Hillary Clinton is the kindest, bravest, warmest, most wonderful human being I've ever known

I've finally come around, after seeing so many diaries on Daily Kos extolling her deserving qualities and virtues, to realizing that Hillary Clinton really is the kindest, bravest, warmest, most wonderful human being I've ever known. Laugh all you want, but I can prove that she possesses each of those in abundance.

Kindness

She's extraordinarily kind, for one thing.

“We have to send a clear message, just because your child gets across the border, that doesn’t mean the child gets to stay,” she said. “So, we don’t want to send a message that is contrary to our laws or will encourage more children to make that dangerous journey.”

Clinton said the main reason minors are coming is to escape violence in their home countries, predominantly Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala.

Ah, yes, isn't it sad so many parents feel they have no choice but to send their children away on a dangerous journey to the United States to escape violence in countries like Honduras. If only someone in a position of authority could have done something, anything to prevent the rise of this murderous, criminal regime which illegally ousted the democratically elected government, and replaced it with an ongoing horror show:

Honduras suffers from rampant crime and impunity for human rights abuses. The murder rate was again the highest in the world in 2014. The institutions responsible for providing public security continue to prove largely ineffective and remain marred by corruption and abuse, while efforts to reform them have made little progress.

If only someone in our government, rather than sending "$50 million in security aid" to these monsters from 2010-2014, had stood up to these gangsters and mass murderers and said this shall not pass! Alas, there was no one willing to fight for the poor people of Honduras.

A number of Clinton emails show how, starting shortly after the coup, HRC and her team shifted the deliberations on Honduras from the Organization of American States (OAS) – where Zelaya could benefit from the strong support of left-wing allies throughout the region – to the San José negotiation process in Costa Rica. There, representatives of the coup regime were placed on an equal footing with representatives of Zelaya’s constitutional government, and Costa Rican president Oscar Arias (a close U.S. ally) as mediator. Unsurprisingly, the negotiation process only succeeded in one thing: keeping Zelaya out of office for the rest of his constitutional mandate.

Such a pity.

But I digress.

Bravery

I don't want to just refer to Hillary Clinton's self-acknowledged personal bravery under fire. That has been well documented. I'm talking about political courage to stand by what you truly believe even in the face of risking everything you care about most.

And then, of course, there is the issue of her moral courage, which she demonstrated in abundance when she defied the majority of Democratic members in Congress to grant President Bush the authority to go to war with Saddam Hussein's cruel and evil regime in Iraq.

[A] sizable majority of Democrats in Congress voted against the authorization to invade Iraq the following year.

There were 21 Senate Democrats — along with one Republican, Lincoln Chafee, and one independent, Jim Jeffords — who voted against the war resolution, while 126 of 209 House Democrats also voted against it. Bernie Sanders, then an independent House member who caucused with the Democrats, voted with the opposition. At the time, Sanders gave a floor speech disputing the administration’s claims about Saddam’s arsenal. He not only cautioned that both American and Iraqi casualties could rise unacceptably high, but also warned “about the precedent that a unilateral invasion of Iraq could establish in terms of international law and the role of the United Nations.”

Hillary Clinton, on the other hand, stood among the right-wing minority of Democrats in Washington.

The Democrats controlled the Senate at the time of the war authorization. Had they closed ranks and voted in opposition, the Bush administration would have been unable to launch the tragic invasion — at least not legally. Instead, Clinton and other pro-war Democrats chose to cross the aisle to side with the Republicans.

And she didn't back down from the position that her vote on Iraq was the right one, even after the Bush administration's dubious claims that Saddam Husein's Iraq supported Al Qaeda and was chock full of weapons of mass destruction, just waiting to blossom into mushroom clouds over America, was proven absolutely, positively to be pure, unadulterated horsepucky.

Even many months after the Bush administration itself acknowledged that Iraq had neither WMDs nor ties to Al-Qaeda, Clinton declared in a speech at George Washington University that her support for the authorization was still “the right vote” and one that “I stand by.” Similarly, in an interview on Larry King Live in April 2004, when asked about her vote despite the absence of WMDs or al-Qaeda ties, she acknowledged, “I don’t regret giving the president authority.”

I don't care what you say, that took guts, a true profile in courage.

