Wednesday, September 4, 2024

TheList 6939


The List 6939     TGB

To All,

Good Wednesday Morning September 4. Up early and can't sleep. It did get hot yesterday and will hit 94 today with more of the same excessive heat warning from the weather guessers. Testing today for over 90 students and that will be a fun 4-5 hours. Fortunately the double gym has air conditioning.

Warm Regards,

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Make it a good Day

 

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This day in Naval and Marine Corps History (thanks to NHHC)

Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/.   Go here to see the director's corner for all 83 H-Grams 

Today in Naval and Marine Corps History

 September 4

1804 The ketch USS Intrepid, outfitted with a large explosive charge to destroy the enemy fleet in Tripoli harbor, is apparently intercepted while entering the harbor and is destroyed in a violent explosion. Lt. Richard Somers, commanding USS Intrepid, and his dozen volunteer officers and men perish in the mission.

1941 The German submarine U-652 attacks the destroyer USS Greer (DD 145), which is tracking the submarine southeast of Iceland. Though the destroyer is not damaged in the attack, USS Greers depth charges damage U-652. The attack leads President Franklin D. Roosevelt to issue his shoot-on-sight order, directing the Navy to attack any ship threatening U.S. shipping or foreign shipping under escort.

1954 The icebreakers USS Burton Island (AGB 1) and USCGC Northwind complete the first transit of Northwest Passage through the McClure Strait.

1954 A P2V-5 Neptune from VP-19 is attacked by two Soviet MiG-15s and crashes in the Sea of Japan, 40 miles off the coast of Siberia. One crewman is lost and the other nine are rescued by a USAF SA-16 amphibian.

1960 USS Bushnell (AS 15) and USS Penguin (ASR 12) begin relief operations in Marathon, Fla., after Hurricane Donna.

 

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Today in World History

September 4

1260    At the Battle of Montaperto in Italy, the Tuscan Ghibellines, who support the emperor, defeat the Florentine Guelfs, who support papal power.

1479    After four years of war, Spain agrees to allow a Portuguese monopoly of trade along Africa's west coast and Portugal acknowledges Spain's rights in the Canary Islands.

1781    Los Angeles, first an Indian village Yangma, is founded by Spanish decree.

1787    Louis XVI of France recalls parliament.

1790    Jacques Necker is forced to resign as finance minister in France.

1804    USS Intrepid explodes while entering Tripoli harbor on a mission to destroy the enemy fleet there during the First Barbary War.

1820    Czar Alexander declares that Russian influence in North America extends as far south as Oregon and closes Alaskan waters to foreigners.

1862    Robert E. Lee's Confederate army invades Maryland, starting the Antietam Campaign.

1870    A republic is proclaimed in Paris and a government of national defense is formed.

1881    The Edison electric lighting system goes into operation as a generator serving 85 paying customers is switched on.

1886    Elusive Apache leader Geronimo surrenders to General Nelson A. Miles at Skeleton Canyon, Ariz.

1893    Beatrix Potter sends a note to her governess' son with the first drawing of Peter Rabbit, Cottontail and others. The Tale of Peter Rabbit is published eight years later.

1915    The U.S. military places Haiti under martial law to quell a rebellion in its capital Port-au-Prince.

1941    German submarine U-652 fires at the U.S. destroyer Greer off Iceland, beginning an undeclared shooting war.

1942    Soviet planes bomb Budapest in the war's first air raid on the Hungarian capital.

1943    Allied troops capture Lae-Salamaua, in New Guinea.

1944    British troops liberate Antwerp, Belgium.

1945    The American flag is raised on Wake Island after surrender ceremonies there.

1951    The first transcontinental television broadcast in America is carried by 94 stations.

1957    Arkansas governor Orval Faubus calls out the National Guard to bar African-American students from entering a Little Rock high school.

1967    Operation Swift begins as US Marines engage North Vietnamese Army troops in Que Son Valley.

1972    Mark Spitz becomes first Olympic competitor to win 7 medals during a single Olympics Games.

1975    Sinai II Agreement between Egypt and Israel pledges that conflicts between the two countries "shall not be resolved by military force but by peaceful means."

1998    Google founded by Stanford University students Larry Page and Sergey Brin.

 

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OPERATION COMMANDO HUNT Thanks to the Bear  

Skip… For The List for the week beginning Monday, 2 September 2024 and ending Sunday, 8 September 2024… Bear🇺🇸⚓️🐻

 

OPERATION COMMANDO HUNT (1968-1972)

From the archives of rollingthunderremembered.com post  of 1 September 1969… Wrap-up on "Balky Company A" and a NYT OpEd by James Reston, "A Whiff of Mutiny." The Nixon Dilemma: how do you keep troops fighting forward while you are pulling out and going home? We lost more than 20,000 American brave hearts (KIA) while fighting the last three years of this lost cause.

