AmateisGal
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,126
- Location
- Nebraska
While reading the September 1943 edition of Ladies Home Journal last night, there was an advertisement with the following quote from South Carolina statesman James F. Byrnes:
"We ought to conduct ourselves so that future generations will speak of the men and women of 1943 as we speak of the men and women of 1776."
Now I don't know anything about Byrnes politics so I'm not factoring that in, but rather looking at the generation as a whole: did they succeed in this? Do we think of them in the same terms as we do the men and women of 1776?
"We ought to conduct ourselves so that future generations will speak of the men and women of 1943 as we speak of the men and women of 1776."
Now I don't know anything about Byrnes politics so I'm not factoring that in, but rather looking at the generation as a whole: did they succeed in this? Do we think of them in the same terms as we do the men and women of 1776?