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Some powerful thoughts by a Marine Master Sergeant.
Ed Evans, MGySgt., USMC (Ret.)

Posted on 01/20/2005 6:02:24 AM PST by bkny23m

I sat in a movie theater watching "Schindler's List," asking myself, "Why didn't the Jews fight back?" Now I know why.

I sat in a movie theater, watching "Pearl Harbor" and asked myself, "Why weren't we prepared?" Now I know why.

Civilized people cannot fathom, much less predict, the actions of evil people.

On September 11, dozens of capable airplane passengers allowed themselves to be overpowered by a handful of poorly armed terrorists because they did not comprehend the depth of hatred that motivated their captors.

On September 11, thousands of innocent people were murdered because too many Americans naively reject the reality that some nations are dedicated to the dominance of others.

Many political pundits, pacifists and media personnel want us to forget the carnage. They say we must focus on the bravery of the rescuers and ignore the cowardice of the killers. They implore us to understand the motivation of the perpetrators.

Major television stations have announced they will assist the healing process by not replaying devastating footage of the planes crashing into the Twin Towers.

I will not be manipulated. I will not pretend to understand. I will not forget. I will not forget the liberal media who abused freedom of the press to kick our country when it was vulnerable and hurting.

I will not forget that CBS anchor Dan Rather preceded President Bush's address to the nation with the snide remark, "No matter how you feel about him, he is still our president."

I will not forget that ABC TV anchor Peter Jennings questioned President Bush's motives for not returning immediately to Washington, DC and commented, "We're all pretty skeptical and cynical about Washington."

And I will not forget that ABC's Mark Halperin warned if reporters weren't informed of every little detail of this war, they aren't "likely -- nor should they be expected -- to show deference."

I will not isolate myself from my fellow Americans by pretending an attack on the USS Cole in Yemen was not an attack on the United States of America.

I will not forget the Clinton administration equipped Islamic terrorists and their supporters with the world's most sophisticated telecommunications equipment and encryption technology, thereby compromising America's ability to trace terrorist radio, cell phone, land lines, faxes and modem communications.

I will not be appeased with pointless, quick retaliatory strikes like those perfected by the previous administration.

I will not be comforted by "feel-good, do nothing" regulations like the silly, "Have your bags been under your control?" question at the airport.

I will not be influenced by so called,"antiwar demonstrators" who exploit the right of _expression to chant anti-American obscenities.

I will not forget the moral victory handed the North Vietnamese by American war protesters who reviled and spat upon the returning soldiers, airmen, sailors and marines.

I will not be softened by the wishful thinking of pacifists who chose reassurance over reality.

I will embrace the wise words of Prime Minister Tony Blair who told the Labor Party conference, "They have no moral inhibition on the slaughter of the innocent. If they could have murdered not 7,000 but 70,000, does anyone doubt they would have done so and rejoiced in it? There is no compromise possible with such people, no meeting of minds, no point of understanding with such terror. Just a choice: defeat it or be defeated by it. And defeat it we must!"

I will force myself to: -hear the weeping -feel the helplessness -imagine the terror -sense the panic -smell the burning flesh - experience the loss - remember the hatred.

I sat in a movie theater, watching "Private Ryan" and asked myself, "Where did they find the courage?" Now I know. We have no choice. Living without liberty is not living.

Ed Evans, MGySgt., USMC (Ret.)

Not as lean, Not as mean, But still a Marine.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS:
Keep this going until every living American has read it so we don't make the same mistake again. The whole TRUTH, !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! About time we stop the Media from running this country!!
1 posted on 01/20/2005 6:02:24 AM PST by bkny23m
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To: bkny23m

Yep. He nailed it. We Americans are already forgetting about what happened. I wonder how many people remember the name of the guy that said, "let's roll!" How many of my fellow sailors were killed aboard COLE?. I hate to say it, but I think it is only a matter of time before we will be reminded of these acts all over again. I WILL do my best in getting this out to everyone I know.


2 posted on 01/20/2005 6:13:01 AM PST by Mathews (Shot... Splash... Out!)
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To: bkny23m
I will not forget the moral victory handed the North Vietnamese by American war protesters...

I will not forget that CBS anchor Dan Rather preceded President Bush's address to the nation with the snide remark, "No matter how you feel about him, he is still our president." I will not forget that ABC TV anchor Peter Jennings questioned President Bush's motives for not returning immediately to Washington, DC and commented, "We're all pretty skeptical and cynical about Washington."