 

https://www.rollingthunderremembered.com/commando-hunt-and-rolling-thunder-remembered-week-forty-three-of-the-hunt-1-7-september-1969/

(Please note the eye-watering ongoing revamp of the RTR website by Webmaster/Author Dan Heller, who has inherited the site from originators RADM Bear Taylor, USN, Retired, and Angie Morse, "Mighty Thunder")…

To remind folks that these are from the Vietnam Air Losses site that Micro put together. You click on the url below and can read what happened each day to the aircraft and its crew. .Micro is the one also that goes into the archives and finds these inputs and sends them to me for incorporation in the List. It is a lot of work and our thanks goes out to him for his effort.

From Vietnam Air Losses site for "for 4 September  

4-Sep:  https://www.vietnamairlosses.com/loss.php?id=1333

 

Vietnam Air Losses Access Chris Hobson and Dave Lovelady's work at:  https://www.VietnamAirLosses.com.

 

This is a list of all Helicopter Pilots Who Died in the Vietnam War . Listed by last name and has other info 

https://www.vhpa.org/KIA/KIAINDEX.HTM

 

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From the archives and worth your time

Thanks to Eagle, I love these and they bring back a lot of memories…skip

 

A fun happy walk down memory lane for those of us senior citizens for your holiday cheer.

 

The 50s‼

For the first couple of minutes, you'll swear you've seen this video before.  THEN...WOW, for the next few 

minutes, you're treated to a whole new compilation,

 done by a genius. Turn up the volume and enjoy.

 Enjoy & remember. Even Tot' s Pavilion.

https://www.yout-ube.com/watch?v=TmsahlXby7c&autoplay=1

 

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A few new one's in here.  Younger generation terms?

23 Terms Only Fighter Pilots Understand

    

18 Mar 2016

BY WARD CARROLL - WEARETHEMIGHTY.COM

If you've ever hung out with military aviators (or watched movies like "Top Gun" or "Iron Eagle") you know they tend to use a lot of strange lingo when they talk, even when they're out of the cockpit. Trying to hold a conversation with them can be tough — until now. WATM presents this handy list of fighter speak that will help keep that social interaction going, which is important because fighter guys have a lot of wisdom to put out and it would be a shame if it got lost in translation.

 

So here's the gouge . . . er, here you go:

1. "Angels"

Altitude in thousand of feet. ("Angels 3" is 3,000 feet.)

2. "Cherubs"

Altitude in hundreds of feet. ("Cherubs 3" is 300 feet.)

3. "Bandit"

A known bad guy.

4. "Bogey"

An unknown radar contact.

5. "Bent"

If a piece of gear is inop it is "bent." ("Giantkiller, be advised my radar is bent.")

6. "Bingo"

Low fuel status or direction to head for the divert field. ("Lobo is bingo fuel," or "Ghostrider, your signal is bingo.")

7. "Blind"

Wingman not in sight.

8. "Delta"

Change to a later time, either minutes or hours depending on the context. ("Delta 10 on your recovery time" means the jet is now scheduled to land 10 minutes later.)

9. "Firewall"

Push the throttles to their forward limit. ("I had that bitch firewalled, and I still couldn't get away from that SAM ring.")

10. "Buster"

Direction to go as fast as possible. ("Diamondback, your signal is buster to mother.")

11. "Bug"

Exit a dogfight rapidly. ("Gucci is on the bug.")

12. "Fragged"

An indication that the airplane is loaded weapons-wise according to the mission order. ("Devil 201 is on station as fragged.")

13. "Grape"

A pilot who's an easy kill in a dogfight.

14. "Naked"

Radar warning gear without indication of a missile threat.

15. "Punch out"

To eject from an airplane.

16. "RTB"

Return to base. ("Big Eye, Eagle 301 is RTB.")

17. "Spiked"

Um, not that "spike." The real "spiked" is an indication of a missile threat on the radar warning receiver. ("Rooster has an SA-6 spike at three o'clock.")

18. "Tally"

Enemy in sight (as opposed to "visual," which means friendly in sight). ("Nuke is tally two bandits, four o'clock low.")

19. "Texaco"

Either a label for the tanker or direction to go to the tanker. ("Gypsy, Texaco is at your one o'clock for three miles, level," or "Gypsy, your signal is Texaco.")

20. "Nose hot/cold"

Usually used around the tanker pattern, an indication that the radar is or isn't transmitting.

21. "Vapes"

The condensation cloud created when an airplane pulls a lot of Gs. ("Man, I came into the break and was vaping like a big dog.")

22. "Visual"

Wingman (or other friendly) in sight (as opposed to "tally," which means enemy in sight). ("Weezer, you got me?" "Roger, Weezer is visual.")

23. "Winchester"

Out of weapons. ("Tomcat 102 is winchester and RTB.")

Bonus 1. "G-LOC"

"G-induced loss of consciousness." (Not good when at the controls of a fighter traveling at high speed at low altitude.)

Bonus 2. "The Funky Chicken"

"The Funky Chicken" is what aviators call the involuntary movements that happen during G-LOC.

Ward is a retired Naval Aviator, novelist, and military commentator. He was the editor of Military.com for nine years before joining We Are The Mighty as editor-in-chief in September of 2014.

