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Is it me?
Hopefully this issue has not already been discussed, and if it has, I apologize. I was a little shocked when I heard how many soldier and marines died in June over in Afghanistan. When Bush was president, I seemed to hear about every soldier or marine who was killed in combat. Now, it's like the fourth estate has made an attempt to put it on the down low. Maybe it's just me.
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No Dennis, it is NOT just you! I have noticed the same thing, as have many other Gold Star families that I talk to on a regular basis. The lame-stream media has "conveniently" forgotten to mention the sacrifice of our military, or have moved it to the back of the paper/news reports, etc. It is my opinion that this is done on purpose, and it is a disgrace and a slap in the face of those families who have lost someone who has given all. Not that I needed anything else to hate the media, but this has taken my distain for the media to a new level!:mad::mad::mad:
molon labe:mad: |
^^^ Amen
I noticed this for awhile now :( |
"America" is not at war, the US Military is.....
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I watch "This Week" every Sunday morning - under their "In Memorium" piece at the end of the show, they list the name, rank, branch of service, and home of record for every casualty which occurred that week.
Here's the segment from last week's show. http://abcnews.go.com/ThisWeek/video...ylist=11026857 Richard :munchin |
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Just got back from this.
http://www.ocregister.com/news/patiñ...article-photos Photo caption: Hundreds line the sidewalk in front of El Dorado High School along Valencia Avenue in Placentia, holding American flags as the funeral procession for Yorba Linda Marine Cpl. Claudio Patino went by late Friday morning. |
One of the primary factors in my mind is the numbers are broadly spread throughout each month. Unlike Iraq where we would unfortunately lose troops in larger groups at one incident.
There is a suppression and not suprising the MSM and current political environment lead to less airplay. Everyone is worried about their bottom line, re-election or insertion of (insert political party) into incumbent slots. After November, just wait we'll become someone's focus, good or bad. And The TS is correct. Quote:
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It has been very prominent in the Washington Post how deadly a month June was. Perhaps its just that I look for it and notice it.
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Holly |
I've given this a lot of thought. In WWII they would simply describe casualties as light or heavy without giving numbers generally. Starting with Vietnam the media was given a daily count. That continues to this day. A breathless anchor with sad eyes describes June as "the deadliest month".
50 kia. In a month. True it's the most so far but hardly a military catastrophe. Constant reminders of casualties can eventually sap the public's (and Congress') commitment to a campaign. It's happened before. Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying the fallen don't need to be honored. I just don't know what purpose numbers flashed across the screen serve. |
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So is there a comparison, or is it just the media's continued exploitation of numbers and a lack of considerable benefit for them? I think so. |
The Washington Post provides a list of casualties every week and I have been impressed with the dignified manner in which they have done it.
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Yesterday the Washington Post's headline was a quote from a soldier, "This Is Not How You Fight a War". (When you read the article you saw the quote referred to the ROE troops must follow. The tone of the article was that the current ROE restrict soldiers' ability to defend themselves and wage war. ) Remember that in 2004 many were upset when Ted Koppel read the names of soldiers killed in Iraq. |
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