Community > Posts By > ShadowEagle
Topic:
Chinese food
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
Topic:
Chinese Checkers
|
|
my favorite game chinese checker
|
|
|
|
Now they are getting it from the Russians
|
|
|
|
Topic:
Chinese food
|
|
National Delicacy in China is Dogs, Cat, human babies during the
depressional era. So, why would they be poisoning their own food source. |
|
|
|
for the record fanta the weapons on the subs are confirmed
|
|
|
|
maybe i'm hacking accounts too..... So i wonder which account is my real
one |
|
|
|
hmmm.
|
|
|
|
i'm cancer zapchaser am Gary am I ... Zapchaser and you are a nocsabasz.
can't figure it out ask a Hungarian |
|
|
|
Topic:
State Of Affairs
|
|
killing me softly
|
|
|
|
don't know but can i be a red neck
|
|
|
|
i'm a zapman be dadad bop dededadad bpop
|
|
|
|
sniff my armpit
|
|
|
|
A bunch of chinks hell no Gary og Hungary kick their ass
|
|
|
|
Topic:
Advice for the Newbies
|
|
where olive
|
|
|
|
Topic:
A Challenge by ZapChaser
|
|
I Can't Post my DD214 or Discharge or if you prefer my Vietnam Official
Discharge records cause one I am still currently active and two, i belong to a division that i can't talk about due to the fact that it may conflict with that of others and of a National Security Levels. I will say that i am not against the men and women who put their lives in the hands of a complete madman. They are soldiers and brave and mighty soldiers they are with Honor and With Pride they fight with thoughts and Ideals of what they are doing is Justified. My hearts go with them and those who's families who have lost love ones to this war. Tell their tale, Sing their song Never forgotten Though they be gone In freedom They live on. Zapchaser thou you challenge me on my credentials i can not comply but, to those in your family as well They Serve with Honor and Pride.. This is something i wrote for all my brothers and sisters who are in the war fighting. We are Soldiers and regardless of where we are sent to and thus, die. We didn't die in Vain... We died With Honor and Pride and though many wars we have fought wrongly... Atleast we never forgot That's it's better to go down with a fight then to die as a *****.. Honor and Pride be thy name Honor and Pride be thy Heart for all those soldiers here my poem as it goes like this: You left your comfortable homes You left behind that softer world For marching, drill, and kit For rules and days with bugles lit For barracks and grounds and rounds So that others could peaceably sleep in beds soft and sweet You stood post in the cold on hard grounds untold In peace and in war you have stood between the darkness and homes warm hearth So well have so many served that today many fail to see, much less appreciate, the job done so well. To be honest, I am around people every day who look down upon those who serve. Who refuse to acknowledge or even consider that they can spout off even complete and utter nonsense -- without fear of true repression only because of the sacrifices made by those who's shoes they are not fit to clean. To every man, woman, and child who has served in the U.S. military since the very beginning, my thanks to you. Because you have stood your watch, and made your sacrifice, we enjoy the sweet fruits of liberty in a way that the majority of the world still does not. |
|
|
|
Topic:
Curiosity : JFK
|
|
You may have called me a Moron or an idiot and never once have i ever
made a negative attack on your post but, as for JFK.... Mafia Godfather Joe Bonano saw Jack Ruby gun down Oswald and knew immediately that it was a mob hit. Bonano offered to testify before the Warren Commission but never was called. In 1963, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev ordered the KGB to find President Kennedy's killer. The FBI never asked for the KGB's report. Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Humphrey secretly identified who they believed ordered JFK's assassination. Robert Kennedy's biographer finally admitted RFK, the president's brother and then-attorney general, prevented testimony of certain witnesses to the Warren Commission. Kennedy's brain -- a crucial piece of forensic evidence -- was stolen by a U.S. Navy admiral, on Robert Kennedy's orders. Robert Kennedy didn't want his brother's death investigated because the investigation might uncover the fact that he, along with the president and the rest of the Kennedy White House, had drawn up operational plans to assassinate Fidel Castro after the Bay of Pigs invasion O'Leary and Seymour note investigative bodies of the U.S. government have made numerous claims, including that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin; that only two shots hit their target, that the bullets fired that day all came from the sixth floor of the Texas Schoolbook Depository; and that Kennedy was killed because he was preparing to pull all U.S. troops out of Vietnam. The authors insist all of these claims are false and are designed to placate the American public and