Thousands Gather To Honor Nation's Veterans |
Posted by CN Staff on May 27, 2002 at 07:53:21 PT By Debbi Wilgoren, Washington Post Staff Writer Source: Washington Post They came to the Mall yesterday to pay tribute to the fallen -- passing through metal detectors on the Capitol lawn, waiting in long, silent lines to inspect a wall of black granite, waving and wearing the red, white and blue. Ramona Pennell, 44, and Gail Drake, 42, had to be there, wearing twin American flag bandannas around their sunburned necks. They could not watch the PBS telecast of the National Memorial Day Concert from their living room in Cincinnati as they had in years past. Not this Memorial Day weekend. "We thought it would be a tribute to September 11," Pennell said of their five-day trip to Washington, which will conclude today. Two of Washington's best-known Memorial Day weekend traditions took place on opposite ends of the steamy Mall yesterday: the evening concert featuring the National Symphony Orchestra on the West Lawn of the Capitol and the massive motorcycle rally, known as Rolling Thunder, calling for the return of U.S. prisoners of war and the missing in action. Each always draws flags and plenty of fervor. But this year -- 8 1/2 months after the worst terror attack on U.S. soil -- the day, and the events, took on new meaning. It could be seen on the T-shirts -- the one showing a different New York skyline, including the Statue of Liberty, and the words "Our flag is still there." It could be seen in the unprecedented security at the concert, where the entire West Lawn was fenced off and people had to pass through metal detectors and have their bags searched at one of four entry points. And it could be seen in the crowds that gathered along Constitution Avenue to greet the motorcyclists as they circled the Mall in a deafening and funereal cortege, dominated by black leather but accented by stars and stripes. "It's nice to see all the red, white and blue. All the flags, all the pins," said Kelly Cleary, 30, of Rockville, who watched in amazement as the motorcycles roared past and then found her way to the Capitol lawn. Rolling Thunder's 15th event was its largest, organizers said. Gathering at the Pentagon, the Harleys and other bikes filled the north parking lot and, for the first time, spilled into the south. Traffic backed up for miles on highways leading to the Memorial Bridge, and a spokeswoman said some riders never even made it to the rally site. Organizers estimated the number of motorcycles at 300,000 to 350,000, most carrying two people, up from an estimated 250,000 last year. They said the large turnout mirrors a surge in membership over the past year, with the number of Rolling Thunder chapters growing from about 50 to 68. "Our wounds are raw," spokeswoman Anne Nicholson said. "We're in a time of war now, and people want to show their support." The motorcycle riders thronged the Vietnam Veterans Memorial to pay homage. They left flowers and wreaths of barbed wire at the Wall and the nearby Vietnam Women's Memorial, along with handwritten notes. They filed past the Quilt of Tears, honoring those harmed by Agent Orange, and wore stickers calling for the release of Scott Speicher, a Navy pilot shot down in Iraq during the 1991 Persian Gulf War and believed by some to be alive. At the Reflecting Pool, just below the Lincoln Memorial, they cheered speaker after speaker who extolled the nation's veterans and urged the U.S. government to bring home its dead and missing -- in Vietnam and elsewhere. Norman Descoteaux was there for the third year in a row, with his brother, Roger, who spent a year in Vietnam. They rode down with a group from Connecticut, joined by hundreds more veterans in New Jersey. State troopers accompanied them the whole way. "All my life, Memorial Day was hot dogs, hamburgers, a beach . . . you know, a barbecue," Descoteaux, 54, said from a shady spot near the Reflecting Pool. "This is Memorial Day. It's the real Memorial Day, and it's why I'll keep coming back here as long as I can." Between the Rolling Thunder gathering and the Capitol lawn concert was another reminder of Sept. 11 -- the first Afghanistan Day celebration. Thousands of Afghans from the Washington area snacked on kebabs bought from vendors and picnics made at home, enjoying traditional music performed on a tented stage flanked by huge American and Afghan flags. The event, which organizers plan to hold annually, was created by the U.S.-Afghanistan Reconstruction Council to build awareness and solicit donations to rebuild schools in Kabul and support the Red Cross Fund for Afghan Children. The mood of patriotism was checked by the reality of unprecedented security at the Capitol. But that did not keep a large crowd from gathering for the concert. Many people said the metal detectors and bag searches made them feel safe as they settled in for a 90-minute tribute to those who died in U.S. wars, including victims of the September attacks. The concert featured patriotic music by the National Symphony Orchestra and the pop group Chicago, as well as a performance of "God Bless America" by New York City police officer Daniel Rodriguez to start the show. Clouds threatened, but rain held off early, and breezes from the approaching storm offered some relief from the heat of the day. The crowd was hushed as images of Sept. 