To: Route66
Then they should refrain from holding a press conference and grieve in private.
914 posted on
02/01/2003 12:54:40 PM PST by
Conservababe
(I calls it like I sees it.)
To: Conservababe
These experts were all very close to this mission these men and women who are dead. They also work for a government agency and are EXPECTED to give the press some information, and I beleive they are doing their best. They are providing as much technical information as they have. I know I would not do as well in a similar situation.
926 posted on
02/01/2003 12:59:44 PM PST by
Route66
(America's Mainstreet)
To: Conservababe
Then they should refrain from holding a press conference and grieve in private. Right and then some would yell coverup. They need time to get their story straight.
947 posted on
02/01/2003 1:11:01 PM PST by
Dave S
To: Conservababe
Then they should refrain from holding a press conference and grieve in private. If you think they are bad, you should have seen Buzz Aldrin who lost it completely on NBC when trying to read a poem someone had emailed him. Maybe they should bring in a cold hearted babe like yourself to do the briefing.
952 posted on
02/01/2003 1:13:50 PM PST by
Dave S
To: Conservababe
Guess I disagree.
More ill comes from stuffing feelings of caring--even dramatic ones--than from sharing them more or less freely.
It's likely that men live few years than women IN PART due to stuffing their feelings.
Sharing feelings at such a time validates the people one is grieving for. It also validates the expressive one as being more than a robot. And it communicates to youth that feelings are important parts of being human.
If one is too choked up to talk well, pass the torch. But PLEASE, do be expressive. I love it. It's human. It's warm. It's connective. It touches hearts as little else can.
If feelings are too much for you to watch, switch channels.
1,126 posted on
02/01/2003 8:05:11 PM PST by
Quix
(21st FREEPCARD FINISHED)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson