Mr. Soresomethingoranother apparently also has difficulty reading. I said I _was_ a DJ (for no pay) for a number of years. A bit of intelligence or a Google search might have come up with the conclusion that I wasn't a DJ at a commercial station, so comments about "business [being] real bad" are probably poorly aimed. This station did _not_ have a play list, and I played whatever I damn well pleased, as I'm sure the present DJs do as well. Kim: When you sit back and accept that there is no recourse but _immediate_ war, or acquiesce to its legitimacy because it's already started, you're letting others do your thinking for you. If _you_ have decided that this war is necessary _right now_, well and fine; we'll disagree. But if you were of a different opinion but now think that the time for silence has come, then I think you do not do your own thoughts proper justice. This is not a matter of yelling fire in a crowded theatre. If anyone has been yelling "fire", I'd say it's the maladministration with its colour code du jour and its warnings of boogeymen in the night. As for responsibility, I'd say that if you think that war should only be a last resort, and that there is no need to push to war at the _earliest_ possible moment, then responsibility is _telling_ people that this is what you think. Silence in the face of evil is no virtue; in fact, there are those that say that such silence has accounded for quite a few tragedies in the course of history. Herc: I didn't know that Natalie Maines was related to Dubya, and that this was just a little internecine feud of no interest or consequence to the rest of us. Thanks for that bit of info. Cheers, -- Arne Lnagsetmo
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