11 flashed on screens above and to the side of the Capitol stage. Some audience members wept silently during the projection of the images and a retelling of stories by firefighters' survivors. "I was pretty emotional throughout" the show, said Victoria Torres, 31, of Victorville, Calif. She said the images of Sept. 11 "made me become more proud of who I am as an American and of my husband," Joseph, who is a Navy lieutenant. Most people arrived early enough that there were never backups at the checkpoints. Officers inspected purses and picnic coolers. They used magnetic wands to check each arrival for metallic objects, requiring some to take off belts and empty pockets before being waved through. Although officers appeared vigilant and strict in their scrutiny, they also were in good humor, and their mood was matched by concertgoers. "It's a shame" that the security was necessary, said Dennis Freeman, who brought his family from Independence, Ohio. But, he said, "that's the way things are. Everybody understands." The Ehrlichs and the Mederricks -- longtime friends from the Leisure World retirement community in Silver Spring who have attended the concert together for nearly a decade -- arrived extra early to avoid delay. The handicapped parking space they usually use was in an area closed off by police, but they secured a good spot in plenty of time to set up folding chairs and enjoy pretzels and drinks before the concert. "I wasn't going to stay away," said Sondra Mederrick, 64, even as her friend Sandy Ehrlich confessed to being worried about the possibility of an attack. "I can't live my life like that. I'm sorry." Jerry Mederrick and Carl Ehrlich, both veterans, said Memorial Day is now as much about remembering civilians as soldiers. "People sacrifice whether they're in uniform or out of uniform," Mederrick said. "We must never forget that." Staff writers Clarence Williams and Martin Weil contributed to this report. Complete Title: Mall's Moving Tributes: Thousands Gather To Honor Nation's Veterans, Victims Source: Washington Post (DC) All POW-MIA Memorial Day Rolling Thunder Memorial Home Comment Email Register Recent Comments Help |
Comment #19 posted by FoM on May 27, 2002 at 12:59:08 PT |
I call that the hiccups. I'll wait a little while because if I edit the posts and someone is posting at the same time their post dispears into cyberspace never to be seen again! I've had that happen to me too. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #18 posted by E_Johnson on May 27, 2002 at 12:43:53 PT |
Something went wrong with my browser, I did not mean to post that three times! [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #17 posted by E_Johnson on May 27, 2002 at 12:42:32 PT |
Everything the Bush administration is doing to attack medical marijuana was planned and set up during the Clinton administration. Democratic Gore supporters would have found many reasons to get fully behind Gore if he were the one in charge of fulfilling the Clinton administration plans to shut down medical marijuana. The liberal news media would have sided with Gore. Because it is Bush doing the shutting down instead of Gore, Democrats find it much easier to criticize this action, and the liberal media wonks can use it as one more piece of evidence against Bush. Politically speaking, it is better that we are victims of an extreme Republican administration. The campaign against medical marijuana can now be associated with the religious extremism of Ashcroft. Under the Clinton administration, the campaign against medical marijuana looked nice and politically correct and not unappealing to liberals. And it would have continued to carry that PC appeal if the battle were being waged by Gore. And he certainly would have been waging it. And also -- those ads linking drugs with terrorism -- a Gore administration might have been too smart to do something dumb like that. A Gore administration would not be making the kinds of inane and self-defeating choices than the Bush administration has made. I don't think it is in our best interests to have a cabal of intelligent liberals plotting to bring us down! If someone is going to be plotting to bring me down, I want it to be some ideological featherbrain doomed to shoot himself in the foot. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #16 posted by E_Johnson on May 27, 2002 at 12:40:40 PT |
Everything the Bush administration is doing to attack medical marijuana was planned and set up during the Clinton administration. Democratic Gore supporters would have found many reasons to get fully behind Gore if he were the one in charge of fulfilling the Clinton administration plans to shut down medical marijuana. The liberal news media would have sided with Gore. Because it is Bush doing the shutting down instead of Gore, Democrats find it much easier to criticize this action, and the liberal media wonks can use it as one more piece of evidence against Bush. Politically speaking, it is better that we are victims of an extreme Republican administration. The campaign against medical marijuana can now be associated with the religious extremism of Ashcroft. Under the Clinton administration, the campaign against medical marijuana looked nice and politically correct and not unappealing to liberals. And it would have continued to carry that PC appeal if the battle were being waged by Gore. And he certainly would have been waging it. And also -- those ads linking drugs with terrorism -- a Gore administration might have been too smart to do something dumb like that. A Gore administration would not be making the kinds of inane and self-defeating choices than the Bush administration has made. I don't think it is in our best interests to have a cabal of intelligent liberals plotting to bring us down! If someone is going to be plotting to bring me down, I want it to be some ideological featherbrain doomed to shoot himself in the foot. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #15 posted by E_Johnson on May 27, 2002 at 12:40:01 PT |
