RE: This Is A Tragedy (Full Version)

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Edwird -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/4/2017 11:17:51 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Danemora

quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwird
quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyPact
quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwird
Explain further your consternation, as to what any of us in civilian land could understand.

You and your dad can punch me all you like, just say something that makes sense, all I'm asking.

"I watched my father bury a son. In my opinion, that was the worst thing that ever happened to him."

"If I had the kind of grief that went with losing a son, I'd probably not ever get out of bed again. I sure as SH^T wouldn't be appeasing some damn troll on the internet who would think it's all cool to attack a parent who had to bury a child."

So explain for us, then, why losing a son/daughter or brother/sister is to be held in some higher esteem if such occurrence happening while in uniform.

So, by this estimation, the loss felt by parents or siblings of family members not in uniform are held to be in lower regard, right?


Honestly Ive never gotten the impression either DS or LP felt their loses of their uniformed loved ones were any more important or significant than any of us who have lost loved ones who didnt wear a uniform. If I can speak frankly, the loss of anyone any of us loves is significant. Uniforms arent necessary.


Since all they ever post is either directly or indirectly concerning their own loss, one could understand their hanging it all on military circumstance so as to elevate the significance.

But nobody else has ever had their own loss, right? Or ever felt great hurt over it, right?






Danemora -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/4/2017 11:33:46 PM)

So...what happens if those happen to be the deaths that matter most to them? Who are we to quantify or qualify their grief? Ibe never once heard either one itter words to the effect of "my loved one died in uniform, yours are second class losses compared to ours." Ive never felt that way personally, but that's just my $0
02. My grandma who I loved like a mother died in '82. Still...losing a child would hurt about a billion times worse than my grandmother's death could ever touch. But Im saying that from the perspective of having a child myself.

In fact, the original OP wasnt about DS's son or LP's relative. It was about a little 2 year old no one knows in Georgia who is dying. Not his own son, mind you.

A loss of a loved one is a loss we all share in common. No hierarchy. Equal pain spread across the board if we look at it bigger picture style




Edwird -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/4/2017 11:46:50 PM)

The grandma died in '92, ma in 2014, one brother gone two years also, etc.

This is nature, I don't know why people make such a big deal of it. Yes, it hurts greatly, everytime, but it is actually joyous, too, when recalling all the great things these people have done for the world.




Danemora -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/5/2017 12:11:27 AM)

So then...what's the reason to give either person shit for grieving their people? Isnt this tangent just a wee bit on the sad side?

People make a big deal of it because they love the person they lost. That isnt a bad thing . Its a human being thing.




bounty44 -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/5/2017 1:38:33 AM)

greta im reading a book about the secret service and their time with the presidents they protected. I just got done reading this and thought you might enjoying hearing it:

"Reagan was famous for firing up air force jets on behalf of children who needed transport for kidney operations...these are things you never knew about. he never bragged about it. I hand-carried checks for four thousand or five thousand dollars to people who had written him. he would say 'don't tell people. I was poor myself.'"




LadyPact -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/5/2017 8:37:31 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: DaddySatyr

quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD
Lady Pack , lives in Alaska. Was stalked and threatened with and subjected to violence by a former partner.
Mentioning this is the paranoia Edwird was talking about.
Her brother was killed on duty so she was offended by Edwirds implication that servicemen and their
families deserve no sympathy since the are little more than hired killers.



Bama, please forgive me for using your quote, but while I had heard rumor of the stalking, I had no idea that she had lost a family member while in the military. Therefore, I had no idea that the idiot's disgusting attack on dead soldiers also affected her.

I'm truly sorry to hear this and, obviously, I understand her father's pain (hers too, but it's not exactly the same thing, really).

Pact, I offer my sincerest condolences on your loss (no matter how long ago it was) and I hope you agree that I honor your brother, when I say that I hope his soul rests in peace and that he didn't go down "unanswered".

