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Murtha dies… Here is my favorite Murtha site

UserPost

6:40 pm
February 8, 2010


John

Admin

posts 586

1

Okay… I always loved this site.  Murtha is gone, but I thought I would share this link before the removed the site:


http://www.bootmurtha.com/

Remember the Key Dates: On November 2, 2010 we take back Congress – On November 6, 2012 we take back The White House – On January 20, 2013 we turn back Obama’s abuses of power.

8:02 am
February 9, 2010


ginny

Admin

Atlanta, GA

posts 4612

2

http://www.foxnews.com/politic…..d-surgery/
Updated February 09, 2010
Congressman: Murtha Died After Intestine Was Damaged in Surgery

WASHINGTON — A Pennsylvania congressman and longtime friend of the late Rep. John Murtha said late Monday the congressman's large intestine was damaged during gallbladder surgery and the complications led him to be hospitalized.

The Pennsylvania Democrat died at Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, Va., where he was admitted on Jan. 31. The gallbladder surgery was performed days earlier at the National Naval Medical Center, in Bethesda, Md., which didn't immediately return messages seeking comment.

The gallbladder surgery was performed days earlier at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md.

Rep. Bob Brady said an infection developed and that Murtha had a fever when he was admitted to the Virginia hospital.

Brady called Murtha his “buddy” and says he'll remember him forever. “There will never be another Jack Murtha,” Brady said. “He went out on top of his game.”

In 1974, Murtha, then an officer in the Marine Reserves, became the first Vietnam War combat veteran elected to Congress. Ethical questions often shadowed his congressional service, but he was best known for being among Congress' most hawkish Democrats. He wielded considerable clout for two decades as the ranking Democrat on the House subcommittee that oversees Pentagon spending.

Murtha voted in 2002 to authorize President George W. Bush to use military force in Iraq, but his growing frustration over the administration's handling of the war prompted him in November 2005 to call for an immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops.

“The war in Iraq is not going as advertised. It is a flawed policy wrapped in illusion,” he said.

Murtha's opposition to the Iraq war rattled Washington, where he enjoyed bipartisan respect for his work on military issues. On Capitol Hill, Murtha was seen as speaking for those in uniform when it came to military matters.

Murtha “was the first Vietnam veteran to serve in Congress, and he was incredibly effective in his service in the House,” said Rep. David Obey, a Democrat and chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. “He understood the misery of war. Every person who serves in the military has lost an advocate and a good friend today.”

Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., said that in part because of Murtha, “America is now on track to removing all combat troops from that country by this summer.”

President Barack Obama called Murtha, who was known in his home state for helping bring money and projects to areas depressed by the decline of the coal and steel industries, “a steadfast advocate for the people of Pennsylvania for nearly 40 years” with a “tough-as-nails” reputation.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, remembered Murtha as a tireless advocate for veterans and the military.

“From health care to weapons procurement, from shipbuilding to pay and benefits, no one understood the needs of our modern military better than he did,” Mullen said in a statement.

“That we remain the greatest military in the history of world is testament in no small part to his vigilance and stewardship,” he said.

Known for his seriousness, Murtha also had a lighter side. Gov. Ed Rendell recalled Monday that “he was a funny guy, he always enjoyed a good laugh and he was somebody who was a great and loyal friend.”

Rendell said Monday that he has not decided when to schedule a special election to replace Murtha. He has 10 days by law; the political parties must come up with their own candidates. The governor said that it would save taxpayer money to hold the election on May 18, the state's planned primary date, but that he might set it sooner in the event of urgent congressional issues.

Murtha was born June 17, 1932. The former newspaper delivery boy left college in 1952 to join the Marines, where he rose through the ranks to become a drill instructor at Parris Island, S.C., and later served in the 2nd Marine Division. He settled in Johnstown, then volunteered for Vietnam, where he served as an intelligence officer and earned a Bronze Star and two Purple Hearts.

He was serving in the Pennsylvania House in Harrisburg when he was elected to Congress in a special election in 1974. In 1990, he retired from the Marine Reserves as a colonel.

“Ever since I was a young boy, I had two goals in life — I wanted to be a colonel in the Marine Corps and a member of Congress,” Murtha wrote in his 2004 book, “From Vietnam to 9/11.”

Murtha's criticism of the Iraq war intensified in 2006, when he accused Marines of murdering Iraqi civilians “in cold blood” at Haditha, after one Marine died and two were wounded by a roadside bomb.

Critics said Murtha unfairly held the Marines responsible before an investigation was concluded and fueled enemy retaliation. He said that the war couldn't be won militarily and that such incidents dimmed the prospect for a political solution.

“This is the kind of war you have to win the hearts and minds of the people,” Murtha said. “And we're set back every time something like this happens.”

Murtha was a perennial target of critics of so-called pay-to-play politics. He routinely drew the attention of ethical watchdogs with off-the-floor activities, from his entanglement in the Abscam corruption probe three decades ago to the more recent scrutiny of the connection between special-interest spending known as earmarks and the raising of cash for campaigns.

Murtha defended the practice of earmarking. The money, he said, benefited his constituents.

He became chairman of the House Appropriations defense subcommittee in 1989.

Murtha's critics recall the Abscam corruption probe, in which the FBI caught him on videotape in a 1980 sting operation turning down a $50,000 bribe offer while holding out the possibility that he might take money in the future.

“We do business for a while, maybe I'll be interested and maybe I won't,” Murtha said on the tape.

