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To: roses of sharon

You put yourself on a pretty high horse when you decide to keep spamming a thread because it annoys you.

How about you show some respect for FR and your fellow freepers and let us discuss the topic at hand.

Military topics are important to some of us and constantly spamming us with your girlish feel good nonsense is childish and condescending behavior directed largely at veterans and some active duty, show us some respect and allow the thread to proceed without you spamming us.


255 posted on 03/04/2008 12:15:23 PM PST by ansel12 (Ronald W. Reagan and William F. Buckley Jr., both were U.S. Army veterans.)
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To: ansel12
Military topics are important to some of us and constantly spamming us with your girlish feel good nonsense is childish and condescending behavior directed largely at veterans and some active duty, show us some respect and allow the thread to proceed without you spamming us.

As in the last post. I've been assigned to JTF-B. I participated in humanitarian efforts. I never once wondered if I would be in the papers.

259 posted on 03/04/2008 12:32:38 PM PST by Fundamentally Fair (Experience Change!)
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To: ansel12
(Yes, as long as this annoying thread proceeds, so will I.)

Baghdad ZOO IS A DRAW AGAIN

With the help of U.S. troops, a sanctuary that was damaged and depleted by the onset of the war is revived.

By Ann M. Simmons

Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

December 30, 2007

BAGHDAD — Capt. Amy Cronin never had a pet. Before deploying to Iraq, she didn’t even really know much about animals.

But in 15 months, Cronin and her unit, the 15th Brigade Support Battalion, have gone from providing logistics and supplies to U.S. troops to helping refurbish an animal clinic, building horse stables and constructing new habitats for bears and porcupines at the Baghdad Zoo.

“It’s really satisfying,” said Cronin, 28, from Boiling Springs, Pa. “Typically support soldiers don’t get to interact with Iraqis as much as infantry would. And this gives me the satisfaction of seeing the direct results of my work.”

That has included projects to resuscitate the zoo, in a lush 3-square-mile park in the heavily fortified Green Zone, which also includes the headquarters of the U.S.-led coalition forces, the Iraqi parliament and other key administrative buildings. It used be among the largest animal sanctuaries in the Middle East.

The zoo had received assistance from U.S. civil affairs units, engineers and international animal aid agencies since the U.S.-led invasion of 2003. But some of the quarters for animals needed to be rebuilt and the park’s aesthetics needed improvement before it could be turned into a haven where Baghdad residents could retreat from the violence on the streets.

“We’re not making sure that people have water and other supplies [with this assignment], but we are making sure that people have a place to relax and have fun,” said Lt. Col. Jeffrey Vieira, the unit’s commander.

(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...

280 posted on 03/04/2008 1:07:57 PM PST by roses of sharon (Who will be McCain's maverick?)
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