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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ManyMoose who wrote (189906)10/7/2001 5:12:45 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Respond to of 769670
 
Nation Greets News of Attacks
Cheers of "USA! USA!" echoed through the Atlanta
Falcons' football stadium at news that U.S. forces had
launched strikes in Afghanistan. In Denver, a woman
who fled as a child from Vietnam ruefully wished that
war could be avoided.

Across the nation, widespread support for
counterstrike against terrorism was coupled with
worries.

The president of the Mormon church choked with
emotion as he reported the U.S. strikes to a
conference of the faithful in Salt Lake City.

"Occasions of this kind pull us up sharply to the
realization that life is fragile, that peace is fragile, that
civilization is fragile," said Gordon B. Hinckley.

Tens of thousands of Americans heard the news while
packed into stadiums for National Football League
games and the close of baseball's regular season.

The start of the Philadelphia Eagles' NFL game against
Arizona at Veterans Stadium was delayed nine minutes
as President Bush's announcement of the strikes was
shown on the big screen. The crowd of more than
64,000 cheered when they saw images of the military
action.

At Miller Park in Milwaukee, baseball fans didn't see
Bush on the scoreboard, but subdued players
watched on clubhouse televisions.

"We all knew it was going to happen," said Milwaukee
Brewers pitcher Mike De Jean. "Baseball has been
secondary since Sept. 11. I think we all want to get
home and be with our families in times like this."

The news soon spread into the stands.

"It's about time," said Dan Scheuerer of Beaver Dam,
Wis. "I hope we get (Osama) bin Laden. I also hope
we can minimize the damage to innocent people."

In Nashville, Ind., Charles King listened to reports of
the attack as he parked cars on a lot that he runs.

"We knew this was going to happen," said King, 54. "I
don't want to live the rest of my life in fear, so we have
to wipe them (terrorists) out."

In Chicago, Nora Murray, 30, got the news while on
the way to an opera matinee. She worried that the
U.S. strikes would draw retaliation.

"There's more to come," she said. "I think fighting
Afghanistan is going to be very difficult."

At the Mormon general conference, Hinckley was
handed a note about the U.S. strikes, then addressed
the crowd.

"We are plunged into the state of war - the first war of
the 21st century," Hinckley said. "This is not a matter
of Christian against Muslim. ... Do not become a party
in any way in the persecution of the innocent."

Residents of the nation's largest Afghan community, in
Fremont, Calif., reacted with a mix of joy and
apprehension. Bin Laden is widely loathed there, but
many Afghan immigrants fear relatives in their
homeland will suffer during the conflict.

"The good thing is I am happy they started," said
Homayoun Khamosh, owner of the Pamir Food Mart.
"And the bad thing is I don't want civilians dead for
nothing."

In Atlanta, Vietnam veteran William McGill said the
United States "should have gone in a long time ago
and taken care of business."

"Even at my age I am willing to go," said McGill, 55. "I
believe in my liberty and my freedom. If they need me,
I'm there for them."

The news saddened Lan To, 25, of Estes Park, Colo.,
a schoolteacher whose family fled from Vietnam when
she was 2.

"We're in this country because we were leaving a war,"
she said. "I never think war is the right thing to do. I
never think violence is the right thing to do, but
unfortunately there's not enough people in the world
who think that."
washingtonpost.com
tom watson tosiwmee



To: ManyMoose who wrote (189906)10/7/2001 7:51:59 PM
From: E. T.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
"Try the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution.
"JudeoChristian Doctrine" Can you tell me where freedom of speech, equal rights, the right to assemble and democracy come out of that doctrine?"

I should have said, can someone cite examples from JudeoChristian text that speaks of freedom of speech, equal rights, the right to assemble and the value of democracy.