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LAUGH OR CRY?

I found this cartoon over at Flopping Aces.  I want to laugh…but it just isn’t funny.  Why the country isn’t outraged over the lack of “literacy” in Congress…is just beyond me.

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WEDNESDAY HERO...CPL. REYNOLD ARMAND

 

Cpl. Reynold Armand
Cpl. Reynold Armand
21 years old from Rochester, New York
2nd Assault Amphibian Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force
August 7, 2007

U.S. Marines

Reynold Armand didn’t want to wait until he turned 18 to join the Marines. He persuaded his adoptive mother to sign papers allowing him to sign up a year early.

“I’m very proud of him,” said his father, Carl Armand. “When he was home, he gave no sign of being afraid.” Armand didn’t speak much about his experiences in Iraq, according to family members, saying only that most Iraqi civilians he encountered were very nice.

“We used to send him a lot of candy,” said his mother, Alma Armand. “He would pass it out.”

Manny Rodriguez, 21, of Rochester met Armand five years ago at New Day Church in Rochester, where both young men were members of the youth group. “He was such an amazing all-around person. He was so easy and comfortable to be around. He liked people for who they are.”

No definitive report could be found on how Cpl. Armand died. Some report that he was killed when shot and others report that he was killed by an IED that exploded near his vehicle in Balad, Iraq.

All Information Was Found On And Copied From MilitaryCity.com with help from Kathi

These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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THESE UNITED STATES ARE...

A Republic…If We Can Keep It.


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GRATITUDE #24

Gratitude*Lavender, raspberries and honeybees.

*A stack of new books.  Some that are just comfort food for the mind.

*Toast with rosemary jelly and a cup of Earl Grey tea…”hot”.

*Daylilies

*”We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done.”  Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.  I don’t know about you…but that is so true for me.

*Birdsong…any time of the day.  (Sorry Punky!)

*Bloggers that make me laugh.  This one…and this one.

*Having bounced around the house and internet all morning…and still having 3 hours before I have to be at work.

Tags: Gratitude  
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WEDNESDAY HERO...FORCE PROTECTION TEAM

Force Protection Team

Force Protection Team
U.S. Army

Members of the force protection team at Camp Eggars, Afghanistan, assess damage resulting from an explosion near the gate. A vehicle-born improvised explosive device exploded near the German Embassy and a U.S. base. Eliminating threats such as the VBIED is the focus of Army’s 3rd Counter-IED Conference that was scheduled July 28-30.

These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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STAND BY ME...FOR FREEDOM

Ok…I gave The Daughter ample time to post this and since she didn’t….here it is.

With all the wall to wall coverage of the sad demise of Michael Jackson, the news people seem to have forgotten there’s a big world of turmoil out there.   And that turmoil is  going to affect a whole lot more people…in more profound ways than MJ ever did.   Now, I’m not one for all this “we are the one world” crap… but the call for freedom?  Count me in.  Kudos to Jon Bon (as he’s affectionately referred to in our house…even if I usually find his politics a tad bit misguided).  Just sayin’.  And who knew Iran had “Superstars”?


On June 24, Iranian Superstar Andy Madadian went into an LA recording studio with Jon Bon Jovi, Richie Sambora and American record producers Don Was and John Shanks to record a musical message of worldwide solidarity with the people of Iran. This version of the old Ben E. King classic is not for sale – it was not meant to be on the Billboard charts or even manufactured as a CD…..it’s intended to be downloaded and shared by the Iranian people…to give voice to the sentiment that all people of the world stand together….the handwritten Farsi sign in the video translates to “we are one”. If you know someone in Iran – or someone who knows someone in Iran – please share this link


h/t  American Digest where I saw it first.
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IMHO...A MOMENT OF SILENCE

Going out to the garden in a little bit, but I have to get this off my chest first.  I read that the United States House of Representatives had a moment of silence for Michael Jackson.  Ok…fine…he was an extremely popular ENTERTAINER. My condolences to his family.

