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-- Kerry the Dolphin Part 2
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| Originally posted by speedracer_mec One swiftboat mission when he was serving on and the other when he took command with a new group of individuals. |
edited the first post above yours with a link
I'm a bit confused..
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| No those people were crewmen of OTHER swiftboats that supposedly went on some of the missions that Kerry did. But please, cut the crap and post sources that detail the how the alleged statements made by these individuals were direct crewmates of Kerry ... I posted sources for my ascertations. |
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| http://www.swiftvets.com |
Perhaps I can help aid you ResonantDrag. Finally, something I can dig into.
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| http://www.swiftvets.com Go to the real story then to quotes and facts I tried putting the link direct but its dead for some reason. Manually going in works fine though This should answer most of your questions. Most of the guys that are shown on the site are just able to say that they didn't commit war crimes while they were in Nam and that on that basis, John Kerry is a liar...unless he retracts everything he said in his now out of print book and to congress. The picture is of other Swiftboat captains...Kerry's peers, not subordinates, stationed with him during his time in Nam. The thing that really got these guys going was the use of the picture and the implication (distortion) that they ALL supported him, when he knew damn well they did not. Several swiftboat crews were all stationed in one place and worked together patrolling the delta in teams, so plenty of guys besides the ones on Kerry's boat got a really good look at John Kerry. |
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It is not all BS. I could see getting a half dozen guys to lie about something (like Kerry's swiftboat supporters maybe?), but not the vast number that are on this site and are willing to take a public stand against Kerry. Character is really at issue here, if the guy isn't a war hero, no way this many people would say he wasn't. I am sure that not all of them think Bush is God's gift to military service either. |
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One swiftboat mission when he was serving on and the other when he took command with a new group of individuals. Could Kerry's subordinates/peers/superiors be lying? Sure, anything is possible. But what do they have to gain by lying? They were't just passing acquaintances, those people were comrade in arms, they fought alongside, protecting each other. I don't know about them, but if I was one of those people, no political differences could make me lie about what really happened on the battlefield or fabricate false stories about those who fought alongside me. I can understand those who question his protesting the war after he served, and how he threw away other peoples medals but not his own, but how can you question whether he served bravely when he volunteered to go to vietnam, was definitely in combat and dangerous situations, and earned a medal for saving a guys life? He did throw away other peoples medals.....that is a factual piece of data. Unbelievable isnt it? |
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| Three days after the skirmish, Kerry and his crew also received a cable from Sealords task force headquarters. "The tactic of attack and assault thoroughly surprised the enemy in his spider-holes and proved to be immensely effective in rousting him into the open," the message read. The cable was from Hoffmann. Four times in February and March, he cabled Kerry and his crew, praising them and other Swift boats after skirmishes. Hoffmann acknowledged the cables, saying Kerry showed "some pretty sharp thinking. He had courage. But he was loose. He went out on his own too much." Hoffmann and several former Swift officers said Kerry's boat sometimes veered off during missions without explanation � a criticism Kerry and his crewmen dismissed. There are no official rebukes in Navy archives or Kerry's available personnel file. Hoffmann's criticism is also at odds with the glowing evaluations of Kerry in his official Navy record. http://www.latimes.com/news/printed...lines-frontpage |
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Also regarding the war crimes. Atrocities were committed by Americans in Vietnam, no doubt. However, his characterization of he and his fellow swiftboat crews as committing ramant atrocities has simply never been supported by any serious review of the facts. I am sure that isolated incidents that qualify as war crimes did occur. However, to suggest that they were a matter of routine combat operations is pure bullshit. The rules of engagement applying to swiftboat operations were strict and are a matter of record. |
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Let me highlight the video from which the doctor in vietnam said... INdirect quote--One statement is from the doctor that allegely (he says he did) treated JKerry for his first wound that led to the #1 Purple Heart. He says that he lied to get the PH. Seems to me that will be particuarlly (sp) damning because it is comming from a Vet and a doctor, two respected positions. |
