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1 posted on 12/26/2016 12:04:45 PM PST by Bull Snipe
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To: Bull Snipe

The skies cleared, too. American combined arms.

Hooahh!


2 posted on 12/26/2016 12:06:30 PM PST by x1stcav (Leftism is like rust: It corrodes 24 hours a day until eradicated.)
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To: Bull Snipe

Nuts: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=73OiRZf7DsM


3 posted on 12/26/2016 12:10:27 PM PST by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: Bull Snipe

My father was with Patton’s Third Army...


4 posted on 12/26/2016 12:13:15 PM PST by JBW1949 (I'm really PC....PATRIOTICALLY CORRECT!!!!)
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To: Bull Snipe

Recommend reading: “To Save Bastogne”, by Robert Phillips.


5 posted on 12/26/2016 12:16:05 PM PST by OKSooner (www.greatagain.gov <= Go here to put a note in the suggestion box!)
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To: Bull Snipe

I’ve heard a bunch of academic political revisionists talk about how he was a bully, coward, martinet etc.
Every IIIRD Army vet I’ve met would stand a little straighter and prouder and say something like “I rolled with Patton!” when the subject came up.


12 posted on 12/26/2016 12:40:16 PM PST by CrazyIvan (Fidel and Che are together again, and it ain't on a t-shirt.)
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To: Bull Snipe
Such a revered general, strategist, tactician, and commander.

We are a better nation for having had him commanding his troops and winning.

But I must point out to the credit of the Screaming Eagles: no member of the 101st Airborne has ever believed or saw that they needed rescuing at Bastogne by General Patton and his command.
15 posted on 12/26/2016 12:51:38 PM PST by righttackle44 (Leave the bodies as a warning--take scalps.)
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To: Bull Snipe
I had two friends who were of Patton's 3rd Army, one of the 104th Infantry, 26th "Yankee" Division; the other a radio Tech. Sgt, who stayed on with the Occupation. Both were fine Christians, and both passed onto Glory within the last 18 months.

A 3rd Army tank commander, a hardened battle veteran at age 21, was my mentor in route sales. While travelling around, Eddie confided several of his experiences, speaking with great hatred of Patton, whom he called "Old Blood-and-Guts" Patton--"his guts and your blood." Eddie told me, "Please, don't ever forget."

It has been a great privilege to know these veterans, and of the ensuing quality of character forged in their service to this country. They remain my heroes.

I was 8 years old at the time of the Battle of the Bulge. Now I'm 80, but have never forgotten the unity of Americans in their Age of Greatness, and the sacrifices of those years.

But we who will never forget will soon all be gone, no longer able to fend off the Clintons and Obamas who never knew the things not to be forgotten, who created their own new ecxesses of immorality and cruelty.

20 posted on 12/26/2016 1:08:38 PM PST by imardmd1 (Fiat Lux)
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To: Bull Snipe
I had a friend who passed away a few years ago, he was one of Patton's top aides.

When he came back he had a whole bunch of Goerring's private dinnerware with him! I walked past that stack of plates for decades, and he never told me. Less than a mile from my house was the personal dishes and cutlery of one of the chief architects of the Third Reich, come to rest in a rural North Carolina farm home.

21 posted on 12/26/2016 1:27:08 PM PST by Ciaphas Cain (The choice to be stupid is not a conviction I am obligated to respect.)
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To: Bull Snipe

I had the honor of serving in the 101st from 81-84. I take great pride in that and in the history and future of that division. Screaming Eagles!


24 posted on 12/26/2016 2:06:04 PM PST by Uncle Sam 911
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To: Bull Snipe

My late Uncle Fred was with the 84th. Infantry Division, at Marche, Belgium. He was wounded in early January of ‘45 but made it home alright at the end of the war. God bless all those guys. The Battle of The Bulge was the largest and bloodiest battle of the ETO in all of WW2.


25 posted on 12/26/2016 2:49:58 PM PST by jmacusa (Election 2016. The Battle of Midway for The Democrat Party.)
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To: Bull Snipe

My grandfather was there. 3rd Army, 26th Infantry “Yankee Division”, 101st Combat Enineer Battalion.


26 posted on 12/26/2016 3:13:43 PM PST by mrmeyer (You can't conquer a free man; the most you can do is kill him. Robert Heinlein)
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To: Bull Snipe

A classmate’s father served as a sentry. We didn’t learn, until after the father died, that he had received a commendation letter, from Patton, himself. Apparently, some officers tried to whisk the General into a Command Post, but the brave sentry wouldn’t budge, until Patton had been properly identified.


31 posted on 12/26/2016 6:19:18 PM PST by jttpwalsh
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