Warmth

Perhaps her best quality, however, is her undisputed charm and grace, and the welcoming, compassionate way she has with ordinary people. For example, just watch her in action, taking the time to generously offer advice to this young woman:

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tMegFe2GUp4 width:600 height:300]

Or how about the time she calmly and patiently dealt with adversity when confronted by an hysterical, foaming at the mouth eco-terrorist nutjob?

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dC4Pvm6Oj4A width:600 height:300]

What grace under pressure! But she has always shown compassion and empathy for the plight of others, especially those so different from herself.

“I'm not a ‘super-predator,’ Hillary Clinton,” Williams said. “Can you apologize to black people for mass incarceration?” Williams asks while brandishing a sign that read, “We have to bring them to heel.” [...]

Clinton seemed audibly and visibly irritated, saying she would answer if allowed to speak and then, even more notably, “that no one had ever asked her that before.” Then, Clinton essentially moved on with her regularly scheduled fundraising program. There was no accounting, partial or full, for her 1996 position nor how she arrived at her 2016 stance on criminal justice reform. Moving on.

It just - I don't know - brings a tear to my eyes when Hillary, after it was finally brought to her attention, did the right thing, and apologized for calling young black youth "super predators." I know some might say that she acted only out of political expediency, and her apology came 20 years too late considering the mass incarceration of so many people after her public support and advocacy for her Hubby's "tough on crime" bill, but such people don't know the Hillary Clinton I know. Her own words say it far better than I.

Clinton said she has devoted her life’s work to helping underserved children, too many of whom, she said, are in African-American communities.

“We haven’t done right by them. We need to,” she said. “We need to end the school to prison pipeline and replace it with a cradle-to-college pipeline.”

How can anyone object to that? Her life's work - helping the most underserved children in America? It just goes to show you that Hillary Clinton really is the most ...

Wonderful Human Being

on the planet.

Remember when Hillary said, "We need to end the school to prison pipeline and replace it with a cradle-to-college pipeline.” Well, the minute someone pointed out to her that some of her political contributions came from the for-profit prison industry, which has grown exponentially over the last 20 years, she cut them completely out of her life.

“When we’re dealing with a mass incarceration crisis, we don’t need private industry incentives that may contribute — or have the appearance of contributing — to over-incarceration,” campaign spokesperson Xochitl Hinojosa told ThinkProgress, explaining that Clinton will donate the large amount she has already received from these sources to a yet-to-be-named charity.

How great is that? Sure, she took her time reaching that decision, but to be fair, she had to balance the interests of everyone involved. You can't just make a knee jerk reaction to every little criticism that comes your way.

[Her] decision came after months of pressure from civil rights and immigrant justice groups, who launched online petitions and interrupted Clinton’s public events, demanding she cut ties with the private prison industry.

“Our message was, ‘You can’t be pro-immigrant and still have this blemish on your record,'” said Zenén Jaimes Pérez with United We Dream, one of many organizations that teamed up to press Clinton. “She had [campaign donation] bundlers who worked for the Corrections Corporation of America and Geo Group, which run most of the immigrant detention centers in this country. For me, it was a big deal, because my dad was detained in a Geo facility. She was taking money from a group profiting from my family’s suffering.”

Yet, in the end the money went to a good use - charity. Which charity? I don't know. Maybe her own. Does it matter? After all, she has promised to end the $7 billion to $8 billion private prison industry forever, and her word is her bond.

And speaking of charity, no one does charity better than Hillary, primarily through the Clinton Foundation, one of the most largest and best charitable organizations in the world, which bar none, knows how to deliver the goods to the people who need their help the most.

ANTONY LOEWENSTEIN: Soon after the Haiti earthquake in 2010, the U.S. ambassador at the time—WikiLeaks documents showed this—wrote a cable essentially saying that a gold rush is on, a gold rush meaning for U.S. corporations and others. [...] The solution that the Obama administration gave for Haiti, pushed by Obama, Hillary Clinton, Bill Clinton and Chelsea Clinton, their daughter, were industrial parks—essentially, places that Haitians can get underpaid and not trained to make cheap clothing for Gap and Wal-Mart that you and I maybe, hopefully, won’t buy in the U.S.