 

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Thanks to Clyde, A repeat but entertaining

Thought this was great. Short one about Neil Armstrong.  Made my day.  I remember staying UP until about 4 in the morning to watch the landing on a black and white T.V.

 

Mr. Gorsky

IN CASE YOU DIDN'T ALREADY KNOW THIS LITTLE TIDBIT OF TRIVIA, ON JULY 20, 1969, AS COMMANDER OF THE APOLLO 11 LUNAR MODULE, NEIL ARMSTRONG WAS THE FIRST PERSON TO SET FOOT ON THE MOON.

HIS FIRST WORDS AFTER STEPPING ON THE MOON, "THAT'S ONE SMALL STEP FOR MAN, ONE GIANT LEAP FOR MANKIND," WERE TELEVISED TO EARTH AND HEARD BY MILLIONS.*

BUT JUST BEFORE HE RE-ENTERED THE LANDER, HE MADE THE ENIGMATIC REMARK - "GOOD LUCK, MR. GORSKY".

MANY PEOPLE AT NASA THOUGHT IT WAS A CASUAL REMARK COCERNING SOME RIVAL SOVIET COSMONAUT.

HOWEVER, UPON CHECKING, THERE WAS NO GORSKY IN EITHER THE RUSSIAN OR AMERICAN SPACE PROGRAMS.

OVER THE YEARS, MANY PEOPLE QUESTIONED ARMSTRONG AS TO WHAT THE -'GOOD LUCK, MR. GORSKY' - STATEMENT MEANT, BUT ARMSTRONG ALWAYS JUST SMILED.

ON JULY 5, 1995, IN TAMPA BAY , FLORIDA , WHILE ANSWERING QUESTIONS FOLLOWING A SPEECH, A REPORTER BROUGHT UP THE 26-YEAR-OLD QUESTION TO ARMSTRONG. THIS TIME HE FINALLY RESPONDED.

MR. GORSKY HAD DIED, SO NEIL ARMSTRONG FELT HE COULD NOW ANSWER THE QUESTION.

IN 1938, WHEN HE WAS A KID IN A SMALL MID-WESTERN TOWN , HE WAS PLAYING BASEBALL WITH A FRIEND IN THE BACKYARD.

HIS FRIEND HIT THE BALL, WHICH LANDED IN HIS NEIGHBOR'S YARD BY THEIR BEDROOM WINDOW.

HIS NEIGHBORS WERE MR. AND MRS. GORSKY. AS HE LEANED DOWN TO PICK UP THE BALL, YOUNG ARMSTRONG HEARD MRS. GORSKY SHOUTING AT MR. GORSKY - "SEX! YOU WANT SEX?! YOU'LL GET SEX WHEN THE KID NEXT DOOR WALKS ON THE MOON !"

TRUE STORY. It broke the place up

 

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The first woman aviator in the United States

 The other day I saw this running when I walked into our bedroom and my wife was watching it. I never knew about her and what she accomplished. She asked me why we never heard about her and I replied that her husband was not a newspaper publisher and made her famous Like Amelia Earhart

If  this does not come through Search for Bessica Raiche in Google and learn about the real deal…skip

 

3:08

 

Antiques Roadshow | Appraisal: Bessica Raiche Aviator ...

 

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Thanks to Brett……I do not know how I missed this one….skip

Happy Labor Day Scruffnecks Worth the read

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2024/09/02/happy-labor-day-scruffnecks-2/

 

September 3, 2024

Happy Labor Day, Scruffnecks! …. and that has nothing to do with the color of your collar.

I've sent this message before, and I repeat it because the one consistency in this crazy world of ours is our ability to remember that not a single person has the power to destabilize us.  Everything of great purpose comes from within, and from a loving God. As Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn famously said:

"The simple step of a courageous individual is not to take part in the lie. One word of truth outweighs the world."

Yes, it's Labor Day in America. And as we pause and celebrate work, productivity, problem solving, and the value of a nation, our nation, built upon boundless ingenuity – so long as we tend the flickering flame of liberty and freedom, to all my brothers and sisters who do not take part in the grand lies that surround us, here's my steadfast reminder….

 

No other nation on earth was ever conceived on the principle of allowing people to manifest their own destiny, while keeping government out of their lives.  The vision, the premise and the purpose, was to allow you the freedom to determine your place in life; and even, at any time, change that determination and strike off in an entirely new direction.

Our labor and aspirations would not be pre-determined by caste, tier, creed or social status; but rather by our personal vision for our own future.  The right of self-determination.

Labor Day is a time to reflect on the value of work; the great personal benefit of endeavors achieved; the pride in accomplishment -regardless of scale- amid this thing we call life; and all of these considerations have absolutely nothing, not-one-thing, to do with the money we assemble in the process.

What is the current value of a former seed that became a tree nurtured toward its continued maturity over decades?  What was that seed worth at the time it was planted?  We can only see the value in hindsight many years later.  What value lay in the blood at Fort McHenry?

The job, per se', was simple.  Hold the flagpole in place.  Keep that representative flag held high, no matter the cost.  And yet, that cost, my God THAT COST, could it ever be quantified appropriately?   A simple yet consequential task that expressed the fullest measure of devotion to the underlying premise, freedom.  America!

