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The FReeper Foxhole - Lazy Sunday and some WW1 Facts - October 17th, 2004
see educational sources

Posted on 10/16/2004 10:14:43 PM PDT by snippy_about_it

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To: bentfeather

Good night feather. My goal is to be offline in 10 minutes!


21 posted on 10/16/2004 10:47:37 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: investigateworld

Most people think of the Pacific when they hear US Marines. The fact that they were in Europe during WWI doesn't seem to ring a bell for a lot of people. Our history isn't being taught very well anymore. :-(


22 posted on 10/16/2004 10:47:44 PM PDT by SAMWolf (I have an inferiority complex, but not a very good one.)
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To: bentfeather

I thank "That Marine" for his service.


23 posted on 10/16/2004 10:48:15 PM PDT by SAMWolf (I have an inferiority complex, but not a very good one.)
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To: snippy_about_it

Thanks Snippy. :-)


24 posted on 10/16/2004 10:48:34 PM PDT by SAMWolf (I have an inferiority complex, but not a very good one.)
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To: snippy_about_it

You have 9 minutes left!


25 posted on 10/16/2004 10:48:49 PM PDT by Soaring Feather (~Poetry is my forte.~)
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To: SAMWolf
That turned out to be a real misnomer didn't it?

For some strange reason people seem to think wars solve things. I wonder if folks thought after WWII that war was over for awhile?

26 posted on 10/16/2004 10:49:29 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: snippy_about_it
I wonder if folks thought after WWII that war was over for awhile?

Not counting, revolutions, insurgency's and the founding of Israel, at least until 1950.

27 posted on 10/16/2004 10:53:21 PM PDT by SAMWolf (I have an inferiority complex, but not a very good one.)
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To: Coleus
Hi Coleus. We are thankful for your grandfather's service.

Some history and some great propaganda posters;



To the American public of 1914, the outbreak of war in Europe came as a shock. At first the encounter seemed remote, but its economic and political effects were swift and deep. By 1915 U.S. industry, which had been mildly depressed, was prospering again with munitions orders from the Western Allies. Both sides used propaganda to arouse the public passions of Americans -- a third of whom were foreign-born or had one or two foreign-born parents. Moreover, Britain and Germany both acted against U.S. shipping on the high seas, bringing sharp protests from President Woodrow Wilson. But the disputes between the United States and Germany grew increasingly ominous.

In February 1915, German military leaders announced that they would attack all merchant shipping on the waters around the British Isles. President Wilson warned that the United States would not forsake its traditional right, as a neutral, to trade on the high seas -- a view of neutral rights not shared by Germany or Great Britain. Wilson declared that the nation would hold Germany to "strict accountability" for the loss of American vessels or lives. Soon afterward, in the spring of 1915, when the British liner Lusitania was sunk with nearly 1,200 people aboard, 128 of them Americans, indignation reached a fever pitch.

Anxious to avoid a possible declaration of war by the United States, Germany issued orders to its submarine commanders to give warning to ocean-going vessels -- even if they flew the enemy flag -- before firing on them. But on August 19, these orders were ignored and the British steamer Arabic was sunk without warning. In March 1916, the Germans torpedoed the French ship Sussex, injuring several Americans. President Wilson issued an ultimatum stating that unless Germany abandoned its present methods of submarine warfare, the United States would sever relations. Germany agreed.

As a result, Wilson was able to win reelection that year, partly on the strength of his party's slogan: "He kept us out of war." As late as January 1917, in a speech before the Senate, Wilson called for a "peace without victory," which, he said, was the only kind of peace that could last.

On January 22, 1917, the German government gave notice that unrestricted submarine warfare would be resumed. When five U.S. vessels had been sunk by April, Wilson asked Congress for a declaration of war. Immediately, the government set about mobilizing its military resources, industry, labor and agriculture. By October 1918, on the eve of Allied victory, a U.S. army of over 1,750,000 soldiers had been deployed in France.



The U.S. Navy was crucial in helping the British break the submarine blockade, and in the summer of 1918, during a long-awaited German offensive, fresh American troops, under the command of General John J. Pershing, played a decisive role on land. In November, for example, American forces took an important part in the vast Meuse-Argonne offensive, which cracked Germany's vaunted Hindenburg Line.

President Wilson contributed greatly to an early end to the war by defining the war aims of the Allies, and by insisting that the struggle was being waged not against the German people but against their autocratic government. His famous Fourteen Points, submitted to the Senate in January 1918 as the basis for a just peace, called for abandonment of secret international agreements, a guarantee of freedom of the seas, the removal of tariff barriers between nations, reductions in national armaments, and an adjustment of colonial claims with due regard to the interests of the inhabitants affected. Other points sought to ensure self-rule and unhampered economic development for European nationalities. The Fourteenth Point constituted the keystone of Wilson's arch of peace -- the formation of an association of nations to afford "mutual guarantees of political independence and territorial integrity to great and small states alike."