Six congressmen and one senator were convicted in that case. Murtha was not charged, but the government named him as an unindicted co-conspirator and he testified against two other congressmen.

Murtha's district encompasses all or part of nine counties in southwestern Pennsylvania and embodies the region's stereotypes of coal mines, steel mills and blue-collar values.

State Sen. Don White, an Army veteran and a Republican who represents a portion of Murtha's district, said he and Murtha were longtime friends, despite holding different political views and serving in different branches of the military.

“He made sure that Washington, D.C., knew where Johnstown, Indiana, Kittanning and a lot of other sites in western Pennsylvania were located,” White said.

Survivors include his wife of nearly 55 years, Joyce, and three children.


I wonder what is going to happen to his airport in PA?

Government exists to protect us from each other. Where government has gone beyond its limits is in deciding to protect us from ourselves. – Ronald Reagan

8:24 am
February 9, 2010


budd

Admin

New Baltimore, New York

posts 5729

3

I sort of have the same feeling as I did when Teddy Kennedy, Johnny Cochran and John Gotti died…..you feel somehow like you ought to have some kind of human compassion, but it's hard to even conjure that up.

“America doesn’t support what Obama’s doing. And because he’s lost the people, he cannot ultimately, win anything”. -Rush Limbaugh

8:30 am
February 9, 2010


Gullaphonic01

Admin

Gull Colony USA

posts 2193

4

budd said:

I sort of have the same feeling as I did when Teddy Kennedy, Johnny Cochran and John Gotti died…..you feel somehow like you ought to have some kind of human compassion, but it's hard to even conjure that up.


 Budd, the people you listed had their chance to repent but instead appear to have chose the same path as Judas. I hope I am wrong but I can't help but picture those people enjoying some very warm weather…  Who knows for sure.

Can I ask a simple question: Who does not have a house that wants one and can afford one, and does not need money from the government to buy one, and is not in danger of losing their job? Supposedly there is a recovery underway. Recovery my ass. -Mi

8:36 am
February 9, 2010


ginny

Admin

Atlanta, GA

posts 4612

5

budd said:

I sort of have the same feeling as I did when Teddy Kennedy, Johnny Cochran and John Gotti died…..you feel somehow like you ought to have some kind of human compassion, but it's hard to even conjure that up.


A couple of times with this thread, I tried to post something nice about the man, that he served his country in Vietnam, started his political career with good intentions ect, but the words just wouldn't flow.


Your comments summed everything up very nicely.  What about the Marines he accused of rape and murder?

Did the left ever assume they were innocent before proven guilty?  No.  Then the case was subsequently dropped.

And what about the Murtha airport in PA?  

Government exists to protect us from each other. Where government has gone beyond its limits is in deciding to protect us from ourselves. – Ronald Reagan

8:37 am
February 9, 2010


budd

Admin

New Baltimore, New York

posts 5729

6

Gullaphonic01 said:

budd said:

I sort of have the same feeling as I did when Teddy Kennedy, Johnny Cochran and John Gotti died…..you feel somehow like you ought to have some kind of human compassion, but it's hard to even conjure that up.


 Budd, the people you listed had their chance to repent but instead appear to have chose the same path as Judas. I hope I am wrong but I can't help but picture those people enjoying some very warm weather…  Who knows for sure.


Interesting observations, Gull, and I too believe they may be “enjoying” (if that's the word you choose to use) some very warm weather…..some which would make Al Gore's fantasyland of global warming look like a day on the polar ice caps by comparison.

“America doesn’t support what Obama’s doing. And because he’s lost the people, he cannot ultimately, win anything”. -Rush Limbaugh

8:37 am
February 9, 2010


budd

Admin

New Baltimore, New York

posts 5729

7

Gullaphonic01 said:

budd said:

I sort of have the same feeling as I did when Teddy Kennedy, Johnny Cochran and John Gotti died…..you feel somehow like you ought to have some kind of human compassion, but it's hard to even conjure that up.


 Budd, the people you listed had their chance to repent but instead appear to have chose the same path as Judas. I hope I am wrong but I can't help but picture those people enjoying some very warm weather…  Who knows for sure.


Interesting observations, Gull, and I too believe they may be “enjoying” (if that's the word you choose to use) some very warm weather…..some which would make Al Gore's fantasyland of global warming look like a day on the polar ice caps by comparison.

“America doesn’t support what Obama’s doing. And because he’s lost the people, he cannot ultimately, win anything”. -Rush Limbaugh

9:06 am
February 12, 2010


jimsouth

Member

posts 1540

8

I never believed he was a good American when he was alive. Why should I be a hypocrite. It's been ” Speak only good of the dead” ; but then, you must have something good to say. Best to say nothing, and get on with life.

Every reform movement has a lunatic fringe. Theodore Roosevelt

9:07 am
February 12, 2010


ginny

Admin

Atlanta, GA

posts 4612

9

jimsouth said:

I never believed he was a good American when he was alive. Why should I be a hypocrite. It's been ” Speak only good of the dead” ; but then, you must have something good to say. Best to say nothing, and get on with life.


Agreed!

Government exists to protect us from each other. Where government has gone beyond its limits is in deciding to protect us from ourselves. – Ronald Reagan

11:34 am
February 12, 2010


Timetoregroup2008

Member

Indiana

posts 1144

10

The “bootmurtha” site is great!  I hope it stays put.  It is part of history that will not be reported many other places.  The truth is out there.

“I think we have more machinery of government than is necessary, too many parasites living on the labor of the industrious.” –Thomas Jefferson

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