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To: kcvl
This is the same John Hurley who claimed that he himself witnessed atrocities in Vietnam, as quoted in "Tour of Duty." When called on it by his fellow veterans, he was forced to retract his claims, and Brinkley plans to remove his false remarks from the next edition.

What was that again about "outright lies," Mr. Hurley?

58 posted on 05/28/2004 6:22:34 PM PDT by Interesting Times (ABCNNBCBS -- yesterday's news.)
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To: Interesting Times
these damm commie loving vets can kiss my A$$
I put up with the lies when I came home in Sept 69
I went back to Chicago
My 1st job was right across the street form the Chicago 7 trial.
DAMMIT!
60 posted on 05/28/2004 6:25:29 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (Hanoi Kerry is a traitor)
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To: Interesting Times
John Kerry: "As a veteran of both the Vietnam War and the Vietnam protest movement, I say to both conservative and liberal misinterpretations of that war that it's time to get over it and recognize it as an exception, not as a ruling example, of the U.S. military engagements of the twentieth century. If those of us who carried the physical and emotional burdens of that conflict can regain perspective and move on, so can those whose involvement was vicarious or who knew nothing of the war other than ideology and legend" (p. 43)
63 posted on 05/28/2004 6:32:06 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: Interesting Times
Iron John

"After the 1984 election, the Doghunters had a black-tie dinner at my house, and the only thing we didn't drink was the Aqua Velva [aftershave]," John Marttila, a political consultant who has worked on every Kerry campaign, says. "They've had regular dinners ever since.

snip

The time Kerry spent with McCain - and, to a lesser extent, with Bob Kerrey and Chuck Robb - completed the transformation that the Doghunters had begun. He was no longer a political loner; he was, finally, part of a distinct, bipartisan, and emotionally intense group: the Vietnam combat veterans in the United States Senate. (Max Cleland, of Georgia, and Chuck Hagel, of Nebraska joined the group in 1996; Kerrey and Robb departed in 2000.) They took common positions on veterans' issues, and sometimes on questions of war and peace, but they were most passionately united when one or another of them was attacked.

Finding his place among comrades was Kerry's first step in from the political cold. There were two others, frequently cited by friends: his victory over William Weld in the 1996 Massachusetts Senate race and his improbable second marriage, to Teresa Heinz.

The notion that Kerry married Heinz for political reasons - specifically, to use her money to run for president - is put to rest within nanoseconds of meeting her: this is a flagrantly impolitic human being. The marriage is bursting with strong emotions and ill-concealed conflicts, and much too complicated for the facile armchair psychologising that goes on during a presidential campaign. It is not the sort of relationship that an ambitious politician, in his right mind, would want; it is likely to be a distraction for the press corps, an easy way to obscure the campaign's "message". One can only conclude, it must be love.

Heinz will not be censored. "John went on too long," she said the day I met her, after watching her husband deliver his Iraq speech in the Senate chamber on c-span [TV link]. "But that's what happens when he starts thinking about history."

Iron John, part two

66 posted on 05/28/2004 6:48:01 PM PDT by kcvl
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