Elmer's Brother

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2005/5/31

Captives told to Claim Torture

@ 07:19 PM (35 months, 25 days ago)

Read the Washington Times article.

SSgt. Hobbs

@ 01:07 PM (35 months, 26 days ago)


 

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2005/5/30

We The Sensible People Of The United States

@ 04:51 PM (35 months, 27 days ago)

The following has been attributed to State Representative Mitchell Kaye
from GA.

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Remember

@ 04:55 AM (35 months, 27 days ago)

I encourage you today to remember those who gave their lives for this country. My family and I would often go to Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery and read the headstones. Some of the more interesting ones included Medal of Honor recipients and their citations. Then we would read the Gettysburg Address etched in stone and be reminded that this country has been bought with a price. Remember.

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2005/5/29

Greetings from Baghdad

@ 05:12 PM (35 months, 28 days ago)

Ray,

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2005/5/23

Wow check this out

@ 03:42 PM (36 months, 4 days ago)

Fake and Inaccurate
Newsweek has followed up its retracted story alleging that U.S. servicemen had flushed a Koran down the toilet at Guantanamo Bay. It turns out that there is a record of Koran-flushing, but it wasn't Americans who did it:

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2005/5/20

Medal of Honor Winner Jose M. Lopez Dies at 94

@ 03:36 PM (36 months, 7 days ago)

washingtonpost.com


By Adam Bernstein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, May 18, 2005; B06

Jose M. Lopez, 94, a retired Army master sergeant who received the Medal of Honor for engaging in a series of seemingly suicidal missions" during the Battle of the Bulge, died May 16 at a daughter's home in San Antonio. He had cancer.

Sgt. Lopez was born in Mexico, orphaned when he was 8 and worked in a series of subsistence jobs. A short but sinewy man, he boxed lightweight for many years in his youth. After a series of seafaring misadventures -- he once was stranded at sea for weeks on a cargo boat with nothing to eat but a cache of bananas -- he enlisted in the Army during World War II.

He landed at Normandy a day after the June 6, 1944, invasion, and a bullet smacked into his ammunition belt, grazing his hip. "I was really very, very afraid,'' he told journalist Bill Moyers for a television special in 1990. "I wanted to cry, and we saw other people laying wounded and screaming and everything, and there's nothing you could do. We could see them groaning in the water, and we had to just keep walking.''

At dawn on Dec. 17, 1944, he and his men were outside Krinkelt, Belgium, shortly after the start of the German offensive through the Ardennes known as the Battle of the Bulge. Lugging a heavy machine gun, Sgt. Lopez climbed into a shallow, snow-covered hole that left everything above his waist exposed. He heard the rumbling of a tank, which he figured was American; an Allied soldier a few hundreds yards away had failed to signal him of approaching danger. When he saw the German Tiger tank come into sight and the horde of German foot soldiers around it, he thought of dozens of his men just a few hundred yards away. Aiming at the soldiers around the tank, he killed 10 of them. That prompted the Tiger tank to fire rather recklessly in his direction. It took three shell blasts to knock Sgt. Lopez over, and he suffered a concussion. He nevertheless repositioned himself to prevent enemy soldiers from outflanking him, resetting his gun and killing 25 more Germans.

Allowing time for his comrades to retreat to a safer position, he then dashed through the dense and protective forest and avoided contact with a cascade of enemy small-arms fire. Eventually, the Americans fell back to Krinkelt and held out through the night. The Germans bypassed the town.

A few months later, Gen. James A. Van Fleet presented Sgt. Lopez with the Medal of Honor. The citation recognized the "seemingly suicidal missions in which he killed at least 100 of the enemy . . . [and which] were almost solely responsible for allowing Company K to avoid being enveloped, to withdraw successfully and to give other forces coming up in support time to build a line which repelled the enemy drive." Jose Mendoza Lopez was born July 10, 1910. He never knew his exact birth town but was raised in Veracruz. His father was gone; his mother said he had drowned. She died of tuberculosis. With other relatives dead or unable to support him, he made his way to Texas and settled in the Rio Grande Valley town of Mission. There, a family let him sleep in their shed and fed him.

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2005/5/19

A Hero Passes On

@ 11:39 AM (36 months, 8 days ago)
I had just finished reading the Colonel's "About Face" when I emailed him to tell him how much I enjoyed the book. To my great surprise he emailed me back to say that he was glad I enjoyed it. I also expressed my gratitude for his service to this country and for his work on behalf of those in uniform. Unfortunately he passed  away earlier this month from a form of cancer that is associated with exposure to defoliants in Vietnam.

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you will enjoy this

@ 11:14 AM (36 months, 8 days ago)

A Tale of Two Columbias

@ 10:46 AM (36 months, 8 days ago)

The patriotic and the politically correct.
from the Wall Street Journal

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2005/5/18

It's not just Newsweek that gets it Wrong

@ 10:30 AM (36 months, 9 days ago)
It's not just Newsweek
Michelle Malkin (archive)

May 18, 2005 | printer friendly version Print | email to a friend Send

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2005/5/5

The Insurgents are not endearing anyone to their cause

@ 02:28 PM (36 months, 22 days ago)
PHOTO OF THE DAY
By Michelle Malkin   ยท   May 04, 2005 04:26 PM

Reader Stu G. writes, "For all the anti-American photos that won awards, here's one that deserve one for if ever one photo so clearly showed the difference between US forces in Iraq and the Michael Moore's 'minutemen,' this is it:"

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2005/5/4

For God's Sake save the Chickens!!!

@ 04:03 PM (36 months, 23 days ago)

Fowl Play
"International Respect for Chickens Day Celebrates Chickens" reads the headline on a press release:

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