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The True Story of The Patton Prayer
The Patton Society ^ | 6 October 1971 | Msgr. James H. O'Neill

Posted on 07/19/2004 5:04:30 PM PDT by flowerjoyfun

The True Story of The Patton Prayer
by Msgr. James H. O'Neill
(From the Review of the News 6 October 1971)

Many conflicting and some untrue stories have been printed about General George S. Patton and the Third Army Prayer. Some have had the tinge of blasphemy and disrespect for the Deity. Even in "War As I Knew It" by General Patton, the footnote on the Prayer by Colonel Paul D. Harkins, Patton's Deputy Chief of Staff, while containing the elements of a funny story about the General and his Chaplain, is not the true account of the prayer Incident or its sequence.
As the Chief Chaplain of the Third Army throughout the five campaigns on the Staff of General Patton, I should have some knowledge of the event because at the direction of General Patton I composed the now world famous Prayer, and wrote Training Letter No. 5, which constitutes an integral, but untold part, of the prayer story. These Incidents, narrated in sequence, should serve to enhance the memory of the man himself, and cause him to be enshrined by generations to come as one of the greatest of our soldiers. He had all the traits of military leadership, fortified by genuine trust in God, intense love of country, and high faith In the American soldier.
He had no use for half-measures. He wrote this line a few days before his death: "Anyone in any walk of life who is content with mediocrity is untrue to himself and to American tradition." He was true to the principles of his religion, Episcopalian, and was regular in Church attendance and practices, unless duty made his presence Impossible.
The incident of the now famous Patton Prayer commenced with a telephone call to the Third Army Chaplain on the morning of December 8, 1944, when the Third Army Headquarters were located in the Caserne Molifor in Nancy, France: "This is General Patton; do you have a good prayer for weather? We must do something about those rains if we are to win the war." My reply was that I know where to look for such a prayer, that I would locate, and report within the hour. As I hung up the telephone receiver, about eleven in the morning, I looked out on the steadily falling rain, "immoderate" I would call it -- the same rain that had plagued Patton's Army throughout the Moselle and Saar Campaigns from September until now, December 8. The few prayer books at hand contained no formal prayer on weather that might prove acceptable to the Army Commander. Keeping his immediate objective in mind, I typed an original and an improved copy on a 5" x 3" filing card:
Almighty and most merciful Father, we humbly beseech Thee, of Thy great goodness, to restrain these immoderate rains with which we have had to contend. Grant us fair weather for Battle. Graciously hearken to us as soldiers who call upon Thee that, armed with Thy power, we may advance from victory to victory, and crush the oppression and wickedness of our enemies and establish Thy justice among men and nations.
I pondered the question, What use would General Patton make of the prayer? Surely not for private devotion. If he intended it for circulation to chaplains or others, with Christmas not far removed, it might he proper to type the Army Commander's Christmas Greetings on the reverse side. This would please the recipient, and anything that pleased the men I knew would please him:
To each officer and soldier in the Third United States Army, I Wish a Merry Christmas. I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty, and skill in battle. We march in our might to complete victory. May God's blessings rest upon each of you on this Christmas Day. G.S. Patton, Jr, Lieutenant General, Commanding, Third United States Army.
This done, I donned my heavy trench coat, crossed the quadrangle of the old French military barracks, and reported to General Patton. He read the prayer copy, returned it to me with a very casual directive, "Have 250,000 copies printed and see to it that every man in the Third Army gets one." The size of the order amazed me; this was certainly doing something about the weather in a big way. But I said nothing but the usual, "Very well, Sir!" Recovering, I invited his attention to the reverse side containing the Christmas Greeting, with his name and rank typed. "Very good," he said, with a smile of approval. "If the General would sign the card, it would add a personal touch that I am sure the men would like." He took his place at his desk, signed the card, returned it to me and then Said: "Chaplain, sit down for a moment; I want to talk to you about this business of prayer." He rubbed his face in his hands, was silent for a moment, then rose and walked over to the high window, and stood there with his back toward me as he looked out on the falling rain. As usual, he was dressed stunningly, and his six-foot-two powerfully built physique made an unforgettable silhouette against the great window. The General Patton I saw there was the Army Commander to whom the welfare of the men under him was a matter of Personal responsibility . Even in the heat of combat he could take time out to direct new methods to prevent trench feet, to see to it that dry socks went forward daily with the rations to troops on the line, to kneel in the mud administering morphine and caring for a wounded soldier until the ambulance Came. What was coming now?
