tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10193821.post6175663653436165281..comments2024-03-25T16:57:17.825-05:00Comments on Bostonmaggie: Tonight's LectureBostonMaggiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17298341600851300309noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10193821.post-819902396307988892007-05-11T12:13:00.000-05:002007-05-11T12:13:00.000-05:00Your night at the "Old South Meeting House" sounds...Your night at the "Old South Meeting House" sounds like the typical Boston Lecture routine. I tend to think of them as 'Secular Sermons.' I'm sure Finan likes to make big issues on what has been banned in Boston.<BR/>Quite frankly, here in Boston, Free Speech has already been banned by the Social Stigma of Philosophical Parisees. The Patriot Act would be banned in Boston if that crowd had its way. 'Sanctuary Cities' would get 'foreign aid' (Hmmm, Maybe...Nah, let it go...). I can just anticipate the day a person in uniform will be charged for indecent exposure by some PC Cop strutting avalanche thighs in a thong. <BR/>Actually, I felt alienation first when I came home in the 60's. My car had an ID tage from the Intelliigence Center, Ft. Holabird, MD (and we've heard how evil we were).<BR/>Henry Knox owned a bookstore in Boston; became Washington's artillery officer and eventually Secretary of War. Oh, Yes. Don't forget the trek he conducted hauling guns from Fort Ticonderoga for Boston's St. Patrick's day - Evacuation Day. Considering the dynamic, I'd say he will stand taller in history that Walden's or Border's. I'd say Finan was a low-renter.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com