it had been
written at all, it would have been a "Memorandum for Record", not a CYA letter and although CYA was a concept, and was occasionally spoken of, it would not have been used as a title on official correspondence. Who ever wrote this learned it from TV shows. Second, who was this LT Bush, in 1973, that a Col and General Officer would give a rats ass what happened to him over something this minor. The First Sergeant might give him a piece of his mind, a Company Commander might get involved, possibly the S1 might report in a staff meeting to the Squadron Commander that X number of pilots hadn't got their pysicals yet. In 1973 the military was under Congressional mandate to downsize. There was a surplus of Officers. This just doesn't ring true by any test. Third, there were only a couple of fonts allowed in military correspondence, no matter what was out there, and none of them had non standard characters. Compliance with the rules of correspondence was a BIG DEAL, everybody froms the clerks on up enforced it. You couldn't type something at home on your wife's portable and put it into the system, you had to have it retyped on an officially recognized font, spacing, and so forth. Paul |
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Gunner wrote:
On Thu, 09 Sep 2004 16:28:51 -0700, Koz wrote: Hehehe.....Selectrics do the TH in superscript (if you have the right ball) which foils at least half their premise. Can't remember exactly but I seem to remember the better models did have variable spacing (kerning) of the text (my memory only, not guaranteed). I believe that was one of the selling points to pay the big bucks for a selectric rather than the other brand. 1. Were Selectrics common in military offices at that time? 2. Are there any other documents from that same office at the same time to compare? I believe at this time..the answer to both, is no. Gunner Wrong on both counts, Gunner. See other posts as to commonality of Selectrics in military offices. See other documents, previously released by the Bush administration, for superscript TH usage. So the TANG had a typewriter with a ball that had that superscript character. As to proportional spacing; the freepers argue that machines of the era were incapable of kerning. True, in a strict sense, but the memo shows no indication of true kerning. Proportional spacing was easy with old Selectrics, though. Mine has a lever to the left of the roller with four positions; 10, 12, PSN, and PS. I can use proportional spacing with any ball, but it looks better if the ball is marked PS. The letters center better in their proportional spaces. The freepers now admit that the memo in question has simple proportional spacing, and that earlier, officially released documents show use of the superscript TH, but argue that the earlier documents didn't have proportional spacing. Big deal. Flip of a lever. One thing my typewriter doesn't do perfectly is align the letters horizontally. It's very difficult to make a ball with all the letters in perfect register, so some are a little high, some a little low. All mechanical typewriters I know of have this problem. Looking at an image of the memo printed in today's newspaper, the letters don't line up horizontally. I think the document was produced by a typewriter similar to mine. Now as to when that was done and by whom, you may carry that as far as you feel comfortable. But I don't think the document itself offers substantial evidence of forgery. Anyway, Gunner, the answer to both your questions is "yes". I may have anticipated some other questions. What do you believe now, and why? Dale Scroggins |
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In article , Dale Scroggins says...
I think the document was produced by a typewriter similar to mine. Now as to when that was done and by whom, you may carry that as far as you feel comfortable. But I don't think the document itself offers substantial evidence of forgery. Oh well. Nice try, Karl Rove! Glad to see he's in there pitching, trying his darndest to keep 'his man's' feet clean. Some you win, some you lose. Looks like a loser for Mr. Rove on this one. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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You obviously have absolutely no idea what the National Guard was like in
the'60s. Sure, when we had to send forms up the line or make out orders they were typed to official specs but notes back and forth between officers at Division HQ were typed with what ever was on the typewriter at the time. It appears that these memos were not "official" correspondence but notes to his immediate superior officer explaining is actions and as the note said, "covering his ass". "6e70" wrote in message m... First, The culture of the memo is 20 years too late. If it had been written at all, it would have been a "Memorandum for Record", not a CYA letter and although CYA was a concept, and was occasionally spoken of, it would not have been used as a title on official correspondence. Who ever wrote this learned it from TV shows. Second, who was this LT Bush, in 1973, that a Col and General Officer would give a rats ass what happened to him over something this minor. The First Sergeant might give him a piece of his mind, a Company Commander might get involved, possibly the S1 might report in a staff meeting to the Squadron Commander that X number of pilots hadn't got their pysicals yet. In 1973 the military was under Congressional mandate to downsize. There was a surplus of Officers. This just doesn't ring true by any test. Third, there were only a couple of fonts allowed in military correspondence, no matter what was out there, and none of them had non standard characters. Compliance with the rules of correspondence was a BIG DEAL, everybody froms the clerks on up enforced it. You couldn't type something at home on your wife's portable and put it into the system, you had to have it retyped on an officially recognized font, spacing, and so forth. Paul |
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![]() "jim rozen" wrote in message ... In article , Dale Scroggins says... I think the document was produced by a typewriter similar to mine. Now as to when that was done and by whom, you may carry that as far as you feel comfortable. But I don't think the document itself offers substantial evidence of forgery. Oh well. Nice try, Karl Rove! Glad to see he's in there pitching, trying his darndest to keep 'his man's' feet clean. Some you win, some you lose. Looks like a loser for Mr. Rove on this one. Jim It doesn't really matter, all they have to do is muddy the waters and the dittohead types, along with the great unwashed masses of Fox News viewers will be satisfied that the documents have been totally debunked. The lazy swing voters who can't read a newspaper to save their lives will consider the whole matter too confusing to evaluate. |
#11
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On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 22:33:04 GMT, Dale Scroggins
wrote: Anyway, Gunner, the answer to both your questions is "yes". I may have anticipated some other questions. What do you believe now, and why? Dale Scroggins At this point, I shall take a wait and see stance. Im still wondering why the daughter and wife of the gent in question state categorically that those are frauds. Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 01:19:07 GMT, "ATP"
wrote: Oh well. Nice try, Karl Rove! Glad to see he's in there pitching, trying his darndest to keep 'his man's' feet clean. Some you win, some you lose. Looks like a loser for Mr. Rove on this one. Jim It doesn't really matter, all they have to do is muddy the waters and the dittohead types, along with the great unwashed masses of Fox News viewers will be satisfied that the documents have been totally debunked. The lazy swing voters who can't read a newspaper to save their lives will consider the whole matter too confusing to evaluate. It really doesn't matter. It could have been printed on the back of a 2003 calendar and the great unwashed masses on the Left, the Anyone but Bush types would believe it from the first utterance. Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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More likely to have the Cent mark and Dollar mark and daggers and crosses for sub notes.