 Several years ago, Florida Power and Light won the prestigious international Edward Demming Award for excellence in multi-platform engineering, efficiency superiority and total quality in the process of energy management.

However, the scruffy rednecks did not blow every PhD intellectual out of the water with slide rules, CAD programs, articulated and quantified quality improvement processes and engineering acumen. They did it with hard hats and dirty fingernails.

Because they lost the award, the jaw-agape Japanese spent 6 months visiting and reviewing FPL and later published a 1,000 page study essentially saying FPL "wasn't really good, they were just lucky."  You see, the reviewers couldn't actually quantify the reason why the Florida-based energy company was so successful.  In response the FPL field leadership laughed, took out magic markers and wrote on the back of their hard hats: "WE'RE NOT GOOD, WE'RE RUCKY."

A few years later, every single Kuwaiti oil field was blown up by Saddam Hussein. Global analysts and think-tanks proclaimed it would take 5 years to cap them all off and restart the Kuwait oil pumping industry. Well, the Kuwaiti's and Saudi's called Texans, who had them all capped and back in working order in 6 months.

We are a nation that knows how to get shit done.

A few more years pass, and the Northern Chile mine workers were trapped two miles underground. The eyes of the world began to tear as the word spread. Most began to whisper no one could save them. Who did they call for help? A bunch of hick miners from USA coal country who went down there, worked on the fly, engineered the rescue equipment on site, and saved every one of them.

Yup, that's our America. Ingenuity born from freedom.

Across the pond a half-breed Islamic whack job, armed with an AK-47 and a goal to meet his virgins, began opening fire on a train in France. The scruffneck Americans on board didn't run to the nearest safe room and hide themselves amid baguettes and brie. They said, "let's go", and beat the stuffing out of that little nut with a death wish.

Legion d'Honneur or not, that's us. WE ARE AMERICANS! That's just how we roll.

 Lady Liberty can stroll along the Champs-Elysées with a swagger befitting Mae West because without her arrival, they'd be speaking German in the Louvre. Yet, for the better part of the past decade, a group of intellectual leftists have been teaching our children that it's better to be sitting around a campfire eating sustainable algae cakes and picking parasites off each other; because 'save the planet', or something similarly minded. It would appear, they hate the outcomes and inequities from freedom.

So we get to today, and right now those who wish to "fundamentally change" our nation are waging a full frontal assault against our constitutional republic. The bombardment seems overwhelming.

Leftist city and state leaders have abandoned rule of law in favor of supporting a mob effort to destroy our sense of national unity. Political activists, left-wing ideologues under the guise of democrats, and a host of their media allies are conducting information warfare on behalf of their objective. Big tech social media companies are attempting to remove the voices of those who are fighting back.

There is a great deal of purposefully driven anxiety and fear amid our nation as this multi-faceted internal war takes place. However, there is a primary element to this effort that each person can shield themselves from, and act to counter.  We are, yet again, in Fort McHenry.

Do not let your sense of self succumb to this assault. Do not let them win the battle for your peace of mind.

It might, heck, -check that- it does seem overwhelming at times. But that is the nature of this collectivist strategy.  That is the purpose of this bombardment. We must hold strong and push back against their lies and manipulations. If you look closely at their attack, it is weak and much of it is psychological bait. Do not fall into the trap of despair.

When we share the message, "live your best life", it is not without purpose. Every moment that we allow the onslaught to deter us from living our dreams, is a moment those who oppose our nation view as us taking a knee. Do not allow this effort to succeed.

You might ask yourself how I can, one person, a flea looking into a furnace, retain an optimistic disposition while all around me seems chaotic and mad.

That's the point; it 'seems' chaotic and mad because it has been created to appear that way. There are more of us than them; they just control the systems that allow us to connect, share messages and recognize the scale of our assembly.  We cannot comply our way out of tyranny.

 Every second that you live your life with thankfulness for the abundance within it; every moment that we CHOOSE to engage with fellowship; every day that we accept guidance from God – however you define him to be; and every moment we cherish this time to be a beacon of optimism; is a moment that we withstand that barrage and hold the flag in place. It is a genuinely patriotic position not to succumb to the attack.

If you allow yourself to be drawn into crisis and despair, you allow them to win. If your center of normal is based around this overwhelming onslaught, you will eventually concede liberty in favor of peace. Once we stop living in liberty, we no longer have peace.

It is time to hold that flagpole again. To remember the reason the seed was planted. To cherish the tree of liberty.

We must withstand this onslaught, any onslaught, and rally to the origin of our true national spirit. We must rally to a standard of Americanism and accept this is not that. In essence, we must individually take a stand. Purposefully, deliberately and with forethought, we must engage those around us to get rid of this sense of foreboding.

This approach is how we win the larger battle. Again, it seems simple but keeping that flag standing tall requires the heart of a lion and dirty fingernails.

All around us, in every tribe and region, there are people who need you to show them the strength that you have. Strength of spirit. Strength of fellowship that you will not relent from expressing. Lead your children, your children's children, and the children of your community with an unwavering and steadfast example.