distract them from the facts of the case. They acknowledge most readers will find it difficult to accept that Kennedy authorized the overthrow of the Catholic government of South Vietnam and the assassination of Diem, South Vietnam's democratically elected, constitutional president. After all, Kennedy had generously pledged American troops, military equipment and tax dollars to protect South Vietnam from the threat of communism. But the authors of "Triangle of Death" provide evidence Kennedy personally asked a high-ranking U.S. military officer to assassinate Diem, who was a political disaster-in-the-making for the president. The events were set into motion when a Buddhist leader named Quang Duc calmly sat down in a Saigon street June 11, 1963, soaked himself with gasoline, lit a match and burned himself to death. The news swept through the world, and when the full extent of Diem's brutality toward the Buddhists became apparent, America immediately began to ask itself the obvious questions, O'Leary and Seymour write: "Why is the U.S. supporting a foreign government that engages in religious persecution? Why is President Kennedy sending U.S. military personnel to help the government of a man who puts his own people into concentration camps?" The authors point out: "Until then, America believed the increasing number of U.S. men and women being sent to South Vietnam – close to 15,000 by June 1963 – and the $1.2-million-per-day aid package were to help the South Vietnamese fight the deadly Vietcong. But literally overnight, the U.S. was internationally perceived as a bunch of buffoons who were propping up a tyrant." With the next U.S. presidential election just over a year away, they write, "Kennedy was infuriated; moreover, he and his political consultants were scared." People "already believed that Kennedy had stolen the election, based on suspicious vote-counting in Illinois; a Catholic U.S. president supporting a Catholic fanatic who was intent on persecuting another religious group would provide them with all the ammunition they needed in November of '64." The authors contend they have irrefutable evidence the Kennedy White House supported a coup d'etat against the government of South Vietnam and the assassination of President Diem. "More than anything else," they write, "this was the rich ground in which a counter-conspiracy was planted, the conspiracy that led to President Kennedy's own assassination." So, to the question I think Lee Oswald is innocent and was set-up to cover up the true killer.... |
|
|
|
In August these Teams or Command Units will be deployed to Iraq:
Ten brigade combat teams will begin deploying to Iraq in August as part of the next rotation of forces, Army officials confirmed Tuesday. The confirmation followed a Defense Department announcement made Tuesday morning and it affects about 35,000 soldiers. This is the first big announcement of brigade combat team rotations since Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced on April 11 that active Army units in the Central Command area of responsibility will serve no more than 15 months in theater and spend no less than 12 months at home. Units called up for this rotation, which DoD and Army officials stress is a regular rotation of forces, are: 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, the longest actively serving Cavalry Regiment in the Army and the service's newest Stryker Brigade, will deploy in August from Vilseck, Germany. 4th Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, was the first brigade formed under the Army's modularity transformation initiative in 2004. The unit deployed to Iraq in January 2005, and will deploy again in September from Fort Stewart, Ga. 1st Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, of Fort Campbell, Ky., will deploy in September. 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, will deploy in October from Fort Campbell. 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, at Fort Campbell, will deploy in October, after 3rd Brigade. 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment from Fort Hood, Texas, will deploy in early November. The unit relocated to Fort Hood from Fort Carson, Colo., in July 2006 after its second tour in Iraq. 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, of Baumholder, Germany, will deploy in late November. 4th Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, will deploy in late November from Fort Polk, La. This brigade was formed in January 2005. 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, at Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, will deploy in December. 