Article claiming MIA POW flag is racist an easy favorite for dumbest thing ever written
Stupidity, thy name is this article titled “It’s Time to Haul Down Another Flag of Racist Hate.”
I don’t know if this guy is honestly this dumb, this insane, or crafty enough to have written a piece of drek so stupid that people can’t help but click and read it. My assumption is the third, that he said something provocative and asinine in order to get people to click and read it. Unfortunately, it’s going to work this time, because it truly is so reprehensible and sophomoric that it almost begs me to discuss it.
So let us begin with the Magnum Opus of the venerable Rick Perlstein, obviously the predicted Ubermensch of Frederich Neitzsche:
You know that racist flag? The one that supposedly honors history but actually spreads a pernicious myth? And is useful only to venal right-wing politicians who wish to exploit hatred by calling it heritage? It’s past time to pull it down.
Oh, wait. You thought I was referring to the Confederate flag. Actually, I’m talking about the POW/MIA flag.
Ah yes, that symbol of hatred, malice and racism. Tell me more Rick, I stand ready to suckle at your overflowing teat of wisdom…
Then the war ended, the POWs (yes, all the POWs) were repatriated to great fanfare, one of them declaring: “I want you to remember that we walked out of Hanoi as winners”—a declaration that seemed to suggest, almost, that by surviving, the POWs had won the Vietnam War.
The moral confusion was abetted by the flag: the barbed-wire misery of that stark white figure, emblazoned in black.
It memorializes Americans as the preeminent victims of the Vietnam War, a notion seared into the nation’s visual unconscious by the Oscar-nominated 1978 film The Deer Hunter, which depicts acts of sadism, which were documented to have been carried out by our South Vietnamese allies, as acts committed by our North Vietnamese enemies, including the famous scene pictured on The Deer Hunter poster: a pistol pointed at the American prisoner’s head at exactly the same angle of the gun in the famous photograph of the summary execution in the middle of the street of an alleged Communist spy by a South Vietnamese official.
Wait, you’re referencing a movie to make a point? Why not Red Dawn? Or perhaps Soylent Green, or even Apocalypse Now. I’m not exactly sure how one scores a war, but for my own part, coming home, getting married and having a daughter was “winning” it as far as I was concerned. War isn’t played on a gridiron with rules dictating the proper pounds per square inch of the ball, it’s never truly “won” or “lost”; only fought. Even if the objectives set forth are met, lives are lost, dreams are shattered, and the “victors” pay a price with every night they wake up sweating and fearing for his fellow man. For a POW, yeah, coming home was winning.
This exemplar of imbecilic logical yoga then goes on to bash one of my personal heroes, Admiral James Stockdale.
Actually, as I document in The Invisible Bridge, it’s more complicated than that: many of the prisoners were anti-war activists. One member of the “Peace Committee” within the POW camps, Abel Larry Kavanaugh, was harassed into suicide after his return to the U.S. by the likes of Admiral James Stockdale, who tried to get Peace Committee members hanged for treason.
Stockdale would become one of the nation’s most celebrated former POWs and a vice-presidential candidate. Kavanaugh took his life in his father in law’s basement in Commerce City, Colorado, in June 1973. Americans would agree that one of them—Stockdale or Kavanaugh—is not a hero—though they would disagree about which one is which.
That damned flag: It’s a shroud. It smothers the complexity, the reality, of what really happened in Vietnam.
We’ve come to our senses about that other banner of lies. It’s time to do the same with this.
First off, I love how he keeps citing to previous works of his. That’s generally speaking a sign that the person believes they speak with some sort of absolute authority on the subject. If there is an audio version of this book available, I’d like to get it, and if it could be read by Gilbert Gottfried or Vizzini from The Princess Bride, so much the better.
