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#521
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Subject: Bush Flew Fighter Jets During Vietnam
From: ojunk (Steve Mellenthin) Date: 7/19/2004 5:57 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: How about a Senior Vice President Creative Supervisor with a major American corporation with operations worldwide? How about you? Ever done anything?. Arthur Kramer VP level program manager in AF Aeronautical Systems Division. Worked B-1, B-2, KC-135R, F-15, F-16, F-22, amomg others. Executive support for 3 Star commander. Otherwise nothing at all. Good work. Now stay in there and fight to put a SR in front of that VP. I know you can do it. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#522
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Ed Rasimus wrote;
In '83 we got the entire AT-38 fleet painted in a standard blue-blue-gray gloss camo. Affectionately known as "Smurf Jets". Spins in a T-38 are unrecoverable as well, but also virtually unattainable. Not sure if they did this while you were at UPT Ed, but early on in the T-38 syllabus they take you out and demo how resistant the T-38 is to spin. The instructor flys because if they let a student try, you know they'de get it into a spin ![]() BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" |
#523
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Ed Rasimus wrote in message . ..
On 18 Jul 2004 23:06:39 -0700, (Fred the Red Shirt) wrote: You need to read some good history of the war and stop reading Terry McAullife dispatches. I am not familiar with Mr McAullife. Kerry was testifying before the Senate in 1971. Nixon had been elected in 1968 and initiated his "Vietnamization" policy to draw down US troop strength and turn over the war to the ARVN. By April of '71, the US force had been reduced by half, bombing of NVN had been in hiatus since 1968. Yes, that is as I recall. Arguably the testimony of Kerry encouraged the aggressiveness of the NVA and led to the increased infiltration that led to the commencement of Linebacker in May of '72, the siege of An Loch, the intensification of the siege of Khe Sanh and the final destruction of Hue. The encouragement of the NV probably increased the destruction rather than reducing it. I find it very hard to beleive that you blame all that on Kerry's testimony. The current government of Vietnam has estimated that we killed 1.4 million of their soldiers. That does not include wounded soldiers or civilians killed or wounded. The United Staes won every militarily significant battle of the Vietnam war. And still the communists did not give up. Kerry realized that the war in Vietnam could not be won by military means. It could only have been prolonged. Once again the attribution of such a strategic view to a Lt(j.g.) aboard a boat in MR IV is incredible. Why? It was the same view that was help by a great many ordinary Americans at that time. Of course the "current goverment of Vietnam" would have a high estimate--they are in Hanoi. They were the enemy. That was who we were trying to kill! If we killed that many and they didn't give up, or we killed fewer and they didn't give up, isn't the essential fact that they didn't give up? We do not know the answers to the questions I posed above because men like Kerry did speak out. We did pull out in 1973 and the surviving POWs did come home. It has been argued that live POWS were held back by the Vietnamese and others as hostages or slaves but really, would fewer have been withheld had we remained in the war longer? GMAFB! We started our pullout in '68. Despite Kerry's best efforts to encourage capitulation which wouldn't have resulted in a return of the POWs we continued negotiation, brought military pressure to bear in Linebacker I/II and succeeded in getting an incredibly rapid return of the POWs. It wasn't BECAUSE of Kerry, it was IN SPITE OF him. Do you really think that absent domestic protests the US would ever have pulled our ground forces out of Vietnam while the war continued? What good would Kerry have done by remaining silent, or by echoing the lies of his government? He might now be accepted in his newly desired role of American hero. I find it odd that you think that would be a good thing. -- FF |
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Ed Rasimus wrote in message . ..