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The award came from the Naval Support Facility in Saigon � issued without any evident formal protest at the time from Hibbard, Letson or other commanders. Neither the slightness of Kerry's wound nor its murky origins would have likely disqualified him, said Shelby Jean Kirk, a retired civilian director of the Bureau of Naval Operations awards branch. The most critical element in an award decision was "action against the enemy." Conflicting battle accounts were not uncommon, and when Navy awards personnel could not make a clear determination, the serviceman often "got the benefit of the doubt," Kirk said. "The fog of war forced the system to bend to interpretation," said former Navy Cmdr. David L. Riley, author of "Uncommon Valor," a history of the Navy's awards. A review of injury reports from Kerry's boat units during his tour of duty confirms that pattern. Stacked in the Navy archives in Washington, the records show that in the last three months of Kerry's tour, 46 Swift boat personnel were wounded. Most were hurt by shrapnel, and all but five of the cases earned Purple Hearts. Injury reports are missing from Kerry's first month � including his contested Dec. 2 wound. But at least two dozen of the 46 men who were wounded later suffered "light" or "minor" shrapnel injuries. In a similar number of cases, wounds could not be clearly traced to enemy fire. "All I knew," Kerry said, "was I had a hole in my shirt and a hole in my arm." http://www.latimes.com/news/printed...lines-frontpage |
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| Originally posted by imokruok Enjoy. Just released today by the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. Nice 1 minute TV commercial. http://humaneventsonline.com.edgesu..._video_wmv.html |
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| ]Originally posted by Q5echo holy shit thats gonna sting |
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| Smear Boat Veterans for Bush The "swift boat" veterans attacking John Kerry's war record are led by veteran right-wing operatives using the same vicious techniques they used against John McCain four years ago. - - - - - - - - - - - - By Joe Conason May 4, 2004 | The latest conservative outfit to fire an angry broadside against John Kerry's heroic war record is Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, which today launches a campaign to brand the Democrat "unfit to serve as commander in chief." Billing itself as representing the "other 97 percent of veterans" from Kerry's Navy unit who don't support his presidential candidacy, the group insists that all presidential candidates must be "totally honest and forthcoming" about their military service. These "swift boat vets" claim still to be furious about Kerry's 1971 Senate testimony against the war in which he spoke about atrocities in Indochina's "free fire zones." More than three decades later, facing the complicated truth about Vietnam remains difficult. But this group's political connections make clear that its agenda is to target the election of 2004. Behind the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth are veteran corporate media consultant and Texas Republican activist Merrie Spaeth, who is listed as the group's media contact; eternal Kerry antagonist and Houston attorney John E. O'Neill, law partner of Spaeth's late husband, Tex Lezar; and retired Rear Adm. Roy Hoffman, a cigar-chomping former Vietnam commander once described as "the classic body-count guy" who "wanted hooches destroyed and people killed." Spaeth told Salon that O'Neill first approached her last winter to discuss his "concerns about Sen. Kerry." O'Neill has been assailing Kerry since 1971, when the former Navy officer was selected for the role by Charles Colson, Richard Nixon's dirty-tricks aide. Spaeth heard O'Neill out, but told him, she says, that he "sounded like a crazed extremist" and should "button his lip" and avoid speaking with the press. But since Kerry clinched the Democratic nomination, Spaeth has changed her mind and decided to donate her public relations services on a "pro bono" basis to O'Neill's latest anti-Kerry effort. "About three weeks ago, four weeks ago," she said, the group's leaders "met in my office for about 12 hours" to prepare for their Washington debut. Although not as well known as Karen Hughes, Spaeth is among the most experienced and best connected Republican communications executives. During the Reagan administration she served as director of the White House Office of Media Liaison, where she specialized in promoting "news" items that boosted President Reagan to TV stations around the country. While living in Washington she met and married Lezar, a Reagan Justice Department lawyer who ran for lieutenant governor of Texas in 1994 with George W. Bush, then the party's candidate for governor. (Lezar lost; Bush won.) Through Lezar, who died of a heart attack last January, she met O'Neill, his law partner in Clements, O'Neill, Pierce, Wilson & Fulkerson, a Dallas firm. (It also includes Margaret Wilson, the former counsel to Gov. Bush who followed him to Washington, where she served for a time as a deputy counsel in the Department of Commerce.) Spaeth's partisanship runs still deeper, as does her history of handling difficult P.R. cases for Republicans. In 1998, for example, she coached Kenneth Starr, the independent counsel, to prepare him for his testimony urging the impeachment of President Clinton before the