Second, I can’t tell you how much I would love to take Rick Perlstein to the Montagnard Village in Ashboro, North Carolina that I visited a few years ago. The Montagnards were mountain people of Vietnam who joined with Special Forces units to try to save South Vietnam. When we left the country they were hunted down and exterminated, save for some that the SF guys were able to get into the United States. The extraordinary efforts to save those people by American Soldiers belies the idiotic “racism” notion of Rick. These Montagnards weren’t “other” people, they were brothers to our Special Forces Operators, who did everything in their power to save them after the war. The racism charge is the crockedest arrow in the quiver, as should be obvious by looking at how the US takes in refugees of all races, colors, creeds and religions on a regular basis when they are targeting for extinction by a totalitarian regime.
But let’s turn to Admiral Stockdale (pictured above receiving his Medal of Honor). While he will likely always be remembered as a POW and as the Vice Presidential candidate who turned off his hearing aids during the debate to avoid having to listen to Quayle and Gore, to me he was the President of The Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina, my alma mater.
Honor is just a word to some people, and for people like Perlstein, it is either used incorrectly or ironically. If you want to see honor, read the Medal of Honor citation for Admiral Stockdale.
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while senior naval officer in the Prisoner of War camps of North Vietnam. Recognized by his captors as the leader in the Prisoners’ of War resistance to interrogation and in their refusal to participate in propaganda exploitation, Rear Adm. Stockdale was singled out for interrogation and attendant torture after he was detected in a covert communications attempt. Sensing the start of another purge, and aware that his earlier efforts at self-disfiguration to dissuade his captors from exploiting him for propaganda purposes had resulted in cruel and agonizing punishment, Rear Adm. Stockdale resolved to make himself a symbol of resistance regardless of personal sacrifice. He deliberately inflicted a near-mortal wound to his person in order to convince his captors of his willingness to give up his life rather than capitulate. He was subsequently discovered and revived by the North Vietnamese who, convinced of his indomitable spirit, abated in their employment of excessive harassment and torture toward all of the Prisoners of War. By his heroic action, at great peril to himself, he earned the everlasting gratitude of his fellow prisoners and of his country. Rear Adm. Stockdale’s valiant leadership and extraordinary courage in a hostile environment sustain and enhance the finest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.
The man was so concerned that he would be used in propaganda against the country that he loved that he smashed his own face with a stool. That’s honor. That’s bravery. That’s patriotism.
At Legion events we have a POW/MIA ceremony, which ends with the following:
The chair is empty. They are NOT here. The candle is reminiscent of the light of hope, which lives in our hearts to illuminate their way home, away from their captors, to the open arms of a grateful nation. The American flag reminds us that many of them may never return – and have paid the supreme sacrifice to insure our freedom. Let us pray to the Supreme Commander that all of our comrades will soon be back within our ranks. Let us remember – and never forget their sacrifice. May God forever watch over them and protect them and their families.
When I hear those words, I feel a lump in my throat, and a hole in my heart. And when I read the reports of our comrades remains being found and repatriated, I stop to thank the Almighty that their families can now get some closure. And when I see that flag, I think about all of those still missing, lying there waiting for friends and family to locate them,
Apparently Rick Perlstein sees racism. I can’t even really muster any anger for Rick, he has nothing but sympathy from me. Because he’ll never know the fraternal love that comes from standing shoulder to shoulder with men and women who were willing to lay their lives down for something greater than themselves.
Rick would rather sell his soul for a few clicks and maybe some extra advertising revenue.
[UPDATE: so right after I wrote this up, the writer and editor printed an “apology”. They should have just remained silent, as any good lawyer would tell an idiot who is a client. The apology is almost as insulting as the original piece, but I add it here for sake of clarity:
A Writer’s Apology
I sincerely regret the use of the word “racist” to describe how the POW/MIA flag distorts the history of the Vietnam War. The word was over the top and not called for.
