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John Kerry & John O'Neill, Dick Cavett Show Debate from 1971 on C-SPAN Now [LIVE THREAD]

Posted on 03/28/2004 3:45:24 PM PST by Stultis

Started 6:30 EST, Interviewing Dick Cavett, now John O'Niell, by phone. Show will start soon.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 1971; cavett; cavettkerry; dickcavett; johnkerry; johnoneill; kerrycavett; vvaw
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To: GailA
Does anyone know what ever happened to this John O'Neill?

There are several prominent John O'Neills in recent news searches. Where is this gentleman [and fellow Annapolis grad :) ] now?
261 posted on 03/28/2004 7:43:13 PM PST by BlueNgold (Feed the Tree .....)
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To: BlueNgold
I was wondering the same thing. I knew Kerry was an arrogant SOB but I am really getting all fired up after watching this. He seemed to want to lump all Vietnam vets in the same category of baby killer, etc. What a bastard! And I can't believe that there are some vets backing him.
262 posted on 03/28/2004 7:46:23 PM PST by LoudRepublicangirl (loudrepublicangirl)
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To: Neenah
"Thurston Howell III ---It is uncanny how much his voice sounds like him !!!!"

Did you hear when he talked about putting on his khakis and going to Saigon? He pronounced it cockeys.

263 posted on 03/28/2004 7:47:11 PM PST by mass55th
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To: JulieRNR21
Just heard on Fox that about 30 families of 9-11 victims are sent a letter to Clarke chastizing him for writing the book and releasing it during the hearings.

NO THANKS, MR. CLARKE (9/11 Families)

Bless them.

264 posted on 03/28/2004 7:53:40 PM PST by cyncooper ("The 'War on Terror ' is not a figure of speech")
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To: BlueNgold
Found this:
http://www.boston.com/globe/nation/packages/kerry/061703.shtml
With antiwar role, high visibility
By Michael Kranish, Globe Staff, 6/17/2003
...excerpt
O'Neill for years has declined to talk about the experience, partly because he says he became disillusioned with politics and government after the fall of Saigon in 1975.

But in a telephone interview from Texas, where he is a trial attorney, O'Neill made it clear he still harbors resentment at the way Kerry accused veterans of atrocities.

"The primary reason I got involved was I thought the charges of war crimes were irresponsible and wrong," O'Neill said. "I thought they did a real disservice to all the people that were there. I thought they were immoral."

The bitterness remains. Asked whether he agrees with the view of some observers that Kerry was forever altered by the war, O'Neill responded: "The war didn't change [Kerry]. I think he was a guy driven tremendously by ambition. I think he was that way before he went and is that way today."
265 posted on 03/28/2004 7:54:22 PM PST by FR_addict
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To: JulieRNR21
The charges were eventually dropped:

http://www.boston.com/globe/nation/packages/kerry/061803.shtml

Definitely something hinky there.

266 posted on 03/28/2004 8:01:15 PM PST by cyncooper ("The 'War on Terror ' is not a figure of speech")
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To: eddie willers
We should seek out John O'Neill today and get him re-involved. As the old adage goes..."Be careful what you wish". I read somewhere (probably FR) that something happened to him in the late Seventies that made him swear off politics forever. He may no longer be a "friendly".

He was interviewed just before the show aired tonight, and he said that he hasn't been politically active in recent years because he donated a kidney to his wife and that situation has taken all of his attention. He seemed to still resent John Kerry, and based on the combination of the film of O'Neill in 71 on the Cavett show and the interview with him in 2004, I'd say it's safe to say that he'll vote against Kerry in November. He didn't seem too eager to become more involved than that, though, IMO.

267 posted on 03/28/2004 8:16:51 PM PST by alnick
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To: Dr. Eckleburg
But in a telephone interview from Texas, where he is a trial attorney, O'Neill made it clear he still harbors resentment at the way Kerry accused veterans of atrocities.

"The primary reason I got involved was I thought the charges of war crimes were irresponsible and wrong," O'Neill said. "I thought they did a real disservice to all the people that were there. I thought they were immoral."

The bitterness remains. Asked whether he agrees with the view of some observers that Kerry was forever altered by the war, O'Neill responded: "The war didn't change [Kerry]. I think he was a guy driven tremendously by ambition. I think he was that way before he went and is that way today."

Excerpt, Boston Globe, 6/17/03, "John F. Kerry, Candidate in the Making"

http://www.boston.com/globe/nation/packages/kerry/061703.shtml

268 posted on 03/28/2004 8:19:40 PM PST by Uncle Miltie (Leave Pat Leave!)
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To: cyncooper
John Kerry

Who?

John Kerry, 1971

269 posted on 03/28/2004 8:22:10 PM PST by Uncle Miltie (Leave Pat Leave!)
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To: texasbluebell
he probably served from dec 1968 to april 1969 so it sounds like it was at least a year what a joke
270 posted on 03/28/2004 8:25:52 PM PST by cannoli54
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To: Eva
Kerry is claiming that there would be no blood bath, just political assassination which Kerry says is ok because it would be less than the bombing.

I found that particularly interesting considering what we've recently learned about the VVAW's plot to assasinate American senators.