Everything the Bush administration is doing to attack medical marijuana was planned and set up during the Clinton administration. Democratic Gore supporters would have found many reasons to get fully behind Gore if he were the one in charge of fulfilling the Clinton administration plans to shut down medical marijuana. The liberal news media would have sided with Gore. Because it is Bush doing the shutting down instead of Gore, Democrats find it much easier to criticize this action, and the liberal media wonks can use it as one more piece of evidence against Bush. Politically speaking, it is better that we are victims of an extreme Republican administration. The campaign against medical marijuana can now be associated with the religious extremism of Ashcroft. Under the Clinton administration, the campaign against medical marijuana looked nice and politically correct and not unappealing to liberals. And it would have continued to carry that PC appeal if the battle were being waged by Gore. And he certainly would have been waging it. And also -- those ads linking drugs with terrorism -- a Gore administration might have been too smart to do something dumb like that. A Gore administration would not be making the kinds of inane and self-defeating choices than the Bush administration has made. I don't think it is in our best interests to have a cabal of intelligent liberals plotting to bring us down! If someone is going to be plotting to bring me down, I want it to be some ideological featherbrain doomed to shoot himself in the foot. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #14 posted by p4me on May 27, 2002 at 12:16:29 PT |
EJ,let me say as a personal belief that one of the biggest problems we have is a two party system that wants it to stay a two party system. I remember my eighth grade teacher talking about the one party rule in Russia 35 years ago. Have two parties take turns doing and undoing laws is not much better. There are a lot more numbers that follow 1 and 2. As long as it is Democrats and Republicans they can get their list together of what they want and play I will let you have that if I can have this. I wish people would leave both parties in droves so the gangster setup going now could be moderated. Your response to what I said seems a little misdirected and I would encourage you and others to read this excellent article by Greg Palast. In the article he flat out says he doesn't give a rat's behind who won and it- our democracy is at stake. I can agree with that statement. What the supreme court did was wrong and I could care less about the personalities involved. I prefer not to interpret what I think such an outstanding professional journalist said however as his work stands for itself. When I express an opinion about Busch I realize I am probably a minority and the main reason I do so is that the controlled media and the political machinery do not hear complete silence as they spout their propaganda and lies. One person speaking is louder than a 1000 silent little lambs afraid of speaking their minds even though they have an unpopular belief. I watched 60 Minutes last night on the 3 strikes law in California. Two members of a jury did not want to impose the 25 year to life conviction for a third offense and were removed from the jury. In California misdeamoner theifs become felonies if their was a prior conviction for felony theft or something like that so that one person discussed in the case for stealing two slices of pizza was tried for felony theft and in fact was sentenced under the three strikes rule which carries a minimum of 25 years to life. It raises the issue of jury nullification and all that goes with the way the laws are being twisted. I said it six months ago when I first called bullshit. I do not know everything, but I know what bullshit is because I have heard so much of it. The spirit of the constitution is not being met in my opinion and that puts Busch up there near, at, equal to, or over treason. We are calling something that is not a war a war. Korea was called a police action and Vietnam started out with that term. Those were wars and they called them police actions and now we have a police action and they are calling it a war. The constitution was a best shot at the way things were supposed to work and even then it had to have the Bill of Rights attatched to get it ratified. They made provision for amendments to fix problem areas they overlooked and knew that problem areas would arise. Good grief, when they first had Presidential elections the person that finished second became vice president and that proved not to be a good idea in a hurry. I never have claimed to be a