I’m deeply sorry it hurt people—especially people who’ve selflessly served their country. Most of all, I’m sorry because many of the people offended by the word “racist” are the same people who were hurt when the experiences and feelings of common soldiers and veterans were manipulated to serve the powerful interests and individuals who blithely and perennially send men and women to war, then don’t take care of them when they return home. And, of course, I regret the pain caused to the families of those who gave the last full measure of devotion to their country in Southeast Asia.
I would ask the people I angered to consider carefully reading the article, which explains, for example, that the Chinese Communists cynically leaked lies about the existence of live POWs in the years after the war in order to harm their rival Vietnam.
Most of all, I wish to express my regrets. Other than that, I stand by my article. —Rick Perlstein
The Editor’s Response
We published Rick Perlstein’s article on the POW/MIA flag, because it insightfully examines the cynical manipulation of public opinion at the expense of the downed pilots and foot soldiers the creators of the MIA movement claimed to represent. Perlstein is an accomplished historian who has spent years researching the Nixon and Reagan years. He knows this material. Our prolonged national discussion of the tragic Southeast Asian war that extended beyond Vietnam is often framed in what can be reasonably described as racist terms. The defenders of an Asian country that was invaded, bombed, defoliated and savaged (see: Kill Anything that Moves by Nick Turse) are vilified, while the invaders are beatified. Neither position is correct or fair. It was a persistent yet perhaps understandable disregard for the “other” victims of a war, beyond our own nation’s tragic losses, that informed the piece.
Nowhere is it suggested, nor do we imply, that individuals who remain devoted to the POW/MIA flag are racist. And it was neither Mr. Perlstein’s intent, nor ours, to dishonor those who served in Vietnam, although based on comments of readers, many were offended. A more careful editor would have moved the term “racist” lower in the body of the story and kept it out of the headline, where it was an unintended red flag that provoked the understandable ire of many readers. —Lou Dubose
Short Perlstein apology: Sorry not sorry, and all you rubes who were upset by my original piece are still rubes.
Shorter Editor’s Response: We’re sorry we said it so early in the piece, but frankly we appreciate the clicks and our revenue is way up thanks to you angry people.
Short Response of Mothax: Stop sniffing glue.
Category: Politics
Nice. That line is worthy of celebrating with another Scottish Ale. (smile)
On a more serious note: good article. But are you sure that Perlstein actually has a soul to sell? My guess would be no, but I could be wrong.
No soul. No balls. Just a set of flapping, drooling labia – both on his face and down below.
actually, I’d suggest he has his anus where his mouth should be.
That’s the result of a chronic recto-cranial inversion
Yeah, we’ve got lots of Hmong here in western N.C,, definitely no love lost for the government of Vietnam. If it’s any consolation, the overwhelming majority of comments (on non kool aid lefty sites at least) was overwhelmingly against Pearlstein yesterday.
I believe you were correct when you wrote,” My assumption is the third, that he said something provocative and asinine in order to get people to click and read it.”. My first thought was that he wants to make a name for hisself. To me, the name would be “Dipshit”.
Your 3rd assumption is the correct one, TSO. perlyslime is an attention whore with pretensions (mostly to himself) that what he creates is actual history, when it is nothing more than created out of whole cloth in his little pointy head, the way a novelist creates a whole world or universe, or whatever.
I have, in fact, seen novels written as alternate histories which had more depth and perceptiveness than anything perlyslime has ever dreamed of creating. He lacks imagination, plagiarizes the work of other people and claims it is his, and lies his way into prominence, all for the sake of getting attention for himself.
Does this behavior remind you, even vaguely, of anyone else we all know and thoroughly despise?
Frankly, having read a few paragraphs of perlyslime’s scribblings, I found it peculiar that he completely ignored the entire history of Vietnam as a country, and the reason that Uncle Ho engaged in the French-Indochina War (money, money, money and when the French paid the ransom, their POWs were released); and Lyndon Johnson’s ego feed.
Anyone who reads that crap by perlslime should demand his time and money be returned to him. But he is an unadulterated attention whore. He should be careful what he wishes for. I don’t he was expecting quite the flaming he’s getting this time around.
Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt.
And Perlstein did it twice, just in case anyone didn’t notice what a moron he was the first go round.
These shittards really need to learn the difference between “I’m sorry I said it,” and “I’m sorry you were offended.”
Mr. Peestain is a man that I could wish a death from metastasized liver cancer on. Sans Morphine.
Sorry doesn’t cut it. This article was written to exploit missing and dead Vietnam veterans for that ‘almighty’ publicity, money, and attention. I don’t feel sorry for either the writer or the editor — they disgust me beyond words. As far as I’m concerned, their apology is hollow, unacceptable, and unaccepted.
I went on Farcebook last night and saw post after post after post from people who agree with us here and the consensus was that Newsweek has flushed itself down the shitpipes by publishing that snotnosed creampuff of an inbred Swamp Donkey’s rant! 😀
Perlstein had no intention of writing a scholarly article explaining the manipulation of the POW/MIA group behind the scenes. He needed something sensational to get anyone to read his words. He carefully chose his title and the wankers at Newsweek agreed it would make for great controversy and create some much needed traffic at what’s becoming a rapidly irrelevant news source.
His apology is about as sincere as Bill Clinton’s for lying to us all when he said he did not have sex with “that woman”…the woman who’d been sucking his dick for some time…Perlstein has chosen the side of the aisle he wants to impress and he has carefully chosen his words to further ingratiate himself among the like minded folks he adores. Suggesting that many Americans might consider Kavanagh the hero and Stockdale something far less was an outright fabrication for which he conveniently offers zero remorse.
We all know who the rat bastard was, and it was the collaborator mis-identified by Perlstein as nothing more than an activist.
Fuck you Mr. Perlstein, lies are lies and in your hatred of the Nixon administration you commit an equally reprehensible act as the man you despise by suggesting that Stockbridge was anything less than a hero and that rat bastard Kavanagh was somehow an activist martyr. That’s a deliberate falsehood designed to achieve a result. No better than the lies told by Nixon or any of your liberal minded allies.
Liars are liars and you’ve decided to join them with open arms. Don’t apologize for your lies, it’s clear you apology was just another lie to avoid repercussions. You have zero remorse so grow some balls and own your lies, or just crawl off under the wood work like the rat bastards you adore as heroes.
[…] h/t: TSO […]
I reckon that Polestank believes that the flag and mission for which it represents only applies to those lost/captured in Vietnam.
Yep. An accomplished historian…
He might be an accomplished historian in Newsweek’s eyes, but he must not know how to use a simple protractor. Exactly the same angle my ass.
More along the lines of the old soviet definition. A man capable of accurately predicting the past. He writes history the way he fells it should have happened.
Can’t you a$$holes read? F*** you very much!
He can stick his head in a bucket of Swamp Donkey diarrhea for all I care, but that would be redundant because Perlswine is already a 24K SHITHEAD! 😀
Yes, I did read the article and everything in it conflicted with my direct knowledge of what happened, because I was ALIVE back then, and that little drip of seminal pus was not.
So – right back at you, perlslime, you useless piece of dried skin.
Yep. He has to stand. Can’t sit because of the ass-pounding he’s getting.
Anyone else struggling with these two sentences from the editor’s statement?
” The defenders of an Asian country that was invaded, bombed, defoliated and savaged (see: Kill Anything that Moves by Nick Turse) are vilified, while the invaders are beatified.
…
And it was neither Mr. Perlstein’s intent, nor ours, to dishonor those who served in Vietnam, although based on comments of readers, many were offended.”
I always like these liberal mouthpieces who think their education makes them intellectually superior to the rest of the population….as though the ability to comprehend his meaning can only be achieved through careful consideration with a high degree of education.
Some of us with lesser degrees who’ve managed to build a comfortable life with a good income and some very enjoyable earthly possessions aren’t without intellectual capacity and we understand quite clearly what this little turd was trying to tell us and we don’t believe his lies….so yeah fuck that guy.