House Judiciary Committee. She even reviewed videotapes of his previous television appearances to give him pointers about his delivery and demeanor. The man responsible for arranging her advice to Starr was another old friend of her late husband's, Theodore Olson, who was counsel to the right-wing American Spectator when it acted as a front for the dirty-tricks campaign against Clinton known as the Arkansas Project; he is now the solicitor general in the Bush Justice Department. (Olson also happens to be the godfather of Spaeth's daughter.) In 2000, Spaeth participated in the most subterranean episode of the Republican primary contest when a shadowy group billed as "Republicans for Clean Air" produced television ads falsely attacking the environmental record of Sen. John McCain in California, New York and Ohio. While the identity of those funding the supposedly "independent" ads was carefully hidden, reporters soon learned that Republicans for Clean Air was simply Sam Wyly -- a big Bush contributor and beneficiary of Bush administration decisions in Texas -- and his brother, Charles, another Bush "Pioneer" contributor. (One of the Wyly family's private capital funds, Maverick Capital of Dallas, had been awarded a state contract to invest $90 million for the University of Texas endowment.) When the secret emerged, spokeswoman Spaeth caught the flak for the Wylys, an experience she recalled to me as "horrible" and "awful." Her job was to assure reporters that there had been no illegal coordination between the Bush campaign and the Wyly brothers in arranging the McCain-trashing message. Not everyone believed her explanation, including the Arizona senator. The veteran group's founder, Rear Adm. Roy Hoffmann, first gained notoriety in Vietnam as a strutting, cigar-chewing Navy captain. But it was O'Neill, by now a familiar figure on the Kerry-bashing circuit, who came to Spaeth for assistance. Until now, Hoffmann has been best known as the commanding officer whose obsession with body counts and "scorekeeping" may have provoked the February 1969 massacre of Vietnamese civilians at Thanh Phong by a unit led by Bob Kerrey -- the Medal of Honor winner who lost a leg in Nam, became a U.S. senator from Nebraska and now sits on the 9/11 commission. After journalist Gregory Vistica exposed the Thanh Phong massacre and the surrounding circumstances in the New York Times magazine three years ago, conservative columnist Christopher Caldwell took particular note of the cameo role played by Kerrey's C.O., who had warned his men not to return from missions without enough kills. "One of the myths due to die as a result of Vistica's article is that which holds the war could have been won sensibly and cleanly if the 'suits' back in Washington had merely left the military men to their own devices," Caldwell wrote. "In this light, one of the great merits of Vistica's article is its portrait of the Kurtz-like psychopath who commanded Kerrey's Navy task force, Capt. Roy Hoffmann." Arguments about the war in Vietnam seem destined to continue forever. For now, however, the lingering bitterness and ambiguity of those days provide smear material against an antiwar war hero with five medals on behalf of a privileged Guardsman with a dubious duty record. The president's Texas allies -- whose animus against his Democratic challenger dates back to the Nixon era -- are now deploying the same techniques and personnel they used to attack McCain's integrity four years ago. Bush's "independent" supporters would apparently rather talk about the Vietnam quagmire than about his deadly incompetence in Iraq. http://www.salon.com/opinion/conaso...ift/index1.html |
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| Yet Hoffmann and Kerry had few direct dealings in Vietnam. A Los Angeles Times examination of Navy archives found that Hoffmann praised Kerry's performance in cabled messages after several river skirmishes. And while the Purple Heart account remains murky, its award was routine. Navy records show Swift boat crews were frequently raked with slight wounds of uncertain origin � injuries that often earned decorations. "I don't know what conclusions you can draw about someone's ability to lead from their combat experience, but John's service was commendable," said James J. Galvin, a former Swift boat officer who, like Kerry, was honored for three minor wounds and left the coastal combat zone early. "He played by the same rules we all did." http://www.latimes.com/news/politic...-home-headlines |
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| "The tactic of attack and assault thoroughly surprised the enemy in his spider-holes and proved to be immensely effective in rousting him into the open," the message read. The cable was from Hoffmann. Four times in February and March, he cabled Kerry and his crew, praising them and other Swift boats after skirmishes. Hoffmann acknowledged the cables, saying Kerry showed "some pretty sharp thinking. He had courage. But he was loose. He went out on his own too much." Hoffmann and several former Swift officers said Kerry's boat sometimes veered off during missions without explanation � a criticism Kerry and his crewmen dismissed. There are no official rebukes in Navy archives or Kerry's available personnel file. Hoffmann's criticism is also at odds with the glowing evaluations of Kerry in his official Navy record. Only Hibbard's was less than effusive. The same day as the Silver Star beaching, Hoffmann sent Kerry's boat another cable commending the crew's capture of "5 VC males" in a "daring PCF operation [that] will provide an invaluable source of intelligence." |