On 18 Jul 2004 23:34:06 -0700, (Fred the Red Shirt) wrote: (ArtKramr) wrote in message ... Subject: Bush Flew Fighter Jets During Vietnam From: Ian MacLure Date: 7/10/2004 11:32 PM Pa We won the 2000 election. We are going to win the 2004 election. So who's bitter? IBM Bush was not elected. He was appointed. We'll fix that in November. Elected by the Congress, like all Presidents in a joint session that most Americans regard as a formality if they know about it at all. Sorry, Fred, but unless you are referring to the certification of the vote of the EC, you are wrong. Yes I am referring to the certification of the vote of the EC and yes, I am correct. The USSC has held (in 1877) the the Congress is the sole judge of the validity of the electoral votes. Thus the Congress can reject perfectly valid electoral votes cast befor the safe harbot deadline, as was done in 1877 and can also accept electoral votes submitted after the safe harbor deadline as was done in 1877 and 1961. There would be considerable furor, to say the least, if the Congress were to reverse an election by rejecting perfectly valid elecoral votes. But that does not mean that they cannot. So, in a very real sense, it is always the newly elected Congress that elects the President and Vice President though almost always they simply applyt their impimatuer to the vote of the Electoral College. The winner must win by a majority vote, not a plurality. If no majority, then the Presidential race goes to the house where each Representative gets a vote No, each state gets one vote. and the VP race goes to the Senate where each State gets one vote. No, each Senator gets one vote. -- FF |
#525
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On Thu, 15 Jul 2004 09:36:59 -0600, Ed Rasimus
wrote: The T-38 has been a great airplane for 42 years of training and with the upgraded glass cockpit looks like it will be active in SUPT for another 20 years at least. I have a friend who went from F-18s and SR-71s to T-38s (Bs, I think) with conventional cockpits. He sure missed the HUD at first. I don't think he realized how much difference it made to him. I could have told him, though, because having a HUD greatly improves my piloting, so think of what it does for a real pilot. Does the T-38 glass cockpit have a HUD? NASA did a cockpit upgrade on the JSC T-38s, but I'm pretty sure it didn't include a HUD. The USAF has been turning every cockpit into a glass cockpit. They did the KC-135s that the ANG flies a couple of years ago, even. That's real dedication to glass cockpits, I'd say. Mary -- Mary Shafer Retired aerospace research engineer |
#526
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"ArtKramr" wrote
How about a Senior Vice President Creative Supervisor with a major American corporation with operations worldwide? How about you? Ever done anything?. A Vice President who supervises? Must be a rinky-dink outfit. Did you have to start the boilers and make the coffee coming on shift, as well? I've done a lot more then that, I'm a capitalist. I gather capital to expand our business, so that we can hire more people to increase production. We actually produce widgets in our company. When I look at the Bush tax cuts, and the alternatives to fighting recession, I don't really like that we didn't pay down the debt, but there was no other choice. To fight inflation you need to put money in the hands of capitalists. The democrats in Washington, just don't get it. I'm not happy with Bush signing every spending bill he gets, to get the programs he wants, but I think he's the guy that got us out of the recession in only four years! That's a hell of an accomplishment. All I see out of the Kerry dreams, is more money for everyone out of a central planning committee in DC. His wife is a heir, not a capitalist. His idea of economy, is you send all your money to Washington, and Congress will distribute it. The Soviets and LBJ already tried that. |
#527
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"WalterM140" wrote
Congresswoman Brown indicated that 16,000 of her constituents were not allowed to vote at all, mooting recounts. Her county has major voting problems. Her county has zero leadership at the local level to facilitate the vote in any election, and no one there to this day knows who is eligible to vote. Hers is the only county that still uses typewriters and 3x5 cards to produce the rolls for each precinct. |
#528
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On Mon, 19 Jul 2004 10:01:07 -0600, Ed Rasimus
wrote: Dunno. Never got a -17 flight, but it would be hard to pack more performance into a little airplane than a T-38. Spins in a T-38 are unrecoverable as well, but also virtually unattainable. The airplane will spin, but it is a decidedly unnatural act and AFAIK only been accomplished in very abusive flight testing at Edwards. The F-5 model with the long pointy nose (the F, maybe) spun more easily and was extremely hard to recover. It took jettisoning the canopy to break the spin, in fact. The T-38 and the other F-5s weren't nearly so difficult to recover, but they weren't really easy, either. The gouge about "easy to spin, easy to recover; hard to spin, hard to recover" has a certain amount of truth to it. We, Dryden, were spinning (intentionally) a 3/8ths model of the F-15 when that F-5 got into trouble. Ken had given a briefing on spins, including the vulnerability of long pointy noses, to a group that included the AFFTC commander about two days before the F-5 spin. The commander called our director and asked if anyone else had any predictions he should know about. Did you ever run into the inverted pitch hang up on the T-38? It's well-known in the Flying Qualities community but I haven't heard that many pilots talk about it. I think the F-5s had it, too. Mary -- Mary Shafer Retired aerospace research engineer |
#529
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"ian maclure" ) writes:
On Sun, 18 Jul 2004 23:34:06 -0700, Fred the Red Shirt wrote: [snip] Elected by the Congress, like all Presidents in a joint session that most Americans regard as a formality if they know about it at all. Not quite. The size of the electoral college is approximately the same as Congress ( both houses ). Congress only gets a direct vote if the Electoral College is a dead heat. 'Tis the House of Representives, not congress as a whole, which can select a president. And that duty falls on the HoR when no one receives a majority of the votes in the electoral college. A dead heat is not required. The HoR selected John Quincy Adams over Andrew Jackson in 1825 even though Jackson received more electoral votes - Henry Clay finished 3rd but secured enough electoral votes to deny either Jackson or Adams a majority. -- "Cave ab homine unius libri" |
#530
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Ed Rasimus wrote in message . ..
