Does anyone question why we fought over a lousy
island during World War II?
Thank God, we didn't have a Cindy Sheehan condemning our president back in the 1940's.
If all mothers, who lost sons in World War II got together against our president; today, east of the Mississippi
River would be talking German, and west of the Mississippi would be talking Japanese...
Today's terrorists do not want to divide our country. They
want to kill all non-believers... (Like most Americans, I'm a proud Christian. So I guess, we're in
the non-believer group. )
Does Christian and non-Christian America have the will-power to win again? Please
read the piece below and learn some history of an American generation who stood their ground. They hated
war and their sons being killed too! However, they also knew what would happen to America, if we lost.
Pray for Cindy Sheehan and especially pray that she finds some
true peace. (Right now, she is being used as a tool of the American Left.) The peace she is asking for now
is NOT a peace America can afford. This is not a war America can walk away from. ( We were attacked on 9-11. )
A Proud Vietnam Veteran
----- Original Message -----
Subject: FOR THOSE WHO MAY HAVE MISSED THIS!
"Some 2,300 Marines were killed or wounded in the first 18 hours..."
Many times as many US soldiers were killed on Iwo Jima as have or will be
killed in Iraq. Does anyone question why we fought over that lousy island?
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Memorial Day, 2005
Mayor Caruso, Council members, distinguished
guests, and fellow Americans I am very honored to be here in Saddle River to add a few thoughts
about Memorial Day. Thank you.
Back in the days of the last century, when I was a lot younger, and thinner, we had
a holiday May 30th called Decoration Day. My parents would take me to the ceremony in Ridgefield Park where they had some
old guys giving speeches about duty and patriotism and heroism. They didn't impress me very much because as a kid, what did
I know about these abstract terms. I was usually bored stiff. I didn't know what those words were all about. I
found out a few years later.
What I did know was that the United States was the greatest country
in the world and the greatest in the history of the world. How did I know that? I was taught it in school, in the Boy Scouts,
and by my parents. They knew full well the flaws in our country's history, but they also knew full well why their ancestors
had come to this country, some of them suffering many hardships to get here.
All my friends knew this too. We knew
all about, and took great pride in the inventions by Americans --the submarine, the airplane, the sewing machine, the reaper,
the telephone, the electric lights, the movies, the phonograph, etc. We knew about the American revolution. Our heroes were
George Washington, Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, James Madison, Patrick Henry "Give me liberty or give me
death," and Nathan Hale who said: "I regret that I have but one life to give for my Country-- as he was hanged.
We
knew about the Civil War. Our heroes were Abraham Lincoln, General Grant, and General Sherman. We knew that when Lee surrendered
to Grant at Appomattox Court House, Grant let him keep his sword and his men keep their weapons.
Then came December
7th, 1941, FDR's proclaimed "Day of Infamy." While the greatest country in the world was going about its
business, Japanese aircraft savagely attacked Pearl Harbor. Most of my generation rushed out to join the services, in my
case the Marines. That first year, the Marine Corps had so many 17 and 18 year olds trying to join, it couldn't handle them
all. I had to wait three months before they got around to me. Why did we rush out to join? Ask anyone my age. We wanted
to defend our country and kill Japanese. Ah, we were so young. Some of us got a lot more than we had bargained for. And
that's why we are here today. Every year at this time, I consider a gathering such as this, my class reunion. I combine the
classes of 1935 to 1945 with my class of 1940 and remember them all. Out of 60 boys in my class, nine were killed. At the
same time, I was good friends with many Teaneck High School students. Four of my good friends were killed..
One was my good friend, Rudolph "Midge" DeCanio, all county basketball player. He was a machine gunner. We were together
through three battles, Bougainville, Guam, and Iwo Jima. He was shot between the eyes his second day on Iwo. I have never forgotten
Midge, and have often asked myself " why me?
Why did I walk off that island while Midge was buried there at the age
of 20? What might he have become? A doctor? A Governor? A husband and father of some kids who never had a chance to be born?
I heard former President George Bush (the father) say the same thing. Why was his gunner killed when his plane was shot down
in the Pacific, and why not him? I'll bet every veteran here has his own Midge DeCanio and has often asked that same question,
why me?
And speaking about Iwo Jima, everyone that I have met of the 26,000 casualties on that island carries a burden
of guilt because he left his buddies before the job was finished. Almost 7000 were buried there and those are the heroes.
When I left, I thought all my friends were dead and didn't have any contact with the survivors for more than 50 years.
No
matter where you were on that island for some five weeks, you were being shot at. The Japanese had every spot zeroed in with
their artillery and kept firing away.
Here's a quote by Arthur Herman in the Wall Street Journal, February 19th, 2005:
"....Iwo Jima would be the first island of the Japanese homeland to be attacked.
The Japanese had put in miles of tunnels and bunkers, with 361 artillery pieces, 65 heavy mortars, 33 large naval guns, and
21,000 defenders determined to fight to the death Their motto, 'kill 10 of the enemy before dying.' American commanders
expected 40% casualties on the first assault. "Even before the attack, the Navy' bombardment lost more ships and men than
it lost on D-Day, without making a significant dent on Japanese defenses. Then at 9;00AM on the 19th, Marines loaded down
with 70 to 100 pounds of equipment each hit the beach and immediately sank into the thick volcanic ash. They found themselves
on a barren moonscape stripped of any cover or vegetation, where Japanese artillery could pound them with unrelenting fury.