Methinks it’s fair to say that Snoozeweek *WHOOPS*, Newsweek) has thoroughly proven itself to be as legit and balanced as say, The Village Voice, Mother Earth News, the NYT or any other far left-wing rag!
That article makes such gross and egregious factual errors that the editor’s acceptance of the author’s credentials (Perlstein is an accomplished historian… He knows this material) is itself suspicious.
One of many obvious blunders by Perlstein, the “accomplished historian”: “because in every other conflict in human history, the release of prisoners had been something settled at the close of a war;”
This is utter twaddle. Throughout history, the exchange of prisoners during the war was normal. The HALTING of the exchange during the US Civil War in December 1862 was the shock, not the fact that the perfectly normal prisoner exchanges had been going on before that. (They resumed in 1865). There are so many obvious examples of prisoner release in so many wars (During the Hundred Years War, capturing nobles specifically to ransom them back to the other side was a normal and expected tactic) that to miss all of it, and to bloviate to the contrary, simply marks one as NOT a historian at all. It’s as simple as that.
Ask the women of Troy if they were ever released from slavery by the Greeks.
It’s only in Western civilization and that only fairly recently, that women have ever been considered prisoners of war. For most of history, women weren’t prisoners, they were booty — both literally and figuratively. It was never considered, or expected, that they be returned. They were given new husbands/masters, and were expected to be grateful that they were still breathing.
The same is in general true of males taken prisoner throughout much of history, PN. For most of human history, personnel taken POW were either killed outright or enslaved. Taking prisoner common soldiers without enslaving them (as opposed to knights and/or other “noble born” officers) is a relatively recent occurrence.
As I noted in comments to the other Perlstein article: the practice of prisoner exchange and/or parole prior to the end of hostilities did not end at the US Civil War. It was also done during the Boer War (parole) and, to a limited extent, during World War I. Here’s the reference:
http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/law/pow_parole.pdf
Sometime after World War I, the practice stopped – not sure if that was during the Italian Conquest of Ethiopia, Japan’s Manchurian/Chinese Invasion, the Spanish Civil War, or World War II itself. But by World War II, it was no longer done. It generally hasn’t been done since.
However, it appears that the current Administration resurrected the practice last year with Bergdahl – and is now willing to trade at 5-for-1.
Newsweek retort to Perlstein:
http://www.newsweek.com/pow-mia-flag-veterans-racist-362553
The short version is perlstein is stupid. He doesn’t know what the history of the flag is or about the MIA and POW issues are. He is to busy wrapped up in Vietnam hate to get it. Then the author goes on a tangent saying that WWP is the modern version of the PoW/MIA flag.
Pearlnecklace is the epitome of leftist academics who have surrendered themselves with fellow commies and been corrupting young minds in our universities for decades.
I can just see him and a flock of other twat-waffles sitting in a coffee shop in Berkeley, sipping tea made from the pubic hair of endangered monkeys.
All the while flapping their lips like a bunch of toothless hobos eating a bucket of KFC they scored from a dumpster.
“So let us begin with the Magnum Opus of the venerable Rick Perlstein, obviously the predicted UNTERMENSCH of Frederich Neitzsche:”
There. Fixed it for ya. You’re welcome.
(I wanted to do a strikethrough of “ubermensch”, but it wouldn’t translate from document to box)
Use the text “del” and “/del”, without quotes, enclosed by < and >.
or like this?:
del /del
OK, no strikethrough occurred.
Sometimes the computer is way smarter than me.
Disregard all above.
Nope – you have to enclose “del” and “/del” with the < and > signs, like this:
<del> (text to receive overstrike goes here) </del>
The result looks like this:
(text to receive overstrike goes here)But will it work with a phone?
SnoozeweekOK, we’ll try it one more time.
