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


To: jlallen who wrote (746051)7/25/2006 3:29:14 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Respond to of 769670
 
Re: "it is cowardice....."

I never said it wasn't.

(But, I also believe that no military movement is likely to volunteer for defeat. After all, they are trying to achieve their aims...)

To continue the earlier analogy though: it also wasn't considered 'brave' (by the British) when the American irregulars hunkered-down behind fences, hedge rows and the trees in the forest, and shot at the British lines --- instead of lining up to face them in 'European-style' battle formations....

Still, was quite effective.



To: jlallen who wrote (746051)7/25/2006 3:32:30 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Respond to of 769670
 
"Francis MarionSWAMP FOX of the Revolution The greatest guerrilla fighter in the American Revolution was Francis Marion. Incredibly daring, he terrorized the entire British Army in South Carolina, striking with fantastic swiftness, then vanishing ghost-like into the swamps. To chase him was a futile nightmare, for the Swamp Fox was too clever and too fearless. Born near Georgetown, South Carolina, Marion was for years a peaceful farmer. When the Cherokees began their massacres he began his fighting career, learning the Indian techniques of surprise attack and sudden disappearance, how to use swamps and forests as cover. Thus when England sent a vast fleet to capture Charleston, Marion was already a brilliant strategist. From a tiny, unfinished island fort he defied fifty warships of the greatest navy in the world. He and his men crippled the entire British fleet and saved the city, though they lacked adequate ammunition, achieving the first important victory of the American Revolution. When Charleston fell to the enemy, Marion escaped and formed Marion's Brigade, one hundred fifty tattered, penniless patriots. None received pay, food or even ammunition from the Continental Army. The only reward they sought was freedom from tyranny, freedom for America. Although Marion received a Congressional citation for wisdom and bravery he was never accorded the honor his country owed him, and when the British evacuated Charleston he was not asked to participate in the celebration because he and his men were too ragged. But that ragged brigade who followed Francis Marion on the long, hard road to American independence earned its rightful plate in history."