[T]he legacy of the Clinton Foundation—and I examine this deeply in the book—is utterly appalling. There are example after example of the Clinton Foundation funding a number of centers that have been infected by chemicals, which also, I might add, the Clinton Foundation were investing in failed things after Hurricane Katrina, as well, here in the U.S. Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton and others—I mean, they’re one example—their solution has primarily been industrial parks.

Who wouldn't want to work at an industrial park, especially one heavily supported by the Clinton Foundation?

Haiti's Caracol Industrial Park—the U.S. State Department and Clinton Foundation pet project to deliver aid and reconstruction to earthquake-ravaged Haiti in the form of private investment—is systematically stealing its garment workers' wages, paying them 34 percent less than minimum wage set by federal law, a breaking report from the Worker Rights Consortium reveals. Critics charge that poverty wages illustrate the deep flaws with corporate models of so-called aid.

The failure of the Caracol Industrial Park to comply with minimum wage laws is a stain on the U.S.'s post-earthquake investments in Haiti and calls into question the sustainability and effectiveness of relying on the garment industry to lead Haiti's reconstruction said Jake Johnston of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in an interview with Common Dreams. [...]

Then-U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former U.S. President Bill Clinton attended Caracol's opening ceremony a year ago. “We’re sending a message that Haiti is open for business again,” Hillary Clinton declared upon the announcement of the opening.

It's the type of thing I would expect from Hillary Clinton. Her service to others continues to amaze me. She is always willing to help out a friend in need.

Well, I hope you understand now why I felt it necessary to reveal what I know about the true heart and character of Hillary Clinton. The New York primary is tomorrow. We sure wouldn't want anyone confused about Hillary Clinton's record as a humanitarian and all around do-gooder.

Opposition leaders “said all the right things about supporting democracy and inclusivity and building Libyan institutions, providing some hope that we might be able to pull this off,” said Philip H. Gordon, one of [Clinton's} assistant secretaries. “They gave us what we wanted to hear. And you do want to believe.”

Her conviction would be critical in persuading Mr. Obama to join allies in bombing Colonel Qaddafi’s forces. In fact, Mr. Obama’s defense secretary, Robert M. Gates, would later say that in a “51-49” decision, it was Mrs. Clinton’s support that put the ambivalent president over the line.

The consequences would be more far-reaching than anyone imagined, leaving Libya a failed state and a terrorist haven, a place where the direst answers to Mrs. Clinton’s questions have come to pass.

Whenever push came to shove, Hillary always chose to do the right thing, no mater how difficult the choice:

[A]s union leaders and human rights activists conveyed these harrowing reports of violence to then-Secretary of State Clinton in late 2011, urging her to pressure the Colombian government to protect labor organizers, she responded first with silence, these organizers say. The State Department publicly praised Colombia’s progress on human rights, thereby permitting hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. aid to flow to the same Colombian military that labor activists say helped intimidate workers.

At the same time that Clinton's State Department was lauding Colombia’s human rights record, her family was forging a financial relationship with Pacific Rubiales, the sprawling Canadian petroleum company at the center of Colombia’s labor strife. The Clintons were also developing commercial ties with the oil giant’s founder, Canadian financier Frank Giustra, who now occupies a seat on the board of the Clinton Foundation, the family’s global philanthropic empire.

The details of these financial dealings remain murky, but this much is clear: After millions of dollars were pledged by the oil company to the Clinton Foundation -- supplemented by millions more from Giustra himself -- Secretary Clinton abruptly changed her position on the controversial U.S.-Colombia trade pact. Having opposed the deal as a bad one for labor rights back when she was a presidential candidate in 2008, she now promoted it, calling it “strongly in the interests of both Colombia and the United States.” The change of heart by Clinton and other Democratic leaders enabled congressional passage of a Colombia trade deal that experts say delivered big benefits to foreign investors like Giustra.

Let me put it this way. When New Yorkers go to the polls tomorrow, we don't want them making the wrong choice because they were misinformed about what Hillary Clinton stands for, and what values, like integrity in public service, and transparency and open government, she holds most dear, do we?

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Oldest Son Of A Sailor's picture

"Did my heart good to see the most moronic party royalists falling all over themselves to tell you how they were glad you saw the light."

Makes it even better when they are unable to edit their comment after missing the Snark...

Interestingly enough a while back when I looked it had only collected 11 flags...

