Tommy Fedora
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 248
- Location
- NJ/NYC
Yes, 911
Also Pearl Harbor.
That put US manufacturing into high gear.
Also Pearl Harbor.
That put US manufacturing into high gear.
renor27 said:9-11 is one of those events that people will remember
The question is how will history play its self out following it?
We know what the country did after the attack @ Pearl Harbor just wondering what do we have the same hutspa that they had in '41 to see the aftermath of 9-11 to the end?
Sabra and Shatila Massacre?Samsa said:9-16-1982
dhermann1 said:Sabra and Shatila Massacre?
Or your DOB?
+1, sir--without the freedom to innovate, would any of the wonderful toys we take for granted everyday have even had a chance to happen?Dixon Cannon said:THE defining moment in American history is the ratification of the Constitution of the United States of America. That one moment in our history and in the history of the world is a melding of political, philosophical, and spiritual principles that is miraculous, to say the least.
Second to that, the ratification of the first ten amendments to that great document, The Bill of Rights.
Without that, all else pales and seems as minor footnotes in American history. For it is the Constitution that created this United States, this Constitutional Republic in which American history unfolds.
Now, that's not politcal expression or opinion - that's fact!
Dixon Cannon said:THE defining moment in American history is the ratification of the Constitution of the United States of America. That one moment in our history and in the history of the world is a melding of political, philosophical, and spiritual principles that is miraculous, to say the least.
Second to that, the ratification of the first ten amendments to that great document, The Bill of Rights.
Without that, all else pales and seems as minor footnotes in American history. For it is the Constitution that created this United States, this Constitutional Republic in which American history unfolds.
Now, that's not politcal expression or opinion - that's fact!
-dixon cannon
Let's face it...
THE defining moment in American history is the ratification of the Constitution of the United States of America. That one moment in our history and in the history of the world is a melding of political, philosophical, and spiritual principles that is miraculous, to say the least.
Second to that, the ratification of the first ten amendments to that great document, The Bill of Rights.
Without that, all else pales and seems as minor footnotes in American history. For it is the Constitution that created this United States, this Constitutional Republic in which American history unfolds.
Now, that's not politcal expression or opinion - that's fact!
-dixon cannon
Over a glass of wine the other night @ a sidewalk cafe the discussion of a ( one ) defining moment in American history can up.
I thought the action at Little Round Top, on the second day of Gettysburg (2 July 1863), when then-Colonel Chamberlain and the 20th Maine held the extreme left flank of the Union line against the Confederate attack was that one moment.
what say the rest of you?