No matter what noise is shouting from the loudspeakers we must withstand it; you must withstand it. We must make eye contact and remain joyful.

We cannot allow despair to be the status quo; and we cannot allow a generation to experience a world without joy.  In this endeavor you can make a difference.

Our nation needs more people like you, right now. Don't wait… engage life. Resolve to get optimistic however you need to do it. Then let that part of you shine right now. This is how we fight.

Hold up that flag; give the starter smile. Rally to the standard you create and spread fellowship again. God knows we need it.

Yes, when I hear President Donald Trump say, "Let's Make America Great Again", I also hear the familiar echo "cowboy up" people.

Git 'r done, as incredibly and visibly stated in the simple three-word message, "FIGHT, FIGHT, FIGHT!"

It's high time we stop being embarrassed about our exceptional American nature, and start being proud of it again.

Because when it matters most, when it really counts, when it's really needed, there's a whole bunch of people all around this world of ours that are mighty happy when swagger walks in to solve their problems.

Yeah, this Labor Day let us recommit to "Make America unapologetically Great Again".

Swagger on, MAGA!

HAPPY LABOR DAY.

 

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This Day in U S Military History

September 4

1812 – The Siege of Fort Harrison begins when the fort is set on fire. On September 3, 1812, a band of Miami arrived and warned Captain Zachary Taylor that they would soon be attacked by a large force of Native Americans. That evening, shots were heard, but Taylor was hesitant to send a scout party. He only had 50 men in his garrison, and sickness had reduced the number of effective soldiers to only 15. In the morning, a party was dispatched and discovered the bodies of two white settlers, the Doyle brothers. The brothers were buried, and the party reported back to Fort Harrison. Captain Taylor, with his 15 able soldiers and about 5 healthy settlers, made ready for the expected attack. Each of the 20 men was issued sixteen rounds to fire. That day, September 4, a force of 600 Potawatomi (under Chief Pa-koi-shee-can), Wea (under War Chief Stone Eater), Shawnee, Kickapoo and Winnebago warriors approached Fort Harrison. A party of 40 men under command of Kickapoo Chief Namahtoha approached under a flag of truce and asked to parley with Taylor the next morning. Taylor agreed, and the Indian force retreated to camp for the night. That night, a warrior crawled up and set the blockhouse on fire. When the sentries opened fire on the arsonist, the 600-strong Indian war party attacked the west side of the fort. Taylor ordered the fort's surgeon and a handful of defenders to control the fire. The blockhouse, which was attached to the barracks, had a store of whiskey, which soon ignited, and the fire raged out of control. Taylor admitted in his report that the situation looked hopeless, and two of his healthy men fled the fort. Warning the fort that "Taylor never surrenders!", the captain organized a bucket brigade to fight the fire before it destroyed the fort's picket walls. One woman, Julia Lambert, even lowered herself down into the fort's well to fill buckets more quickly. The fire did serve one purpose, in that it illuminated the night, revealing the attackers. The fire left a 20-foot-wide (6.1 m) gap in the outer wall, which the garrison temporarily sealed with a 5-foot-high (1.5 m) breastwork. The remaining few of the garrison returned the fire of the Indians so fiercely that they were able to hold off the attack. All remaining invalids were armed to maintain defense, while healthy men were put to work repairing a hole left in the fort's walls. The fort was repaired by daybreak of September 5. The Indian force withdrew just beyond gun range and butchered area farm animals within sight of the fort. The garrison and settlers inside the fort, meanwhile, had lost most of their food in the fire, and had only a few bushels of corn, and faced starvation. News of the siege arrived in Vincennes as Colonel William Russell was passing through with a company of regular infantry and a company of rangers, on their way to join Ninian Edwards, governor of Illinois Territory. Colonel Russell's companies joined with the local militia and 7th Infantry Regiment and marched to the relief of Fort Harrison. Over 1000 men arrived from Vincennes on September 12, and the Indian force departed. The next day, however, a supply train following Colonel Russell was attacked in what became known as the Attack at the Narrows in modern Sullivan County, Indiana

1886 – For almost 30 years he had fought the whites who invaded his homeland, but Geronimo, the wiliest and most dangerous Apache warrior of his time, finally surrenders in Skeleton Canyon, Arizona. Known to the Apache as Goyalkla, or "One Who Yawns," most non-Indians knew him by his Spanish nickname, Geronimo. When he was a young man, Mexican soldiers had murdered his wife and children during a brutal attack on his village in Chihuahua, Mexico. Though Geronimo later remarried and fathered other children, the scars of that early tragedy left him with an abiding hatred for Mexicans. Operating in the border region around Mexico's Sierra Madre and southern Arizona and New Mexico, Geronimo and his band of 50 Apache warriors succeeded in keeping white settlers off Apache lands for decades. Geronimo never learned to use a gun, yet he armed his men with the best modern rifles he could obtain and even used field glasses to aid reconnaissance during his campaigns. He was a brilliant strategist who used the Apache knowledge of the arid desert environment to his advantage, and for years Geronimo and his men successfully evaded two of the U.S. Army's most talented Indian fighters, General George Crook and General Nelson A. Miles. But by 1886, the great Apache warrior had grown tired of fighting and further resistance seemed increasingly pointless: there were just too many whites and too few Apaches. On September 4, 1886, Geronimo turned himself over to Miles, becoming the last American Indian warrior in history to formally surrender to the United States. After several years of imprisonment, Geronimo was given his freedom, and he moved to Oklahoma where he converted to Christianity and became a successful farmer. He even occasionally worked as a scout and adviser for the U.S. army. Transformed into a safe and romantic symbol of the already vanishing era of the Wild West, he became a popular celebrity at world's fairs and expositions and even rode in President Theodore Roosevelt's inaugural parade in 1905. He died at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, in 1909, still on the federal payroll as an army scout.