I worry for our “culture”.  I worry that our priorities are so skewered that an entertainer is mourned with more fanfare than young men  who truly did change the world.  *I* thank God for these young men.

Sgt. 1st Class Paul R. Smith

Lt. Michael P. Murphy

Master-at-arms, 2nd Class Michael A. Monsoor

Pfc. Ross A. McGinnis

Cpl. Jason L. Dunham

2008-04-medal-of-honor-presented-to-navy-seal-monsoor

 

They are the real STARS.

Love and Respect,
M*A

Update:  Bouhammer is thinking along the same line I am.  He posts about Someone More Important Than Michael Jackson Died.  Godspeed 1LT Brian N. Bradshaw.

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WEDNESDAY HERO...BAND OF BROTHERS

Band Of Brothers

Band Of Brothers
U.S. Army

Something a little different this week. Instead of profiling a service member, Wednesday Hero will be profiling a movie. Band Of Brothers. It was a miniseries tha aired on HBO in 2001. It follows Maj. Richard Winters, Cpt. Lewis Nixon and the men of the 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment assigned to the 101st Airborne Division, aka E-Company or Easy Company on their march to Germany. From their training to their battles at Normandy and Bastogne, their liberation of the Kaufering IV concentration camp to their taking of Hitler’s Eagle Nest. A great cast and great writing make this one of the best war movies ever made. But it is graphic in visuals and language. And parts of it may be hard to watch, but it is worth it.

What the men of E-Company did will never be forgotten. They are the heroes that helped the cause of freedom.

These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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SUMMER MORNING

Light and shadow.

June 2009 044

It’s the little things.

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WEDNESDAY HERO...PVT. WILLIAM LONG

Pvt. William Long

Pvt. William Long
23 years old from Conway, Arkansas
D Company, 2nd Battalion, 58th Infantry
June 1, 2009
U.S. Army

“My brother taught me valuable lessons and made me the man I am today,” said Pfc. Triston Long, brother of Pvt. William Long. “My commander said, ‘Make your brother one of us.’ I will miss my brother with all that I am, and I serve in honor of him.”

Pvt. William Long had just completed basic training and was set to ship out on June 8 to his first duty station in Korea when he and Private Second Class Quinton Ezeagwula were shot outside a Little Rock, Arkansas Army-Navy Recruiting Center by Abdul Hakim Mujahid Muhammad. They were in Little Rock to speak to with potential recruits about their experiences.

Pvt. Long’s father, Daris Long, a former Marine, wrote a letter to give to him when he shipped out for South Korea. In that letter he wrote, “Your day only ends when you’ve done your duty. You and your brother … are both heroes for having the moral courage to stand up when your country needs you most. You are in my hopes and my thoughts and my prayers. You are my son, you are my hero. I love you. Semper fidelis.”

Along with his father and brother, Pvt. William Long is survived by his mother, Janet, who had served in the Navy herself.

All Information Was Found On And Copied From RedState, Sipsey Street Irregulars & Army Times with help from Kathi

These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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FLAG DAY 2009

June 9 2008 006

The history of Flag Day

Our Star Spangled Banner


h/t Katy

AND…

HAPPY 234th BIRTHDAY UNITED STATES ARMY

HOOAH!

army_birthday
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WEDNESDAY HERO...MARC A. LEE

Aviation Ordnanceman 2nd Class (SEAL) Marc A. Lee

Aviation Ordnanceman 2nd Class (SEAL) Marc A. Lee
28 years old from Hood River, Oregon
Navy SEAL
August 2, 2006
U.S. Navy

“Marc was amazing. He was my best friend, my love,” his widow, Maya, said.

Petty Officer Marc A. Lee joined the Navy in 2001 and became an AO after completing Naval Air Technical Training. Later that year he attempted to complete the grueling BUD/S program but caught pneumonia and had to drop out. He tried again in 2004 and completed the course.