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| FOX exposed anti-Kerry vets' flip-flopping As part of ongoing efforts to undermine Senator John Kerry's war record, the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, a group founded to discredit Kerry's record during and after his service in Vietnam, held its first news conference on May 4. Also on that day, Media Matters for America released a report on the group's founder, John O'Neill -- also one of Kerry's strongest critics; the report documents O'Neill's participation in Republican efforts to smear Kerry dating back to the Nixon administration. The scrutiny that cable networks directed toward Kerry's critics throughout the day varied significantly; FOX News Channel provided in-depth coverage, including revealing that some of Kerry's present-day critics have, in the past, actually praised Kerry for his Vietnam service. In many of the May 4 cable news reports, the partisan political backgrounds of the Swift Boat Vets were mentioned. CNN's afternoon news program, Live From..., described the group only as "Vietnam vets who formed a special purpose political action committee" and did not note O'Neill's or any other member's political affiliation. Later in the day, CNN senior political correspondent Candy Crowley reported on Inside Politics: "[T]he Kerry campaign points out there are Republicans here." Crowley also noted that the group's spokeswoman "is a Texas Republican who has contributed to the Bush campaign." On CNN's Crossfire, co-host James Carville also pointed to the Swift Boat Vets' Republican ties, as reported in Salon.com by Joe Conason in a May 4 article. [/b]On MSNBC's Scarborough Country, host Joe Scarborough mentioned criticism of O'Neill's "dirty tricks" for the Nixon administration and asked if O'Neill was doing it again for the Bush campaign.[/b] MSNBC's Lester Holt Live showed a clip of Michael Meehan, Kerry presidential campaign adviser, criticizing the Swift Boat Veterans for their partisan attacks on Kerry and noting that a number of Kerry's crewmembers in Vietnam have praised his service. An afternoon report on MSNBC's daily news show, MSNBC Live, noted only that the Kerry campaign is "of course putting up veterans who disagree" with Kerry's critics. The broadcast omitted any information on individual members of the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, whom the program identified as "a group of former Navy swift boat commanders and personnel many of whom served with Kerry in Vietnam." FOX News Channel pushed harder on the credibility of some of the group's members. On several shows throughout the afternoon and evening, including Special Report with Brit Hume, FOX News Channel chief political correspondent Carl Cameron provided substantial background on some key Kerry critics. Cameron reported that the veterans held a news conference "essentially to trash [Kerry]" and that much of their criticism "dramatically conflicts with the public record." Cameron stated, "Senator Kerry has released most of his military records and for the most part, they are a glowing detail of his military service." Not only does their criticism conflict with what The New York Times described in an April 22 article as Kerry's "uniformly positive" evaluations included in his military records, but, as Cameron also reported, their criticism is inconsistent with statements previously made by many of the Swift Boat Vets themselves. Cameron reported that in 1968, Kerry critic Grant W. Hibbard,[1] a lieutenant commander in Vietnam during Kerry's tour: ... described Kerry in various favorable ways, as quote, "One of the top few in his willingness to seek and accept responsibility." Captain George Elliot, who served in Vietnam at the same time Kerry did, condemns Kerry now for touting his service in a war that Kerry later protested. ... But in '96, Elliot and other critics of today, praised him for going after the enemy. |
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| Beyond pointing out the inconsistent statements by some of Kerry's critics, Cameron also reported that Democrats say that "many of them ... have become Republicans ... who have supported the Bush campaigns in Texas, have been close friends of the Bush family both in politics and business." Cameron stated on Special Report with Brit Hume, "The GOP says it's not involved with the veterans criticizing Kerry, but many of them are Republicans who have contributed to and backed various Bush campaigns and causes over the decades." |
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| On FOX News Channel's Hannity & Colmes, co-host Alan Colmes challenged the credibility of the Swift Boat Vets. Colmes noted that Swift Boat Vets leader O'Neill did not serve in Vietnam with Kerry; rather, as O'Neill told Colmes, "I actually took his boat over, but about two months after he [Kerry] left."Colmes also draws attention to the flip-flopping nature of the comments made about Kerry by several group members. Colmes questioned O'Neill who appeared on the show: |
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| Here is what Grant Hubbard [sic], who's now part of your group, here's what he had to say back then about John Kerry. And he signed -- let's put it up on the screen -- a report on Kerry. He said on initiative, one of the top few. Cooperation, one of the top few. Personal behavior, one of the top few. Why would he say that then and now be supporting you now? |