By the summer of 1918, when Germany's armies were being beaten back, the German government appealed to Wilson to negotiate on the basis of the Fourteen Points. The president conferred with the Allies, who acceded to the German proposal. An armistice was concluded on November 11.

http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/H/1994/ch9_p2.htm

28 posted on 10/16/2004 11:04:57 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: bentfeather

I'm five minutes late. LOL.


29 posted on 10/16/2004 11:05:53 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: SAMWolf
Not counting, revolutions, insurgency's and the founding of Israel, at least until 1950.

That's all? :-)

Good night Sam.

30 posted on 10/16/2004 11:06:51 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: snippy_about_it

Good Night Snippy.


31 posted on 10/16/2004 11:08:34 PM PDT by SAMWolf (I have an inferiority complex, but not a very good one.)
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To: snippy_about_it
Good morning Snippy.


32 posted on 10/17/2004 2:01:17 AM PDT by Aeronaut (This is no ordinary time. And George W. Bush is no ordinary leader." --George Pataki)
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To: snippy_about_it

Good morning Snippy and everyone at the Foxhole.


33 posted on 10/17/2004 3:14:03 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; manna; All

Boy I could use a Lazy Sunday today, busy, busy, busy. Off to the BORG to pick up some more trim and look at how much a 40" ladder is gonna set me back(groan)

Will rustle up some WWI pics later.

Regards

alfa6 ;>}


34 posted on 10/17/2004 5:40:41 AM PDT by alfa6 (HTML is fun,he he he ho ho ho)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; bentfeather
Still on the other computer with no ping list

October 14, 2004

Wholeness Of Life

Read: Mark 2:1-12

Son, your sins are forgiven you. . . . Arise, take up your bed, and go to your house. —Mark 2:5,11

Bible In One Year: Isaiah 43-44; 1 Thessalonians 2


A social worker told her colleagues about a young boy in an urban ghetto who appeared to be little more than a bit of twisted human flesh. He had been struck by a car several months before and had not received proper medical attention.

Although not part of her caseload, the social worker took the boy to an orthopedist, who performed surgery on his legs. Two years later the boy walked into her office without crutches. His recovery was complete. The two embraced. "If I accomplish nothing else in my life," said the social worker to herself, "I have made a real difference with at least this one!"

She paused, then said to her colleagues, "This was all several years ago now. Where do you think that boy is today?" Some suggested that he might be a school teacher, others a physician or a social worker. With deep emotion, the woman responded, "No, he's in the penitentiary for one of the foulest crimes a human can commit. I was instrumental in teaching him how to walk again, but there was no one to teach him where to walk."

We must point people to Jesus. Through Him, those with broken bodies, broken dreams, broken homes, and broken hearts receive wholeness of life. —Haddon Robinson

Lord, help us to tell of Your love for mankind—
A love for the sin-sick, the broken, the blind;
And help them to see by the way that we live
A wholeness of being that You long to give. —D. De Haan

A person may go wrong in many different directions but right in only one.

35 posted on 10/17/2004 5:52:17 AM PDT by The Mayor (The Lord is the Spirit; and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.)
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To: snippy_about_it

36 posted on 10/17/2004 5:56:24 AM PDT by Grzegorz 246
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To: snippy_about_it; sam

Good morning, Snippy, Sam, and All.

My knowledge of WWI went up a great deal this morning. It's not a war I've studied very much, since I had no relatives fighting in it. My grandmother's oldest surviving son came of age in 1918, but it was too late for him to join. The war was over. Her youngest son did serve in WWII.

This is a "keeper" for me. Lots of new facts for me.


37 posted on 10/17/2004 6:25:15 AM PDT by Humal
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To: snippy_about_it

During Vietnam in the EOD circles, we had a basset hound named Red Dog, that went to Vietnam with a unit in 1965 and got back home in 1973. He was just a mascot and moved from unit to unit during his stay in Vietnam. In 1972 everyone in country contributed to the, "Bring Red Dog Home Fund", and a guardian was elected and appointed. Red Dog was wounded twice, once in a mortar attack and once shot with a 45 cal pistol. He died of cancer sometime around 1978 or so. The vet had to put him down, but when he examined and x-rayed Red Dog's body, he found more fragments of the mortar still in him. He was featured in Army Times once, with his guardian SGM Hole.


38 posted on 10/17/2004 6:27:36 AM PDT by U S Army EOD (John Kerry, the mother of all flip floppers.I)
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To: The Mayor

Good morning, Mayor.


39 posted on 10/17/2004 6:43:37 AM PDT by Soaring Feather (~Poetry is my forte.~)
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To: Aeronaut

Morning Aeronaut.


40 posted on 10/17/2004 6:46:43 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I have an inferiority complex, but not a very good one.)
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