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Rest in Peace Walter Cronkite

cornflake

better'n coco pops any ol' day o da week
Veteran
This fine gentleman's reputation for honesty even reached across the seas, to be known by an Australian boy, like me.

RIP Walt.
 

PoopyTeaBags

State Liscensed Care Giver/Patient, Assistant Trai
Veteran
he had a long life and probably better then anythign any of use will expierence... RIP
 

yortbogey

To Have More ... Desire Less
Veteran
dam...shame..HE waz brilliant for TV and newz...forever and A day.....U will be missed......RIP...:jawdrop:...so.so.so.SAD.
 
J

JackTheGrower

I was a boy and I remember the body counts and watching Walter Cronkite.. It was Vietnam war!

Part of my life has passed..

RIP
 

kmk420kali

Freedom Fighter
Veteran
Just to ad this...Mr Cronkite was also down for our Cause--

[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif] WALTER CRONKITE RECOGNIZED FAILED WARS
by Ethan Nadelmann, (Source:Detroit News)
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[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Michigan
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[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Everyone knows Walter Cronkite was "the most trusted man in America" and someone whose rare expressions of personal opinion -- such as on the Vietnam War -- could powerfully influence the views of middle America. But fewer are aware of a passion of his that he came to relatively late in life -- ending the nation's disastrous war on drugs.

I first learned of Walter Cronkite's interest in the drug war back in 1995, when a producer for "The Cronkite Report" -- an occasional series on the Discovery Channel -- called to ask for my help on a documentary that he and Cronkite were doing on the drug war. The one hour report that resulted provided a devastating critique of the nation's drug policies.

Focusing on the lives of three women who had been sentenced to many years in Bedford Hills prison in New York, the program revealed the utter waste of human lives and taxpayer dollars that define the drug war. Neither Cronkite nor the women involved suggested that they had done nothing wrong. But the extraordinary lengths of the prison terms to which they had been sentenced, for relatively minor participation in the illicit sale of drugs, combined with the impact on their children and families, and the absurd amount of money being spent to punish rather than help and treat -- all this shaped Cronkite's devastating indictment of the drug war.

Walter Cronkite got it -- and he got it early. He knew a failed war when he saw one.

Then in 1998, he joined other prominent individuals in signing a public letter to United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan that stated: "We believe that the global war on drugs is now causing more harm than drug abuse itself."

Two women played a pivotal role in Cronkite's involvement thereafter with my organization, the Drug Policy Alliance. The first was Marlene Adler, his longtime assistant, who appreciated Walter's commitment to this issue. And the second was Dr. Mathilde Krim, a friend and neighbor of the Cronkites in New York, the founder and co-chair of amfAR, the HIV/AIDS research and advocacy organization, and a board member of the Drug Policy Alliance. It was with Mathilde's and Marlene's assistance that Walter agreed both to join the alliance's honorary board and sign the fundraising letter that has helped the group recruit tens of thousands of new members.

He wrote: "I remember. I covered the Vietnam War. I remember the lies that were told, the lives that were lost -- and the shock when, 20 years after the war ended, former Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara admitted he knew it was a mistake all along.

"Today, our nation is fighting two wars: one abroad and one at home. While the war in Iraq is in the headlines, the other war is still being fought on our own streets. Its casualties are the wasted lives of our own citizens.

"I am speaking of the war on drugs.

"And I cannot help but wonder how many more lives, and how much more money, will be wasted before another Robert McNamara admits what is plain for all to see: the war on drugs is a failure.

"While the politicians stutter and stall -- while they chase their losses by claiming we could win this war if only we committed more resources, jailed more people and knocked down more doors -- the Drug Policy Alliance continues to tell the American people the truth -- 'the way it is.'","

I once asked Walter -- at a dinner at Mathilde's home a few years ago - -- whether he had ever tried marijuana. As I recall, he laughed and said not exactly, except for the "contact high" he might have gotten around CBS's offices back in the 1960s, when smoking was still allowed and not everything smoked was tobacco.

But of course the issue for him was never about the drugs. What mattered was intellectual honesty, sensible moral judgment and the obligation to speak truth to power, no matter how unwelcome or inconvenient that truth might be.
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RIP
 

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