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"The Greatest Generation"

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"The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 19:51:05

I would guess the median age here to be 32-33. There's some college kids and younger, and a few boomers, but how many really old people over say, late 60s? early 70s. I've seen some people look really old and worn out at 40. but for the most part, over 70 is old and part of the "greatest generation" as that asskisser Brokaw put it. I can sympathize with the young oldergenerationtrashers that I read here sometimes, I know the feeling. My general impression of that older WWII bunch is not good. But they had some great musicians. And they fought like hell.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby TheTurtle » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 19:57:18

I just started reading The Fourth Turning today. Interesting discussions of intergenerational conflicts therein. Have you read it, PMS?
“Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves.” (Ted Perry)
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby holmes » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:04:26

not real intelligent. Consumed vast quantities of resources in a horrifyingly short time frame. almost zero ecological common sense. Greedy. neo classical economicly driven. lived for the moment as is obvious in the state of our affairs today.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:07:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TheTurtle', 'I') just started reading The Fourth Turning today. Interesting discussions of intergenerational conflicts therein. Have you read it, PMS?
No I haven't but let me know what you think of it. What's the name of the generation that was in their 20s and 30s during WWII? Guys like Jimmy Stewart's age, maybe that's in the book.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby holmes » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:08:14

and if u observe ww2 was mostly profit driven. Nothing was really solved or americas future protected because of it. example wide open borders and mulitculturalism. Thought the war was for future generations protection. nope all a scam and lie. however i respect their fighting ability and toughness. hard ass mothers compared to the gynocracy of glam seen nowadays. soccer moms are the tuff guys now. LOL.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby holmes » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:13:51

Lee Marvin rocks!
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:15:47

Lee Marvin was a good tough guy actor of that era, he actually was tough fighting in the pacific as a marine.

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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby holmes » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:16:56

gen Omar Bradley was a great general.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:17:15

Audie Murphy was a great soldier and he could play a guitar and sing.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby Schweinshaxe » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:19:59

JR Ewing was an asshole, but Bobby was OK. They were very old but also very different. I guess there are good AND bad old farts out there.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby holmes » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:22:24

Darn straight! woody guthrie too. not a soldier tho.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby holmes » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:26:16

Lets see. My uncles were in saipan, iwo jima and okinawa. Front lines. marines. want to talk about tough sumbitches. still carry out the deer from the mountian. no machine. nothing. no body fat on them GI's. Compare them to our overtechnologied paunchy ground soldiers of today. An easier less disciplined world.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby Zardoz » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:31:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('holmes', '.')..Nothing was really solved or americas future protected because of it. example wide open borders and mulitculturalism. Thought the war was for future generations protection. nope all a scam and lie...


Protection from all them non-Northern-Europeans sneakin' in, huh? Sounds like you feel that the wrong side won.

You folks seem to be laboring under some sort of misconception. You do realize who we were at war with right? You've heard of Nazism, correct? And you are aware that the Japanese at that time were without doubt the Nazis of Asia? Ask the Chinese and Koreans how life under Japanese occupation was, if you doubt me.

We solved Nazism. We solved Japanese Imperialism. We solved Italian Fascism. Sounds like we have historical revisionists lurking around this site, along with paranoid conspiracy theorists.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby TheTurtle » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:49:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zardoz', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('holmes', '.')..Nothing was really solved or americas future protected because of it. example wide open borders and mulitculturalism. Thought the war was for future generations protection. nope all a scam and lie...


Protection from all them non-Northern-Europeans sneakin' in, huh? Sounds like you feel that the wrong side won.


I'm beginning to worry that somebody has access to holmes' account and is making out of character posts. :shock: Or else maybe a pod-person has taken control? 8O
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby holmes » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:53:24

Reality is a revisionist.
Profits are always the driving force in a neoclassicla economic paradigm and for those that lock step to it.
The paradigm implemented and fought over is a profit driven one. The nation is not sustainable. it is on its way out. u want revisionist. in my world the borders would be fire and brimstone. all illegals and their offspring would be rounded up and sent where ever they came from. multiculturalists sent packing. aclu and la raza type orgs crushed. Marshall law implemented. Ecological economics put in in replacement for the neoclassical.
marshall law enacted.
I ahve always saluted the nazi and jap defeat. The motives however looked under a microscope were not all "morals" and "values".
I like to operate under reality not patriotic fervor. ala the nazis. Thingfs are not all they seem. If I am a revisionist so be it. I will never forget the good and bad or the truth.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby holmes » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 20:55:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TheTurtle', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zardoz', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('holmes', '.')..Nothing was really solved or americas future protected because of it. example wide open borders and mulitculturalism. Thought the war was for future generations protection. nope all a scam and lie...


Protection from all them non-Northern-Europeans sneakin' in, huh? Sounds like you feel that the wrong side won.


I'm beginning to worry that somebody has access to holmes' account and is making out of character posts. :shock: Or else maybe a pod-person has taken control? 8O


LOL turtle. as the bugs bunny said in his classic line "He dont know me vewy well." Hehe. Thanks for the back up. we need it nowadays.
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby Zardoz » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 21:13:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('holmes', 'R')eality is a revisionist.
Profits are always the driving force in a neoclassicla economic paradigm and for those that lock step to it.
The paradigm implemented and fought over is a profit driven one. The nation is not sustainable. it is on its way out. u want revisionist. in my world the borders would be fire and brimstone. all illegals and their offspring would be rounded up and sent where ever they came from. multiculturalists sent packing. aclu and la raza type orgs crushed. Marshall law implemented. Ecological economics put in in replacement for the neoclassical.
marshall law enacted.
I ahve always saluted the nazi and jap defeat. The motives however looked under a microscope were not all "morals" and "values".
I like to operate under reality not patriotic fervor. ala the nazis. Thingfs are not all they seem. If I am a revisionist so be it. I will never forget the good and bad or the truth.



You're pretty drunk right now, aren't you?
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby Schweinshaxe » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 21:27:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zardoz', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('holmes', '.')..Nothing was really solved or americas future protected because of it. example wide open borders and mulitculturalism. Thought the war was for future generations protection. nope all a scam and lie...


Protection from all them non-Northern-Europeans sneakin' in, huh? Sounds like you feel that the wrong side won.


What's wrong with the northern Europeans? Being a European doesn't automatically make you a Nazi!

I expect an apology here... :x
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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby Daculling » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 22:10:31

uhmm. It is Friday night and this is the drunk thread right? That being said, the "Greatest Generation" is gone. Dead. Get over it. Now back to my Glen Miller recordings. That not a joke BTW.

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Re: "The Greatest Generation"

Unread postby TheTurtle » Fri 10 Mar 2006, 22:31:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', ' ')What's the name of the generation that was in their 20s and 30s during WWII? Guys like Jimmy Stewart's age, maybe that's in the book.


They call it the G.I. Generation (1901-1924), followed by the Silent Generation (1925-1942), the Baby Boomer Generation (1943-1960), the Thirteenth (as in 13 generations who can call themselves American) Generation or Generation-X (1961-1981) and the Millennial Generation (1982-2002).

The book was written in 1997, so I don't know what they would call the generation born 2003 - 2018? ... maybe the Peak Oil Generation? :lol:
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