100% Dead on!

3 posted on 01/20/2005 6:14:25 AM PST by Obadiah
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To: bkny23m

Power utilized for conquest diminishes...

Power utilized for liberty grows...

In all cases cited, those who were oppressed ultimately came to overcome their oppression.

The bad guys just don't get it. They think they can take and hold by force. They can take, but they can't hold because justice always prevails. Sometimes it takes more time than we want, but it always prevails.


4 posted on 01/20/2005 6:19:40 AM PST by Paloma_55
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To: Mathews

Marines just never stop giving.


5 posted on 01/20/2005 6:20:07 AM PST by Grateful One
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To: Obadiah

From a John Wayne movie:
"I will not be wronged....I will not be insulted."
Good words to live by.


6 posted on 01/20/2005 6:20:24 AM PST by libertyhoundusnr
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To: Junior

Great read ping


7 posted on 01/20/2005 6:21:35 AM PST by cjshapi
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To: bkny23m

That was great. It always amazes me how some liberals think we can negotiate with mass murderers.


8 posted on 01/20/2005 6:34:25 AM PST by Barney Gumble (http://purveyors-of-truth.blogspot.com/)
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To: Mathews

Forgetting? One of the hijacked airplanes turned left above my home. 60 AlQaida operatives living in this neighborhood left town on 9/11 after doing their "ground guide" work ~ it's not possible to forget even though every single Democrat I know has advised me that "the war is over, pull out".


9 posted on 01/20/2005 6:35:05 AM PST by muawiyah (Egypt didn't invent civilization time)
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To: libertyhoundusnr

complete quote from the 'Duke' in "The Shootist" (his last and most likely his best Motion picture)

"I won't be wronged, I won't be insulted, I won't be laid a hand upon, I don't do these things to other people, and I require the same from them." JB Books


10 posted on 01/20/2005 6:38:11 AM PST by Vaquero
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To: bkny23m
I sat in a movie theater, watching "Pearl Harbor" ...

I was unbelievably disappointed with that movie. "Tora Tora Tora" is the one to watch.

11 posted on 01/20/2005 6:39:57 AM PST by shekkian
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To: libertyhoundusnr

I love that statement from his last movie, "The Shootist."

"I won't be wronged, I won't be insulted, and I won't be laid a hand on. I don't do these things to others, and I expect the same from them."


12 posted on 01/20/2005 6:42:03 AM PST by fredhead ("It is a good thing war is so terrible, or we should grow too fond of it." General Robert E. Lee)
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To: bkny23m

Right on! They need to keep playing those images until it $#%^@ sinks in what we are up againts. Never forget!


13 posted on 01/20/2005 6:45:05 AM PST by WolfRunnerWoman (I want closure on the word "closure".)
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To: Barney Gumble

I'm sure John Kerry thinks we can sit down with Iran, NK, etc and "work something out."


14 posted on 01/20/2005 6:59:40 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: WolfRunnerWoman
Semper Fi Sergeant. You nailed it! Let's not let the wussy boys in the effete media change our course.
15 posted on 01/20/2005 7:03:05 AM PST by Nevada Mark (stayin' alive in '05)
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To: fredhead

Thanx for the corrected copy.
My other favorite is (words to the effect of):

"Life is tough, and a lot tougher if you're stupid"


16 posted on 01/20/2005 7:13:43 AM PST by libertyhoundusnr
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To: bkny23m
I will not forget that CBS anchor Dan Rather preceded President Bush's address to the nation with the snide remark, "No matter how you feel about him, he is still our president."

That's actually pretty mild, coming from The Dan. Must have really hurt him to say it, even snidely.

What we see in the media is a reflection of what has been called "the revolt of the elite" in America. The natural leaders of the nation have spurned the essence of the nation, starting at least in the 1920s, and for a while, they had the people behind them (because nobody could see where they were going!) Now it's obvious where they have gone, and we are now seeing "the counterrevolution of the people" against the "elite".

I could see this in the 1970s -- it was apparent that the "best and brightest" used their control of the channels of information to direct popular thought. Didn't you ever wonder how Cuba kept from being overrun in spite of repeated provocation, and is still in Communist hands after 45 years? It's because the media framed and controlled opinion -- what they blessed was considered orthodox, and any thoughts that might lead to America's cleaning out Castro and his goons were rigidly suppressed.

