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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist




I wasn't even alive when Kennedy was shot but I find it crude, distasteful, and deeply unpatriotic to callously joke about or playfully, blithely post moving images of the assassination of our President.




38 posted on 06/02/2016 9:00:41 AM PDT by golux
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To: golux

I agree. This was a horrible tragedy, why are we joking about a man’s death? Even more, why are we joking about our president’s death?


43 posted on 06/02/2016 9:04:30 AM PDT by freepertoo
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To: golux; Extremely Extreme Extremist; CaptainK
I wasn't even alive when Kennedy was shot but I find it crude, distasteful, and deeply unpatriotic to callously joke about or playfully, blithely post moving images of the assassination of our President.

You weren't alive when those of us who were experienced almost three full years of his crude, distasteful, and unpatriotic use of the White House and his playfully, blithe conduct of the privileges covering it up.

You weren't alive to understand the deep distrust and rejection of his imperious Camelotish conduct, his failed Bay of Pigs incident, and his initiation of US involvement in the Viet Nam conflict that made him extremely unpopular. In fact, he most certainly was not a "hero" until the day he was shot, a moment in time seized by the media to turn the hearts of the un- and dis-informed fickle public into an enduring state of blind, doting, misplaced compassion. Not everyone was fooled by this unfortunate ending of his failing career as upholding America's anti-Communism struggle in the Cold War:

"The editors of National Review judged John Fitzgerald Kennedy to be a consummate technician of mass politics. His programs and policies -- often chosen, by the evidence, in opportunistic furtherance of technical manipulations--we judged to be, for the most part, dangerous to the nation’s well-being and security, and to the survival of our perilously threatened Western civilization. Neither his death nor the fearful manner of it provides any reason to change these judgments." (My added emphasis)

-- Excerpt from the National Review, quoted by Loe Conason in his article for the National Memo, "Was JFK A Conservative — Or A Socialist? Let’s Ask The Right-Wingers Of 1963" (click here) (Nov. 22, 2013, 50 years latere)

Please do not think that by any means I would believe that this was the way our President should be relieved of his office. Unlawful, certainly, and not at all laughable, but unpatriotic--who can know? One would have to be in possession of reliable information not within reach of the ordinary citizen at this time.

It would not be my way to honor and uphold the Constitution of my forefathers.

92 posted on 06/02/2016 10:50:15 AM PDT by imardmd1 (Fiat Lux)
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