On 19 Jul 2004 00:04:17 -0700, (Fred the Red Shirt) wrote: No. You created teh strawman yourself with your implication that he was speaking literally. Everyone, including yourself, knows that he was not speaking literally. One fervently hopes that testimony given under oath to the US Senate is always literal. Speaking figuratively about issues, particularly issues as important as allegations of war crimes should NEVER be done figuratively. I take Kerry's testimony under oath as literal and I take his statement on Face the Nation regarding his own commission of war crimes as truth. Why would I doubt his veracity? I never said he was speaking figuratively, that is your straw man again. I do not believe that you take all his statements as literal. No one does. Also, just to disabuse you of the concept in advance, I never said that NONE of his remarks were literal either. I think it is obvious to both of us and especially to the Senators in attendance, when he was speaking generally and when he was speaking of specifics. To claim that what he said was always one way or the other is simply dishonest. Abu Ghraib was reprehensible. It was clearly a failure of leadership on site. It was a failure of leadership from the top down. When the Secretary of Defense re[peatedly and boldly decalres that the United States will not honor the Geneva Conventions, when he publically scoffs at accusations of abuse, he sends a clear message on down the line. Once again we see the strawman. While the principle of responsibility flowing from the top down is correct, the implication that the President is responsible for every act of the the entire military establishment down to the lowest enlisted individual in the field is impossible to support. Your straw man again. In the absence of clear written directives to act in the manner of the Abu Ghraib guards, one must assume that the problem was localized. Again, when the secretary of Defense publicly states that the United States will not observe the Geneva Conventions, and when he publicly scoffs at accusations of wrongdoing he sends a clear message on down the line. And one must assume that message encourages the sort of abuses as ocurred at Abu Graib. What of the doctrine of command responsibility? What should we conclude about the resonsibilites of the officer who received the ICRC complaints? What about the officers above them? There has been publication of the legal opinion statement that suggested a level of detachment from Geneva Convention rules, but the whole story is that the opinion did NOT result in an acceptance of that policy. a Convention rules, but the whole story is that the opinion did NOT result in an acceptance of that policy. I don't know what you're talking about here but it looks like your strawman again. Consider the following letter written On 4 Aug 1863, From William Tecumseh Sherman wrote, to John Rawlins, which read in part: "The amount of burning, stealing, and plundering done by our army makes me ashamed of it. I would quit the service if I could, because I fear that we are drifting to the worst sort of vandalism. I have endeavored to repress this class of crime, but you know how difficult it is to fix the guilt among the great mass of all army. In this case I caught the man in the act. He is acquitted because his superior officer ordered it. The superior officer is acquitted because, I suppose, he had not set the fire with his own hands and thus you and I and every commander must go through the war justly chargeable with crimes at which we blush. Sherman said "war is hell." Lee, however, said "it is good that war is so terrible, lest we come to love it too much." Aristotle said that "war ennobles man." Putting service above self and recognizing that there are some principles that are worth fighting and dying for is basic. I agree with that but disagree that is is apropos this discussion. Well, duh! If you introduced the Sherman letter, why should the topic of war and the relationship of warriors be inappropriate. It isn't my dog in this hunt, it's yours. War and warriors are topics that broad beyond the bounds of the current discussion. You ran off on a tangent. I'll not follow your stray dog. Now, after looking up to see what sorts of things Kerry REALLY said, and the context in which he said them, would you not consider that context to be much the same as General Sherman's remarks? No, I would not. Sherman spoke of an incident and a failure of an officer to perform. No. I do have an advantage in that I already knew that Sherman wrote the letter as part of the correspondence he sent with three officers (not one) he sent back for court martial for (I think) three seperate crimes. However I also redirect your attention to the first sentence: "The amount of burning, stealing, and plundering done by our army makes me ashamed of it. I would quit the service if I could, because I fear that we are drifting to the worst sort of vandalism. So, Sherman had sent the officers back for court-martial, in the same manner that the Abu Ghraib perps have been brought under investigation. I do not recall anyone in the present administartion saying or writing that they felt any responsibility whatsover for the crimes at Abu Ghraib. So no, not at all in the same manner. Now, back to the discussion at hand, do you not see any parrallels between what Sherman wrote about the collective guilt of himself, Rawlins and every commander in the Union Army and what Kerry said about all American soldiers in Vietnam? Does that mean that Lincoln condoned war crimes? Did Lincoln publicly declare that the Union should not abide by the laws of war? (It wouldn't surprise me, he gave short shrift to teh habeas protections in the Constitution.) Sherman was writing about what was happening through out his army, not an isolated incident. Kerry did what Sherman said