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Archives for 2004

The Trouble with the Freedom Trail

by Bryan Strawser · Mar 21, 2004

There’s a great story to be told along Boston’s Freedom Trail – the story of how our revolution came to be. A column in today’s Boston Globe Ideas section calls for an update to the freedom trail:

In one way, the Freedom Trail has been a victim of its greatest successes: the loving restoration of Boston’s three most important public buildings of the Revolutionary era, the Old State House, Faneuil Hall, and the Old South Meeting House. But we are so used to thinking of government as representative and as taking place indoors that we have lost sight of what the revolutionary generation called “the people out of doors.” After all, some of the most famous events of the Revolution in Boston took place not within these buildings but in the streets or squares — and involved thousands of ordinary people who were not normally part of the political system.

The processions protesting the Stamp Act in 1765 began with effigies hanging from the Liberty Tree, the great elm at the corner of Essex and Washington streets, and the space beneath the tree (known as “Liberty Hall”) remained a center of political activity for the next decade. The Boston Massacre of 1770 occurred in the square below the balcony of the State House. The Tea Party of 1773 took place at Griffin’s Wharf, where several thousand stood in hushed silence as 100 or so men staged their famous act of civil disobedience.

The story is there to be told.. but only if you already know it.

Read On…

Filed Under: Massachusetts

Lex: Friday Musings

by Bryan Strawser · Mar 19, 2004

Lex drops some thoughts in his weekly Friday Musing – the best is at the end though:

And I’ll tell you something privately, just you and me: I’m proud of what we did. If I live to be a hundred years old, I don’t know that I’ll ever have the chance to do something so important, be a part of something so selfless, change the lives of so many people so positively, ever again.

No WMD found? I can live with that. One less thing to worry about.

Twenty-five million people liberated from the kind of oppression you will never understand unless you’d lived it yourself?

Priceless.

And we’re proud of you for what you and your men have done…

Filed Under: Military

Colonel Peter J. Stewart

by Bryan Strawser · Mar 19, 2004

While at the Vietnam Memorial last week, I was struck by this note left behind at the panel bearing the name of Colonel Peter J. Stewart:



Colonel Stewart was declared missing in action eight years before I was born – to this day, his family does not know what happened to him. You can read more about his crash here.

I have thought of him often this week…

Filed Under: Military

The Next Generation

by Bryan Strawser · Mar 19, 2004

Many times, I have talked with like-minded friends about how they came to their beliefs about living in the United States – about freedom – about our responsibilities as citizens – and so on. It is through these processes that our understanding of freedom – and it’s cost – is passed from generation to generation.

There have been times in the past few years when I have wondered and feared about the next generation of Americans – if they will understand and value freedom the same way that my family and I do. Will they remember why this nation came to be? Will they understand what it means to stand in the Lincoln Memorial and read the Gettysburg Address? Will they remember why we went to Europe to fight in World War I and II?

Will they remember why we have sent men (and now women) off to fight in foreign lands?

Will they remember that freedom is not free?

This week, at the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, DC, a letter and a note left there in memory of those that gave their lives reminded me that the next generation hasn’t forgotten what it means to be a citizen of the United States.




Click on Photo for larger version

Filed Under: Deep Thoughts

Friedman: Axis of Appeasement

by Bryan Strawser · Mar 19, 2004

As usual, Tom Friedman of the New York Times says it better than I ever could:

The notion that Spain can separate itself from Al Qaeda’s onslaught on Western civilization by pulling its troops from Iraq is a fantasy. Bin Laden has said that Spain was once Muslim and he wants it restored that way. As a friend in Cairo e-mailed me, a Spanish pullout from Iraq would only bring to mind Churchill’s remark after Chamberlain returned from signing the Munich pact with Hitler: “You were given the choice between war and dishonor. You chose dishonor and you will have war.”  

Read it…

Filed Under: Politics

Digital Workflow at Sports Illustrated

by Bryan Strawser · Mar 19, 2004

I take alot of Digital Photos, but what Sports Illustrated is doing with Digital Technology takes the cake.

A great read if you’re interested in reading more about how Sports Illustrated handles the more than 16,000 photos that they took of the Super Bowl this year.

Via Slashdot

Filed Under: Technology

Survey: Iraqis are Better Off

by Bryan Strawser · Mar 18, 2004

Also yesterday, a ABC News poll found 48 percent of Iraqis believe the United States was right to lead an invasion of their country, while 39 percent said it was wrong.

Fifty-six percent said their lives were better than before the war; 19 percent said worse.

Now, why don’t we hear about this poll – a friend of mine found it buried at the end of an article in the Boston Herald.

Filed Under: Politics

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