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To: KeyLargo

I think she and Jane Fonda are now in the same category.


17 posted on 11/21/2012 7:18:32 AM PST by JABit (Another retired vet.)
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To: JABit

Bury them in the same plot, close to a 7-11...


26 posted on 11/21/2012 7:20:57 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks (In the game of life, there are no betting limits)
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To: JABit

Yesterday I was watching The Five on FOX and the fat fu_k Bob Beckel said that Jane Fonda should not be judged by “just a one-time photo.”

Many of us vets know the real story of how Jane Fonda committed multiple acts of Treason which caused the deaths of American POWs.

A good book written by Mark Holzer laying out the facts of the multiple counts of Treason commited by that bi_tch can be found here:

“Aid And Comfort”: Jane Fonda In North Vietnam”

By: Henry Mark Holzer & Erika Holzer
Price: $39.95
Foreword by Col. George “Bud” Day
Format: Hardback
(7 x 10)
Pages: 216
ISBN: 0-7864-1247-X
Publication Date: 2002

Jane Fonda’s visit to Hanoi in July 1972 and her pro–North Vietnamese, anti–American conduct, especially her pose with an anti-aircraft gun used to shoot down American planes and her propaganda broadcasts directed toward American troops, angered many Americans. In their eyes, she was guilty of treason, but she was never charged by the American legal system. Instead, she has made millions, been the recipient of countless awards, and remained an honored American icon.

This work investigates Fonda’s activities in North Vietnam and argues that she could have been indicted for treason, that there would have been enough evidence to take the case to a jury, that she could have been convicted, and that a conviction probably would have been upheld on appeal. It also considers Fonda’s early life and the effect it had on her behavior and beliefs in her later years, her audience of American pows who were forced by the Vietnamese to listen to her broadcasts condemning them as war criminals, her arrival in Vietnam and how it was viewed by American servicemen and civilians, the crime of treason throughout history, and the only Congressional inquiry into her actions, which resulted in the government’s decision to take no legal action against her. Texts of Fonda’s radio broadcasts to American servicemen comprise the appendix.

Henry Mark Holzer is professor emeritus at Brooklyn Law School. Erika Holzer is a lawyer, novelist and essayist.

http://www.henrymarkholzer.com/books.html


33 posted on 11/21/2012 7:29:09 AM PST by KeyLargo
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