My dad had to make a custom SCM unit - about 1/3 of the keys had a Greek letter or a super case 2 and 3 and sub case 2 and 3 but not the ^th on a flip up key hammer. In the university I worked in, the neutron gun lab that I "tech'ed" in used an IBM selectric driven by a pdp-8 for data logging. Printers in those days were TTY's or wet monsters and mainframe monsters. Then the digital selectric. I think my spinterm printer - the one in the shop floor to scrap out - had a wheel that had two letters in it - but circles for TM and R and C ; th is a bit handwriting mode. Martin Glenn Ashmore wrote: I would assume that the Texas Guard did. We had Selectrics all over the 48th Aromored HQ here in the Georgia Guard back in '66 and the Texas Guard had a lot more budget that we did. We only had Royal electrics at my office so whenever I needed to type up a really nice letter I would run down to the Guard Hq and use one of their Selectrics. I used a Times Roman ball too. Got yelled at by the Sgt once for not changing back to the san sertif ball he used for his reports. "Gunner" wrote in message ... On Thu, 09 Sep 2004 16:28:51 -0700, Koz wrote: Hehehe.....Selectrics do the TH in superscript (if you have the right ball) which foils at least half their premise. Can't remember exactly but I seem to remember the better models did have variable spacing (kerning) of the text (my memory only, not guaranteed). I believe that was one of the selling points to pay the big bucks for a selectric rather than the other brand. 1. Were Selectrics common in military offices at that time? 2. Are there any other documents from that same office at the same time to compare? I believe at this time..the answer to both, is no. Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke -- Martin Eastburn, Barbara Eastburn @ home at Lion's Lair with our computer NRA LOH, NRA Life NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder |
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Gunner wrote:
On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 22:33:04 GMT, Dale Scroggins wrote: Anyway, Gunner, the answer to both your questions is "yes". I may have anticipated some other questions. What do you believe now, and why? Dale Scroggins At this point, I shall take a wait and see stance. Im still wondering why the daughter and wife of the gent in question state categorically that those are frauds. Gunner I saw reports of statements by the widow and a son. Didn't see anything about a daughter; widow and son said, as I recall, it was unfair to pick out things the "gent" wrote thirty years ago and broadcast them when he couldn't put his statements in context. Valid point, but uncorrectable. After we die, things we wrote down are likely to be taken at face value. Widow avows he wasn't a typist. Didn't discuss likelihood of a clerk or secretary. Didn't see anything from either the widow or the son claiming direct knowledge that the documents were forged. Just general sentiment. Widow admits he left some other documents around, but she really hasn't looked for them. Dale Scroggins |
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 02:59:20 GMT, Dale Scroggins
wrote: They believe, however, that once he was "saved", he suddenly became responsible, bright, and capable. Go figure. Abe Lincoln was a failed lawyer and shopkeeper. He apparently rose to the occasion. Wasnt it Truman that was a failed habadasher? He apparently rose to the occasion. Clinton..well...lets not go there...chuckle There are plenty of other examples in history of the "bad boy gone good" Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 04:23:20 GMT, Dale Scroggins
wrote: Gunner wrote: On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 22:33:04 GMT, Dale Scroggins wrote: Anyway, Gunner, the answer to both your questions is "yes". I may have anticipated some other questions. What do you believe now, and why? Dale Scroggins At this point, I shall take a wait and see stance. Im still wondering why the daughter and wife of the gent in question state categorically that those are frauds. Gunner I saw reports of statements by the widow and a son. Didn't see anything about a daughter; widow and son said, as I recall, it was unfair to pick out things the "gent" wrote thirty years ago and broadcast them when he couldn't put his statements in context. Valid point, but uncorrectable. After we die, things we wrote down are likely to be taken at face value. Widow avows he wasn't a typist. Didn't discuss likelihood of a clerk or secretary. Didn't see anything from either the widow or the son claiming direct knowledge that the documents were forged. Just general sentiment. Widow admits he left some other documents around, but she really hasn't looked for them. Dale Scroggins You are correct. I was thinking of another fellow who a number of years ago swore under oath that Bush had crossed his Is and dotted his t's, then recently said he had not. I was thinking of his daughter who had posed the question and exposed him.. Name starts with a B..just recently..last week Might also want to read this article currently running on www.drudgereport.com "Saturday, another retired Air National Guard officer came forward to attack CBSNEWS credibility. Retired Maj. Gen. Bobby W. Hodges, who was cited by a senior CBS official on Thursday as the network's "trump card" in verifying the documents, said in an interview that he was "misled" by CBS and believed the documents to be forgeries. Hodges said that he was read only excerpts of the documents and never saw the documents. A CBS spokesman said the network stands by its report. " And this one....G http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...shguard11.html More challenges about whether Bush documents are authentic By Pete Slover The Dallas Morning News AUSTIN, Texas — The man named in a disputed memo as exerting pressure to "sugarcoat" George W. Bush's military record left the Texas Air National Guard a year and a half before the memo supposedly was written, his service record shows. An order obtained by The Dallas Morning News shows that Col. Walter "Buck" Staudt was honorably discharged March 1, 1972. CBS News reported this week that a memo in which Staudt was described as interfering with officers' negative evaluations of the future president's service was dated Aug. 18, 1973. That added to mounting questions about the authenticity of documents that seem to suggest Bush sought special treatment as a pilot, failed to carry out a superior's order to undergo a physical exam and was suspended from flying