1942 – At Guadalcanal, the Japanese receive additional reinforcements. Off the coast, two older American destroyers utilized as transports are sunk by Japanese destroyers.

1945 – 2,200 Japanese soldiers finally lay down their arms-days after their government had already formally capitulated. Wake Island was one of the islands bombed as part of a wider bombing raid that coincided with the attack on Pearl Harbor. In December of 1941, the Japanese invaded in force, taking the island from American hands, losing 820 men, while the United States lost 120. The United States decided not to retake the island but to cut off the Japanese occupiers from reinforcement, which would mean they would eventually starve. Rear Adm. Shigematsu Sakaibara, commander of the Japanese forces there, ordered the 96 Allied prisoners of war who had been left behind shot dead on trumped-up charges of trying to signal American forces by radio. And so the Japanese garrison sat on Wake Island for two years, suffering the occasional U.S. bombing raid, but no land invasion. In that time, 1,300 Japanese soldiers died from starvation, and 600 from the American air attacks. Two days after the formal Japanese surrender onboard the USS Missouri, Sakaibara capitulated to American forces, which finally landed on the island. Sakaibara was eventually tried for war crimes and executed in 1947.

1967 – The U.S. 1st Marine Division launches Operation SWIFT, a search and destroy operation in Quang Nam and Quang Tin Provinces in I Corps Tactical Zone (the region south of the Demilitarized Zone). A fierce four-day battle ensued in the Que Son Valley, 25 miles south of Da Nang. During the course of the battle, 114 men of the U.S. 5th Marine Regiment were killed while the North Vietnamese forces suffered 376 casualties.

1969 – Radio Hanoi announces the death of Ho Chi Minh, proclaiming that the National Liberation Front will halt military operations in the South for three days, September 8-11, in mourning for Ho. He had been the spiritual leader of the communists in Vietnam since the earliest days of the struggle against the French and, later, the United States and its ally in Saigon. Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai and a delegation from China held talks with First Secretary Le Duan and other members of the North Vietnamese Politburo. The Chinese leaders assured the North Vietnamese of their continued support in the war against the United States. This support was absolutely essential if the North Vietnamese wished to continue the war. Many in the United States hoped the death of Ho Chi Minh would provide a new opportunity to achieve a negotiated settlement to the war in Vietnam, but this did not materialize.

Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day

*PETERS, LAWRENCE DAVID

Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Marine Corps, Company M, 3d Battalion, 5th Marines, 1st Marine Division. Place and date: Quang Tin Province, Republic of Vietnam, 4 September 1967. Entered service at: Binghamton, N.Y. Born: 16 September 1946, Johnson City, N.Y. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as a squad leader with Company M. During Operation SWIFT, the marines of the 2d Platoon of Company M were struck by intense mortar, machinegun, and small arms fire from an entrenched enemy force. As the company rallied its forces, Sgt. Peters maneuvered his squad in an assault on any enemy defended knoll. Disregarding his safety, as enemy rounds hit all about him, he stood in the open, pointing out enemy positions until he was painfully wounded in the leg. Disregarding his wound, he moved forward and continued to lead his men. As the enemy fire increased in accuracy and volume, his squad lost its momentum and was temporarily pinned down. Exposing himself to devastating enemy fire, he consolidated his position to render more effective fire. While directing the base of fire, he was wounded a second time in the face and neck from an exploding mortar round. As the enemy attempted to infiltrate the position of an adjacent platoon, Sgt. Peters stood erect in the full view of the enemy firing burst after burst forcing them to disclose their camouflaged positions. Sgt. Peters steadfastly continued to direct his squad in spite of 2 additional wounds, persisted in his efforts to encourage and supervise his men until he lost consciousness and succumbed. Inspired by his selfless actions, the squad regained fire superiority and once again carried the assault to the enemy. By his outstanding valor, indomitable fighting spirit and tenacious determination in the face of overwhelming odds, Sgt. Peters upheld the highest traditions of the Marine Corps and the U.S. Naval Service. He gallantly gave his life for his country.

STOCKDALE, JAMES B.