On August 2, 2006, Marc A. Lee became the first SEAL to be killed in combat in Iraq when he was fatally wounded in a firefight in Ramadi, Iraq. The following is from the award citation:

“During the operation, one element member was wounded by enemy fire. The element completed the casualty evacuation, regrouped and returned onto the battlefield to continue the fight. Petty Officer Lee and his SEAL element maneuvered to assault an unidentified enemy position. He, his teammates, Bradley Fighting Vehicles and Abrams tanks engaged enemy positions with suppressive fire from an adjacent building to the north.

“To protect the lives of his teammates, he fearlessly exposed himself to direct enemy fire by engaging the enemy with his machine gun and was mortally wounded in the engagement. His brave actions in the line of fire saved the lives of many of his teammates”

“It was so like Marc to give up his life to save his friends,” his mother, Debbie Lee, told the Hood River News. “I am so proud of him. He is my hero.”

Petty Officer Lee was posthumously awarded a Bronze Star with combat “V” for his actions in Iraq during his team’s combat tour and the Purple Heart medal.

All Information Was Found On And Copied From MilitaryCity.com

These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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D DAY + 23,741


Ghosts of VictoryNational D-Day Memorial Foundation

23,741 days  or 65 years.  A long time.  Long enough that those who were there are leaving us at over a thousand a day.  Long enough that there are generations that know little or nothing of what happened that day. There were many D-Days.  My father’s were in the Pacific. His unit was attached to the Australian 7th Division.   He never spoke of it, but those memories were there.  Always.

I received an email with what was reported to be a posting from an Army Captain, a doctor.  Unlike so many of those forwards, this  one was was real.  There is a link at the bottom of the post from a psychiatric nurse in Australia that brought tears to my eyes.

FROM A PSYCHIATRIC NURSE

I could not help but be touched by reading the article, From a Military Doctor by Captain Stephen R. Ellison, MD. Thank you for sharing it Doctor. I am a nurse, not as qualified as you, but I dislike general nursing, preferring the mental health field.

I am a level 8 Security Lockdown Ward Psychiatric Nurse. Due to the new policies put in place here in Australia, under the mental health umbrella, I found myself working with the criminally insane, dementia and old war veterans whose families wanted them closer to where they lived, so they would not have to travel half away across the country to see them.

Yes they have put them all the same place. Why… because of budgets and politics.

I can tell you one thing, every time we received a new patient that was a war veteran who suffered from dementia and I heard a doctor “sigh” in disappointment, and mumble under his breath, “That’s all we need another one to join the war that never ends in their head.” I wanted to scream and choke the living daylights out of him/her.

It is so easy to just see the disease and forget the sacrifice.

But when you look at it through my eyes, through someone who works with these people 24/7 you see the human being beneath the disease.

You know that it was the sacrifice that caused the disease. And as you form relationships with them (which happens no matter how many walls you put up) you become aware that they are the way they are now because the real Heroes are the ones that didn’t make it back alive; because the demons are still breathing. Their guilt at being alive, being the last one left is what haunts them for the rest of their lives.

So they go back to the battlefield in their mind and they relive it again, and again, and again – to try to save their mate – to try and become a Hero – to return back home under the flag they fought under. The medals, the parades, all the honour means nothing to these tortured souls, because they don’t see themselves as Heroes

But they did fight a good fight, and they fought for us to be free and to give us freedom of speech, thought, and way of life as well as the right for doctors to sigh because they have to spend an hour examining them once a week, while we nurses spend 8 hours a day with them every day. Sometimes, because of staff shortages in my field of nursing, we work 16 hours a day with them.

On a regular shift I walk into and out of their reality at least 100 times, I have been in the trenches with them; I have been pulled to down to the ground with them using their own body as shield to protect me when they heard artillery and I heard thunder. To each and every one of them I was a different person from their past; I wore that personality with pride, and gave them what comfort they needed.