for failing to meet Air National Guard standards. Staudt, who lives in New Braunfels, Texas, did not return calls seeking comment. His discharge paper was among documents obtained by The Morning News from official sources during 1999 research into Bush's Guard record. A CBS staffer stood by the story, suggesting Staudt could have continued to exert influence over Guard officials. But a former high-ranking Guard official disputed that, saying retirement would have left Staudt powerless. Authenticity of the memo and three others included in Wednesday's "60 Minutes" report came in for heavy criticism yesterday, prompting an unusual, on-air defense of the original work. Experts on typography said the memos appeared to have been computer-drafted on equipment not available at the time. And the widow and son of the officer who supposedly wrote them, Lt. Col. Jerry Killian, who died in 1984, have said it wasn't his nature to keep detailed personal notes. In its news broadcast yesterday, CBS said the documents were supported by both unnamed witnesses and others, including document examiners. CBS anchor Dan Rather earlier told The Dallas Morning News that he had heard nothing to make him question the legitimacy of the memos. He attributed the backlash to partisan politics and competitive journalism. "This story is true. The questions we raised about then-Lieutenant Bush's National Guard service are serious and legitimate," he said. "Until and unless someone shows me definitive proof that they are not, I don't see any reason to carry on a conversation with the professional rumor mill." The Washington Post quoted Rather as saying CBS had talked to two people who worked with Killian — his superior, retired Maj. Gen. Bobby Hodges, and his administrative assistant Robert Strong — and both described the memos as consistent with what they knew of Killian. Hodges, who told CBS he was "familiar" with the documents, is an avid Bush supporter and "it took a lot for him to speak the truth," the Post quoted Rather as saying. The Los Angeles Times, however, later quoted Hodges as saying that he believed the memos from Killian were not real. A CBS news executive confirmed that Hodges had changed his story. Rather's interview with The Morning News concluded before the newspaper determined the date of Staudt's departure, but a CBS staffer with extensive knowledge of the story said later that the departure doesn't derail the story. "From what we've learned, Staudt remained very active after he retired," the staffer said, speaking on condition of anonymity. "He was a very bullying type, and that could have continued." In the "60 Minutes" report, Rather said of the memo's contents: "Killian says Col. Buck Staudt, the man in charge of the Texas Air National Guard, is putting on pressure to 'sugarcoat' an evaluation of Lt. Bush." Staudt was the person Bush initially contacted about Guard service, and he was the group commander at Ellington Air Force Base in Houston when Bush arrived there to fly an F-102 jet. He transferred later to Austin, where he served as chief of staff for the Air National Guard. In the disputed memo, Killian supposedly wrote "(another officer) gave me a message today from group regarding Bush's (evaluation) and Staudt is pushing to sugarcoat it." It continues: "Austin is not happy either." The CBS staffer said the memo appears to recognize that Staudt has retired, since it differentiates between his displeasure and that of Austin, where he served his final Guard stint. But another Texas Air National Guard official who served in that period said the memo appears to wrongly associate Staudt with his group command in Houston, and — based on that mistake — the memo distinguishes his views from that of the Austin Guard. Retired Col. Earl Lively, director of Air National Guard operations for the state headquarters during 1972 and 1973, said Staudt "wasn't on the scene" after retirement, and that CBS' remote-bullying thesis makes no sense. "He couldn't bully them. He wasn't in the Guard," Lively said. "He couldn't affect their promotions. Once you're gone from the Guard, you don't have any authority." Bush has not commented publicly about the CBS report, and aides say his honorable discharge proves he fulfilled his obligations. Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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Gunner wrote:
On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 04:23:20 GMT, Dale Scroggins wrote: Gunner wrote: On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 22:33:04 GMT, Dale Scroggins wrote: Anyway, Gunner, the answer to both your questions is "yes". I may have anticipated some other questions. What do you believe now, and why? Dale Scroggins At this point, I shall take a wait and see stance. Im still wondering why the daughter and wife of the gent in question state categorically that those are frauds. Gunner I saw reports of statements by the widow and a son. Didn't see anything about a daughter; widow and son said, as I recall, it was unfair to pick out things the "gent" wrote thirty years ago and broadcast them when he couldn't put his statements in context. Valid point, but uncorrectable. After we die, things we wrote down are likely to be taken at face value. Widow avows he wasn't a typist. Didn't discuss likelihood of a clerk or secretary. Didn't see anything from either the widow or the son claiming direct knowledge that the documents were forged. Just general sentiment. Widow admits he left some other documents around, but she really hasn't looked for them. Dale Scroggins You are correct. I was thinking of another fellow who a number of years ago swore under oath that Bush had crossed his Is and dotted his t's, then recently said he had not. I was thinking of his daughter who had posed the question and exposed him.. Name starts with a B..just recently..last week Barnes. Speaker of the House in Texas. He claims he made the call that put Dubya at the head of the line. A caller to a radio talk show on the east coast claimed to be his daughter and called him a liar. Might also want to read this article currently running on www.drudgereport.com "Saturday, another retired Air National Guard officer came forward to attack CBSNEWS credibility. Retired Maj. Gen. Bobby W. Hodges, who was cited by a senior CBS official on Thursday as the network's "trump card" in verifying the documents, said in an interview that he was "misled" by CBS and believed the documents to be forgeries. Hodges said that he was read only excerpts of the documents and never