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, will deploy at the end of December from Fort Hood. Also deploying this fall are 504 soldiers from the Army Reserve's 478th Combat Engineer Battalion, based in the town of Fort Thomas, Ky. The 40th Signal Battalion at Fort Huachuca, Ariz., will send 430 soldiers. Both battalions will deploy in August. The 15-month deployment policy will remain in place until the Army can revert to 12 months in theater and 12 months at home, with the ultimate goal of 12 months deployed and 24 months at home. National Guard and Reserve soldiers are not affected by the policy and will be mobilized for no more than 12 months at a time. No time frame has been announced for a return to 12-month tours for active Army soldiers. Right now, there are 17 BCTs in Iraq and two in Afghanistan; by June there will be 18 BCTs in Iraq, five of them sent to theater as part of the "surge." The move to 15-month tours, requested by Acting Army Secretary Pete Geren and Chief of Staff Gen. George W. Casey, provides soldiers and families with long-term predictability about how long deployments will last and how much time soldiers will have at home, Gates said during the April 11 press conference. Keeping soldiers at home for 12 months also provides them with the time they need to prepare and train for their next deployment, Lt. Gen. James Lovelace, the Army G-3, has said. |
|
|
|
I tell you people this one blew my mind and i guess shows how cruel
people can be. Vineland, Minnesota - The 11-year-old boy was led from his school in handcuffs, held overnight in a juvenile detention center, and hauled into court in shackles and an orange prison jumpsuit. His crime? Missing a court date to testify as the victim of an assault. The treatment of the boy, a member of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe, has reignited a decades-old feud between the tribe and officials from the surrounding county in central Minnesota. "There's other people out there they could have picked to make an example of," said Kristie Lee Davis-Deyhle, the boy's mother, in her first interview about the case. "Not an 11-year-old." Tribal leaders are calling for the resignation of the Mille Lacs County attorney, Jan Kolb, who says she was just carrying out policy in the face of a long history of band members ignoring subpoenas. "I don't know that it should have been done differently," said Kolb, who was first elected in 1993. The uproar, she said, "is a way to make Mille Lacs County look like it's racist." The Mille Lacs Band, now the largest employer in the county, and some of its neighbors have long had a tense relationship in their shared home around Lake Mille Lacs, Minnesota's second-biggest lake and a choice spot for walleye fishing and other outdoor recreation. The official policy of the county is that the Mille Lacs Band's reservation no longer exists because of legal decisions dating to the early 20th century. Federal courts have rejected a lawsuit to that effect, but Kolb and the Mille Lacs County Commission maintain their position. Kolb caused a flap last year by detailing the policy in a memo to county department heads. Soon after, members of the local American Indians Veterans Post 52 and the Ladies Auxiliary were booed by some spectators while riding a float in the Fourth of July parade in the Mille Lacs County town of Isle. Against that backdrop came the arrest of the 11-year-old band member. The boy was allegedly the victim of an assault by a 13-year-old classmate. But, Kolb said, the county was having trouble prosecuting the 13-year-old because the younger boy and his mother ignored subpoenas and missed several court dates. Davis-Deyhle said the family never got the subpoenas, and a tribal lawyer said the county is not diligent in making sure subpoenas are served. When the boy missed a court hearing in early April, Kolb's office requested the judge issue a warrant for his arrest. A tribal officer was dispatched to his school, where he was handcuffed and transported to the detention center. Davis-Deyhle talked to her son on the phone that afternoon. "He told me he didn't understand what was going on. I could hear the tears, the fear in his voice," Davis-Deyhle said. The boy spent the night at the juvenile detention center, about 60 miles away in St. Cloud. At the court hearing the next morning, in which the boy was brought into court in an orange jumpsuit, handcuffs and shackles, prosecutors announced that they wouldn't press charges and that he was free to go. Kolb is unapologetic about the boy's treatment. She said the entire point of the prosecution was to make him safer against the 13-year-old aggressor. "This family knew his appearance was needed in court," Kolb said. "Someone needed to step in and say, we'll get him there next time. Some showing of accountability or acknowledgment of the criminal justice system." Last week, Benjamin asked the state attorney general to intervene and force Kolb to change her practices; lawyers from that office went to Mille Lacs County and are now determining if they have jurisdiction. The American Civil Liberties Union is also seeking a government investigation, and Brunkow said the family is likely to file a federal civil rights lawsuit. |
|
|
|
who doesn't
|
|
|
|
Topic:
Is G.W.B losing his friends
|
|
Sunday 06 May 2007