legal scholar but I remember when the US took Noreiaga, and I admit I do not care enough to check on spelling, out of Panama. My uncle was a lawyer and his second wife was a lawyer and they both said it was an illegal act plain and simple. Do I know that it is illegal. No. I don't have any law books to look it up and wouldn't because what difference does it make? Do, I think it was illegal? Yes, because the two lawyers I knew to talk to said it was plain and simple- it was totally illegal. The only reason I came back was to say something about Tom and Rollie. I was thinking about their tombstones and thought about the epitaph "Give me liberty or give me death." It makes me think that if they were side by side the second epitaph would read "I was really hoping for liberty." Man I wish I had a joint. ICBS,VAAI,POW [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #13 posted by dddd on May 27, 2002 at 12:09:23 PT |
...I must respectfully,and adamantly disagree with your "voters fault" theory.......I will admit that if the voters were smart,,they might have elected a government that could assure a fair,and accurate election....but I dont blame the voters for the voting machine/chads thing,,,I blame an utterly incompetant government that can spend trillions on everything else,,but cant even come up with the funds,and resources for something so basic,and essential to a "democracy",,that being the mechanicics of an up to date voting system that is somehow standardized....I respectfully submit,,that I think blaming the voters is absurd,and a wreckless assertion!....I think that what went on in Florida during the election was scandalous,,criminal,,and most disturbing...I think the tall tales that were spun about "chads",,and incompetant voters was a smokescreen to divert attention from the slimy court appointment of the texas dickhead!!......I dont mean to ruffle your feathers,,but I dont think your voter blame theory is legitimate........ Respectfully.....dddd [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #12 posted by FoM on May 27, 2002 at 11:54:30 PT |
Actually this article is off topic but I thought we could post what is important to us. Memorial Day stirs up many emotions. I don't want to bum anyone out but you know how you only have your birthday every 7th year if you are born on February 29? Today on May 27, 1996 my son passed away from AIDS and this is the first time that both the day and Memorial Day fall on the same day once again. Memorial Day means something very different to me. We shouldn't forget those who died for whatever reason on this day I believe. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #11 posted by Bounce to the Ounce on May 27, 2002 at 11:46:59 PT |
I apollogize if this is off-topic, but I need to address the "Bush was selected/appointed" comments. I am not a supporter of Bush, but I feel the circus that was the 2000 Election was the fault of the voters. I mean, come on...if you can't punch a hole in a simple ballot correctly, you have no business at the polls. Also, the voter turnout in an average American election is pathetic: an average of 50% of Americans of voting age bother go to the polls every 4 years (Sources: http://www.fairvote.org/turnout/preturn.htm and http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0781453.html ). Sure, us Americans can sit on our asses and complain about quickly this country is going down the tubes, but what causes it...corrupt government officials or the voter apathy that allows it to happen? Just wanted to get that off my chest. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #10 posted by dddd on May 27, 2002 at 11:22:42 PT |
...I was right with ya in your last comment..I also voted for Nader,,and there were people who suggested I should vote Gore,to try and make sure that Bush didnt win,,or get appointed...I had some heated discussions with my little brother who is a college professor,,,and he said ,,that he was going to vote Gore,,,I made it a challenge,to try and persuade him to vote for Nader,but he insisted,,that if the republicans took control of the whorehouse,,,it would be disasterous,because of the people they would appoint as AG,,judges,,etc...well,,,I had to admit that he was right......now things are alot more fucked...........I hope that perhaps you were joking??.. .: "We in this movement are damned lucky that it is Bush not Gore doing the shutting down.".. .???....Are you serious EJ?.........dddd [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #9 posted by FoM on May 27, 2002 at 10:36:11 PT |
That's exactly what I am hoping C News is becoming. A place where news articles and comments make it a place that we can put the puzzle together. This is also way off topic but last night we watched a program on the History Channel about the 12 lost tribes of Israel. It blew me away when they were in Kabul. This was of course before 9-11. It doesn't matter what is important to each one of us necessarily but the sum of all the things that are talked about is what makes us tick.
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Comment #8 posted by E_Johnson on May 27, 2002 at 10:33:26 PT |
He talks about how the elections were stolen by the Republicans by eliminating people from voter roles that had convictions in other states and 180,000 ballots that were not even considered for a recount.
