johnnyboy said:Clinton's dramatic claim to have also integrated a segregated bus on that same "fateful day" as Rosa Parks failed the smell test, I'm sure, for many, but went largely unchallenged. There are some problems with his story, however.
johnnyboy said:Clinton's dramatic claim to have also integrated a segregated bus on that same "fateful day" as Rosa Parks failed the smell test, I'm sure, for many, but went largely unchallenged. There are some problems with his story, however.
For one thing, the arrest warrant, ( from the national archives ), was written up at 6;06 p.m., too late for the newspapers that day.
Secondly, what seems important in retrospect, could hardly have seemed important at the time. As things stood on the evening of December 1, 1955, the situation seemed painfully reminiscent of the mythical headline of the we-can-make-news-out-of-anything school of journalism: !!!!! MAN IN ALBANY MISSES BUS !!!!!! The hometown newspaper, "The Montgomery Advertiser" didn't carry any reference to the event until five days after that "fateful day", so how did little nine year old Bill Clinton know about it on that fateful day?
Does this matter? If not, why did every major news organization in the country carry his remarks? If it does matter, why didn't they check up on his story.
I'm not talking about bias here, biased reporting can still be accurate and responsible. The fact that nobody checked up on Clinton's latest whopper is less than biased. It is sloppy and gullible reporting, to point of being an accessory to compulsive humbug.
For more info and sources you can visit a blog on the am 1280 THE PATRIOT website, go to DISCUSS , click NEWS STAND, , click CLINTON'S EULOGY.
I was a 9-year-old southern white boy who rode a segregated bus every single day of my life. I sat in the front, black folks sat in the back. When Rosa showed us that black folks didn’t have to sit in the back anymore, two of my friends and I, who strongly approved of what she had done, decided we didn’t have to sit in the front anymore
Kelzie said:He said it was later, not on the same day:
johnnyboy said:Dear Kelzie:
The word "later" doesn't appear in your Clinton quote. You said he said "later", he didn't.
Here is a quote from the sentence which preceded the words you quoted:"“I remember as if it were yesterday that fateful day 50 years ago. I was a nine-year-old Southern white boy who rode a segregated bus....." Clearly he is saying that he heard of what she had done on that "fateful day" , which in the context could only be December 1, 1955. The only wiggle room he left for himself is: what do you mean by "fateful day", sound familiar?
Stinger said:Here is what he said
Rosa Parks ignited the most significant social movement in modern American history. To finish the work that spawned the Civil War and redeemed the promise of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments. For 50 more years, she moved beyond the bus, continuing her work on that promise. It was my honor to present her with a Presidential Medal of Freedom and to join the leaders of Congress in presenting her with a Congressional Gold Medal. I remember well when she sat with Hillary in the box of the First Family at the State of the Union address in 1999 and how the entire Congress, Democrats and Republicans alike, rose as one to recognize that she had made us all better people and a better country. When I first met Rosa Parks, I was reminded of what Abraham Lincoln said when he was introduced to Harriet Beecher Stowe, the author of Uncle Tom's Cabin. He said, “So this is the little lady who started the great war.” This time, Rosa's war was fought by Martin Luther King's rules – civil disobedience, peaceful resistance – but a war, nonetheless, for one America in which the law of the land means the same thing for everybody.
Rosa Parks, as we saw again today, was small in stature with delicate features. But the passing years did nothing to dim the light that danced in her eyes, the kindness and strength you saw in her smile or the dignity of her voice. To the end, she radiated that kind of grace and serenity that God specially gives to those who stand in the line of fire for freedom and touch even the hardest hearts.
I remember as if it were yesterday that fateful day 50 years ago. I was a nine-year-old Southern white boy................
Kelzie said:Actually, the words you want to be looking for is "when Rosa showed us". Let me give you an example.
"I wrote on the chalkboard"
vs
"When Rosa showed us, I wrote on a chalkboard"
"When Rosa showed" maked his action conditional on when he learned what Mrs. Parks showed him. Did you really not know that?
Hoot said:What in the world are you people talking about in here? LOL!
You make it sound like Clinton was riding the same bus as Rosa that day! ROTFL!!!!!
You also make it sound like Clinton moved to the back of the bus on the same day Rosa refused to give up her seat?! LOL
There's nothing in that dialogue that indicates this, but thanks for the best laugh I've had all morning!