saw the documents. A CBS spokesman said the network stands by its report. " I dont't think Hodges was the lynchpin of the story. I think the primary source was Killian's XO, or administrative officer. Strong, I think. There's no doubt that Dubya's case was a divisive issue in the command of TANG at the time. Apparently, it still is. And this one....G http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...shguard11.html More challenges about whether Bush documents are authentic By Pete Slover The Dallas Morning News AUSTIN, Texas — The man named in a disputed memo as exerting pressure to "sugarcoat" George W. Bush's military record left the Texas Air National Guard a year and a half before the memo supposedly was written, his service record shows. Not a realistic viewpoint by the writer. My introduction to metalworking came in the shop of a retired NG officer. He was a P-51 pilot in WWII, came home, joined the Guard, and retired as some sort of General. He had been retired for five years when I first met him. He still knew lots of phone numbers of active officers, and they listened to him. He didn't ask for favors often, but he was never denied. He still received calls from active officers seeking his help years after his retirement. Like in local politics, one need not hold office to hold power. It's who you know and who owes you. An order obtained by The Dallas Morning News shows that Col. Walter "Buck" Staudt was honorably discharged March 1, 1972. CBS News reported this week that a memo in which Staudt was described as interfering with officers' negative evaluations of the future president's service was dated Aug. 18, 1973. That added to mounting questions about the authenticity of documents that seem to suggest Bush sought special treatment as a pilot, failed to carry out a superior's order to undergo a physical exam and was suspended from flying for failing to meet Air National Guard standards. Staudt, who lives in New Braunfels, Texas, did not return calls seeking comment. His discharge paper was among documents obtained by The Morning News from official sources during 1999 research into Bush's Guard record. A CBS staffer stood by the story, suggesting Staudt could have continued to exert influence over Guard officials. But a former high-ranking Guard official disputed that, saying retirement would have left Staudt powerless. Authenticity of the memo and three others included in Wednesday's "60 Minutes" report came in for heavy criticism yesterday, prompting an unusual, on-air defense of the original work. Experts on typography said the memos appeared to have been computer-drafted on equipment not available at the time. I think this part will change within the next week. If the story has legs. And the widow and son of the officer who supposedly wrote them, Lt. Col. Jerry Killian, who died in 1984, have said it wasn't his nature to keep detailed personal notes. In its news broadcast yesterday, CBS said the documents were supported by both unnamed witnesses and others, including document examiners. CBS anchor Dan Rather earlier told The Dallas Morning News that he had heard nothing to make him question the legitimacy of the memos. He attributed the backlash to partisan politics and competitive journalism. "This story is true. The questions we raised about then-Lieutenant Bush's National Guard service are serious and legitimate," he said. "Until and unless someone shows me definitive proof that they are not, I don't see any reason to carry on a conversation with the professional rumor mill." The Washington Post quoted Rather as saying CBS had talked to two people who worked with Killian — his superior, retired Maj. Gen. Bobby Hodges, and his administrative assistant Robert Strong — and both described the memos as consistent with what they knew of Killian. Hodges, who told CBS he was "familiar" with the documents, is an avid Bush supporter and "it took a lot for him to speak the truth," the Post quoted Rather as saying. The Los Angeles Times, however, later quoted Hodges as saying that he believed the memos from Killian were not real. A CBS news executive confirmed that Hodges had changed his story. Rather's interview with The Morning News concluded before the newspaper determined the date of Staudt's departure, but a CBS staffer with extensive knowledge of the story said later that the departure doesn't derail the story. "From what we've learned, Staudt remained very active after he retired," the staffer said, speaking on condition of anonymity. "He was a very bullying type, and that could have continued." In the "60 Minutes" report, Rather said of the memo's contents: "Killian says Col. Buck Staudt, the man in charge of the Texas Air National Guard, is putting on pressure to 'sugarcoat' an evaluation of Lt. Bush." Staudt was the person Bush initially contacted about Guard service, and he was the group commander at Ellington Air Force Base in Houston when Bush arrived there to fly an F-102 jet. He transferred later to Austin, where he served as chief of staff for the Air National Guard. In the disputed memo, Killian supposedly wrote "(another officer) gave me a message today from group regarding Bush's (evaluation) and Staudt is pushing to sugarcoat it." It continues: "Austin is not happy either." The CBS staffer said the memo appears to recognize that Staudt has retired, since it differentiates between his displeasure and that of Austin, where he served his final Guard stint. But another Texas Air National Guard official who served in that period said the memo appears to wrongly associate Staudt with his group command in Houston, and — based on that mistake — the memo distinguishes his views from that of the Austin Guard. Retired Col. Earl Lively, director of Air National Guard operations for the state headquarters during 1972 and 1973, said Staudt "wasn't on the scene" after retirement, and that CBS' remote-bullying thesis makes no sense. "He couldn't bully them. He wasn't in the Guard," Lively said. "He couldn't affect their promotions. Once you're gone from the Guard, you don't have any authority." Maybe no authority, but influence can persist. See above. Bush has not commented publicly about the CBS report, and aides say his honorable discharge proves he fulfilled his obligations. Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company |
#18
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Retired Guard generals definitely have a lot of clout long after they
retire. 10 years after he retired General Russell singlehanded got the 48th Infantry to relocate its summer camp from Ft. McClellan to Ft. Stewart in his home town . |
