Quote Originally Posted by Gumby
how did you figure out your history? I've looked for mine, but it's a rare name, and I believe the history in america is only 3-4 generations. My father went to Italy to look around, and he found some of his relatives. He passed away quickly after that however and it's always been something interesting to me. I find it weird who's all related and the pathology of it all. Kerry always reminded me of Bush and I never understood why the Democrates chose him to run... I didn't know they were related untill recently, but they are both interested in the same things... money and power... Maybe one day soon we'll have someone incharge who wants a better world than to better themselve...do you know why it is that all there ancestors are from the other states than Texas and Florida... and why Jeb and George decided to take over those to states first??

I doubt very much that Kerry and Bush have a similar "pathology" due to a common ancestor from over 300 years ago! :dance:

We all have thousands of ancestors from that far back, because each generation's number of great grandparents doubles. In other words, you have 2 g. parents, 4 gr. grandparents, 8 gg grandparents, 16 ggg g.parents, 32 4X gr. grandparents, 64 5 X great grandparents (for me 4-6 was about the time of the Revolution), 128 6X gr grandparents, 256 ggggggg grandparents, so you can see that this number soon goes into the thousands.

I started tracing my ancestry with a book about a Revolutionary War soldier's ancestors - one of which is me. The book was published in 1915, and my grandmother, then a girl, was included - along with her parents, grandparents, etc. Somebody, in the past, probably a distant cousin, submitted parts of this genealogy to the Mormon's LDS genealogy database FamilyHistoryWebsite for posterity. Once I had some names, I went online and it took me back to the Mayflower - and many other surprising discoveries about my ancestry. I took it further and did â??realâ?ť research by going to county courthouses, graveyards, various genealogical societies and repositories of information, ordering census information, and other methods. I can, and have, â??provenâ?ť my ancestry not only to myself, but to the satisfaction of a number of organizations that I joined that required iron-clad proof of whatever qualifying ancestry youâ??re using to become a member. As my research was helped by earlier people that did similar searches, I hope that some of what I have done will help others along in their quests. We owe those pioneers and trailblazers a lot - and genealogy is a great way to honor them by keeping their memory, and hard work and sacrifices, alive through an outlet like this.
Breukelen advocaat Reviewed by Breukelen advocaat on . Bush's BIO! i feel bad he was such a fuck up doesnt mean he gets to fuck up America though! seriously, read it... you owe it to yourself to know this http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/6482734/all_hat_no_cattle Rating: 5