" Chaplain, how much praying is being done in the Third Army?" was his question. I parried: "Does the General mean by chaplains, or by the men?" "By everybody," he replied. To this I countered: "I am afraid to admit it, but I do not believe that much praying is going on. When there Is fighting, everyone prays, but now with this constant rain -- when things are quiet, dangerously quiet, men just sit and wait for things to happen. Prayer out here is difficult. Both chaplains and men are removed from a special building with a steeple. Prayer to most of them is a formal, ritualized affair, involving special posture and a liturgical setting. I do not believe that much praying is being done."
The General left the window, and again seated himself at his desk, leaned back in his swivel chair, toying with a long lead pencil between his index fingers.
Chaplain, I am a strong believer in Prayer. There are three ways that men get what they want; by planning, by working, and by Praying. Any great military operation takes careful planning, or thinking. Then you must have well-trained troops to carry it out: that's working. But between the plan and the operation there is always an unknown. That unknown spells defeat or victory, success or failure. It is the reaction of the actors to the ordeal when it actually comes. Some people call that getting the breaks; I call it God. God has His part, or margin in everything, That's where prayer comes in. Up to now, in the Third Army, God has been very good to us. We have never retreated; we have suffered no defeats, no famine, no epidemics. This is because a lot of people back home are praying for us. We were lucky in Africa, in Sicily, and in Italy. Simply because people prayed. But we have to pray for ourselves, too. A good soldier is not made merely by making him think and work. There is something in every soldier that goes deeper than thinking or working--it's his "guts." It is something that he has built in there: it is a world of truth and power that is higher than himself. Great living is not all output of thought and work. A man has to have intake as well. I don't know what you it, but I call it Religion, Prayer, or God.
He talked about Gideon in the Bible, said that men should pray no matter where they were, in church or out of it, that if they did not pray, sooner or later they would "crack up." To all this I commented agreement, that one of the major training objectives of my office was to help soldiers recover and make their lives effective in this third realm, prayer. It would do no harm to re-impress this training on chaplains. We had about 486 chaplains in the Third Army at that time, representing 32 denominations. Once the Third Army had become operational, my mode of contact with the chaplains had been chiefly through Training Letters issued from time to time to the Chaplains in the four corps and the 22 to 26 divisions comprising the Third Army. Each treated of a variety of subjects of corrective or training value to a chaplain working with troops in the field. [Patton continued:]
I wish you would put out a Training Letter on this subject of Prayer to all the chaplains; write about nothing else, just the importance of prayer. Let me see it before you send it. We've got to get not only the chaplains but every man in the Third Army to pray. We must ask God to stop these rains. These rains are that margin that hold defeat or victory. If we all pray, it will be like what Dr. Carrel said [the allusion was to a press quote some days previously when Dr. Alexis Carrel, one of the foremost scientists, described prayer "as one of the most powerful forms of energy man can generate"], it will be like plugging in on a current whose source is in Heaven. I believe that prayer completes that circuit. It is power.
With that the General arose from his chair, a sign that the interview was ended. I returned to my field desk, typed Training Letter No. 5 while the "copy" was "hot," touching on some or all of the General's reverie on Prayer, and after staff processing, presented it to General Patton on the next day. The General read it and without change directed that it be circulated not only to the 486 chaplains, but to every organization commander down to and including the regimental level. Three thousand two hundred copies were distributed to every unit in the Third Army over my signature as Third Army Chaplain. Strictly speaking, it was the Army Commander's letter, not mine. Due to the fact that the order came directly from General Patton, distribution was completed on December 11 and 12 in advance of its date line, December 14, 1944. Titled "Training Letter No. 5," with the salutary "Chaplains of the Third Army," the letter continued: "At this stage of the operations I would call upon the chaplains and the men of the Third United States Army to focus their attention on the importance of prayer.
" Our glorious march from the Normandy Beach across France to where we stand, before and beyond the Siegfried Line, with the wreckage of the German Army behind us should convince the most skeptical soldier that God has ridden with our banner. Pestilence and famine have not touched us. We have continued in unity of purpose. We have had no quitters; and our leadership has been masterful. The Third Army has no roster of Retreats. None of Defeats. We have no memory of a lost battle to hand on to our children from this great campaign.
" But we are not stopping at the Siegfried Line. Tough days may be ahead of us before we eat our rations in the Chancellery of the Deutsches Reich.