#19
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In article , Dale Scroggins
says... Looks like a loser for Mr. Rove on this one. It doesn't really matter, all they have to do is muddy the waters and the dittohead types, along with the great unwashed masses of Fox News viewers will be satisfied that the documents have been totally debunked. The lazy swing voters who can't read a newspaper to save their lives will consider the whole matter too confusing to evaluate. I'm not sure I understand why CBS is pursuing this matter. Right - it may have something to do with integrity or something. A totally foreign concept to Rove. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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Glen, Who's talking about the 60's. In the 60's men were trying to
get into the guard in order to avoid active military service. (read Vietnam) By 1973 most of the 60's era members had fulfilled their 6 years obligation and were gone. The culture of the National Guard had changed completely by the 70's. By '73 the US Military was under congressional mandate to downsize drastically and immediately. I was on active duty at FT Lewis, WA in 1972 when the official word went out "anybody want out of the Army see your First Sergeant". Officially the Vietnam War ended in 1975, but the buildup of forces ended in 1972. In 1973 Officers were a dime a dozen and there were all kinds of active duty aviators trying to get a guard slot. It was a pivotal time, you had to be there to know it. Nothing like this had happened since the end of WWII. Air Force Officers who had come to love the service were being forced out. They were trying to get a NG slot in order to keep an affilliation going, to provide some income during transition to civilian life, and perhaps while at school on the GI Bill. Any Officer who didn't want to fully participate in the NG program at that time would have been allowed to fade away, which is, in fact, what happened. Paul |
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What has that got to do with the kind of typewriters we had or the way we
communicated within the Hq? |
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 09:34:58 GMT, Dale Scroggins
wrote: This fellow is a loser, Gunner. Not because he's a Republican or a conservative. There are admirable people who are both. I'd vote for any of them if they were running. But I can't vote for Dubya. I don't want to be held responsible. Dale Scroggins Fair enough. Your opinion is indeed noted. And if things go well, Id expect you to not try to cash in on the rising economy or even hint at sharing any credit. If Kerry wins, and things turn to ****..I will indeed return to haunt you with your own words. Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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On 12 Sep 2004 07:25:10 -0700, jim rozen
wrote: In article , Dale Scroggins says... Looks like a loser for Mr. Rove on this one. It doesn't really matter, all they have to do is muddy the waters and the dittohead types, along with the great unwashed masses of Fox News viewers will be satisfied that the documents have been totally debunked. The lazy swing voters who can't read a newspaper to save their lives will consider the whole matter too confusing to evaluate. I'm not sure I understand why CBS is pursuing this matter. Right - it may have something to do with integrity or something. A totally foreign concept to Rove. Jim Ah..Jim..please dont mention Integrity and Democrat politicians in the same breath. Least of all dont type it. Your computer will emplode. Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 10:05:50 GMT, Dale Scroggins
wrote: Gunner wrote: On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 04:23:20 GMT, Dale Scroggins wrote: Gunner wrote: On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 22:33:04 GMT, Dale Scroggins wrote: Anyway, Gunner, the answer to both your questions is "yes". I may have anticipated some other questions. What do you believe now, and why? Dale Scroggins At this point, I shall take a wait and see stance. Im still wondering why the daughter and wife of the gent in question state categorically that those are frauds. Gunner I saw reports of statements by the widow and a son. Didn't see anything about a daughter; widow and son said, as I recall, it was unfair to pick out things the "gent" wrote thirty years ago and broadcast them when he couldn't put his statements in context. Valid point, but uncorrectable. After we die, things we wrote down are likely to be taken at face value. Widow avows he wasn't a typist. Didn't discuss likelihood of a clerk or secretary. Didn't see anything from either the widow or the son claiming direct knowledge that the documents were forged. Just general sentiment. Widow admits he left some other documents around, but she really hasn't looked for them. Dale Scroggins You are correct. I was thinking of another fellow who a number of years ago swore under oath that Bush had crossed his Is and dotted his t's, then recently said he had not. I was thinking of his daughter who had posed the question and exposed him.. Name starts with a B..just recently..last week Barnes. Speaker of the House in Texas. He claims he made the call that put Dubya at the head of the line. A caller to a radio talk show on the east coast claimed to be his daughter and called him a liar. Thats the one. Various news organizations have interviewed her publicly. Quite believable. Shrug. Might also want to read this article currently running on www.drudgereport.com "Saturday, another retired Air National Guard officer came forward to attack CBSNEWS credibility. Retired Maj. Gen. Bobby W. Hodges, who was cited by a senior CBS official on Thursday as the network's "trump card" in verifying the documents, said in an interview that he was "misled" by CBS and believed the documents to be forgeries. Hodges said that he was read only excerpts of the documents and never saw the documents. A CBS spokesman said the network stands by its report. " I dont't think Hodges was the lynchpin of the story. I think the primary source was Killian's XO, or administrative officer. Strong, I think. There's no doubt that Dubya's case was a divisive issue in the command of TANG at the time. Apparently, it still is. And this one....G http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...shguard11.html More challenges about whether Bush documents are authentic By Pete Slover The Dallas Morning