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| Colmes further probed: Let me show you the report of George Elliott, who also graded John Kerry in Vietnam. Here's what was said. Here's what he said. "In a combat environment often requiring independent, decisive action, Lieutenant Junior Grade Kerry was unsurpassed. LTJG Kerry emerges as the acknowledged leader in his peer group. His bearing and appearance are above reproach." That's a report of officer fitness from 1969 by George Elliott, who also graded Kerry. How do you account for that? Do you want to claim that everybody now is saying what you're saying? It's clearly not true. |
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| Colmes went on to say to O'Neill, "You haven't explained to me how the very people who you claim are supporting you now had these superlative things to say about John Kerry back in the day when he was serving in Vietnam. I don't understand the discrepancy. Maybe you could explain it." O'Neill answered by saying, "Sure. They were hardly superlative. If you look at John Kerry rated ... as a member of a group, you'll find that virtually everybody in the group got the same ones. Commander Hibbard, related generally, graded John Kerry as not observed. So you take that two or three items and ignored the not observed item on there." Colmes replied, "[E]verything he did observe him on he was superlative." O'Neill responded: "Yes, and mostly it was not observed." -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Notes: [1]During his April 19 MSNBC show Scarborough Country, former Florida Republican Representative Joe Scarborough referred to an April 14 Boston Globe story, from which he quoted the following: "John Kerry's much-heralded service medals are being questioned." Scarborough extensively quoted the Globe's interview with Kerry's commanding officer in Vietnam, Lieutenant Commander Grant Hibbard, who has questioned Kerry's first Purple Heart: "He [Hibbard] said -- quote -- 'He [Kerry] had a little scratch on his forearm. He was holding a piece of shrapnel. People in the office were saying, I don't think we got any fire.' And when asked about Kerry's medal, Grant said: 'Obviously, he got it, I don't know how.'" Scarborough failed to mention the following facts from the Globe article: that Hibbard is a Republican and that "a review by the Globe of Kerry's war record ... found that the young Navy officer [Kerry] acted heroically under fire, in one case saving the life of an Army lieutenant." In an April 14 Salon.com article, historian Douglas Brinkley debunked efforts to diminish Kerry's Vietnam record. Brinkley is the director of the Eisenhower Center for American Studies, a history professor at the University of New Orleans, and author of Tour of Duty: John Kerry and the Vietnam War. � N.C. http://mediamatters.org/items/200405050004 |
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| "Adrian Lonsdale remembers a young John F. Kerry as a naval officer who was a good debater, even back in his days in Vietnam. "'He and I and others used to have long discussions at the officers club,' said Mr. Lonsdale of Mattapoisett, a former Coast Guard officer who commanded a division in which the Massachusetts senator was attached back in 1969. 'They were very spirited discussions about the war and the politics back home.' "'He was opposed to the war but it didn't make any difference in his performance,' said the former owner and still instructor at Northeast Maritime Institute in New Bedford. 'He was a very good officer.' "Capt. Lonsdale was among a group of former Vietnam veterans the Massachusetts Democrat brought to the Charlestown navy yard recently to rebut a Boston Globe column that raised questions about Sen. Kerry's Vietnam service, particularly the Silver Star he won. "Mr. Lonsdale was in charge of a two-division flotilla opereating [sic] out of Phu Quoc, a big island near the Cambodian border. One division was made up of Swift boats, fast 50-foot offshore boats, while the other was composed of 82-foot Coast Guard patrol boats." http://www.s-t.com/daily/11-96/11-04-96/d01lo120.htm |
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| O'Neill told NewsMax.com that the medals and their back stories were not the real issue being targeted by the organization, referring to the second paragraph of the letter to Kerry: "It is our collective judgment that, upon your return from Vietnam, you grossly and knowingly distorted the conduct of the American soldiers, Marines, sailors and airmen of that war (including a betrayal of many of us, without regard for the danger your actions caused us.) Further, we believe that you have withheld and/or distorted material facts as to your own conduct in this war." But it is with regard to the latter sentence of the charge that O'Neill and others get vague. When asked by NewsMax if they had in mind any potential smoking gun of distortion that might be revealed by an unfettered examination of Kerry's military records, there was no answer forthcoming. http://www.newsmax.com/archives/art.../4/132751.shtml |
Don't you people have jobs??? How do you write a 20 page thesis in the middle of a Thursday afternoon? Or any afternoon for that matter? I must be getting too old for this.