Obviously, I now feel a kinship with your dad and, if he's still alive, I hope he's managed to find some balance to cope with the pain. If he's not alive, I believe in a heaven and I hope his reunion with his son was a joyful and liberating one.



Michael


And now, it's best for me to use your quote. (Hopefully, that bit of levity will be worth something.)

There are a couple of things that I have to correct. I don't want anyone misled. I understand that some people when reading forums will misunderstand circumstances, so I want to clear that up.

My brother didn't die in uniform. My brother (the first sibling I lost) was not even an adult at the time of his passing. As my brother was older than me (all of my siblings were older than me) that put me at age eleven. That means I got an up close and personal, front row seat to watch a father grieve. My father really was of the "real men don't cry" generation. I never saw him shed a tear prior to that day. After, I couldn't tell you how many times he sobbed, what seemed uncontrollably, sometimes for hours.

It's part of what convinced me that I don't think I have the strength to lose a child. I don't know if the "why" matters. I don't know if it changes the pain on any scale. Losing that child, regardless of age, is a horrid pain, that no one should have to endure. I am, and always will be, so sorry for your loss.





BamaD -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/5/2017 10:30:02 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyPact


quote:

ORIGINAL: DaddySatyr

quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD
Lady Pack , lives in Alaska. Was stalked and threatened with and subjected to violence by a former partner.
Mentioning this is the paranoia Edwird was talking about.
Her brother was killed on duty so she was offended by Edwirds implication that servicemen and their
families deserve no sympathy since the are little more than hired killers.



Bama, please forgive me for using your quote, but while I had heard rumor of the stalking, I had no idea that she had lost a family member while in the military. Therefore, I had no idea that the idiot's disgusting attack on dead soldiers also affected her.

I'm truly sorry to hear this and, obviously, I understand her father's pain (hers too, but it's not exactly the same thing, really).

Pact, I offer my sincerest condolences on your loss (no matter how long ago it was) and I hope you agree that I honor your brother, when I say that I hope his soul rests in peace and that he didn't go down "unanswered".

Obviously, I now feel a kinship with your dad and, if he's still alive, I hope he's managed to find some balance to cope with the pain. If he's not alive, I believe in a heaven and I hope his reunion with his son was a joyful and liberating one.



Michael


And now, it's best for me to use your quote. (Hopefully, that bit of levity will be worth something.)

There are a couple of things that I have to correct. I don't want anyone misled. I understand that some people when reading forums will misunderstand circumstances, so I want to clear that up.

My brother didn't die in uniform. My brother (the first sibling I lost) was not even an adult at the time of his passing. As my brother was older than me (all of my siblings were older than me) that put me at age eleven. That means I got an up close and personal, front row seat to watch a father grieve. My father really was of the "real men don't cry" generation. I never saw him shed a tear prior to that day. After, I couldn't tell you how many times he sobbed, what seemed uncontrollably, sometimes for hours.

It's part of what convinced me that I don't think I have the strength to lose a child. I don't know if the "why" matters. I don't know if it changes the pain on any scale. Losing that child, regardless of age, is a horrid pain, that no one should have to endure. I am, and always will be, so sorry for your loss.



The loss of any family member is horrible.
To minimize what you are allowed to feel for any reason is heartless.




Danemora -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/5/2017 10:55:17 AM)

I completely agree with you, Bama. Loss is loss and it hurts like a mothetfucker sometimes. The twist this thread took where DS and LP were ripped into was completely uncalled for and highly insensitive.




DaddySatyr -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/5/2017 11:22:29 AM)


edweird ... tommyboy

They're like Bruce Wayne and Batman. When one is unable to post, the other one rears its ugliness.



Michael




Greta75 -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/6/2017 8:42:20 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: JVoV

Greta, he's out of jail, but keeps committing more crimes. I think even in Singapore, a person would still be arrested and held for a few days, until he can see a judge. And he's on probation, meaning he hasn't finished the sentence for his initial crime(s).

If a judge sees you every month, and you tell him the same thing every month, how many chances do you think you should get?