" As chaplains it is our business to pray. We preach its importance. We urge its practice. But the time is now to intensify our faith in prayer, not alone with ourselves, but with every believing man, Protestant, Catholic, Jew, or Christian in the ranks of the Third United States Army.
" Those who pray do more for the world than those who fight; and if the world goes from bad to worse, it is because there are more battles than prayers. 'Hands lifted up,' said Bosuet, 'smash more battalions than hands that strike.' Gideon of Bible fame was least in his father's house. He came from Israel's smallest tribe. But he was a mighty man of valor. His strength lay not in his military might, but in his recognition of God's proper claims upon his life. He reduced his Army from thirty-two thousand to three hundred men lest the people of Israel would think that their valor had saved them. We have no intention to reduce our vast striking force. But we must urge, instruct, and indoctrinate every fighting man to pray as well as fight. In Gideon's day, and in our own, spiritually alert minorities carry the burdens and bring the victories.
" Urge all of your men to pray, not alone in church, but everywhere. Pray when driving. Pray when fighting. Pray alone. Pray with others. Pray by night and pray by day. Pray for the cessation of immoderate rains, for good weather for Battle. Pray for the defeat of our wicked enemy whose banner is injustice and whose good is oppression. Pray for victory. Pray for our Army, and Pray for Peace.
" We must march together, all out for God. The soldier who 'cracks up' does not need sympathy or comfort as much as he needs strength. We are not trying to make the best of these days. It is our job to make the most of them. Now is not the time to follow God from 'afar off.' This Army needs the assurance and the faith that God is with us. With prayer, we cannot fail.
" Be assured that this message on prayer has the approval, the encouragement, and the enthusiastic support of the Third United States Army Commander.
" With every good wish to each of you for a very Happy Christmas, and my personal congratulations for your splendid and courageous work since landing on the beach, I am," etc., etc., signed The Third Army Commander.
The timing of the Prayer story is important: let us rearrange the dates: the "Prayer Conference" with General Patton was 8 December; the 664th Engineer Topographical Company, at the order of Colonel David H. Tulley, C.E., Assistant to the Third Army Engineer, working night and day reproduced 250,000 copies of the Prayer Card; the Adjutant General, Colonel Robert S. Cummings, supervised the distribution of both the Prayer Cards and Training Letter No. 5 to reach the troops by December 12-14. The breakthrough was on December 16 in the First Army Zone when the Germans crept out of the Schnee Eifel Forest in the midst of heavy rains, thick fogs, and swirling ground mists that muffled sound, blotted out the sun, and reduced visibility to a few yards. The few divisions on the Luxembourg frontier were surprised and brushed aside. They found it hard to fight an enemy they could neither see nor hear. For three days it looked to the jubilant Nazis as if their desperate gamble would succeed. They had achieved compete surprise. Their Sixth Panzer Army, rejuvenated in secret after its debacle in France, seared through the Ardennes like a hot knife through butter. The First Army's VIII Corps was holding this area with three infantry divisions (one of them new and in the line only a few days) thinly disposed over an 88-mile front and with one armored division far to the rear, in reserve. The VIII Corps had been in the sector for months. It was considered a semi-rest area and outside of a little patrolling was wholly an inactive position.
When the blow struck the VIII Corps fought with imperishable heroism. The Germans were slowed down but the Corps was too shattered to stop them with its remnants. Meanwhile, to the north, the Fifth Panzer Army was slugging through another powerful prong along the vulnerable boundary between the VIII and VI Corps. Had the bad weather continued there is no telling how far the Germans might have advanced. On the 19th of December, the Third Army turned from East to North to meet the attack. As General Patton rushed his divisions north from the Saar Valley to the relief of the beleaguered Bastogne, the prayer was answered. On December 20, to the consternation of the Germans and the delight of the American forecasters who were equally surprised at the turn-about-the rains and the fogs ceased. For the better part of a week came bright clear skies and perfect flying weather. Our planes came over by tens, hundreds, and thousands. They knocked out hundreds of tanks, killed thousands of enemy troops in the Bastogne salient, and harried the enemy as he valiantly tried to bring up reinforcements. The 101st Airborne, with the 4th, 9th, and 10th Armored Divisions, which saved Bastogne, and other divisions which assisted so valiantly in driving the Germans home, will testify to the great support rendered by our air forces. General Patton prayed for fair weather for Battle. He got it.
It was late in January of 1945 when I saw the Army Commander again. This was in the city of Luxembourg. He stood directly in front of me, smiled: "Well, Padre, our prayers worked. I knew they would." Then he cracked me on the side of my steel helmet with his riding crop. That was his way of saying, "Well done."
(This article appeared as a government document in 1950. At the time it appeared in the Review of the News, Msgr. O'Neill was a retired Brigadier General living in Pueblo, Colorado.)


