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Famous historical PHOTOS.....

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ScaresYouToDeath

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Dec 10, 2004
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I've seen this done a couple times, and it is usually very interesting. I'd thought I'd give it another shot...




Sudan, 1993. The photographer committed suicide soon after this photo was released.
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Tiananmen Square, 1989
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Pale%20Blue%20Dot.jpg
 
The Dot is Earth... first photo take of our little marble. Voyager, '86 right? Or it launched in '86 and pic is from '94ish...
 
Originally posted by dillionaire23:
think about it...
Posted from wireless.rivals.com

I had to google it and would have never gotten it by thinking about it. Thanks to the others for clarifying for the rest of the challenged like my self.
This post was edited on 5/13 9:30 AM by clayshall
 
Originally posted by clayshall:
That's some deep stuff dude. What's up with the blue dot?
earth-reduced.jpg

Awesome photos, Dillionaire.
The one of the child with the vulture lurking tugs at the old heart strings.
 
What about the one with the Vietnamese getting shot in the head by the soldier. If I had time I would post it, but gotta run.
 
Originally posted by dillionaire23:
didn't want to give it away too easily, sir
Posted from wireless.rivals.com

yeah, wasn't trying to be a d, but my post kind of looked like it. it has been amended. pretty cool stuff... according to my good friend Wikipedia, it was taken in 1990.

Do it.
 
Originally posted by Califashorn:
What about the one with the Vietnamese getting shot in the head by the soldier. If I had time I would post it, but gotta run.

Beat me to it

"Still photographs are the most powerful weapon in the world," AP photojournalist Eddie Adams once wrote. A fitting quote for Adams, because his 1968 photograph of an officer shooting a handcuffed prisoner in the head at point-blank range not only earned him a Pulitzer Prize in 1969, but also went a long way toward souring Americans’ attitudes about the Vietnam War.

For all the image’s political impact, though, the situation wasn’t as black-and-white as it’s rendered. What Adams’ photograph doesn’t reveal is that the man being shot was the captain of a Vietcong "revenge squad" that had executed dozens of unarmed civilians earlier the same day. Regardless, it instantly became an icon of the war’s savagery and made the official pulling the trigger ? General Nguyen Ngoc Loan ? its iconic villain.

Sadly, the photograph’s legacy would haunt Loan for the rest of his life. Following the war, he was reviled where ever he went. After an Australian VA hospital refused to treat him, he was transferred to the United States, where he was met with a massive (though unsuccessful) campaign to deport him. He eventually settled in Virginia and opened a restaurant but was forced to close it down as soon as his past caught up with him. Vandals scrawled "we know who you are" on his walls, and business dried up.

Adams felt so bad for Loan that he apologized for having taken the photo at all, admitting, "The general killed the Vietcong; I killed the general with my camera."

 
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