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I am pleased to see that it is gone

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 14 Nov 2009 16:32

Unfortunately it came across as very bitter and very dogmatic with nothing to temper the accusations against military personnel. Perhaps it is a bit of a sickly poem, most of these e mail poems are over the top but the fact remains that somebody had used it to express their feelings about remembrance day and to attack that was felt to be offensive.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 16:35


http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2009/11/11/remembrance-ceremonies.html


Following the wreath-laying ceremony, Rabbi Reuven Bulka, the honorary chaplain of the Canadian Legion, delivered the benediction.

"We who ride on the coattails of our heroes can best show our gratitude by standing up for the values they continue to defend by nurturing in Canada an enveloping culture of respect, of harmony, of inclusion, a great country worthy of their great sacrifice," Bulka said.

"This is our sacred trust, our unshakable perpetual obligation, our way to actively remember."


None of this obnoxious freeedumbbb noise. None of this empty thanking.

Bulka is not one of my favourite people, but even he got this right.

Show gratitude by DOING. By respecting. By including. Because what MY society is about is respect and inclusion.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 16:37

SRS: "Being so close to Remembrance Day and with so many soldiers away who are related to members on here, your post was bound to stir emotions on the board."


And the offensive, fascistic, militaristic tripe to which I responded STIRRED EMOTIONS too. Mine (and I have had a thoughtful PM from someone not comfortable expressing them in this place).

What makes someone else's more important, more deserving of consideration, and my expression of mine deserving of SUPPRESSION?

WHAT?

Not freedom of speech, that's what not.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 14 Nov 2009 16:39

Sylvia will you stop accusing me of something I am not doing. I Did not want to see Janey deleted and I didn't say I did.

I and my husband caught the ten oclock bus into Gloucester and got home again at 1pm I am not a liar. Anything that went on the thread in that time I did not see I was not here. and that is just what I mean by stirring. you are very good at it.

Quote “Oh thats good now you can all tell Janey what you think now shes here ... lol especially seeing as it was hoped she was deleted ...”

Rambling

Rambling Report 14 Nov 2009 16:39

"Show gratitude by DOING. By respecting. By including. Because what MY society is about is respect and inclusion."

I don't think anyone would argue with that Janey, if you had said just that, simply and plainly , your 'case' would have been made.

~~~Secret Red ^^ Squirrel~~~  **007 1/2**

~~~Secret Red ^^ Squirrel~~~ **007 1/2** Report 14 Nov 2009 16:40

did I say that your post should have been suppressed Janey? What I said was "your post was bound to stir emotions on the board"

Please read back a few pages at my first remark on here, I said that although I didn't agree with your post, there was no valid reason why it should have been deleted.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 16:41

Rose, there are several million things I could say if I had the time.

In this instance, I was RESPONDING to a nasty bit of fascistic militaristic tripe.

I responded to it as I saw fit.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 16:44

Then I don't take your point, SRS.

It was bound to stir emotions. What, that's bad? Nothing should ever be said that might stir emotions? Maybe the person who posted the vulgar stupid thing in the first place should delete it then, or I should report it because it offended me? It did. That was the first thing I said. It is deeply offensive. To anyone who values all the things it dishonoured -- freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom of speech, freedom to protest, the right to a fair trial (hahahaha), the right to vote -- and to all of the clergy, reporters, poets, campus organizers, lawyers and politicians who have fought AND DIED for those things.

ChAoTicintheNewYear

ChAoTicintheNewYear Report 14 Nov 2009 16:46

I saw the thread (well some of it) this morning. I was going to reply to it but didn't have time then and came back a few minutes ago to find this one here instead.

I have to agree with Rose about the generalising. That's the way it came across to me too. It may not have been what you intended Janey (you've already said that you were responding to generalisations) but that's the way I interpreted it.

Having said that I actually agreed with some of the things you were saying and, although controversial, I didn't think the thread should be removed.

~~~Secret Red ^^ Squirrel~~~  **007 1/2**

~~~Secret Red ^^ Squirrel~~~ **007 1/2** Report 14 Nov 2009 16:48

Janey, I was trying to explain the reaction on the boards to your post, I didn't say it was bad, just that people feel very emotional about what you were saying at this particular time.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 16:50

"Interpret" as you like, everybody. Nothing has stopped you yet.