271 posted on 03/28/2004 8:26:15 PM PST by alnick
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To: cannoli54
Ha! That's exactly what I was thinking! Looks good in print, at least if you don't know the truth.
272 posted on 03/28/2004 8:28:40 PM PST by texasbluebell
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To: FR_addict
excellent .. thanks
273 posted on 03/28/2004 8:34:33 PM PST by BlueNgold (Feed the Tree .....)
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To: BlueNgold
Unfortunately I don't. Maybe google would help.
274 posted on 03/28/2004 8:36:07 PM PST by GailA (Kerry I'm for the death penalty for terrorist, but I'll declare a moratorium on the death penalty)
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To: oh8eleven
at least we didnt take eddie haskell seriously it's scary to think JFK is taken seriously in this Country. Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't he say that the heads of European governments talked to him and said they wanted him instead of Bush and when the Bush people wanted names he changed his story and said he was'nt approached but people around him were told that by these so called heads of Europe.
275 posted on 03/28/2004 8:37:48 PM PST by cannoli54
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To: Stultis
BUMP TO MARK SPOT!
276 posted on 03/28/2004 8:38:34 PM PST by GrandMoM (GOD is working in secret, behind the scenes even when it looks like nothing will ever change! JM)
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To: cyncooper; PhiKapMom; backhoe; hellinahandcart; sauropod; kristinn
I went to my video recording and made a transcript of the drunk mother portion. I've left out some "uhs" and repeated words:
I think that what we're doing is we're trying, in a sense, to show where the country went wrong. And we believe, as veterans who took part in the war, we have nothing to gain by coming back here and talking about those things that have happened, except to try and say, "here is where we went wrong, and we've got to change."

And I think that the attitude of the Vietnam Veterans For A Just Peace is really one, sort of, of, "my country, right or wrong," which is really, on the intellectual level I think, of saying, "my mother, drunk or sober." And I think that, just as when your mother is drunk, you take her and dry her out -- God forbid that she is -- you take your country, in the words of Senator Carl Schurz who said, "my country, right or wrong; when right, keep it right; when wrong, put it right."

I hope C-SPAN does post a full transcript. I haven't been able to find one elsewhere on the net. O'Neill responded to every point of Kerry's opening statement and eviscerated him with facts, often quotes from Kerry himself. Here's O'Neill's reaction just to the "drunk mother" portion:

Our attitude certainly isn't, "our country, right or wrong." We were all fifteen and sixteen years old [when] we happened to get into the Vietnam War. What's so interesting about many of Mr. Kerry's backers, including Clark Clifford, Roger Hillsman [and] a number of others, is that they happen to be exactly the same people who sent us to Vietnam. We certainly, obviously, would never support this country if we felt it were wrong. We just feel we need a rational way out of Vietnam.

Elsewhere, of course, O'Neill pointed out that Kerry's advocacy of the "Paris plan" was an irrational full retreat, and a blatant capitulation to a communist takeover of South Vietnam. Stunningly, Kerry later in the discussion went a long ways toward acknowledging this:

The bigger issue at hand is the question, literally, of how the United States is going to get out of Vietnam now. And I have said again and again this evening that we can set a date, that we can bring the prisoners home.

But the point is I think this administration is still seeking some kind of victory. It is still committed to the idea, totally, of a non-communist regime [in South Vietnam], and I think that is unrealistic in terms of the political forces that are in play in South Vietnam, in fact in all of South East Asia. And we have learned, if we haven't learned anything by now, that we simply cannot impose a settlement ourselves.

I just don't understand how they believe, or how this other group believes, that the Vietnamese are going to succeed in doing with 50,000 Americans what they haven't been able to do with 500,000 Americans. I'd like that explained.

O'Neill responded effectively on several counts, noting that his group (and the Nixon administration) was not seeking a military solution but a negotiated one, that it was Kerry's friends that had escalated to hundreds of thousands of troops, and that the South Vietnamese military had not been properly equipped, cultivated or used as a military force until (Nixon's) program of Vietnamization beginning in '68, that this was what allowed the American forces to be reduced, and so on.

Kerry is being disingenuous with language here, but is remarkably upfront for all that. His position was not merely against seeking "victory," it was against negotiating a rational peace at all. Kerry was claiming here that the only way we could get the POWs back, and the only option we had period, was to agree to the demands of the South Vietnamese insurgents (who even wanted us to topple the South Vietnamese government for them!) without substantive negotiation. He didn't just want us to leave without a (further) fight, he wanted us to leave without even a verbal argument!

There is terrific material for Republican political ads throughout this, but the above has especially obvious applications to the present day.

277 posted on 03/28/2004 8:45:10 PM PST by Stultis
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To: alnick
That is interesting. Another note: Kerry once joked- at one of those press dinner/roasts, about "if Bush was assassinated, then..." or some such thing. Maybe someone else can recall the comment. A radio commentator was talking about it when t he democrats went ape over Bush's joke about WMD.
278 posted on 03/28/2004 8:50:08 PM PST by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge.)
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To: Stultis
Btw, although Kerry credits Carl Shurz (which he pronounced as "Shirts," with a "t") he didn't give credit to G.K. Chesterton:
'My country, right or wrong' is a thing no patriot would ever think of saying except in a desperate case. It is like saying 'My mother, drunk or sober.'

He also left out the last part of the Schurz quote (as leftists always do) "but always: my country".

Just for completeness, the original version is from the naval hero Stephen Decatur (1816):

Our Country! In her intercourse with foreign nations may she always be in the right, but our country, right or wrong.

Which was critiqued as follows by John Quincy Adams shortly thereafter, and long before Shurz:

I can never join with my voice in the toast which I see in the papers attributed to one of our gallant naval heroes. I cannot ask of heaven success, even for my country, in a cause where she should be in the wrong. Fiat justitia, pereat coelum ["Let justice be done though heaven should fall" - anonymous, circa 43 B.C.]. My toast would be, may our country always be successful, but whether successful or otherwise, always right.

279 posted on 03/28/2004 9:02:10 PM PST by Stultis
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To: Stultis
Does Kerry shave his unibrow?
280 posted on 03/28/2004 9:07:50 PM PST by Conservative til I die
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