(Odierno,Dempsey and Chandler have all signed up with Hollywierd to do a 3 Stooges remake of “You’re in the Army Now.)Well, I’ll be.
Thanks, Hondo !!
So then:
NewsweekSnoozeweekGreat article!
Sheesh, that
Newsweekidiot editor at the Washington Spectator, Lou Dubose, who added a justification for running the article is as blatently stupid and obviously left-biased as Perlstein. From that dipstick’s “justification”:I wonder if either of those numbnuts realize that sentence applies to what THEY wrote and/or approved?
Last time I checked, it was the RVN – for the benefit of Newsweek, that’s South Vietnam – that was invaded. They were invaded by troops from North Vietnam. The Vietcong were North Vietnam’s locally recruited Quislings, not any form of “indigenous local uprising”. And the Vietcong formed only a small part of the forces fighting to conquer South Vietnam. The rest were regular troops who invaded from the North.
It was South Vietnam – not North Vietnam – in general that saw widespread use of defoliants. About 2/3 of the bombing tonnage dropped in Southeast Asia was NOT dropped on North Vietnam – indeed, South Vietnam received more total bomb tonnage than did North Vietnam, and Laos and Cambodia each also received a large share (combining those two, they received more than did either North or South Vietnam).
When an enemy army is invading, bombs get dropped where that invading army goes – including friendly territory, invasion routes through neutral countries, and enemy marshaling and support areas. That’s the way war works.
And yes – when North Vietnam conquered South Vietnam, many of the people in the South were savaged, both during and afterwards. By the invaders.
Actually Hondo it looks like the article was first published by Washington Spectator and Newsweek picked it up like some of the conservative media all run with op-eds and don’t verify or fact find. So the fire mission needs to be on the Washington Spectator and it’s editorial staff. Which if you follow the wiki’s on them you find they used to have Molly Irvins as one of the lead editors and all the rest have been working at places like Democracy Now, Real News with Bill Moyers, Pacifica Radio and all the other ultra left media organs.
The type that view us military types as knuckle dragging maroon and welfare bums who could not get a real job.
http://washingtonspectator.org/the-story-of-the-other-racist-flag/
Linky to the original story and the non apology apology
Thanks – I don’t generally read leftist trash like the Washington Spectator, so I missed the original and also didn’t realize Dubose was an editor there vice Newsweek.
Comment above has been modified to correct the error.
My opinion about Newsweek still hasn’t changed, though. They’ve been slanting their stories to the left since about the Reagan Administration. It’s a pity – at one time they actually used to be a fairly decent source of news and analysis.
No worries. As I stated yesterday when the story first broke over here. I have been forced to read Perlstein for some of my college classes by a few history and government professors. So when I read his piece and googled him the Spectator thing came up as first as well as his original essay from 2013 when he wrote the same shit for the Nation. That the POW-MIA thing needs to stop because they all came home and anyone left there is a war criminal and dead and deserves to stay there.
“Ah yes, the former “Ding Dong The Bitch is Dead” Molly Ivins.. when she passed on they needed to dig a double wide. She was occasionally amusing, always irritating, and looked like she ate most of the NY Times restaurant section for breakfast. We suffered from her for DECADES in Texas, and most of us heaved a deep sigh of relief when she was buried – not out of some schadenfreude at her passing, but in sincere relief that we weren’t her pallbearers.