News AUSTIN, Texas — The man named in a disputed memo as exerting pressure to "sugarcoat" George W. Bush's military record left the Texas Air National Guard a year and a half before the memo supposedly was written, his service record shows. Not a realistic viewpoint by the writer. My introduction to metalworking came in the shop of a retired NG officer. He was a P-51 pilot in WWII, came home, joined the Guard, and retired as some sort of General. He had been retired for five years when I first met him. He still knew lots of phone numbers of active officers, and they listened to him. He didn't ask for favors often, but he was never denied. He still received calls from active officers seeking his help years after his retirement. Like in local politics, one need not hold office to hold power. It's who you know and who owes you. True enough. I still have a few back channels into the Old Boy Network myself. An order obtained by The Dallas Morning News shows that Col. Walter "Buck" Staudt was honorably discharged March 1, 1972. CBS News reported this week that a memo in which Staudt was described as interfering with officers' negative evaluations of the future president's service was dated Aug. 18, 1973. That added to mounting questions about the authenticity of documents that seem to suggest Bush sought special treatment as a pilot, failed to carry out a superior's order to undergo a physical exam and was suspended from flying for failing to meet Air National Guard standards. Staudt, who lives in New Braunfels, Texas, did not return calls seeking comment. His discharge paper was among documents obtained by The Morning News from official sources during 1999 research into Bush's Guard record. A CBS staffer stood by the story, suggesting Staudt could have continued to exert influence over Guard officials. But a former high-ranking Guard official disputed that, saying retirement would have left Staudt powerless. Authenticity of the memo and three others included in Wednesday's "60 Minutes" report came in for heavy criticism yesterday, prompting an unusual, on-air defense of the original work. Experts on typography said the memos appeared to have been computer-drafted on equipment not available at the time. I think this part will change within the next week. If the story has legs. Time will tell. And the widow and son of the officer who supposedly wrote them, Lt. Col. Jerry Killian, who died in 1984, have said it wasn't his nature to keep detailed personal notes. In its news broadcast yesterday, CBS said the documents were supported by both unnamed witnesses and others, including document examiners. CBS anchor Dan Rather earlier told The Dallas Morning News that he had heard nothing to make him question the legitimacy of the memos. He attributed the backlash to partisan politics and competitive journalism. "This story is true. The questions we raised about then-Lieutenant Bush's National Guard service are serious and legitimate," he said. "Until and unless someone shows me definitive proof that they are not, I don't see any reason to carry on a conversation with the professional rumor mill." The Washington Post quoted Rather as saying CBS had talked to two people who worked with Killian — his superior, retired Maj. Gen. Bobby Hodges, and his administrative assistant Robert Strong — and both described the memos as consistent with what they knew of Killian. Hodges, who told CBS he was "familiar" with the documents, is an avid Bush supporter and "it took a lot for him to speak the truth," the Post quoted Rather as saying. The Los Angeles Times, however, later quoted Hodges as saying that he believed the memos from Killian were not real. A CBS news executive confirmed that Hodges had changed his story. Rather's interview with The Morning News concluded before the newspaper determined the date of Staudt's departure, but a CBS staffer with extensive knowledge of the story said later that the departure doesn't derail the story. "From what we've learned, Staudt remained very active after he retired," the staffer said, speaking on condition of anonymity. "He was a very bullying type, and that could have continued." In the "60 Minutes" report, Rather said of the memo's contents: "Killian says Col. Buck Staudt, the man in charge of the Texas Air National Guard, is putting on pressure to 'sugarcoat' an evaluation of Lt. Bush." Staudt was the person Bush initially contacted about Guard service, and he was the group commander at Ellington Air Force Base in Houston when Bush arrived there to fly an F-102 jet. He transferred later to Austin, where he served as chief of staff for the Air National Guard. In the disputed memo, Killian supposedly wrote "(another officer) gave me a message today from group regarding Bush's (evaluation) and Staudt is pushing to sugarcoat it." It continues: "Austin is not happy either." The CBS staffer said the memo appears to recognize that Staudt has retired, since it differentiates between his displeasure and that of Austin, where he served his final Guard stint. But another Texas Air National Guard official who served in that period said the memo appears to wrongly associate Staudt with his group command in Houston, and — based on that mistake — the memo distinguishes his views from that of the Austin Guard. Retired Col. Earl Lively, director of Air National Guard operations for the state headquarters during 1972 and 1973, said Staudt "wasn't on the scene" after retirement, and that CBS' remote-bullying thesis makes no sense. "He couldn't bully them. He wasn't in the Guard," Lively said. "He couldn't affect their promotions. Once you're gone from the Guard, you don't have any authority." Maybe no authority, but influence can persist. See above. Perhaps. This is indeed an interesting bit. If the allegations of fraud are proven, lets hope that those reponsible are punished fully. When NBC tried the exploding side saddle gas tank fraud..heads rolled there as well. Perhaps CBS will have the guts to eviserate its own. Probably not, according to Bernard Goldberg. Only time will tell. Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 09:55:28 -0400, "Glenn Ashmore"
wrote: Retired Guard generals definitely have a lot of clout long after they retire. 10 years after he retired General Russell singlehanded got the 48th Infantry to relocate its summer camp from Ft. McClellan to Ft. Stewart in his home town . But did he do it for a lowly First Louie? Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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In article , Gunner says...
