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I will always be amazed at what can be accomplished, when the nation is united in the eternal battle against evil.
1 posted on 05/29/2004 7:02:12 PM PDT by wagglebee
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To: wagglebee
And yet today the news medias,Hollywierds, and so-called "experts" including Kerry are doing everything they can to divide the country!

No wonder we are having trouble.

2 posted on 05/29/2004 7:15:11 PM PDT by Sen Jack S. Fogbound (Let there be Term Limits!)
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To: wagglebee

Although he isn't an American the name of Field Marshall Bernard Law Montgomery should be included as well.
It was Montgomery who planned D-Day and was in a large part responsible for it's success.
Last summer I finally got around to finishing reading Nigel Hamilton's three volume biography on Montgomery and I can tell you he cleared up many misconceptions in a number of areas but also showed what a complete professionial soldier Monty was. He was without a doubt, along with Field Marshall Alan Brook, the best the British had and without them D-Day may not have been the success it was.


3 posted on 05/29/2004 7:24:29 PM PDT by Captain Peter Blood
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To: wagglebee

.

NEVER FORGET


'The Lion in Winter' =

Sgt/Major BASIL L. PLUMLEY

Parachuted into Nazi-Occupied France the night before the Normandy Invasion

Fought at the last Major Battle of the Korean War on PORK CHOP HILL

Fought at the fist Major Battle of the Vietnam War in the IA DRANG Valley


http://www.lzxray.com/guyer_set3.htm
(Photo of Sgt/Major BASIL L. PLUMLEY in Vietnam-1965)



NEVER FORGET

.


6 posted on 05/29/2004 7:31:07 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE (Vet-Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.LZXRAY.com)
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To: wagglebee; MeekOneGOP; devolve; potlatch


I am the flag of the United States of America.
My name is Old Glory.
I fly atop the world's tallest buildings.
I stand watch in America's halls of justice.
I fly majestically over great institutes of learning.
I stand guard with the greatest military power in the world.
. Look up! And see me!
I stand for peace - honor - truth and justice.
I stand for freedom.
I am confident - I am arrogant
I am proud.
When I am flown with my fellow banners.
My head is a little higher.
My colors a little truer.
I bow to no one.
I am recognized all over the world.
I am worshipped - I am saluted - I am respected.
I am revered - I am loved, and I am feared.
I have fought every battle of every war for more than 200 years:
Gettysburg, Shilo, Appomattox, San Juan Hill, the trenches of France,
the Argonne Forest, Anzio, Rome, the beaches of Normandy,
the deserts of Africa, the cane fields of the Philippines, the rice paddies
and jungles of Guam, Okinawa, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Guadalcanal New Britain, Peleliu, and many more islands.
And a score of places long forgotten by all but those who were with me.
I was there.
I led my soldiers - I followed them.
I watched over them.
They loved me.
I was on a small hill in Iwo Jima.
I was dirty, battle-worn and tired, but my soldiers cheered me, and I was proud.
I have been soiled, burned, torn and trampled on the streets of
countries I have helped set free.
It does not hurt, for I am invincible.
I have been soiled, burned, torn and trampled on the streets of
my country, and when it is by those
with whom I have served in battle - it hurts.
But I shall overcome - for I am strong.
I have slipped the bonds of Earth and stand watch over the
uncharted new frontiers of space
from my vantage point on the moon.
I have been a silent witness to all of America's finest hours.
But my finest hour comes when I am torn into strips to
be used for bandages for my wounded comrades on the field of battle,
When I fly at half mast to honor my soldiers,
And when I lie in the trembling arms of a grieving
mother at the graveside of her fallen son.
I am proud.
My name is Old Glory.
Dear God - Long may I wave.



God Bless and Thank You All For Serving

7 posted on 05/29/2004 8:28:52 PM PDT by Smartass ( BUSH & CHENEY IN 2004 - Si vis pacem, para bellum - Por el dedo de Dios se escribió.)
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To: nutmeg

read later


11 posted on 05/29/2004 9:15:20 PM PDT by nutmeg (Land of the Free - Thanks to the Brave)
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To: wagglebee
Another NewsMax article filled with 'factual' gems:
Speaking of Gen. George Patton (1890-1945), this aggressive WWI tank officer earned a Purple Heart and a Distinguished Service Cross on the battlefields of France in the Great War, later being elevated to Superintendent of West Point.

Problem was, Patton was never a Superintendent of the USMA at West Point. General Douglas MacArthur was a USMA Superintendent from 1919 to 1922

Source: USMA Library Archives Official Register of the Officers and Cadets (1818 to 1966), 1952 edition, page 10 (PDF page 16/176).


At the outbreak of WWII, “Old Blood and Guts” became head of II Corps in North Africa, and then led the 7th Army into Sicily. After an infamous episode of slapping a couple of GIs for “cowardice,” he was demoted to serve under his former junior, Omar Bradley.

Patton was never demoted, General Bradly was promoted over him to command the 12th Army Group, to which Patton's Third Army belonged...


By the time of the infamy at Pearl Harbor, he had engineered the transformation of the ill-prepared American military and was elevated to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, becoming President Franklin Roosevelt’s right hand man throughout the war.

General George C. Marshall (VMI 1901) was the U.S. Army Chief of Staff from August 1939 to November 1945. The then embryonic WWII Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) was presided over by Adm. William D. Leahy, not General Marshall.


Taking charge in the air, Gen. Henry H. “Hap” Arnold (1886-1950) rose to become overall commander of the Army Air Forces in World War II -- the only air commander ever to attain the five-star rank of general of the armies.

His rank was not 'general of the armies', it was "General of the Army". The term 'General of the Armies' only belong to Generals Washington, Grant, Sherman, Sheridan and Pershing. It has always been considered to be the highest rank given the order: General of the Armies (Five-Star plus equivalent); General of the Army (WWII Five-Star); General (Four Star); Lieutenant-General (Three-Star); Major-General (Two-Star); Brigider-General (One-Star).


When a skin disease sidelined Adm. William Halsey, the head of the formidable Task Group 16, Spruance stepped forward into the annals of history in a significant way, leading the task force to a decisive victory over the Japanese forces at Midway.

Historians consider Midway the turning point of the war – pushing Japan back half way across the Pacific and making any designs on America’s West coast a lost dream of the Divine Wind.

In June, 1942, Spruance became chief of staff to Chester Nimitz, commander of the Pacific Fleet. The following year Spruance was promoted to vice admiral and became Nimitz’s deputy, playing a key role in the planning of the Pacific war.

Problems with the above statements is that it was Task Force 16 (TF-16), not Task Group 16. Because the NewsMax author lifted the above sentences, he (as did his source) sort of forgot that then Vice-Admiral Spruance commanded the U.S. 5th Fleet in the Pacific, a little bigger job than his incorrectly described position of just being Chief of Staff to Admiral Nimitz.

The other big problem with the article is that the author has directly lifted paragraphs from an online Internet-based web-site Spartacus International without crediting the source. This used to be known as plagiarism, but I guess at NewsMax it must just be part of meeting the deadline...

Very slipshod work...

dvwjr

16 posted on 05/30/2004 7:09:12 AM PDT by dvwjr
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To: wagglebee
These great men were the progenitors of the Greatest Generation...

They got home from the war and proceeded to inflict hippies upon the earth. We have Social Security, welfare, abortion, Medicare, and a massive socialistic government as a result of their inability to raise their children.

What is so "great" about that?

18 posted on 05/30/2004 8:48:33 AM PDT by nonliberal (Bush 2004: He is better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick.)
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