BlueLion wrote:Best news anchor in my life time bar none.
L-188 wrote:But he had his faults too. Remember his Tet offensive commentatry had a devestating effect on the war and in many way condemned the Vietnamse to the horrors of communist rule for 30 years.
AndesSMF wrote:L-188 wrote:But he had his faults too. Remember his Tet offensive commentatry had a devestating effect on the war and in many way condemned the Vietnamse to the horrors of communist rule for 30 years.
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Yeah, his comments costs the lives of millions of people.
He was probably quite responsible for the current media culture as well, I have no respect for the guy at all. He became a commentator disguised as a newscaster.
AndesSMF wrote:Are you disputing our comments?
AndesSMF wrote:Then I suggest you take a read about the 'Tet Offensive'.
Essentially, the North was wiped out as a fighting unit, and uncle Walter made a comment about how the war was lost and the rest is history. This is how you can snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
SE Asia became far more of a nightmare after that, Khmer Rouge and more, and if the US had won, it wouldn't have.
I stand by my opinion.
And you should read and find out that there is very little dispute to my allegations.
By 1968, when Cronkite returned from a reporting trip to Vietnam, his verdict on the situation there helped convince President Lyndon Johnson that he'd lost a crucial swath of public -- and establishment -- support. "It seems now more certain than ever that the bloody experience of Vietnam is a stalemate," Cronkite said, on the air. "If I've lost Cronkite, I've lost America," Johnson reportedly said, and decided not long afterwards not to seek reelection.
The horrendous losses inflicted on Viet Cong units struck into the heart of the irreplaceable infrastructure that had been built up for over a decade. MACV estimated that 181,149 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops had been killed during 1968
General Tran Do, North Vietnamese commander at the battle of Hue, gave some insight into how defeat was translated into victory:
In all honesty, we didn't achieve our main objective, which was to spur uprisings throughout the South. Still, we inflicted heavy casualties on the Americans and their puppets, and this was a big gain for us. As for making an impact in the United States, it had not been our intention — but it turned out to be a fortunate result
AndesSMF wrote:L-188 wrote:But he had his faults too. Remember his Tet offensive commentatry had a devestating effect on the war and in many way condemned the Vietnamse to the horrors of communist rule for 30 years.
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Yeah, his comments costs the lives of millions of people.
He was probably quite responsible for the current media culture as well, I have no respect for the guy at all. He became a commentator disguised as a newscaster.
Murph61 wrote:AndesSMF wrote:L-188 wrote:But he had his faults too. Remember his Tet offensive commentatry had a devestating effect on the war and in many way condemned the Vietnamse to the horrors of communist rule for 30 years.
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Yeah, his comments costs the lives of millions of people.
He was probably quite responsible for the current media culture as well, I have no respect for the guy at all. He became a commentator disguised as a newscaster.
A journalist compared to Hitler, eh?
That's one of the funniest things I've ever read, to be honest.