But alas, I did see some new nurses come and go, and hardly any stayed, and all they saw when they looked at one of them was a crazy senile old man. And I am ever so grateful that those fresh young nurses straight out university did leave and run back to General nursing because:

  • They didn’t see the young man full of hopes and dreams
  • They never saw the 15 year old young larrikin who lied about his age to get into the army and serve with pride.
  • They never saw the diggers playing 2-up in the trenches
  • They never saw the man he was, the father he became and the memories and guilt he carried with him. (The Demons that dreamed with him)
  • They didn’t even see the proud grandfather who carried his grandchild on his shoulders with pride, and had a glistening tear in his eye when his infant grandchild wrapped his tiny little fist around his finger and stared up at him, and the fierce protectiveness he felt towards that child.
  • And they never saw the guilt about the ones that never made it back and would never experience any of what he had, even if he no longer remembered any of it any more, just the war and the guilt of surviving.

They just saw an old man who was nuts; who could not communicate any longer; an old man who wet and soiled his pants that they had to clean, who they had to feed shower and dress; an old man who mistook their actions as attacks and at times fraught them with every ounce of his strength, and got a few good punches in; an old man who didn’t even recognize his own family members anymore.

But they never once stopped to ask themselves why do the family members still come? I will tell you why they still come. Just because he has forgotten who they are, and who he was to them, they never do.

Oh, yes there were many family members who stopped coming – it was too hard for them to watch their loved ones in this state. And that’s when we became their family; that’s when we became their daughters, sisters, grandmothers and wives, whatever other role they created for us, including their buddy who was burrowed down in that bunker with them while enemy fire flew above our heads. We even escaped from the camps together.

It was just a case of stepping into another reality for a few minutes.

Sometimes the reality you stepped into was warm and sweet, other times they would be begging you to resuscitate a pillow that was one of their mates who got hit, and you did it and just hoped you could pull it off, without flipping him out so he kills you.

You stepped into that living hell of a reality and you felt their pain anguish and desperation, with every fibre of your body

And the whole time you are resuscitating the pillow in the back of your mind you know that this old man has been marked down by his own family as NFR (not for resuscitation).

I became what ever they needed me to become and I never left one alone when his time came. I was by his side, I cleansed him, packed him, I tagged and bagged him.

Then I would take 15 minutes off to find a corner to cry for him.

After my shift ended and handover was complete, every one of us nurses on that ward headed down to the pub and celebrated his freedom with a toast to him and rejoiced in knowing he was finally free.

Never did we leave their side and we always left a door and all the windows open before he passed and for 24 hours after that. The windows had bars on them but they were no longer a barrier for one who had no need for his body anymore.
Copyright April 2005 Trish Mathis

My father had dementia at the end of his life.  He could not be left alone.  One night in the nursing home, when he was very agitated a nurse came into his room.  He asked her if she was the Angel of Death.  She told him no, she was his friend and she would sit with him as long as he wanted.  As I type this I find tears in my eyes because I know that very special nurse was an angel.  An angel in the same mold as Tish Mathis.

So on this 65th anniversary of D-Day I am thinking about beaches, Omaha, Utah, Sword, Juno, Gold and Aitape and Wewak.

Thank you.

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WEDNESDAY HERO...SGT. PABLO A. CALDERON

Sgt. Pablo A. Calderon

Sgt. Pablo A. Calderon
26 years old from Brooklyn, New York
1st Battalion, 5th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division
November 30, 2004
U.S. Army

“He wanted to fight for his country,” said his heartbroken younger sister, Lilliana Calderone. “He always wanted to be there.”

Pablo Calderon joined the Army in 1997, right out of High School. “He went straight to the army from high school,” said his sister. “He wanted to improve himself. He was proud. He loved his country.”

Sgt. Calderon was killed when an IED was detonated near his vehicle in Fallujah, Iraq. Also killed in the attack was Sgt. Jose Guereca of Missouri City, Texas.

All Information Was Found On And Copied From MilitaryCity.com & NYDailyNews.com

These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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WEDNESDAY HERO...USS GEORGE H.W. BUSH

USS George H.W. Bush

USS George H.W. Bush
U.S. Navy

Sailors assigned to the Air Department of the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) are silhouetted against the setting sun at the conclusion of flight operations. George H.W. is underway in the Atlantic Ocean conducting flight deck certifications.

These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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