Rank and organization: Rear Admiral (then Captain), U.S. Navy. Place and date: Hoa Lo prison, Hanoi, North Vietnam, 4 September 1969. Entered service at: Abingdon, Ill. Born: 23 December 1923, Abingdon, Ill.. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while senior naval officer in the Prisoner of War camps of North Vietnam. Recognized by his captors as the leader in the Prisoners' of War resistance to interrogation and in their refusal to participate in propaganda exploitation, Rear Adm. Stockdale was singled out for interrogation and attendant torture after he was detected in a covert communications attempt. Sensing the start of another purge, and aware that his earlier efforts at self-disfiguration to dissuade his captors from exploiting him for propaganda purposes had resulted in cruel and agonizing punishment, Rear Adm. Stockdale resolved to make himself a symbol of resistance regardless of personal sacrifice. He deliberately inflicted a near-mortal wound to his person in order to convince his captors of his willingness to give up his life rather than capitulate. He was subsequently discovered and revived by the North Vietnamese who, convinced of his indomitable spirit, abated in their employment of excessive harassment and torture toward all of the Prisoners of War. By his heroic action, at great peril to himself, he earned the everlasting gratitude of his fellow prisoners and of his country. Rear Adm. Stockdale's valiant leadership and extraordinary courage in a hostile environment sustain and enhance the finest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.

 

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for September 4,  FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD "PHIL" MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY

4 September

1911: BOSTON AIR MEET. Lt Thomas DeWitt Milling became the first Army officer to fly at night. While participating in a 160-mile tristate air race, Milling had to land his plane by the light of gasoline flares. Earle L. Ovington won the race. (24)

1922: KEY EVENT. Lt James H. Doolittle completed the first transcontinental flight in one day in a rebuilt DH-4B with Liberty 400 HP engines. He flew from Pablo Beach, Fla, to Rockwell Field, Calif., and covered the 2,163 miles in 21 hours 20 minutes flying time. (9)

1923: The airship USS Shenandoah (ZR-1) made its first flight at Lakehurst, N.J. (20)

1932: Maj James H. Doolittle flew a Granville Gee Bee Monoplane with a Wasp engine at an average speed of 294 MPH to set an FAA record for 3 kilometers at Cleveland, Ohio.

1933: At Glenville, Ill., James R. Wedell flew his Wedell-Williams Airplane to a 305-MPH world speed record. (9)

1936: Louise Thaden and Blanche Noyes won the Bendix Trophy Race. They also set an east-west transcontinental speed record for women, when they flew from Floyd Bennett Field, N. Y., to Los Angeles, Calif., in 14 hours 55 minutes in a Beachcraft airplane with a Wright Whirlwind engine. (24)

1950: KOREAN WAR. At Hanggan-dong, an H-5 helicopter made its first rescue of a U.S. pilot behind enemy lines, when Lt Paul W. Van Boven saved Capt Robert E. Wayne. (28)

1952: KOREAN WAR. 75 fighter-bombers flew well north of the Chongchon River to attack targets, flushing out about 89 MiGs from their bases in Manchuria. While protecting the F-84s, 39 F-86 Sabres engaged the MiGs, destroying 13, to equal the one-day record set on 4 July. Four F-86s fell to the MiG pilots. Maj Frederick C. Blesse, 334th Fighter Interceptor Squadron, destroyed his fifth enemy aircraft to become an ace. An H-19 from the 3d Air Rescue Squadron saved a downed fighter pilot and two crewmen of a US Navy helicopter, which had lost power and crashed in the water while attempting to pick up the pilot. (28) The USAF awarded the production contract for Lockheed's 383 transport, better known as the C-130 Hercules. (4)

1957: Lockheed's C-140 Jetstar prototype first flew. (12)

1958: Four F-100 Super Sabres completed the first nonstop jet fighter flight from the US to Norway. (24)

1959: At Sioux Falls, Idaho, an unmanned balloon, launched for scientific purposes, soared to an altitude of 150,000 feet. (24) The Minuteman missile program received the highest national priority for production. (6)

1961: PROJECT TACKHAMMER/OPERATIONS STAIR STEP and BRASS RING. Through 27 November, three operations offered a show of force to Soviet Union's erection of the Berlin Wall. Airlift units moved a Composite Air Strike Force to Europe from 4 to 7 September under Project TACKHAMMER, and then they carried nearly 10,000 troops and some 2,380 tons of cargo to the region from 31 October to 27 November during Operation STAIR STEP. In November, airlifters also moved Tactical Air Command F-104s and personnel in Operation BRASS RING. (18)

1970: The Army's CH-47 Chinook helicopter flew its maiden flight with the new T-55-1-11A Lycoming engines at Edwards AFB, Calif. (3)

1975: For outstanding air refueling support, the Tactical Air Command gave Strategic Air Command its "Gen Carl 'Tooey' Spaatz Award" in memory of the first Chief of Staff of the Air Force and pioneer in air refueling. On 4 October, the Strategic Air Command then gave the first award to the 11th Air Refueling Squadron at Altus AFB, Okla. (1)

1981: Vandenberg AFB, Calif., moved the last modified Thor space booster into storage at Norton AFB in San Bernardino, Calif. (6)