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| Originally posted by Shakka Don't you people have jobs??? How do you write a 20 page thesis in the middle of a Thursday afternoon? Or any afternoon for that matter? I must be getting too old for this. |
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| Originally posted by Shakka Don't you people have jobs??? How do you write a 20 page thesis in the middle of a Thursday afternoon? Or any afternoon for that matter? I must be getting too old for this. |
. And Opus doesn't really have much to do all day since there are no transitional fossils for him to work on
. You must have missed the thread where creatiionists logically and scientifically debunked biology.
Speaking of non-existant transitional fossils, I just read this new development on the study of Archaeopteryx today:
Scientists Say Dinosaur Bird Was Equipped to Fly
Wed Aug 4, 2004 02:07 PM ET
By Patricia Reaney
LONDON (Reuters) - A dinosaur bird that lived 147 million years ago had a brain similar to a modern eagle or parrot and was equipped to fly, scientists said on Wednesday.
Archaeopteryx is the most ancient bird known. It had the bony tail and teeth of a dinosaur and the feathers and wings of a bird but its flying ability has never been proven.
But researchers in the United States and Britain have used sophisticated computer imaging of the braincase from a fossil of Archaeopteryx found in Germany in 1861 to show that the creature had all the characteristics and brain power to conquer the skies.
"Archaeopteryx's brain, its senses and its ear turned out to be surprisingly more bird-like than we thought," Dr Angela Milner, a paleontologist at the Natural History Museum in London, said in an interview.
"It is regarded as the most primitive bird we know and its skeleton is almost all dinosaur except that it has feathers and wings, so we were surprised that its brain was already quite an advanced bird-like brain."
The particular shape of the brain, its inner ear which is linked to balance, and its sensory ability have convinced scientists it was capable of flying.
"It had everything in place in its neurosensory functions and structures that suggest it was well-equipped to fly," Milner added.
OLDEST BIRD BRAIN
Archaeopteryx was small -- about the size of a European magpie. The evidence showing it was capable of flying, reported in the science journal Nature, raises new questions about the origins of flight.
"Archaeopteryx's brain was fully equipped for flight and it had a bird-like brain. Obviously the evolutionary trends that led to that must have happened a lot further back in time than we really thought," said Milner.
Scientists at the London museum removed the 20 millimeter (0.8 inch) braincase from the rest of the fossil and collaborated with researchers at the University of Texas at Austin who constructed a three-dimensional model of its brain using computer images.
"This animal had huge eyes and a huge vision region in its brain to go along with that, and a great sense of balance," said Dr Timothy Rowe, of the Texas university.
"Its inner ear looks very much like the ear of a modern bird."
Significant visual ability and brain power were thought to be needed to coordinate information from the eyes and ears that is essential for flight.
In a commentary in the journal, Lawrence Witmer of Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine in Athens, Ohio described the research as a landmark study.
"The results have implications for both the biology of Archaeopteryx and the evolutionary transition to birds," he said, adding that previous studies have looked at the structure of wings and features for clues about the creature's ability to fly.
"But flight isn't just about wings, rudders and flaps. It's also about the pilot and on-board computer, and those are the missing elements that this new study provides for Archaeopteryx," he added.
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle....32&pageNumber=1
I wish Nessa was still around to debunk it 
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| Originally posted by occrider I wish Nessa was still around to debunk it |
lol i just got back from taking my philosophy final.
Crap two big posts to reply to -_-
OpUS and occ's.
It will be a while before I begin to read those "novels"
Gangbanging me 
Where are my conservative nerds/brainiacs at?
I bet you liberals probably think that statement is an oxymoron
I'm not a liberal ...
