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Transatlantic slave-route rower rescued after springing a leak
AFP ^
| Sun May 7
| AFP
Posted on 05/07/2006 11:26:44 PM PDT by ConservativeMind
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To: ConservativeMind
"Thanks for all the donations guys. I think I'll just fly home instead."
2
posted on
05/07/2006 11:30:38 PM PDT
by
Jotmo
("Voon", said the mattress.)
To: ConservativeMind
Can anyone say "complete dingbat"?
I would hate to have to rely on the Senegalese Navy for a rescue, especially after only an hour of rowing.
3
posted on
05/07/2006 11:42:52 PM PDT
by
CurlyDave
To: ConservativeMind
hmmm..reminds me of that world sailborder from France who left his girlfriend at the beach on the Kali to Hawaii leg and adios....never seen again.
Extreme sailing...sometimes extremely dumb
4
posted on
05/07/2006 11:43:51 PM PDT
by
wardaddy
(I am buying Shelby Steele's new book: White Guilt)
To: ConservativeMind
Victor even has had an opportunity to meet the Pope. He is quite the celebrity.

He is an avid rower and his plans to row across the Atlantic while seeming a bit extravagant as far as good sense is not something I will knock.
There is no excuse for slavery.
But I also think if Victor were to put his rowing talents to use in expanding anti slavery awareness he should highlight the plight of Africans and others that even today are bound as slaves. The United States has solved this problem.
5
posted on
05/07/2006 11:45:50 PM PDT
by
A message
To: ConservativeMind; aculeus; dighton; martin_fierro
Mooney said before setting off that his voyage aimed to raise awareness of his ancestors, slaves who died during the transatlantic slave trade... If his ancestors didn't make it, what's he doing here? ;-)
6
posted on
05/07/2006 11:48:12 PM PDT
by
Thinkin' Gal
(As it was in the days of NO...)
To: ConservativeMind
I've been across both the Atlantic and the Pacific by ship.
The ocean is VERY LARGE, VERY DEEP AND VERY LONELY OUT IN THE MIDDLE OF IT.
You can disappear and no one will hear or see you ever again. You are smaller than a mere spec in the middle of the oceans
Stay home or take a very large boat.
7
posted on
05/07/2006 11:50:35 PM PDT
by
garyhope
To: ConservativeMind
Should have used a Spanish galleon to make the experience more accurate.
To: ConservativeMind
Should have used a Spanish galleon to make the experience more accurate. Much more seaworthy, too.
To: ConservativeMind
Leaving aside the comic aspects, the PC causes, etc., I am just sick of people staging their big adventures as something that other people should contribute to.
My sucker of a local TV station featured a "news item" the other day about some dingbats going on a round the world bicycle trek for some cause de jour.
Big adventures might be fun....but you might as well pee up a rope as to try and get me to donate. And how they keeping hooking media with these gimicks is a hoot.
10
posted on
05/08/2006 12:25:07 AM PDT
by
LK44-40
To: ConservativeMind
He should be careful. I hear that there are still sharks who congregate along these old routes out of a instinctive memory of all the slaves who were thrown overboard back in the days of the slave trade*.
11
posted on
05/08/2006 3:46:42 AM PDT
by
bondjamesbond
(*Supposedly serious academics in the field of African American studies have held this to be true!)
To: ConservativeMind
He sank in the first hour?
To: ConservativeMind; Thinkin' Gal
The Senegalese navy received a distress call from Mooney about an hour into his journey Dude, you're never gonna make The National Geographic Channel at that rate.
To: ConservativeMind
To: A message
anti slavery awareness he should highlight the plight of Africans and others that even today are bound as slaves. And failing that, there's that Darfur thing.
Stuff going on NOW.
To: bondjamesbond
He should be careful. I hear that there are still sharks who congregate along these old routes out of a instinctive memory of all the slaves who were thrown overboard back in the days of the slave trade
So says Major Owens.
To: garyhope
I've been across both the Atlantic and the Pacific by ship. The ocean is VERY LARGE, VERY DEEP AND VERY LONELY OUT IN THE MIDDLE OF IT. You can disappear and no one will hear or see you ever again. You are smaller than a mere spec in the middle of the oceans Stay home or take a very large boat.Four of us crossed the Atlantic on a 42-foot sailboat 12 years ago. It is indeed a humbling experience. One of our crew refused to wear his harness when he was on watch alone, so we did a little demonstration for him. We tossed a large, hollowed out melon rind (about the size of his head) into the water in broad daylight and told him to watch it for as long as he could. He lost it after about two minutes.
He wore his harness after that.
17
posted on
05/08/2006 5:01:25 AM PDT
by
SlowBoat407
(A living insult to Islam since 1959.)
To: bondjamesbond
18
posted on
05/08/2006 5:04:10 AM PDT
by
HuntsvilleTxVeteran
("Remember the Alamo, Goliad and WACO, It is Time for a new San Jacinto")
To: PBRSTREETGANG
LOL!
19
posted on
05/08/2006 5:09:27 AM PDT
by
stevio
(Red-Blooded Crunchy Con, American Male (NRA))
To: ConservativeMind
He claimed he tried to row the Atlantic in a boat that hadn't been repaired? Either he's the world's dumbest person, or else this whole thing was a publicity-seeking fraud from day one.
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