1984: At Palmdale, Calif., Rockwell International rolled out the first B-1B (Tail No. 82-0001) for the public. (1) Exercise GALLANT EAGLE '84. Through 12 September, the Strategic Air Command, the Tactical Air Command, Military Airlift Command, and Army units in the west took part in the largest US military exercise since 1962. Gallant Eagle involved 44 B-52s (182 sorties), KC-135s and KC-10s (309 support missions), command and control, and reconnaissance aircraft. (1)

1987: An F/A-18 fired an Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missile for the first time at supersonic speeds at Point Mugu, Calif. (5) 1996: A C-141 Starlifter from the 305th Air Mobility Wing at McGuire AFB, N. J., evacuated 30 passengers from Bujumbura, Burundi, to Nairobi, Kenya, to remove them from the danger of a civil war in Burundi. (26)

2005: HURRICANE KATRINA. Air Guard pararescue specialists saved 538 human lives in one day. This one-day total was the highest number of saves by Air National Guard rescue assets during the hurricane relief operation. (32) HURRICANE KATRINA. During their first three days of relief operations, Air National Guard aircrews flew 785 sorties to transport 12,854 people and 39,013 tons of cargo. (32)

 

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Thanks to Barrel

Kamala Harris's past

I am not the author.

 

The following statements are objectively and verifiably true. If you are a Democrat, you can decide to hate me for this, but you cannot deny the factual accuracy of what I am about to say:

1. Kamala Harris is the offspring of two foreign-born college professors, and they provided Kamala a prosperous childhood ensconced amidst the Ivory Towers of academia.

2. Kamala Harris' mother comes from the Indian Brahmin caste, which sits atop India's horrifically backward and oppressive caste system. Her father comes from a family of wealthy Jamaican slave plantation owners.

3. Kamala Harris' father was an influential Marxist economist.

4. Kamala Harris spent her formative teen-age years living in Montreal, Canada. At no time in her formative years did Harris ever live what is customarily referred to as "The African-American Experience"; or, for that matter, the American working class experience.

5. Kamala Harris failed the California bar exam.

6. Kamala Harris rose to political prominence in California thanks to the support of a much older, married and influential Democrat pol, Willie Brown, with whom she was having sex while he advanced her career.

7. As California's Attorney General, Kamala Harris knowingly engaged in numerous unfair and unethical legal practices that wrongfully denied many, many unjustly-incarcerated black men their freedom and liberty.

8. As a Senator from California, Kamala Harris was ranked by many non-partisan political analysts as the most extreme Leftist in the Senate.

9. Running as a Democrat Presidential candidate in 2020, while being incredibly well-funded, Kamala Harris nevertheless polled at the bottom of all major candidates and was one of the very first to withdraw. This was widely perceived to be a function of her unlikeability and her inability to offer cogent campaign positions of substance.

10. Joe Biden explicitly stated that he hired Harris BECAUSE she is a black woman. Thus, it is entirely fair to label her a "DEI hire."

11. Kamala Harris as Vice President has had an unusually high staff turnover rate exceeding 90%.

12. The media is extremely hard-pressed to recount a single accomplishment of Harris as VP. Quite the opposite, they have white-washed her informal title as "Border Czar" as she failed to do anything to stop the extremely high flow into the USA of illegal immigrants.

13. Prior to becoming the Presidential candidate, Kamala Harris had the lowest VP approval ratings of any VP since Spiro Agnew.

14. Kamala Harris knew that Joe Biden had dementia and was incompetent, and took no actions of any kind to ensure that the USA had a competent President.

15. Kamala Harris, along with Barack Obama and other Democrat luminaries, engaged in some form of extortion to force Joe Biden to step aside as the Democrat Presidential nominee in 2024, so she could assume that mantle herself.

16. Kamala Harris never received a single primary vote in favor of the candidacy she seized from Joe Biden.

17. As the Presidential candidate, Kamala Harris was spurned by most of the Democrat party luminaries to be her VP candidate, and instead she settled for Tim Walz, a VP candidate with an extraordinary amount of negative personal baggage.

18. Kamala Harris has been the Democrat Presidential candidate for approximately six weeks, and has yet to engage in any sort of press interview of any kind.

19. Kamala Harris has never worked in a private business in her adult life.

20. Kamala Harris has stated virtually no campaign positions of any kind, and some major ones that she has stated are exact duplicates of her GOP opponent's long-standing positions.

21. The most visible components of Kamala Harris' campaign platform thus far are arguably "brat" and "JOY!"

 

All of the above is objectively true. These are not opinions, these are facts.

So allow me to summarize the above:

"Kamala Harris is the privileged child of racist immigrant college professors, she has all but no connection to the American working class experience in her formative years, she rose to prominence by having sex with a much older, powerful Democrat politician, as a government lawyer she engaged in corrupt practices that discriminated against black men in prison, as a Senator she was the most extreme Leftist in the Senate, she got chosen as VP because of her skin color and genitalia, as VP she has had no notable accomplishments other than to ignore the advanced dementia of her boss, she used extortion to grab the Presidential nomination for herself, and her campaign currently consists of hiding from the press while having no verifiable campaign platform."

Vote wisely.

 

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