I hate it when people try to make Gore look like an innocent victim. I voted for Nader specifically to help Gore LOSE! If Gore hadn't aliented people like myself irretrievably with his lying openly about the IOM report, and his shameless pandering to the PDFA, there would not have been a chance in hell for this election to have been so narrow that these issues mattered at all. Please do not tell me that my own personal effort to hurt Gore had no impact, I really want to believe that Gore was punished by voters like myself for being such a Drug War pandering bastard. The man stood on the stage at the 2000 Convention and said he believed in a Drug Free Anmerica. His wife was the national poster child for Zoloft at the time. I really want to believe that Gore got exactly what he deserved for doing that, and I really don't like attributing Gore's own deserved bad karma to anything done by Bush. If Gore had won, they'd still be shutting down the cannabis clubs, but the liberals would be backing it fully because it was Al Gore the Great White Liberal doing it. We in this movement are damned lucky that it is Bush not Gore doing the shutting down. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #7 posted by qqqq on May 27, 2002 at 10:29:37 PT |
11:45 PM..Bud-Wise Epicurean Spleef Tasting Event in 4qs Winnabego....BYOB,,(bring your own buds) [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #6 posted by p4me on May 27, 2002 at 10:25:21 PT |
Maybe what everyone is trying to do by reading Cnews is develop a picture of what is going on for real. What is real is that things are screwed up and if it were not for the internet nobody would know anything. There is an article by Greg Palast, an investigative reporter in exile in the UK and working for the BBC. He describes the canvas and background of the painting we are all trying to create in our minds. I cannot recommend this article strong enough. It is at http://www.guerrillanews.com/counter_intelligence/235.html He talks about how the elections were stolen by the Republicans by eliminating people from voter roles that had convictions in other states and 180,000 ballots that were not even considered for a recount. He says that Osama is no Hitler, but more of a John Gotti running a protection racket- pay us or we will blow you up. He says investigative reporting is dead in the US and cites Seymour Hersch that broke the My Lai story 30 years ago and has won at least two Pulitzer prizes cannot even get a job with an American newspaper. Then there is Palast himself that complains his children are growing up with a British accent because of his exile from American journalism. He says too much to try to condense. If you want a very articulated statement of our current situation you would have to read this. Again:http://www.guerrillanews.com/counter_intelligence/235.html Americans still do not know that 120 FBI agents were out people hunting 10 days before 9/11 instead of protecting our real national interest. Tom and Rollie were casualties in a war for freedom as much as any combat veteran. The tragedy of their deaths is compounded by the fact that the enemy was our own government. The government is way out of control and the American people need an outcry that all of Congress has got to go for letting this situation continue and grow. I think they should impeach Busch for malfeasance in office. I wish they could hang him and I am just a moderate member of the Extremist Party. ICBS,VAAI,POW [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #5 posted by E_Johnson on May 27, 2002 at 10:22:12 PT |
Here will be our observance on April 20 of each year: Sunrise service, singing of the hymn "Tree of Life, Healer of the Nations" Moment of silence for the victims of the war 8am: Communal breakfast of hemp foods All day: Picnics, games and performances to lighten the spirit Noon: The blessing of the seed 4:20pm ceremonial smoke 4:25pm Dinner Sunset: Lighting the Candle of Remembrance of the Drug War Repeat singing of the hymn "Tree of Life, Healer of the Nations" [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #4 posted by letsgetfree on May 27, 2002 at 09:59:30 PT |
I'm only 20 and from Canada, so I wont pretend to know how you yanks feel on this day. Some observations from up north: It seems to me that American patriotism is at dangerous levels, allowing the government basically a free hand in doing what it does best: representing the corporate and military industrial complex. It's scary when people are so curtain of their superiority, like many in the USA do. How many times have I heard 'greatess country on the planet' blah bla bla you've all heard it before i'm sure. It seems Americans, in general, still could care less for what happens to other people on the planet. I'm Canadian, like I said before, but don't think that really means much when you think about it. I happened to be born in a curtain location that is a country. I did not plan on being born where I did, who knows I could've been born in India or China, or anywhere in Africa, and my life would've been compleately different from the one I have now. To me I am a human being, no better or worse then the other 5 billion of us. But because I was born here I'm supposed to have this fanatical devotion to my government and country. Nationalism is so scary and dangerous, so seeing things like memorial day in the states sends shivers up my spine. Just some thoughts. LetsgetFree [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #3 posted by Rambler on May 27, 2002 at 09:38:08 PT |