We are all free to choose to "interpret" what others say, and to choose how we then characterize what others say in public.

Have at it. Your interpretations and characterizations are your responsibility, not mine.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 16:51


http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/lorcas-grave-awakens-other-ghosts-1813199.html

The excavation of a mass grave on a Granada hillside where the POET Federico Garcia Lorca was murdered during the Spanish Civil War has reinforced calls for the area to be investigated. "Lorca was just one of 4,000 executions on a roadside just a kilometre long," says Juan Antonio Lopez Diaz, a Granada University professor. "There are so many bodies there that pine trees were planted just to stop them being uncovered by rainfall erosion."

After years of debate, digging finally began last week at the mass grave where half a dozen men, possibly including Lorca, were killed and buried on 18 August 1936 by hitmen from General Franco's right-wing Nationalist forces.



I remember Garcia Lorca on Nov 11.

HE FOUGHT FOR FREEDOM. And he died because of it.

~~~Secret Red ^^ Squirrel~~~  **007 1/2**

~~~Secret Red ^^ Squirrel~~~ **007 1/2** Report 14 Nov 2009 16:51

oooh and you never stir Sylvia? lol ;)

Sorry, couldn't resist.....I think there's a wooden spoon in most people's homes.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 16:53


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_State_shootings

The Kent State shootings, also known as the May 4 massacre or Kent-State massacre, occurred at Kent State University in the city of Kent, Ohio, and involved the shooting of unarmed college students by members of the Ohio National Guard on Monday, May 4, 1970. The guardsmen fired 67 rounds over a period of 13 seconds, killing four students and wounding nine others, one of whom suffered permanent paralysis.



I remember the Kent State victims on Nov. 11.

CAMPUS ORGANIZERS fought for the freedom ... and the lives ... of the Vietnamese. And some died for it.

Rambling

Rambling Report 14 Nov 2009 16:54

Janey, you still haven't re-posted the comments re rape... I would like to re-read to see if my initial interpretation ( which was shared by others ) was correct....I think it is important.

ChAoTicintheNewYear

ChAoTicintheNewYear Report 14 Nov 2009 16:55

Janey Canuck: Meanwhile, maybe someone can tell me.

What is being fought for in Iraq?

Simple question.
-------------------------------

Oil.

Having said that I think you'll find most people are against the war in Iraq and many have been before it started.

As for the soldiers they're there to do a job, they don't have much choice in the matter. They go where the politicians send them.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 16:56

http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/news/hundreds-colombian-lawyers-murdered-no-one-prosecuted-report-reveals


More than 400 Colombian lawyers have been murdered since 1991 but no one has been prosecuted for a single killing, a devastating report from 42 British lawyers who visited Colombia last year has revealed.

Uribe said: ‘There were 40 lawyers killed last year alone. They were persecuted because they were associated with the “crimes” or sympathies of their clients. If they are willing to defend them, the logic goes, then they must be fellow travellers.’


Lawyers all over the world fighting AND DYING for the rights and freedoms of other people. And other lawyers fighting for them.

Anybody want to thank a lawyer?


Oh, and who killed Garcia Lorca? Who killed the Kent State four? Who is killing the lawyers?

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 16:57

There we go, Cãt.


Now do we thank them for fighting for oil?

As I said, I pity some. I thank none.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 14 Nov 2009 16:59

Cat, I think that was a point raised many times on the original thread, soldiers go where they are sent if anyone is to blame it is governments.

Which, in a funny roundabout way confirms Janey's views on the poem I suppose!!!


Who deleted?

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 14 Nov 2009 17:02

It precisely confirms my views on the poems.

Soldiers join the military by choice. (Those who don't, like my great-uncle who was gassed in October 1918 and died some time later at a field hospital, may still have choices ...)

They then do what they are told to do. Sometimes, heroically and selflessly and for the most honourable and laudable of purposes. Sometimes, in violation of all human decency and/or international law.

They are a part of us.