Reading comprehension...It's never too late.
Kelzie said:Okay great. The beginning part of what I already posted that in no way can decide what he meant. :roll:
Pacridge said:Maybe there was a web cam on Rosa' bus. Clinton and his buds saw it on the net and went out that day and did the same thing?
Stinger said:How typical of Clinton to try and make the occasion about himself and to do so by "embellishing" it.
Pacridge said:I don't know of any successful politicians that don't do that. That's sad, but true.
Stinger said:Well let's cut off where he went off track for a minute
Here is what he said
Rosa Parks ignited the most significant social movement in modern American history. To finish the work that spawned the Civil War and redeemed the promise of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments. For 50 more years, she moved beyond the bus, continuing her work on that promise. ....................................... I remember as if it were yesterday that fateful day 50 years ago. I was a nine-year-old Southern white boy who rode a segregated bus every single day of my life. I sat in the front, black folks sat in the back. When Rosa showed us that black folks didn’t have to sit in the back anymore, two of my friends and I, who strongly approved of what she had done, decided we didn’t have to sit in the front anymore.
It's typical Clinton making it about himself instead about the person being honored. And saying that as a nine year he had any comphrension of rembemering "that fateful day" that Parks acted is ludicrus. It was a local story in Montgomery that day and for the next several days. But then Clinton isn't known for being truthful and for falsely making things about himself.
Stinger said:Those are Clinton's word giving that impression..........that's the point.
Stinger said:Well let's cut off where he went off track for a minute
Here is what he said
Rosa Parks ignited the most significant social movement in modern American history. To finish the work that spawned the Civil War and redeemed the promise of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments. For 50 more years, she moved beyond the bus, continuing her work on that promise. ....................................... I remember as if it were yesterday that fateful day 50 years ago. I was a nine-year-old Southern white boy who rode a segregated bus every single day of my life. I sat in the front, black folks sat in the back. When Rosa showed us that black folks didn’t have to sit in the back anymore, two of my friends and I, who strongly approved of what she had done, decided we didn’t have to sit in the front anymore.
It's typical Clinton making it about himself instead about the person being honored. And saying that as a nine year he had any comphrension of rembemering "that fateful day" that Parks acted is ludicrus. It was a local story in Montgomery that day and for the next several days. But then Clinton isn't known for being truthful and for falsely making things about himself.
Stinger said:Some but not all and certainly none will the gaul of Clinton. I guaranty that had it been Reagan it would have been "And she was awarded the Medal of Freedom" and not "Well I was the one who awarder her the Medal of Freedom because I'm such a great guy why I even stood up to segregation when I was a nine year old boy after I heard about Rosa."
Hoot said:No...Reagan would've said..."And I just fired all the bus drivers for going on strike, and hired replacement riders."
Kelzie said:Yeah. And "when Rosa showed him" he learned a lesson from it. You obviously don't know many nine year olds. Segregation and discrimination aren't all that complicated of a subject.
Hoot said:He's talking about the fateful day when he and his friend were on a bus! Sheesh! It's typical of a calloused republican taking away from the honor of Rosa Parks and making it out to be a Dem conspiracy.
Johnnyboy said:If he had said that whenever he did hear about it he moved to the back of the bus as a gesture of solidarity, that could have happened, but that is not what he said.
Hoot said:When Rosa showed us that black folks didn’t have to sit in the back anymore, two of my friends and I, who strongly approved of what she had done, decided we didn’t have to sit in the front anymore.
Here's the crux of this whole petty argument.
"When Rosa showed us..." 'When' and 'showed' imply past tense.
"Two of my friends and I, who strongly approved of what she HAD DONE.."
There...another past tense..."had done"
What Clinton is saying is AFTER Rosa "showed us," and "had done" what she did, Clinton moved to the back of the bus in support of her efforts.
The "fateful day 50 years ago" was obviuosly about Rosa, and not Clinton's ride on the bus, so I did err in my haste to get a post out, but clearly...Clinton heard about Rosa and her actions, and then moved to the back of the bus, as you say, as a sign of solidarity.
Can you imagine what would happen if we picked Bush's speeches apart like this? LOL! There's not enough minutes in the day.
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