But did he do it for a lowly First Louie? Ha ha ha. A 1st L. who's name is..... Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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In article , Gunner says...
Right - it may have something to do with integrity or something. A totally foreign concept to Rove. Jim Ah..Jim..please dont mention Integrity and Democrat politicians in the same breath. Rove is a republican. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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Gunner wrote:
On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 09:34:58 GMT, Dale Scroggins wrote: This fellow is a loser, Gunner. Not because he's a Republican or a conservative. There are admirable people who are both. I'd vote for any of them if they were running. But I can't vote for Dubya. I don't want to be held responsible. Dale Scroggins Fair enough. Your opinion is indeed noted. And if things go well, Id expect you to not try to cash in on the rising economy or even hint at sharing any credit. If Kerry wins, and things turn to ****..I will indeed return to haunt you with your own words. Not to worry. I have a defense well-polished by the Bush supporters; anything bad that happens in the next four years will be Bush's fault. Dale Scroggins |
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In article , Dale Scroggins says...
If Kerry wins, and things turn to ****..I will indeed return to haunt you with your own words. Not to worry. I have a defense well-polished by the Bush supporters; anything bad that happens in the next four years will be Bush's fault. Haa ha. Bravo! That's just the plan to adopt. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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On 12 Sep 2004 13:32:00 -0700, jim rozen
wrote: In article , Gunner says... Right - it may have something to do with integrity or something. A totally foreign concept to Rove. Jim Ah..Jim..please dont mention Integrity and Democrat politicians in the same breath. Rove is a republican. Jim Yes and? Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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On 12 Sep 2004 13:30:52 -0700, jim rozen
wrote: In article , Gunner says... But did he do it for a lowly First Louie? Ha ha ha. A 1st L. who's name is..... Jim Old HW Bush was a a first term Representative in Congress in 1968. Not exactly someone who has a lot of power over the Guard. Gunner "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child - miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosphy of sniveling brats." -- P.J. O'Rourke |
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In article , Gunner says...
Old HW Bush was a a first term Representative in Congress in 1968. Not exactly someone who has a lot of power over the Guard. It's a small world out there, and at that time, I bet texas politics were a tiny bit of a small world. Bush's connections with business in the state probably carried more weight than his seat in the house. Trust me, folks knew who Dubya's dad was. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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In article , Gunner says...
Ah..Jim..please dont mention Integrity and Democrat politicians in the same breath. Rove is a republican. Yes and? The only politician's being discussed here *are* republicans. Rove is running his man and responding to media attacks. That's what he does. Nobody was talking about democrats at all. I admit that talking 'integrity' in a political ****-match is dumb. What you didn't pick up on (you need more mountain dew...) is I was putting newcasters (rather) into the integrity arena. As Sherman once said, if you killed all the newpapermen in the morning there would be 'news from hell' by breakfast. Even so, Rather is defending the only real thing a news person has, his believability. Somebody (you?) voiced suprise here about his strong response to attacks on his sources. It was no suprise to me that he'd come out strong on that. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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On Mon, 13 Sep 2004 06:30:22 GMT, Gunner
calmly ranted: On 12 Sep 2004 13:30:52 -0700, jim rozen wrote: In article , Gunner says... But did he do it for a lowly First Louie? Ha ha ha. A 1st L. who's name is..... Jim Old HW Bush was a a first term Representative in Congress in 1968. Not exactly someone who has a lot of power over the Guard. Um, his -family- wasn't exactly poor at the time. Aren't you glad these aren't YOUR family values? http://www.hereinreality.com/familyvalues.html ------------------------------------------------------- Have you read the new book "What Would Machiavelli Do?" ---------------------------- http://diversify.com Dynamic, Interactive Websites! -------------------------------------------------------- |
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I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "ATP"
wrote back on Sun, 12 Sep 2004 01:19:07 GMT in rec.crafts.metalworking : Oh well. Nice try, Karl Rove! Glad to see he's in there pitching, trying his darndest to keep 'his man's' feet clean. Some you win, some you lose. Looks like a loser for Mr. Rove on this one. Jim It doesn't really matter, all they have to do is muddy the waters and the dittohead types, along with the great unwashed masses of Fox News viewers will be satisfied that the documents have been totally debunked. The lazy swing voters who can't read a newspaper to save their lives will consider the whole matter too confusing to evaluate. So, you are believing that these documents are real documents, despite the lack of verification aside from CBS? Say, I've been meaning to sell some Roman Drachmas, they have Julius Ceaser's portrait and are dated 44BCE. I've also a certificate of authentication to validate them, so you don't have to worry. tschus pyotr -- pyotr filipivich Most journalists these days couldn't investigate a missing chocolate cake at a pre-school without a Democrat office holder telling them what to look for, where, and what significance it all has. |