The government does not control the press in this country, but what you can't do with government may be done by other means. The tsunami of opprobrium and innuendo that would come down on anybody who got "off the reservation" was enough to shut up any possible dissenters, excepting those who were content with living in oblivion. Walter Cronkite could intone "That's the way it is" every night, knowing that he was being believed. And in contrast, just recall the pitiful performance of Pres. Ford, showing off his "WIN" button (Whip Inflation Now -- remember that?) Gerry may have had the "nuclear trigger", but that was a weapon he could never use; Walter had the "camera", and he used it artfully and constantly.

But they didn't suppress Reagan; they couldn't stop him from making news, and they couldn't prevent him from reaching directly to the people. Those to whom the fantasies of Hollywood are more real than reality are more easily led contrary to their own common sense by artificially constructed images, and they tend to listen to the opinions of celebrities, maybe because they imagine them in the role of friends:--I dunno. But here came Ronaldus Magnus, right out of the Hollywood milieu -- you could rent his movies just like you could Bogart's or Jimmy Stewart's.

There were people I knew that had a serious problem with RR just because he was an actor. They would say, "He's used to pretending. How do you know if the man you are seeing is "real" and not a script?" At the time, I had the sense that it was real, and I think history has borne this out. Because Reagan pursued his own course, one which he had set out before the nation in the late 1970s ("Viewpoint" radio commentaries) and which the people "bought" in 1980. Not to put down his other accomplishments (ending the Cold War in victory is not to be sneezed at!), I think the best thing he did was something so "small" as to pass nearly unnoticed at the time.

Reagan canned the odious "Fairness Doctrine". That was the instrument of backdoor government control of opinion. Broadcast media, who depended on their license renewals to stay in business, could be jerked around at will by liberal pressure groups who could demand "equal time" anytime somebody said "God bless America" on a public broadcast. It didn't matter that conservative broadcasts were paid for; if you, a radio station owner, accepted one you were sure to be threatened with loss of license at renewal time if you didn't GIVE "equal time" to any loonies that showed up with a protest. And, of course, if you did actually air their screed, you would come back at the end of their "equal time" segment to find your audience gone. Nobody could stay in business that way.

News programs were, therefore, especially tightly controlled. Not by government, at least, not directly. Oh, no, it was the network executive suite, with eyes firmly fixed on the almighty bottom line, who would pounce on any sentence, any implication uttered "on air" that might provoke one of those "equal time" protests. (Remember Jimmy "the Greek" Snyder?) Of course, liberalism and statism were safe subjects, because liberals and statists were the only ones that ever agitated for "equal time". Conservatives were busy with actual living, working for an honest income rather than government grants, and didn't have the time for constant agitation. It was easier simply to get "used" to the liberal drumbeat, not heeding it, but fending it off as "something that goes with the territory", the way a man with no umbrella might hold up a piece of stray cardboard to fend off a constant drizzle.

Talk radio had begun at least as early as the 1970s, but the hosts were uniformly just as liberal as Walter Cronkite, so there was nothing new about it. I listened to Larry King a couple of times, and rather more to Michael Jackson (the radio commentator, NOT Jacko!), but not to get my opinions from them, of that you can be sure. And then, the Fairness Doctrine ended.

As with many such fundamental changes, nobody noticed for years what was going on. It was 1991 when I first heard, on an office mate's radio, a "different" talk show. What caught my ear at first was the unaccustomed sense of hearing something with which I actually agreed coming out of a radio. I remember thinking, "Hey! That guy is conservative!" Next day, it happened again, and I thought, "Hey! That guy is CONSISTENTLY conservative!" and I was hooked.

Yeah, you know who it was. Don't even ask.

So, to summarize, I say, the truth will out. You may, for a time, convince people to close their eyes and believe you when you say "there is no light, only dark", but you cannot extinguish the sun, and as soon as those eyes open for even a second to see "where the heat is coming from", you have lost them forever.

(Mmm. That felt good. Move along, nothing to see here.)

17 posted on 01/20/2005 7:46:45 AM PST by thulldud (It's bad luck to be superstitious.)
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To: thulldud

somehow, I had never connected those dots. thank you!


18 posted on 01/20/2005 10:12:24 AM PST by King Prout (trolls survive through a form of gastroenterotic oroborosity, a brownian "perpepetual movement")
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