Looks like a new category for the tournament:
“Most Totally Fucked-Up attempt at Journalism”
OK, for all you knuckle dragging morons who don’t know how to use the inter-web (invented by Al Gore), I have the responses from the author and editor below. However, read my response to them first. Dear Author and Editor, GFY! MCPO PS1: The majority of personnel were not “sent” to fight a war, the majority volunteered to go! Only some 25% were draftees, the balance were all volunteers. PS2: So considering the information in PS1 … GFY again! ### A Writer’s Apology: I sincerely regret the use of the word “racist” to describe how the POW/MIA flag distorts the history of the Vietnam War. The word was over the top and not called for. I’m deeply sorry it hurt people—especially people who’ve selflessly served their country. Most of all, I’m sorry because many of the people offended by the word “racist” are the same people who were hurt when the experiences and feelings of common soldiers and veterans were manipulated to serve the powerful interests and individuals who blithely and perennially send men and women to war, then don’t take care of them when they return home. And, of course, I regret the pain caused to the families of those who gave the last full measure of devotion to their country in Southeast Asia. I would ask the people I angered to consider carefully reading the article, which explains, for example, that the Chinese Communists cynically leaked lies about the existence of live POWs in the years after the war in order to harm their rival Vietnam. Most of all, I wish to express my regrets. Other than that, I stand by my article. —Rick Perlstein The Editor’s Response: We published Rick Perlstein’s article on the POW/MIA flag, because it insightfully examines the cynical manipulation of public opinion at the expense of the downed pilots and foot soldiers the creators of the MIA movement claimed to represent. Perlstein is an accomplished historian who has spent years researching the Nixon and Reagan years. He knows this material. Our prolonged national discussion of the tragic Southeast Asian war that extended beyond… Read more »
I wrote a long document about the things that are wrong in Perly’s article then I deleted it. This man needs to spend some time in uniform and he needs to spend time in Southeast Asia. His article is intended to make veterans very pissed off and vocal so that he can point to us and say, “see? they are crazy and you cannot trust anything they say”.
Ya know, when a dog pisses on your shoe, you can’t be mad, he is just being a dog. Perly, you owe me a pair of shoes.
I’ve pointed out before that I used to run into hipper-than-thou people like Perlstein all the time in the Bay Area, and it’s common for them to use passive-aggressive voice as a rhetorical device.
Hipster Dude: It must have been difficult having a mother who was a skank whore down on the corner. I imagine the experience is what made you illiterate and ignorant.
You: How about if I punch your stupid face?
Hipster Dude: Did I say something offensive? Just trying to understand. I’m so sorry if you took it the wrong way.
Perlstein has pulled the equivalent of the same thing. He’s not acknowledging errors of fact in the original editorial; what he’s actually doing is expressing tepid remorse that somebody might be offended by his bullshit view of the way things are.
Or, instead of ‘How about if I punch your stupid face’, you respond to the first sentence (a declarative, not a question), with something on the order of this:
‘You should know. Yours threw you into the trash where you belong first.’
Or this: Me? I thought you were talking about your egg donor for the Petri dish.
Or something like this: Are you talkin’ to me? You talkin’ to me, asswipe? Did your parents have any children that lived?
TSO; your third possibility is probably coreect. However, this idiot is so weapons grade stoopid that he doesn’t know that the attention he is getting is not because people thinks he provacative or intellectual, but rather that he’s a hate filled moron.
There are too many things that aren’t just wrong with perslime’s article, but are outright fabrications on his part. The best you can say about it is that he’s an attention whore and a pseudo-intellectual moron whose only intention is to get your attention. It’s clear that he’s done this before but never got the level of attention he wanted. Simple research based on actual documentation and interviewing people who WERE in Vietnam, including indigenous people who emigrated FROM there TO the USA to escape the heinous rampages of the Vietcong can correct that.
However, like any other conceited know-it-all, he didn’t bother with facts. He made them up to suit himself.
Well, he got what he wanted and now he doesn’t like it. Tough shit, imbecile. You made your bed. Now lie in it. Wallow in it. It may be your last chance to make a fool of yourself. Now you can become part of the DRC.
What an asshole.
“Other than that, I stand by my article.”
I placed a copy of the article on the fast lane of northbound I-95, about a mile from Exit 16E. Another copy I placed at the midpoint of LAX runway 7L-24R. A third copy I placed between the rails just outside of the Harvard Station on the Boston subway’s Red Line. Pick one, Ricky, and stand by it.