Here I am

This'll make you even more proud

Attention: TDR Forum Junkies
To the point: Click this link and check out the Front Page News story(ies) where we are tracking the introduction of the 2025 Ram HD trucks.

Thanks, TDR Staff

Who says all big companies don't care?

War and News Coverage

Got this in the mail yesterday. Makes you even more proud of what we stand for.







TRIBUTE TO THE UNITED STATES





     This, from a Canadian newspaper, no less, is worth sharing.





     America: The Good Neighbor.





     Widespread but only partial news coverage was given



     recently to a remarkable editorial broadcast from



     Toronto by Gordon Sinclair, a Canadian television



     commentator. What follows is the full text of his



     trenchant remarks as printed in the Congressional



     Record:







     "This Canadian thinks it is time to speak up for the



     Americans as the most generous and possibly the least



     appreciated people on all the earth.







     Germany, Japan and, to a lesser extent, Britain and



     Italy were lifted out of the debris of war by the



     Americans who poured in billions of dollars and



     forgave other billions in debts. None of these



     countries is today paying even the interest on its



     remaining debts to the United States.







     When France was in danger of collapsing in 1956, it



     was the Americans who propped it up, and their reward



     was to be insulted and swindled on the streets of



     Paris. I was there. I saw it.







     When earthquakes hit distant cities, it is the United



     States that hurries in to help. This spring, 59



     American communities were flattened by tornadoes.



     Nobody helped.







     The Marshall Plan and the Truman Policy pumped



     billions of dollars into discouraged countries. Now



     newspapers in those countries are writing about the



     decadent, warmongering Americans.







     I'd like to see just one of those countries that is



     gloating over the erosion of the United States dollar



     build its own airplane. Does any other country in the



     world have a plane to equal the Boeing Jumbo Jet, the



     Lockheed Tri-Star, or the Douglas DC10? If so, why



     don't they fly them? Why do all the International



     lines except Russia fly American Planes?







     Why does no other land on earth even consider putting



     a man or woman on the moon? You talk about Japanese



     technocracy, and you get radios. You talk about German



     technocracy, and you get automobiles. You talk about



     American technocracy, and you find men on the moon -



     not once, but several times and safely home again.







     You talk about scandals, and the Americans put theirs



     right in the store window for everybody to look at.



     Even their draft-dodgers are not pursued and hounded.



     They are here on our streets, and most of them, unless



     they are breaking Canadian laws, are getting American



     dollars from ma and pa at home to spend here.







     When the railways of France, Germany and India were



     breaking down through age, it was the Americans who



     rebuilt them. When the Pennsylvania Railroad and the



     New York Central went broke, nobody loaned them an



     old caboose. Both are still broke.







     I can name you 5000 times when the Americans raced to



     the help of other people in trouble. Can you name me



     even one time when someone else raced to the    Americans



     in trouble? I don't think there was outside help even



     during the San Francisco earthquake.







     Our neighbors have faced it alone, and I'm one



     Canadian who is damned tired of hearing them get



     kicked around. They will come out of this thing with



     their flag high. And when they do, they are entitled



     to thumb their nose at the lands that are gloating



     over their present troubles. I hope Canada is not one



     of those. "







     Stand proud, America!



    
 
Last edited:
Here's another one just in

We'll Go Forward From this Moment

>> >>

>> >> by Leonard Pitts Jr. , the Miami

>> >> Herald

>> >>

>> >> It's my job to have something to

>> >> say. They pay me to provide

>> >> words that help make sense of

>> >> that which troubles the American

>> >> soul. But in this moment of

>> >> airless shock when hot tears

>> >> sting disbelieving eyes, the

>> >> only thing I can find to say,

>> >> the only words that seem to fit,

>> >> must be addressed to the unknown

>> >> author of this suffering.

>> >>

>> >> You monster. You beast. You

>> >> unspeakable *******.

>> >>

>> >> What lesson did you hope to

>> >> teach us by your coward's attack

>> >> on our World Trade Center, our

>> >> Pentagon, us? What was it you

>> >> hoped we would learn?

>> >>

>> >> Whatever it was, please know

>> >> that you failed.

>> >>

>> >> Did you want us to respect your

>> >> cause? You just damned your

>> >> cause.

>> >>

>> >> Did you want to make us fear?

>> >> You just steeled our resolve.

>> >>

>> >> Did you want to tear us apart?

>> >> You just brought us together.

>> >>

>> >> Let me tell you about my people.

>> >> We are a vast and quarrelsome

>> >> family, a family rent by racial,

>> >> social, political and class

>> >> division, but a family

>> >> nonetheless. We're frivolous,

>> >> yes, capable of expending

>> >> tremendous emotional energy on

>> >> pop cultural minutiae -- a

>> >> singer's revealing dress, a ball

>> >> team's misfortune, a cartoon

>> >> mouse. We're wealthy, too,

>> >> spoiled by the ready

>> >> availability of trinkets and

>> >> material goods, and maybe

>> >> because of that, we walk through

>> >> life with a certain sense of

>> >> blithe entitlement. We are

>> >> fundamentally decent, though --

>> >> peace-loving and compassionate.

>> >> We struggle to know the right

>> >> thing and to do it. And we are,

>> >> the overwhelming majority

>> >> of us, people of faith,

>> >> believers in a just and loving

>> >> God.

