Posted on 08/28/2012 6:20:39 AM PDT by shortstop
When the names Romney and Obama have moldered into meaninglessness, school children will still learn the name of Armstrong and be inspired by what he did. His will be one of the greatest names of our era, one of the greatest men to ever live.
Neal or Lance?.........
I would include Lewis & Clark in that pantheon as well.
Why doesn’t the Republicans have a memorial service for the guy. They have the microphone for the next three days. Use it for some good. There are two stories hogging up the airwaves....the storm and the GOP. Nothing else is going on.
Yesterday, the president ordered the America flags at federal properties to be flown at half- staff on Friday, the day Neil A. Armstrong is buried.
I told everyone that Armstrong would get his flag day at 1/2 staff. Nobody believed me but I knew it 100 percent. Right again. Someday you guys will at least believe 1/2 what I say.
I disagree with this article. I’ve done google searches on his death and followed twitter. I was amazed at even the young celebrities who chimed in on his death.
Even the BBC had shows talking about him and all over the world. Armstrong wouldn’t want any fanfare at all.He would not want a state funeral. He truly felt he was doing his job, doing what he loved and was just fortunate to be at the right place at the right time.
Just because CBS NBC or ABC doesn’t do a big story doesn’t mean anything. They are irrelevant.
Funny thing about Armstrong...He’d probably look at all this fuss and say “nahhhhhhh”...
But he’d say it in a way that could be written down for the ages to learn from...
There was economy of effort in the things he said and did in his lifetime, and that is a lesson in and of itself...
IIRC, you could go back and look at the medical telemetry and when the 1200 series of alerts came from HOUSTON to the Eagle about those concerns...
I believe his heartrate stayed normal...I stand to be corrected,but that is what I remember of a little side story years ago...
But hey...He was not alone in that effort either...There was another guy there in that lander...And he lost a pretty good friend there...
Good question.
The death of Neil Armstrong wasn’t ignored. The second he died, and for some time thereafter, this was the lead story on every newsbreak, on every tv screen news crawler, etc. I heard it, I saw it, it was dominant.
What happened is that people have gone on from there in a somewhat understated way, not like Kennedy, King, etc being assassinated. The circumstances of Armstrong’s death at 82, from heart disease, wasn’t shocking. He had lived as long as his body was able, so he passed from this life, and his enormous achievement was noted.
Beyond that, where would you go? Neil Armstrong was very understated and hated personal publicity. The man would not want anything more than what he received. He was PAINFULLy against anything more than that in life, and no doubt, in death.
In point of fact, I have always been astounded by how very little homage was given to the Mercury and Apollo astronauts. I would guess that 99% of Americans could have run into Alan Shepard or Neil Armstrong at the grocery store, and never recognized them. 50% of Americans alive today probably couldn't even tell you who they were, if provided the name.
He hates white boys and their achievements.
I am not being facetious.
Nothing is allowed now unless it includes females and minorities.
Greatness is done, and will be eradicated from history; look at Columbus for object lesson #1.
Just like the arch-bureaucrats want it.
Lewis and Clark were American heroes but they are scarcely known anywhere else.
Actually Armstrong was probably the only legitimate first. The Vikings, at a minimum, preceded Columbus and Magellan died prior to circling the globe.
Other than another excuse to put his ugly face in a picture, the kenyan usurper has yet to figure out how to capitalize on a True American Hero who was humble. Therefore, ignoring him so that Hussein remains the center of attention, is the strategy.
“Neal or Lance?.........”
...haf mast for losing his Tour de France trophies? In an Obama world, it makes sense.
He was a humble man.
He did not crave the limelights or the fortune and fame.
He is remembered by those he inspired and will always do so...........
In our celeb-ri-world it sure would...........
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