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"Do you realize the responsibility I carry?
I'm the only person standing between Richard Nixon and the White House."

~John F. Kennedy~
Economic: -9.13, Social: -7.28,
Cachola's picture

What a bunch of morons! Goes way, way beyond humorlessness.

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Mundus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur.

no understanding of satire or tone, so they uprate it.

The HRC troll gang is paid to uprate BS, so they uprate satire.

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Remember how many of them thought Colbert's character was serious? He had rightwing fan clubs!

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Twain Disciple

How the amount of foresight she has just blows you away.

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Beware the bullshit factories.

you left out

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Steven D's picture

Such a lovely, lovely person she is.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

ppnortney's picture

to the differently appendaged, but I wonder if she got a hard-on when she said that.

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The smaller the mind the greater the conceit. --Aesop

but she is a FUCKING PUDDLE OF PUKE. I wouldn't walk across the fucking road to see her in person. In fact, I wouldn't walk across the road to see any lousy pol. With the exception of a Sanders or Warren. And Warren's squishyness on her support for a candidate puts that in doubt. Have some backbone. In 12 I had a chance to sit in the first row behind Obama at an event. I told them no and in fact wouldn't even be attending. In 08 I would have. But after seeing him in action for 4 years the "hope" shit didn't cut it with me. I held my nose and voted for him in 12 just because romney was a FUCKING PUDDLE OF PUKE. Where have I heard that before?? Jill Stein is going to break her 5% this year.
Anyway, I wish, when hillary told the young lady she should run for office, the lady should have said "run for president like you madam secretary?" Of course hillary would say yes. Then the lady should have said, "I'm not that immoral"...

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Oldest Son Of A Sailor's picture

I've seen it with my own eyes...

An American Robin (Turdus migratorius) flew into a plate glass window, and was laying on the ground slowly moving, when she quickly walked over and stomped on its head, grinding it under her heel, putting the stunned bird out of its misery...

Such a compassionate woman...
#HillarySoQualified #HillaryWarMonger #HillaryBringThemToHeel

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"Do you realize the responsibility I carry?
I'm the only person standing between Richard Nixon and the White House."

~John F. Kennedy~
Economic: -9.13, Social: -7.28,
riverlover's picture

You should be ashamed! Goddamm-it! Was there a movie created with that scene?

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Oldest Son Of A Sailor's picture

No movie I saw...
But considering what she does to people, the birds don't have a chance...

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"Do you realize the responsibility I carry?
I'm the only person standing between Richard Nixon and the White House."

~John F. Kennedy~
Economic: -9.13, Social: -7.28,
Fern's picture

You have a lot of guts to put it up over there...but no one was disputing the facts, the last I checked.

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Fern

Lenzabi's picture

Darn good snark!

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So long, and thanks for all the fish

Steven D's picture

about her, as I see it. Smile

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

Damnit Janet's picture

and bake cookies.

I remember her swarmy little comment in the 90s, "what do you want me to do? stay home and bake cookies?"

I was a stay at home Mom at the time. I hated her then. Hate her even more now.

I won't ever vote for her. I don't vote or support Republicans.

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"Love One Another" ~ George Harrison

Bollox Ref's picture

kicking in.

Most of life on the planet is beneath her.

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

Damnit Janet's picture

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"Love One Another" ~ George Harrison

I was no longer a stay at home Mom at the time -- I was a lawyer -- but I had previously taken five precious years to stay home with my little ones, and I had by-God baked every cookie recipe in the Good Housekeeping Cookbook. Those were precious years, and I have nothing but respect for a parent who stays home with children as long as possible. What an arrogant, condescending, narrow-minded piece of garbage she is. The other line I remember her for is her response to someone saying small businesses couldn't afford to provide healthcare to employees, considering the high costs (My husband and I had run a small business, no margin at all, with three employees and ourselves.): "It's not my job to protect undercapitalized entrepreneurs." Man, took my breath away. Message: Little people, stay in your place; I'm speaking to the rich here. Anyhow, it's always driven me nuts that health insurance got tied to jobs. Makes no sense. Health care should be government-run, like education. Imagine not being able to send your kids to school unless your employer paid the tuition.

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Twain Disciple

Damnit Janet's picture

that I am truly a feminist. Because I am a strong person. Because I try to share courage and compassion.