Disillusioned supporters of President George W Bush are defecting to Barack Obama, the Democratic senator for Illinois, as the White House candidate with the best chance of uniting a divided nation. Tom Bernstein went to Yale University with Bush and co-owned the Texas Rangers baseball team with him. In 2004 he donated the maximum $2,000 to the president's reelection campaign and gave $50,000 to the Republican National Committee. This year he is switching his support to Obama. He is one of many former Bush admirers who find the Democrat newcomer appealing. Matthew Dowd, Bush's chief campaign strategist in 2004, announced last month that he was disillusioned with the war in Iraq and the president's "my way or the highway" style of leadership - the first member of Bush's inner circle to denounce the leader's performance in office. Although Dowd has yet to endorse a candidate, he said the only one he liked was Obama. "I think we should design campaigns that appeal, not to 51% of the people, but bring the country together as a whole," Dowd said. Bernstein is a champion of human rights, who admires Obama's call for action on Darfur, while Dowd's opposition to the war has been sharpened by the expected deployment to Iraq of his son, an Arabic-speaking Army intelligence specialist. But last week a surprising new name joined the chorus of praise for the antiwar Obama - that of Robert Kagan, a leading neoconservative and co-founder of the Project for the New American Century in the late 1990s, which called for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. Kagan is an informal foreign policy adviser to the Republican senator John McCain, who remains the favoured neoconservative choice for the White House because of his backing for the troops in Iraq. But in an article in the Washington Post, Kagan wrote approvingly that a keynote speech by Obama at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs was "pure John Kennedy", a neocon hero of the cold war. In his speech, Obama called for an increase in defence spending and an extra 65,000 soldiers and 27,000 marines to "stay on the offense" against terrorism and ensure America had "the strongest, best-equipped military in the world". He talked about building democracies, stopping weapons of mass destruction and the right to take unilateral action to protect US "vital interests" if necessary, as well as the importance of building alliances. "Personally, I liked it," Kagan wrote. Disagreements on the war have not stopped John Martin, a Navy reservist and founder of the website Republicans for Obama, from supporting the antiwar senator. He joined the military after the Iraq war and is about to be deployed to Afghanistan. "I disagree with Obama on the war but I don't think it is a test of his patriotism," Martin says. "Obama has a message of hope for the country." Financiers have also been oiling Obama's campaign. In Chicago, his home town, John Canning, a "Bush pioneer" and investment banker who pledged to raise $100,000 for the president in 2004, has given up on the Republicans. "I know lots of my friends in this business are disenchanted and are definitely looking for something different," he said. Not to be outdone, Hillary Clinton has many Republican defectors of her own, including John Mack, chief executive of Morgan Stanley, who helped raise $200,000 for the president's reelection, qualifying him as a "Bush ranger". He said last week that he was impressed by Clinton's expertise. "I know we're associated mainly with the Republicans but we've always gone for the individual," Mack said. According to figures compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics in Washington, Obama and Clinton have vacuumed up more than $750,000 (£375,000) in individual contributions from former Bush donors. Some of the donations reflect the natural tendency of those with power to shift to the likely White House winner. Penny Pritzker, the staggeringly successful head of fundraising for Obama, voted for John Kerry, the 2004 Democratic candidate, but also donated that year to Bush. As she was a head of the family-run Hyatt hotel chain, it was considered a prudent move. With the Democrats widely expected to win in 2008, Clinton's status as frontrunner is encouraging Wall Street money to migrate to her, while Obama may be picking up some mischievous "Stop Hillary" donations from still-loyal Republicans. But there is plenty of genuine enthusiasm to go around. A poll released by Rasmussen last week showed Obama overtaking Clinton for the first time by 32% to 30%, although another poll by Quinnepiac showed her with a 14-point lead over the Illinois senator, her nearest rival. The current issue of the New Yorker contains a profile of Obama, which highlights his appeal to conservatives. For his optimism about the future, Obama has been dubbed the "black Ronald Reagan". He frequently challenges the black community to support two-parent families and encourage school students, instead of criticising them for "acting white". |
|
|