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I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show jim rozen
wrote back on 12 Sep 2004 13:32:00 -0700 in rec.crafts.metalworking : In article , Gunner says... Right - it may have something to do with integrity or something. A totally foreign concept to Rove. Ah..Jim..please dont mention Integrity and Democrat politicians in the same breath. Rove is a republican. Jim Right. So what? Apparently, Jim just woke up from a coma, and doesn't know anything about James "Corporal Cueball" Carville. Or the spear-catcher, what's his name the Press Secretary for Clinton. Say, who hired Craig Livingstone? Did they ever find out? I know he turned in a resignation, but to whom? That's one of the elements which made the Clinton White House so much fun. Were else can a bouncer from Arkansas become the Chief of Security without having to get a job interview or even needing to be told where to pick up is check. And then he can just call up the FBI and IRS and have 'em send confidential files (breaking the law in the process) over to the White House. And then there is Jim "two tapes" Baghdad McDermit. He is given a "chance" recording of a cell phone conference call (the recording of which is a felony) and then Jim, not being aware of the law he sponsored, turns this evidence of criminal activity over to the newspapers, as opposed to the Justice Department. Yeah, tell me about "democrats" being the party of "integrity". They wouldn't know integrity if it dropped a keg on their head. tschus pyotr -- pyotr filipivich. as an explaination for the decline in the US's tech edge, James Niccol wrote "It used to be that the USA was pretty good at producing stuff teenaged boys could lose a finger or two playing with." |
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In article , pyotr filipivich
says... That's one of the elements which made the Clinton White House so much fun. ... I love this. As soon as somebody suggest that georgie boy got grounded for not ****ing in a cup at his physical, the first thing out of everyone's mouth is the cannonical: " W H A T A B O U T C L I N T O N ???!!!!" Hey folks. That was about four years ago. Time to pick up the pace here. Heck. Who's bush gonna blame, if he wins? Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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pyotr filipivich wrote:
I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show "ATP" wrote back on Sun, 12 Sep 2004 01:19:07 GMT in rec.crafts.metalworking : Oh well. Nice try, Karl Rove! Glad to see he's in there pitching, trying his darndest to keep 'his man's' feet clean. Some you win, some you lose. Looks like a loser for Mr. Rove on this one. Jim It doesn't really matter, all they have to do is muddy the waters and the dittohead types, along with the great unwashed masses of Fox News viewers will be satisfied that the documents have been totally debunked. The lazy swing voters who can't read a newspaper to save their lives will consider the whole matter too confusing to evaluate. So, you are believing that these documents are real documents, despite the lack of verification aside from CBS? Say, I've been meaning to sell some Roman Drachmas, they have Julius Ceaser's portrait and are dated 44BCE. I've also a certificate of authentication to validate them, so you don't have to worry. I was in Regular Army, WA National Guard and Army Reserve from '70 to '74ish. The thing that I find amusing is that nearly everyone from that era was trying to get out of something. Nearly everyone that could, pulled strings. Nearly everyone missed Guard or Reserve meetings. I did. Nearly everyone schemed to stay out of Nam. I did. It was the way it was. I don't believe the Bush memos are real, but even if they are, I'd be a hypocrite to find much fault in them. |
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In article , pyotr filipivich
says... So, you are believing that these documents are real documents, despite the lack of verification aside from CBS? Which documents, the ones released by the white house, that say that bush got grounded for disobeying the order to take a physical? Now why would *any* jet pilot (heck, that's got to be the best job in the whole world) decide he'd rather be grounded than take a simple physical? Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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I missed the staff meeting but the minutes show jim rozen
wrote back on 14 Sep 2004 17:06:31 -0700 in rec.crafts.metalworking : In article , pyotr filipivich says... That's one of the elements which made the Clinton White House so much fun. ... I love this. As soon as somebody suggest that georgie boy got grounded for not ****ing in a cup at his physical, the first thing out of everyone's mouth is the cannonical: " W H A T A B O U T C L I N T O N ???!!!!" What about him? He's had chest pain, he's had a quadrupled by-pass surgery. Hey folks. That was about four years ago. Time to pick up the pace here. Okay. So what does President Bush's TANG service have to do with anything? That was 35 years ago, and President Bush himself has said that Kerry got shot at, all he did was fly airplanes. Heck. Who's bush gonna blame, if he wins? You, and the other Democrats -- pyotr filipivich Most journalists these days couldn't investigate a missing chocolate cake at a pre-school without a Democrat office holder telling them what to look for, where, and what significance it all has. |
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