I had hated the idea that Ms Rodham was what Feminism was in those years. So much so that I began to hate the term itself and would not identify with it till a few years ago while in a rape survivor diary that I was indeed a feminist as was my husband. ...

Flash forward to me protesting Hillary Clinton's vote for the Iraq War.... I still hated her. But it was Hillary Rodham Clinton I hated not Feminism. I had just conjoined the two because so many told me that she was such a strong woman, a strong feminist... when she was everything I completely wasn't and didn't want to be. And now they want me to shut up, suck it up and just vote for her??? Noway.

I've noticed during the debates that the traits I really don't like in other women... are such vintage Hillary. Condescension is a deal breaker for me. I just have zero stomach for it and that is one of her "charms".

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"Love One Another" ~ George Harrison

lotlizard's picture

Imagine not being able to send your kids to school unless your employer paid the tuition.

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Bollox Ref's picture

but had to join today just to rec a great post.

I used to be a Carter supporter, but more and more, Reagan is making sense to me.

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

thanatokephaloides's picture

Let's see, what did computers look like back then?

Oh, yeah:


Attribution: By Michael L. Umbricht / Retro-Computing Society of Rhode Island Native name Retro-Computing Society of Rhode Island Location Providence, Rhode Island Coordinates 41° 49′ 07″ N, 71° 26′ 46″ W Established 1994 Website http://rcsri.org (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], via Wikimedia Commons

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

Bollox Ref's picture

super cooled.

Just like HRC's server.

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

Arrow's picture

A Dec-10 in all it's glory.

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I want a Pony!

Shahryar's picture

it was my first market research job. We'd program our "deck", get the cards punched out...literally. Lots of you young'uns have heard the term "punch cards". That's exactly what they were. They had 80 columns of numbers from 0 through 9...like this:

00000000
11111111
22222222
33333333
etc.

0 through 9, across the card, 80 columns of that. Each answer was represented by a hole in the card in a specific column. Anyway, we'd bring our punched deck of cards into the cooled computer room where the deck would be read in and matched with a reel to reel tape. Then if it didn't work we had to fix the problem with the deck and get back in line because the computer could only run one "job" at a time. If it did work we'd get a printout on lined green bar paper.

Often that paper had carbon paper in between layers so we could get three copies at once. Then we'd hook up the printout to a machine that separated the layers and rolled up the used carbon paper. And that was considered high tech at the time!

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thanatokephaloides's picture

The first digital (and Digital) computer I ever used was a PDP-10. I was a member of the very first set of computer courses ever taught in Colorado Springs, Colorado high schools. We communicated with the DEC-10 using either dumb Teletype terminals or punched cards; the DEC LA-36 Decwriter was considered ultrahigh tech for the time.

Those of us who punched cards learned the sub-language of multipunches early on. 6-7-8-9 meant "End Of Deck", for one example.

Because of the large proportion of military families in Colorado Springs, we each received a survey every year, printed on a punch card. On it was our name; we had to add our physical address and check a box asking if we were a military family or not. This was so that the federal PILT (Payment In Lieu Of Taxes) would be set correctly, and our County reimbursed for educating children whose legal residence wasn't Colorado Springs because their parents were active-duty military.

One kid in my computer class decided to be a smartass, and put his card into the cardpunching machine; he commenced placing the 6-7-8-9 multipunch into the first column on the card. He submitted it like that.

The school district was NOT amused!

Smile

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

Alison Wunderland's picture

though I think he mostly ghost-wrote articles for illiterate veeps for their in-house magazine.

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Looks like we were sitting at the keypunch machine around the same time.
I Went to a 6 month business computer programming school in 78. We didn't have a Dec10 there, we had a Univac 1600 I think it was. 4k memory (that's K, not meg or gig for you youngin's). Keypunching my programs (cheap school. we punched our own cards!) that's how I learned to type! *grin*. Two fingers and an occasional thumb is how I programmed my way through school and how I to this day type my way through life lol.
How fondly I recall those decks of cards in their card boxes containing all the beautiful code I had produced. Adding numbering on the far right of the cards was essential because when (not IF) you dropped your box of cards, it sure made it easier to put them all back in the correct order.
The programs were load and go back then, You entered your program followed by the data into the card reader to accomplish your mission. The program and the data could encompasses many many boxes of cards. The number 1 rule was, don't drop the freaking cards!
I graduated that fall #1 overall in the grading/scoring standards of that school and wrote my first program for a paycheck before I turned 18 that December. Programming was good work, good pay but can be a terribly stressful occupation.
Still the programming life was good until around 2000 when HB-1 Visa's and outsourcing to India in particular and other places, decimated the programmer ranks across the country.
I can't seem to bring to mind the name of the machine that separated the sheets and removed the carbon paper. Those aren't decolators I think, but I just can't recall what they were called. The carbon was messy as hell though!
Anyway, Hail old timer!