he wished to do. Kerry quit and then renounced the drift into vandalism that was overtaking the military in Vietnam. The big difference is that Kerry quit (good choice of words) and then accused the ENTIRE US military establishment from the top down and including every warrior in the field of advocating and executing a policy of war crimes. Sherman limited his accusation to ALL commanders. I suppose that is a big difference. But do you see NO similarity? There were other differences of course. Sherman was fighting for the survival of the nation, and he was fighting and winning a war that clearly could be won, and was being won, by military means. Kerry not only occupied a lower station in the military, but he also saw that the survival of the US was not at stake and that the war in Vietnam could not be won by military means. The US had prevailed almost to the greatest extent possible in every military endeavor in Vietnam and still the end of the war was no where in sight. So, Kerry could occupy a "lower station in the military" but he could view the global strategic picture and determine that the war could not be won? How very prescient of him. Do you not claim to have a view of the global strategic picture in Vietnam and also in the world today? How prescient are you? You state correctly that the US prevailed in every military endeavor (the great Tet victory of the NVA for example was a huge military defeat for them). And, the end of the war was in sight within two weeks at any time that the likes of Kerry could be overcome and the resolve to gain the victory could be mustered by the politicians. How? Witness the rapid end to hostilities, the signing of the treaty and the release of the POWs in less than 90 days following December '72. Yet the communists did not quit. Do you think that without political pressure in the US we would have agreed to pull our troops out while the NVA was still fighting? Kerry spoke of a generic ignoring of the rules of war, not only tolerated by leadership but condoned and even directed. That was a lie. I do not believe that it was a lie. Cite an example where an allegattion of war crimes was promptly investigated without an extensive, even illegal effort to cover-up or obstruct the investigation. Calley/Medina. No. I asked for an example of a promt investigation without an extensive, even illegal coverup or effort at obstruction. Or, how about the Turkestan incident since this is an aviation group? OK, tell us about it. My real issue with Kerry is his desire to have it both ways. He sought public approval for protesting the war vigorously. That was well within his right to do so. Now, he seeks approval for being a great warrior. Those are mutually exclusive positions. No they are not mutually exclusive positions. Moreover they represent the truth of his experience. Impetuous, even egotistical (and what politician is not?) he first believed the bull**** and lies about the glory of war and the righteousness of the cause, and perhaps there was at one time some truth to that. But once he saw with his own eyes the reality of Vietnam, and had at his disposal knowledge gained form his fellow soliders he learned differently, came home, and tried to fix the problem he had contributed to befor. You state elsewhere that you turned 18 in 1973. So, you didn't see with your own eyes the "reality" that Kerry saw. At 18 I met a man, his nickname ironically was 'Saint'. Saw him a few times but then I went away to college. Saint said that when he was in Vietnam he killed 56 people. Some of those were civilians and some of those, women and children. I do not doubt what you say about your experience. I do not doubt what Saint said either. Why should I? I was there in '66 and I was there again in '72-'73. How much time did you spend on the ground in combat zones? How much contact did you have with EPWs? How much contact did you have with villagers in-country? I continue to associate with literally hundreds of warriors from the period--USAF/USA/USN/USMC. Not one of them agrees with Kerry. You asked each and every one of them this? I don't believe that you did. Or is it wrong for me to assume that you must have literally polled each and every one? His view of the total corruption of the military is his alone. Kerry's "fellow soldiers" from the Winter Soldier testimony--the 150 accusers of war crimes--have been largely discredited. Many have been found to be outright liars, some did not serve at all! I'd like ot see your evidence. Here you can find lists of the 'alleged' veterans, along with other participants: http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/1st_Marine_roster.html#Robert%20S.%20Craig http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/1st_Air_Cav_roster.html#John%20Mallory http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/3d_Marine_roster.html#Allen%20Akers http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/POW_roster.html#Jon%20Floyd http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/Misc_roster.html#Moderators http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/3d_World_roster.html#Evan%20Haney http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/25th_Infantry_roster.html#Ron%20Podlaski http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/82d_Airborne.html#Charles%20Leffler http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/1st_Infantry_roster.html#Robert%20McConnachie http://lists.village.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Winter_Soldier/Units/Americal_roster.html#William%20Bezanson Are not all great warriors anti-war in their hearts? Actually no. I'm fortunate enough to know many warriors. They are patriots in their hearts and they take great pride in the profession of arms. But have they no objection to war? -- FF |
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