National Pamphleteers Bash Everyone They Can!
Individual members of the national pamphleteer organizations prove once again: actual facts have no bearing when adhering to the Soros/Jarrett/owe-bama philosophy!! These individuals--which include most pamphleteers--don't feel any responsibility to verify the information they're fed via the SJo regime; hence the "Palin persecution!"
Governor Palin--during her on-going, illusive 'One Nation' bus tour--arrived at the site of the 'Paul Revere warning ride' to expound on the full story of Mr Revere's middle-of-the-night ride to warn the locals of an impending invasion of British forces. We all know the Longfellow poem inwhich the Revere warning of 'one if by land; two if by sea' became a battle cry for the initial British attack. Mr Longfellow only expounds on the various points of the ride: through "every Middlesex village and farm;" the "Charleston shore;" climbing the tower of the "Old North Church;" where the river widens to meet the bay; the "Mystic (River);" Medford town; "...galloped into Lexington;" "....the bridge in Concord town."
The national pamphleteers--acting more like stenographers--do not let the facts cloud their issue, which is: Sarah Palin is a moron; she hasn't a clue about history; she's intent on making headlines, no matter the factual expense!! These pamphleteers would do well to research their topics prior to publication, rather than consistantly proving they are the morons!! The Longfellow Historical Society--as quoted by Mr William Jacobson of the Cornell Law School--says:
{*}Paul Revere's own account of that night indicates that he was indeed captured and later released; he did warn the British that they'd be in 'deep kimchi' if they attacked the colonists; that the British wouldn't find or take the caches of weapons and ammunition secreted among the towns and villages surrounding Boston!!
The basic premise of Longfellow's poem is historically accurate, but Paul Revere's role is exaggerated. The most glaring inconsistencies between the poem and the historical record are that Revere was not the only rider that night, nor did he make it all the way to Concord, but was captured and then let go (without his horse) in Lexington, where he had stopped to warn Samuel Adams and John Hancock of the impending attack … Longfellow's intention was not to write a history; it was to create a national hero and he was successful at doing so.{*}
So..... Who's the moron here?!?
Til Nex'Time....
http://www.nationalcenter.org/PaulRevere'sRide.html
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