Smile

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

lotlizard's picture

the name of the machine that separated the sheets and removed the carbon paper

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Bursters were for separating checks and/or mailings.
After seeing your post I went back and looked up Decollators.. found a pic of one I used back then.
soo.. decollators ARE the carbon removing machine.
The bursters had to be set at the proper settings to separate the checks without chopping them in half.
Heaven help the computer operator that got the paychecks chopped wrong!

It's not that my mind is going because I'm getting older. It's the chemo therapy.
That's my story and I'm sticking to it!
Smile

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

Oldest Son Of A Sailor's picture

I used a Digital PDP-8 Computer in school...
It was literally the 1st Desktop MiniComputer...
Not that you could have it on your desk and use it but rather it would fit on top of the desk...
The Whole Top of the Desk!

It had about 4K of memory of which the C-Focal code used about 3K leaving 1K for us to use...
We wrote our programs on teletype machines, which made a paper punch tape, which we would feed into the machine's reader, and have to turn the reader on and off as it fed through, so we wouldn't overload the input buffer...

Oh those were the days...
The cutting edge of technology...

Digital PDP-8 Minicomputer.jpg

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"Do you realize the responsibility I carry?
I'm the only person standing between Richard Nixon and the White House."

~John F. Kennedy~
Economic: -9.13, Social: -7.28,
riverlover's picture

I didn't do it then but remember college friends having to get up in the middle of the night for "deck runs". And yes, the boxes. And after that, the scrap deck cards with a hole or two having two useful writing sides.

I was late to the dance, first work computer was an Apple II or IIe. 5-or-whatever-" floppies. Only later did I send my first email at Cornell, through the DARPA network. Then Mozilla dragon, and dealing with early ver. DNAStar. Where I had to learn C commands. Now I'm probably officially past middle age.

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Steven D's picture

after Lebanon. He was smart enough to take away the lesson after that disaster (or one of his advisers was) that getting involved in a land war in Asia (or sub-Saharan Africa for that matter) is a losing proposition.

To bad Hillary, despite her vaunted intelligence and experience, has yet to acquire that small bit of wisdom.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

Lenzabi's picture

Hey! My Basic Training unit at Ft. Sill was on alert and packed, I almost took a trip to Grenada in 1983!

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So long, and thanks for all the fish

Bollox Ref's picture

About QE II inspecting lunches for the security detail/soldiers around Balmoral Castle. Apparently, if sandwiches weren't up to scratch, they were sent back on her orders for improvement.

Fluff piece I know, but given the Secret Service stories about "She Who Will Be Elected, I very much doubt said individual is scrutinizing food for the 'staff'.

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

detroitmechworks's picture

The Prince actually served.
They seem to actually LIVE the idea of "Noblesse Oblige", as opposed to our American royalty which seems to think it gets to piss on the servants if it amuses them.

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

There are times when I regret the Revolution. The Brits have real health care.

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Twain Disciple

riverlover's picture

but I guess the Colonies were too late.

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Damnit Janet's picture

ended AIDS together. Forever.

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"Love One Another" ~ George Harrison

Bollox Ref's picture

I like your hat.

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

Damnit Janet's picture

My smiley face was tagged at an event this Saturday and I really liked their photo of me so dumped my old avvie and bringing out the real me.

And the hat hides my dual horns, of course. Biggrin

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"Love One Another" ~ George Harrison

sensetolisten's picture

I TOTALLY FUCKING LOVED THIS !!!!!!!!!!!!

Saw this on TOS and was laughing and laughing and laughing!!!!!

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“I never did give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell.”
― Harry Truman

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