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 3rdarmy; bastogne; generalgeorgepatton; generalpatton; georgepatton; georgespatton; jameshoneill; luxembourg; nazis; patton; pattonsprayer; pattonsweatherprayer; prayer; reincarnation; thirdarmy; weatherprayer; worldwareleven; zionist
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To: Pharmboy
He seems to have been well known for his Jew hatred.

As were a great number of "devout Christians" of Patton's day. I never understood the hatred of Jews "as killers of Christ", but it was very real and very widespread. That topic was addressed ad infinitum in the Passion of the Christ threads.

41 posted on 07/22/2004 10:11:42 AM PDT by Cloud William (The Second Amendment is the Statute of Liberty! - Col. Jeff Cooper)
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To: theDentist
theDentist wrote ~ "I'd heard he was anti-semetic (though he was enraged when he heard of the death camps and the furnaces). I'd be happy to be shown wrong."

Beau wrote ~ Instead of asking us to prove an unfounded sweeping general accusation which you have just thrown out without offering a bit of proof, let alone source, you should prove your accusation first ~ then we might deal with a defense.

Saying that you just 'heard it somewhere' makes you sound like some kind hateful person yourself and not a rational soul who is interested in the facts.

Source your accusation; and because it is so dire source it from three different respectable sources.

General Patton's accomplishments, and his family's, are too great and too real to be left besmirched by the likes of your rumor mongering. ~ Beau

theDentist spews ~ Stick it Beau. I've been reading about Patton for 30+ years. I don't make a notation of every book, every article, every documentary, every movie, every radio discussion I ever experienced. Not good enough for you? Too damn bad. If it's such a twist in your knickers, YOU do the research. But for 1 reference, read "General Patton: A Soldier's Life" where it was stated in no uncertain terms.
Try Google, and then whine to all those various sources.

Beau writes ~ Typical girlie man: deal with any disagreement with a vicious assault of name calling, deny the validity of facts, then throw in another personal attack against the one who dares to question the girlie man.

You made the assertion that Patton hated Jews; you prove it. Pulling something out of your pants and tossing it around, does not make it anything than what was to begin with, a big giant pile of waste. If you want to make such a statement give me the edition, and the page number, preferable a direct html link. Otherwise keep your rumor mongering pie hole shut.

42 posted on 07/22/2004 11:06:23 AM PDT by Beau Schott (Mother nature has a way of taking care of the weak... you hesitate and the lion eats you.)
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To: Beau Schott
Otherwise keep your rumor mongering pie hole shut.

