THE PATRIOT THREAD

Discussion in 'Politics' started by candletrader, Mar 21, 2003.

  1. #11     Mar 21, 2003
  2. msfe

    msfe

    your brave boys and girls in uniform are not alone

    Full list of coalition countries:

    Afghanistan, Albania, Australia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Colombia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, El Salvador, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Georgia, Hungary, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, the Philippines, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Spain, Turkey, United Kingdom and Uzbekistan.

    Source: US State Department

    No-show neighbours

    Notable for their absence from the state department list were a number of members of the Nato alliance, including Canada, Belgium, and Norway, as well as France and Germany.

    And the US was surprisingly unsuccessful in gaining any allies in its traditional backyard of Latin America.

    Only El Salvador, Nicaragua and Colombia - where the US is funding a huge anti-drugs war - were prepared to be identified with the US coalition.

    The larger South American nations, like Argentina and Brazil, have followed the example of Mexico and Chile, who failed to back the US attempt to gain a second UN resolution.

    And the only two African countries which are on the list, Ethiopia and Eritrea, are bitter rivals who are both seeking US support in a boundary dispute.

     
    #12     Mar 21, 2003
  3. Magna

    Magna Administrator

    That's what I've always thought, but I guess I was wrong. Maybe He selected this slab of land on the North American continent and decided the rest of the entire planet wasn't worthy of His love and blessings.... :confused:
     
    #13     Mar 21, 2003
  4. I don't think the term "God Bless America" means that, since we are asking God to bless us, that we are asking him not to bless anyone else. It is just a political formality left behind from the days when this country was settled by puritans.

    That "separation of church and state" thing is funny. Kids can't say god in the classroom but the president who represents our country can say "God bless America" after giving a speech.
     
    #14     Mar 21, 2003
  5. now you're learning... next on the list: "do as I say, not as I do"
     
    #15     Mar 21, 2003
  6. This is what I meant... God's blessings aren't exclusive to us, its just a manner of speech...
     
    #16     Mar 21, 2003
  7. POST BY CANDLETRADER, 3/9/03:



    http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=14558&perpage=6&pagenumber=9
     
    #17     Mar 21, 2003
  8. !
     
    #18     Mar 21, 2003
  9. Babak

    Babak

    [​IMG]

    Believe it or not, the flip flop was invented by Leonardo da Vinci.

    I have no idea why I thought of this when I read this thread :confused:
     
    #19     Mar 21, 2003
  10. TV's War News Coverage Outdrawn by Comedy Repeats

    Reuters

    Friday, March 21, 2003; 5:21 PM
    By Ben Berkowitz

    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - U.S. television networks, facing a bill of up to $20 million each per day to cover the Iraq war, found that "Friends" are more popular than enemies as a repeat episode of the top sitcom on Thursday night beat live war cover on ABC in the ratings.

    With networks wondering just how deep the American appetite for war cover will be, preliminary data from Nielsen Media Research on Friday showed ABC's live coverage running second throughout Thursday evening, behind NBC's entertainment programming, and later in the night an edition of its news show "Dateline."

    For the 8 p.m.-11 p.m. prime-time period, ABC's news coverage averaged 10.83 million total viewers, behind NBC's 13.65 million viewers for its mix of half-hour comedies and "Dateline." At 8 p.m., NBC's long-running hit comedy "Friends" drew nearly 4 million more viewers than ABC's news, even though it was a repeat episode.

    In the audience ages 18-49, considered key by advertisers and used by the networks as a leading benchmark of performance, NBC drew a 6.3 rating for the night, compared with a 3.9 for ABC. One rating point represents one percent of homes that own television sets.

    Goldman Sachs research estimated this week that the cost to the networks of continuous coverage of the war could be $5 million to $20 million per day, in a worst-case scenario, depending on the network.

    Tom Wolzein, an analyst at Sanford Bernstein who is a former NBC News executive and also served in Vietnam, said war coverage could increase costs for news divisions by 5 percent to 10 percent, or $40 million to $60 million for the year.

    "From a business side, ABC's noncommercial coverage not only removed the network from ratings competition with CBS and NBC, but also kept its weak Thursday night out of the overall ratings averages, which don't include non-sponsored programs," Wolzein said in research note Friday.

    The result: "This should actually help ABC's ratings for the season."

    ABC MAKES A MEA CULPA

    While dealing with the ratings and the possibility that this Sunday's Academy Awards may not go on because of the war with Iraq, the news division has also found itself having to issue a mea culpa to its affiliates.

    The network on Friday confirmed that it has sent a letter of apology to its affiliate stations nationwide for a snafu Wednesday night, in the early hours of the war against Iraq, that left many of them with dead air where their late-night newscasts would normally have been.

    Of all the networks covering the military conflict in the Gulf, ABC was last to come on with the news Wednesday night, nearly 10 minutes behind front-runner NBC.

    When ABC did report the bombing around Baghdad, it was without lead anchor Peter Jennings.

    Substitutes filled in until he came on the air a few minutes later, but at 11 p.m. ET, Jennings signed off. ABC affiliates on the west coast went back to entertainment programming, while those on the East Coast who were expecting sustained coverage from Jennings were left with nothing.

    Affiliates, who had been told that the network would stay with news through the evening, were furious at the result.

    "ABC News repeatedly informed affiliates across the country that network coverage would prevent local stations from airing 11 p.m. newscasts," local affiliate WCJB-TV, in the Gainesville, Florida area, said on its Web site.

    "At 11pm, with no notice or warning, ABC decided to end their continuous coverage immediately," the note said. "We have been in contact with ABC and expressed our grave concerns over the decisions made at the network level."

    Yet to be determined is whether news coverage of the war will displace Sunday's planned telecast of the 75th Annual Academy Awards.

    On Thursday, a spokesman for the entertainment side of ABC said the network was taking a "moment-by-moment" approach to airing the highly lucrative event, which generated as much as $1.45 million for a 30-second advertising spot this year.

    NBC is a unit of General Electric Co. ; CBS is a unit of Viacom Inc. ; ABC is a unit of Walt Disney Co. ; and Fox is a unit of News Corp Ltd.
     
    #20     Mar 21, 2003