Country or Government? by Paul Hein Memorial day is again upon us, reminding us that hypocrisy and sentimentality, not to mention naďveté and gullibility, are with us to stay. Someone with the title “White House Commission on National Moment of Remembrance” has written a letter to Dear Abby reminding us to “reclaim Memorial Day for the noble and patriotic purpose for which it was intended.” How is this to be accomplished? All Americans are “to pause and reflect for one minute--at 3 p.m on Memorial Day, in remembrance of those who have died to preserve our freedom.” If you’re driving, turn on your lights. The playing of Taps is recommended at public events. This will remind us of the two million men and women who “have sacrificed their lives to defend and preserve this precious land of hopes and dreams.” The writer concludes with the hope that Abby’s readers will “join together in solidarity with those whose grief is fresh and deep, to express their gratitude to the men and women who have died that we might live in freedom.” Well, there’s one thing to say for this bit of fluff: at least it didn’t refer to sacrifices for our country, although we can be sure that the weekend will not pass without our hearing that expression many times: the brave men and women who gave their lives for our country. What nonsense! Our country was never at significant risk in any of our legitimate (i.e., declared by Congress) wars, and in the subsequent unlawful military adventures, the risk to the U.S. mainland was even less. Millions of American men and women (how many women?) have died fighting, but they were fighting for their government, not the country. Franklin Roosevelt admitted, in a letter to Colonel House, that the American government has been owned by “certain financial interests” since the days of Andrew Jackson. It was to protect those interests that doughboys died in WWI, and the consequence of WWI was WWII, in which additional hundreds of thousands died. Those killed in Korea or Vietnam weren’t defending our country, either. That these slain soldiers were brave is not the point: of course they were. Going off to fight, knowing that you might very well die in the ensuing battle, requires courage. But it is doubtful that any of those prepared to make the supreme sacrifice could tell you what they were sacrificing for, in anything but the most general terms: “We’re fighting for freedom,” or “to preserve the American way of life.” Well, you can’t expect a man facing death to be clear-headed. Were they fighting and dying to preserve our freedoms, as suggested by the “White House Commission on National Moment of Remembrance?” What freedom was threatened by the Kaiser, or Emperor Hirohito? Yes, if we had lost the World Wars, American would have been occupied by German or Japanese troops, and we’d have had to take our orders from them. Instead, we take them from Americans. Orders are orders! Does the language matter? Japanese and Germans took orders from Americans during their occupation (our troops are still there, more than half a century later) but today, they take their orders from their own, in their own language. So did our erstwhile enemies loose their freedom? When people fight for their freedom, it is against their own governments that they fight. Today, my freedom is curtailed by my own government, not that of Saddam. Propaganda, of course, is the way governments speak to their subjects. It is not surprising that we find this sort of meretricious tripe being circulated on Memorial Day. Simple straightforward speech is inconsistent with government objectives. You can hardly expect our rulers to admit that they delight in war, and are perfectly willing to accept American deaths to further their hegemony. No, the frustration lies not in our rulers’ hypocrisy, but rather in the pathetic acceptance of it by Americans, who continue to believe that our dead soldiers died fighting for our freedom, or to protect our country. This much can be admitted: They did not die in vain. But the purpose for which they gave their lives was not, and is not, the preservation of the country, or the maintenance of our freedoms! May 27, 2002 [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #2 posted by kaptinemo on May 27, 2002 at 09:01:28 PT:
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for lost liberties? If a bell were rung every second for every non-violent person whose lives were destroyed not by drugs but the DrugWar, you wouldn't have any sleep for a month. If a cannon were fired for every instance of your Bill of Rights being abrogated by the US Government during the DrugWar, they'd all be slagged from the heat. I'm sure the ghosts of Esequiel Hernandez, Mario Paz, Donald Scott, Patrick Dorismond, Alberto Sepulveda, Peter McWilliams and God alone knows how many others, can sleep safe in the certainty that their unlawful deaths serve the greater good...killed by the people charged with 'preserving and protecting' those same rights against such unlawful deaths. Memorial Day has come to mean something else to this veteran. You'll forgive me if, after planting flags at the local military cemetary, I don't join in the yappy, self-congratulatory nonsense. If this insane domestic warfare and foreign adventurism isn't stopped and soon, I fear that someday, I shall have to attend the largest funeral yet; the one for the Republic of the United States of America. It's on life support, alraedy... [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #1 posted by FoM on May 27, 2002 at 08:07:28 PT |
Hi Everyone, I know this article is off topic but it is Memorial Day and I know many people who are part of Cannabis News were affected by Vietnam and it must never be forgotten. It must never happen again. [ Post Comment ] |
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