In Singapore, he will be kept in jail or in probation(means he gets an ankle tag he can't take off and gets regular officer visits and curfews, lots of movement restrictions) and then escorted to the transplant under heavy security to make sure that kidney gets taken out of him and delivered to the child. Whatever time he spends in Hospital recovering does not count in his jail term if there is pending jail term.

And then he goes back to jail or probation and start from scratch after that. That's how it would work! I seriously cannot understand what so difficult about allowing this dude donate his kidneys. (Actually if he was just in probation over here, being bed ridden in hospital is as good as staying at home. As there are curfews and restrictions of what you can do, being stuck in hospital is perfect)

He will not skip any punishment. There are no chances given. Stop punishing the child for the father's mistakes.




Greta75 -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/6/2017 8:45:17 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

greta im reading a book about the secret service and their time with the presidents they protected. I just got done reading this and thought you might enjoying hearing it:

"Reagan was famous for firing up air force jets on behalf of children who needed transport for kidney operations...these are things you never knew about. he never bragged about it. I hand-carried checks for four thousand or five thousand dollars to people who had written him. he would say 'don't tell people. I was poor myself.'"


Cheers to Reagan for that little act of Kindness.




WhoreMods -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/6/2017 9:22:36 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Greta75


quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

greta im reading a book about the secret service and their time with the presidents they protected. I just got done reading this and thought you might enjoying hearing it:

"Reagan was famous for firing up air force jets on behalf of children who needed transport for kidney operations...these are things you never knew about. he never bragged about it. I hand-carried checks for four thousand or five thousand dollars to people who had written him. he would say 'don't tell people. I was poor myself.'"


Cheers to Reagan for that little act of Kindness.

Much more significant than all the children he paid the contras to kill, yes.




Greta75 -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/6/2017 10:28:31 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: WhoreMods
Much more significant than all the children he paid the contras to kill, yes.

I don't know anything about this Reagan ordering children to be killed. Do quote your source.




WhoreMods -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/6/2017 11:36:53 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Greta75


quote:

ORIGINAL: WhoreMods
Much more significant than all the children he paid the contras to kill, yes.

I don't know anything about this Reagan ordering children to be killed. Do quote your source.

Google "the Reagan doctrine" "Nicaragua", "Sandinistas" and "Contras".
The contras (right wing psychopaths devoted to opposing the left wing Sandinistas) had a real taste for attacking civilian targets, burning hospitals, blowing up schools, and most of the other stuff that daesh are now vilified for doing by the same sort of people who spent most of the '80s turning a blind eye to the reprehensible conduct of the people Reagan was funding (and supplying with absolutely not military at all 'advisors" to encourage them in their shittiness).




bounty44 -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/6/2017 11:55:39 AM)

this will catch you up a little greta:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/reagan-iran/




JVoV -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/6/2017 12:06:48 PM)

Greta, it's not like the guy just smacked his family around a little. He fucking broke his infant son's skull.

https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/11/06/us/devin-patrick-kelley-texas.html?referer=https://t.co/eDcPdzOqLm?amp=1




bounty44 -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/6/2017 1:20:31 PM)

jv I think you accidentally posted to the wrong thread




DaddySatyr -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/23/2017 2:11:00 AM)


Sometimes, there are happy endings, dreams do come true, and prayer does work!

Update To the Story



Peace,


Michael




Greta75 -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/23/2017 2:51:40 AM)

I'm glad there is a happy ending! But it was soo close to tragic! Now the real journey begins. Who is responsible for raising this child? And making sure the child will be okay. Father is completely useless. Hope he has a decent mom.




Edwird -> RE: This Is A Tragedy (11/23/2017 8:22:39 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

yes, but as im understanding it, with the justification being they don't want him in prison, or rather back in prison, after having donated.

they are not saying that outright, but that's the only inference I can make.


What the doctors were/are saying, with complete justification, is that the prison medical system is such shit that the father/donor was at great risk of death, even after that modern and relatively mundane procedure, if sent back to prison a day or two after the operation.

Tell's you something there.





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