Say, have you heard that Patton hated Jews?

43 posted on 07/22/2004 11:14:23 AM PDT by Lazamataz ("Stay well - Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown" -- harpseal)
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To: Pharmboy
Pharmboy ~ "There are two errors in this assumption. First, when we remove an individual German we punish an individual German, while the punishment is -- not intended for the individual but for the race, Furthermore, it is against my Anglo-Saxon conscience to remove a person from a house, which is a punishment, without due process of law. In the second place, Harrison and his ilk believe that the Displaced Person is a human being, which he is not, and this applies particularly to the Jews, who are lower than animals."

Beau ~ Thanks Pharmboy for the enlightenment, although the previous stuff in this bit that you posted was still hearsay and innuendo quoted from others; this is a direct quote from Patton's own diaries you say, and is damming in the extreme, if true.

Though I do not have access to a copy of Patton's diaries for the sake of the peace, I'll leave it at this. Be well. ~ Beau
44 posted on 07/22/2004 11:21:52 AM PDT by Beau Schott (Mother nature has a way of taking care of the weak... you hesitate and the lion eats you.)
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To: Beau Schott
deal with any disagreement with a vicious assault of name calling,
Pot Kettle Black, Beau.

3 sources to start with, you whiny liberal.

http://www.imaginer.ch/courrier/reportages/Shoah/en/histoire.html
Patton the Anti-Semite
... The famous General George S. Patton went even further. In his diary he castigated those who "think that the displaced person is a human being, which he isn't, and this applies especially to the Jews, who are inferior to animals".

General Patton: A Soldier's Life
...Patton himself was a lifelong anti-Semite, his attitudes inherited from his patrician father; even after the liberation of the Nazi death camps he would insist that Jews “are lower than animals.”

The "Jewish Threat": Anti-Semitic Politics of the U.S. Army - Joseph Bendersky
Contains several examples about prominent generals such as George Patton--described as a crude anti-Semite--as well as Marshall and Eisenhower.

You're on your own from here, Hillary.

45 posted on 07/22/2004 12:08:26 PM PDT by theDentist ("John Kerry changes positions more often than a Nevada prostitute.")
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To: Lazamataz

I'd heard that.


46 posted on 07/22/2004 12:34:54 PM PDT by theDentist ("John Kerry changes positions more often than a Nevada prostitute.")
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To: Beau Schott
Hello Beau!

I and others have cited some 6 sources of Patton and Anti-Semitism, you wanted 3. And in one of them, you state "... this is a direct quote from Patton's own diaries you say, and is damming in the extreme, if true." SO as I see it, you can say oops and bury the hatchet, or you can continue to act like a liberal.

47 posted on 07/22/2004 5:58:28 PM PDT by theDentist ("John Kerry changes positions more often than a Nevada prostitute.")
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To: theDentist

As I have read ‘the dentist’s’ exchange: what Beau was demanding was your sources before you started to smirk. Why are you calling beau a liberal for demanding your sources?

‘the dentist’, not Beau, has done exactly what the liberals are famous for: name-calling and making the argument personal instead of documenting the facts and using them to build something better.


48 posted on 07/27/2004 7:00:29 PM PDT by daisymeme (Money often costs too much, when we make money to spend time.)
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To: VadeRetro; PatrickHenry
it will be like what Dr. Carrel said [the allusion was to a press quote some days previously when Dr. Alexis Carrel, one of the foremost scientists, described prayer "as one of the most powerful forms of energy man can generate"],

ping

49 posted on 07/27/2004 7:10:10 PM PDT by Tribune7
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To: Alamo-Girl; betty boop

ping


50 posted on 07/27/2004 7:10:38 PM PDT by Tribune7
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To: Temple Owl

ping


51 posted on 07/27/2004 7:11:46 PM PDT by Tribune7
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To: daisymeme
Try reading again, dear daisy.