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| Originally posted by occrider Speaking of non-existant transitional fossils, I just read this new development on the study of Archaeopteryx today: Scientists Say Dinosaur Bird Was Equipped to Fly Wed Aug 4, 2004 02:07 PM ET By Patricia Reaney LONDON (Reuters) - A dinosaur bird that lived 147 million years ago had a brain similar to a modern eagle or parrot and was equipped to fly, scientists said on Wednesday. Archaeopteryx is the most ancient bird known. It had the bony tail and teeth of a dinosaur and the feathers and wings of a bird but its flying ability has never been proven. But researchers in the United States and Britain have used sophisticated computer imaging of the braincase from a fossil of Archaeopteryx found in Germany in 1861 to show that the creature had all the characteristics and brain power to conquer the skies. "Archaeopteryx's brain, its senses and its ear turned out to be surprisingly more bird-like than we thought," Dr Angela Milner, a paleontologist at the Natural History Museum in London, said in an interview. "It is regarded as the most primitive bird we know and its skeleton is almost all dinosaur except that it has feathers and wings, so we were surprised that its brain was already quite an advanced bird-like brain." The particular shape of the brain, its inner ear which is linked to balance, and its sensory ability have convinced scientists it was capable of flying. "It had everything in place in its neurosensory functions and structures that suggest it was well-equipped to fly," Milner added. OLDEST BIRD BRAIN Archaeopteryx was small -- about the size of a European magpie. The evidence showing it was capable of flying, reported in the science journal Nature, raises new questions about the origins of flight. "Archaeopteryx's brain was fully equipped for flight and it had a bird-like brain. Obviously the evolutionary trends that led to that must have happened a lot further back in time than we really thought," said Milner. Scientists at the London museum removed the 20 millimeter (0.8 inch) braincase from the rest of the fossil and collaborated with researchers at the University of Texas at Austin who constructed a three-dimensional model of its brain using computer images. "This animal had huge eyes and a huge vision region in its brain to go along with that, and a great sense of balance," said Dr Timothy Rowe, of the Texas university. "Its inner ear looks very much like the ear of a modern bird." Significant visual ability and brain power were thought to be needed to coordinate information from the eyes and ears that is essential for flight. In a commentary in the journal, Lawrence Witmer of Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine in Athens, Ohio described the research as a landmark study. "The results have implications for both the biology of Archaeopteryx and the evolutionary transition to birds," he said, adding that previous studies have looked at the structure of wings and features for clues about the creature's ability to fly. "But flight isn't just about wings, rudders and flaps. It's also about the pilot and on-board computer, and those are the missing elements that this new study provides for Archaeopteryx," he added. http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle....32&pageNumber=1 I wish Nessa was still around to debunk it |
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| Originally posted by occrider I'm not a liberal ... |
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| Originally posted by NYCTrancefan You would think that it would be fair knowledge by now, Occ is not a liberal speedracer. There are those who are questioning the current Bush adiministration and they don't have to necessarily be part of the Communist Workers Party, European or Michael Moore fans |
If they quit banning me, I can actually post for a change. No more bullshit hooligans out on the COR, the mods are prudes.
Whassup, Speed?
[[[smoke]]]
Ian van Dahl - Teime 2 Go
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| Originally posted by smoke If they quit banning me, I can actually post for a change. No more bullshit hooligans out on the COR, the mods are prudes. Whassup, Speed? [[[smoke]]] Ian van Dahl - Teime 2 Go |
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| Originally posted by speedracer_mec Hey sup? and you are? LOL Are you another guy whose going to bash my comments? lol |
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| Originally posted by smoke No, I was always backing you up. Take a look at the avatar and figure it out. [[[smoke]]] |
Ape or Emander might ring a bell for you....Are you slow or what??/
[[[smoke]]]]
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| Originally posted by smoke Ape or Emander might ring a bell for you....Are you slow or what??/ [[[smoke]]]] |
Welcome back Smokeape! I've been wondering where you were. What'd you get banned for?
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| Originally posted by speedracer_mec Where are my conservative nerds/brainiacs at? |
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| Originally posted by speedracer_mec MICHAEL MOORE SLUTBAGS! Yea I didnt know he was a liberal, since Ive been in this particular forum for a short while. |
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| Originally posted by St_Andrew *wasn't? |
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