A friend of mine called me tonight. He had seen footage of Kerry today in I-dee-ho. He said that Kerry's body language is that of someone who is under a tremendous amount of stress.
Go here, http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1192211/posts , and tell me if my friend wasn't right. This is a very troubled man (the confusion he is experiencing is because he is feeling as though he should be bothered by his conscience but, being in cognitive dissonance and all that other new age crap, he's incapable and probably wants it all to go away)and it is up to us to provide therapy and healing for him.
The truth shall make him well.
Let's get him, Freepers! I mean help him. Hell! You know what I mean.
-- snip --
To: Jenya
1. Kerry was stationed on the coast. Not mid-Mekong river.
2. Kerry' unit's patrol area was as close as 50 miles to the border. By air, in a straight line. Rivers aren't straight, by river distance he was more like 100 miles.
3. A different type of boat was used further up river, PBRs. Fiberglass hulled, water jet drive. Smaller.
4. Kerry was in command for only a few weeks. Why would the CIA, or Special Forces use or trust a newbie? And what commander would assign a new doofus like Kerry with such a task? No one, and no one did.
5. Such a insertion mission would, at a minimum, require a day of planning, a day of running fast up river, crossing and insertion at night, a day running back down river, and I would imagine a day for rest and refit. Where is the week Kerry did this? He was only running boats for a total of like 12-13 weeks. Furthermore he said he did this multiple times. So he needs multiple weeks.
6. What SF and or Seal unit did he work with? I'm sure they would be glad to confirm Kerrys lie, oops, missions.
Let's get him, Freepers! I mean help him. Hell! You know what I mean.
I thought that after Gore acknowledged he lost in 2000, for a while at least, he seemed a lot more relaxed.
As opposed to on the campaign trail, especially at the debate podium, where he seemed to hold his body in weird and subtly shifting poses. Wilhelm Reich's theory of psycho/muscular "body armor" came to mind.