First off, I am a big fan of the General's. I posted his wonderful poem, "Through a Glass, Darkly" (post #3). Someone else pointed out the allegations of anti-semitism (post #28). I merely agreed that it was a disappointment (#29). Beau got into that particular thread later (#38), snottily saying we needed to provide sources (at least 3 in fact) else we were rumor mongering.

I replied (rashly I suppose). We provided sources. 6 or 7 in fact, including Patton's own journals.

Beau, in #42 then writes "Typical girlie man: deal with any disagreement with a vicious assault of name calling, deny the validity of facts, then throw in another personal attack against the one who dares to question the girlie man."

BTW, Do you see the irony there? He starts with name-calling, denies the validity of the story, then again throws in a name-calling personal attack. Pot kettle black.

Later, in post 43 he admits that he is wrong to 1 person, pharmboy, though he has been snotty to several more than that. If it were me, I'd have made sure everyone I argued with was copied on that one. But no, he hadn't the testicular fortitude to do that.

You can read it any way you wish, but I defended my posting, provided the sources he demanded (as did others), and was no tthe first to get snotty. But he wanted to fight in the swill, I obliged to get down there with him, because in the long run of life, it matters not.

Ultimately, I was (sadly) shown to be right, and he didn't apologize as a gentleman would. Anything else, daisy?

52 posted on 07/27/2004 7:41:22 PM PDT by theDentist ("John Kerry changes positions more often than a Nevada prostitute.")
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To: Tribune7; Alamo-Girl; marron
Marvelous, Tribune! Drawing the lesson, now seems to be a really good time to pray, and pray often....

I mean, we are not only beset by terrorists 24/7, and thus there is a (just) war going on; but this is also a presidential election year.

I thought last night, former president Bill Clinton excelled and astounded at the fine art of spinning "world-class fiction." It seemed the glories of his rhetoric were designed to disguise the weakness of his logic; notwithstanding, his conclusions seemed to have elicited a wildly intoxicated resonance in that crowd, wildly glad to give assent to the completely unintelligible....

One of the things I pray for is that folks be able to tell the difference between fiction (illusion) and reality these days.

Thanks for the ping, T7!

53 posted on 07/27/2004 7:57:51 PM PDT by betty boop
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To: flowerjoyfun

OK, call me a sucker that will bump any thread heading by "The Patton Society".


54 posted on 07/27/2004 8:00:07 PM PDT by VOA
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To: flowerjoyfun

"He was true to the principles of his religion, Episcopalian, and was regular in Church attendance and practices, unless duty made his presence Impossible. "

Hmmmm ... then why did he have an affair with his niece? thankfully she didn't get pregnant.

Odd, he could hardly make a statement without swearing ... in those days Episcopalians were conservative. Today they are mostly misguided liberals.


55 posted on 07/27/2004 8:05:00 PM PDT by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: Tribune7

Thanks for the ping!


56 posted on 07/27/2004 8:44:33 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl

:-)


57 posted on 07/27/2004 8:45:53 PM PDT by Tribune7
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To: betty boop
One of the things I pray for is that folks be able to tell the difference between fiction (illusion) and reality these days.

Amen! Obama's speech tonight had the same quality of sounding kind but not adding up.

58 posted on 07/27/2004 8:54:06 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl; betty boop
Obama's speech tonight had the same quality of sounding kind but not adding up.

I was impressed with Obama. Assuming he is sincere, my impression was that (1) he would have made a good Republican, (2) if the Democratic Party were made up of people like him, I wouldn't be so frightened of a Dem victory at the polls. But the Dem Party isn't made up of people like him, which means either he must support things that will violate his conscience, or leave the party, or he must work to reform the DNC.

The crowd was responding enthusiastically to what was essentially a Republican message, which means that maybe a few Obama's could redeem that party. I won't be holding my breath, though. I fear they will reform him before he reforms them.

59 posted on 07/28/2004 9:15:28 AM PDT by marron
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To: marron
Thank you so much for your excellent analysis of Obama! Indeed, his message sounded a lot like Condi Rice's. I hope he is sincere.
60 posted on 07/28/2004 9:41:51 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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