>> >>

>> >> Some people -- you, perhaps --

>> >> think that any or all of this

>> >> makes us weak.

>> >>

>> >> You're mistaken. We are not

>> >> weak. Indeed, we are strong in

>> >> ways that cannot be measured by

>> >> arsenals.

>> >>

>> >> Yes, we're in pain now. We are

>> >> in mourning and we are in shock.

>> >> We're still grappling with the

>> >> unreality of the awful thing you

>> >> did, still working to make

>> >> ourselves understand that this

>> >> isn't a special effect from some

>> >> Hollywood blockbuster, isn't the

>> >> plot development from a Tom

>> >> Clancy novel. Both in terms of

>> >> the awful scope of their

>> >> ambition and the probable final

>> >> death toll, your attacks are

>> >> likely to go down as the worst

>> >> acts of terrorism in the history

>> >> of the United States and,

>> >> probably, the history of the

>> >> world. You've bloodied us as we

>> >> have never been bloodied before.

>> >>

>> >> But there's a gulf of difference

>> >> between making us bloody and

>> >> making us fall. This is the

>> >> lesson Japan was taught to its

>> >> bitter sorrow the last time

>> >> anyone hit us this hard, the

>> >> last time anyone brought us such

>> >> abrupt and monumental pain. When

>> >> roused, we are righteous in our

>> >> outrage,

>> >> terrible in our force. When

>> >> provoked by this level of

>> >> barbarism, we will bear any

>> >> suffering, pay any cost, go to

>> >> any length, in the pursuit of

>> >> justice.

>> >>

>> >> I tell you this without fear of

>> >> contradiction. I know my people,

>> >> as you, I think, do not. What I

>> >> know reassures me. It also

>> >> causes me to tremble with dread

>> >> of the future.

>> >>

>> >> In the days to come, there will

>> >> be recrimination and accusation,

>> >> fingers pointing to determine

>> >> whose failure allowed this to

>> >> happen and what can be done to

>> >> prevent it from happening again.

>> >> There will be heightened

>> >> security, misguided talk of

>> >> revoking basic freedoms. We'll

>> >> go forward from this moment

>> >> sobered, chastened, sad. But

>> >> determined, too. Unimaginably

>> >> determined.

>> >>

>> >>

>> >> You see, the steel in us is not

>> >> always readily apparent. That

>> >> aspect of our character is

>> >> seldom understood by people who

>> >> don't know us well. On this day,

>> >> the family's bickering is put on

>> >> hold.

>> >> As Americans we will weep, as

>> >> Americans we will mourn, and as

>> >> Americans, we will rise in

>> >> defense of all that we cherish.

>> >>

>> >> So I ask again: What was it you

>> >> hoped to teach us? It occurs to

>> >> me that maybe you just wanted us

>> >> to know the depths of your

>> >> hatred. If that's the case,

>> >> consider the message received.

>> >> And take this message in

>> >> exchange:

>> >>

>> >> You don't know my people. You

>> >> don't know what we're capable

>> >> of. You don't know what you just

>> >> started.

>> >>

>> >> But you're about to learn.

>> >>
 
If you do not realize..... Mr Sinclare's article was writen in 1973. .

he died in 1983,still good however,no wonder it did not recieve coverage!

Uncle Joe
 
And Yet timely Mr Sinclare's article is and now thanks to Canada it needs to be amended...





My uncle spent time in France during the Korean war. He told me of the stories of how he was treated there.

If he was in uniform, he was spit at. If he was in plain clothes he he got stares and jeers... ... if they were on a lonely street and a some french men were coming the other way, the safest thing they could do was either turn around and or cross the streets so they wouldnt cross paths. He said it was horrible. At least when in Korea they were allowed to defend themselves. Sorry to say his stories stick in my mind. Back when we need to fly over France, I think it was France that wouldnt allow it. Than why are they in NATO? It's sad how all of this sticks in my mind and paints a certain picture.



I wish I could be 1/100th as articulate as the two writers that had their verbage posted in this thread. Reading these things help to convey, realize, verbalize, even understand our own feelings.



Bob
 
...don't forget the Exocet and the Sheffield...

Anybody remember the Falklands War? The US was not involved. It was Argentina and Grt Britain. The HMS Sheffield was armed with the French-made (not French maid ;) ) Exocet antiship missile. Unfortunately, France had also sold them to the Argentinians to be used for shore defense. The Sheffield had a highly sophisticated missile-defense system, computer-driven with automatic deployment of radar-confusing foil-chaff charges.



When confronted with the radar signature of an Exocet, the computer interpreted the signal as "Friendly Incoming". No foil cloud. The Exocet struck the Sheffield at its largest-profiled point, the "sail" or "tower". I don't think she sank, but it killed steering, communications, and the command group that was there, thereby leaving her a sitting duck for follow-ups.



That's the result of doing business with someone who grazes on both sides of the fence.



I suspect I'll never drive a Pugeot, Citroen, or Renault. And I don't want to shoot no stinkin' Moisin-Nagant, neither!
 
if you implied mosin nagant is french made... .

its not... . made in former soviet union or earlier in the russian monarchy,first ones came out in 1890 or so
 
Back
Top