Scores of wounded Marines helplessly waiting to be evacuated off the beach were killed 'with the greatest possible violence,'
as veteran war reporter Robert Sherrod put it. Shells tore bodies in half and scattered arms and legs in all directions.....
Some
2300 Marines were killed or wounded in the first 18 hours. It was, as Sherrod said, 'a nightmare in hell.' "And overlooking
it all, rising 556 feet above the carnage, stood Mount Suribachi where the Japanese could direct their fire along the entire beach.
It took four days of bloody fighting to reach the summit and when Marines did, they planted an American flag. When it was
replaced by a larger one, photographer Joe Rosenthal recorded the scene-the most famous photograph of WWII and the most enduring
symbol of a modern democracy at war.
"Yet instead of meaning the end of the battle, it marked the beginning,
which dragged on for another month and cost 26,000 men. The Marines pushed on. Over the next agonizing weeks, they took
the rest of the island yard by yard, bunker by bunker, cave by cave, They fought through places called Bloody Gorge and the
Meat Grinder. They learned to take no prisoners in fighting a skilled and fanatical enemy who gave no quarter and expected
none. Twenty out of every 21 Japanese defenders died where they stood.
One in every three Marines were either killed
or wounded.
Twenty seven Marines and Naval Corpsmen won Medals of Honor, 13 posthumously.
One third of all the
Marines killed in WWII died on Iwo Jima.
Admiral Chester Nimitz Commander in Chief said, 'Among the Americans who
served on Iwo Island, uncommon valor was a common virtue."
Can you see why
we didn't talk about it for more than 50 years. Is it any wonder why most of our "baby boomer" children have no idea of the
sacrifices a whole generation of their fathers and mothers made so they can live in freedom?
So welcome to our 65th
Class Reunion. There's not many of us left. We are also here to remember the men and women who died in Korea and Vietnam. Those in Vietnam won every battle and
the politicians lost the war. I have always admired the men who fought at that time. On the home front they were reviled and
spat upon, yet they did their jobs magnificently. And we are also remembering all the heroes who gave their lives for their
country from the Revolution right up to today's war on terrorism. We have been blessed to have such exceptional people who
gave us our liberty and helped preserve it.
And I want to add to that list, those exceptional people, those firemen,
policemen, and EMT workers who ran into those burning twin towers to rescue people. They do that on a daily basis, but it
took 911 for them to gain the recognition they truly deserve. Yet even this valor and sacrifice is not the full story of what
Iwo
Jima means, or what Rosenthal's immortal photograph truly symbolizes. The lesson of Iwo Jima is an ancient one.
Sometimes free societies must be as tough and unrelenting as their enemies.
Totalitarians test their opponent's resolve
by generating extreme conditions of brutality and violence; in those conditions-in the streets of Fallujah or on the beach
and in the bunkers of Iwo Jima-they believe weak democratic nerves will crack. This in turn demonstrates their
moral superiority: that by giving up their own decency and humanity they have become stronger than those who have not.
Free
societies can afford only one response. There were no complicated legal issues or questions of 'moral equivalence' on Iwo Jima It was kill or be killed.
That remains the nature of war even for free societies. The real question is, who outlasts whom? The real significance of
Iwo
Jima is that as long as Americans cherish the memory of those who served at Iwo Jima, and grasp the
crucial lesson they offer all free societies, the totalitarians will never win.
But, those of us who are still standing
are not finished. All those sacrifices will be for nothing if we don't continue the battle for freedom and for our values
at home. Our country has been weakened morally to the point where, some 10 or 20 years down the line, we might not have
a country because we may not have the will to fight for it. Medal of Honor Winner Marine Corps General Ray Davis called it
to our attention a few years ago. He said our job isn't finished and challenged us to go to work and help educate
the young people of America to the values we hold dear. We owe it to our dead
buddies, we owe it to ourselves, we owe it to our country, and we owe it to our grandchildren.
The young are being
deprived of their country's history and are being taught all about our country's defects and none of the good qualities that
make it the best hope of mankind. History is not being put into perspective. I recommend you read Bill Bennett's
book, "Why We Fight" if you want an idea of what's happening to our country.
Back in September 2001 after we were so
horrendously attacked by fanatical murderers, I saw a lot of flags being waved, but I didn't see a rush by today's 18-year
olds to sign up to defend their country, did you? What I hear is a bunch of spoiled, self indulgent college kids demanding
their rights and some demanding rights for our enemies. A small group, I'm sure, but growing larger. Some colleges wont permit
the ROTC to operate on their campuses, and some wont even fly the American Flag because they don't want to offend some people.
Well,
I'm offended! Is this why I ran up a beach under fire? Is this what our dead comrades fought for? We have some wonderful people,
our kind of people in our armed forces, but each year they are drawn from a smaller and smaller pool of young people who are
willing to make sacrifices for their country. If we truly want to honor our fallen comrades, we must make every day a Memorial
Day. Get busy and start educating our young people about what's really important in life. What better place to start than
with our own grandchildren. Stop indulging their every whim and teach them responsibility by holding them accountable for
their actions.
Then take a look at their schools and see what they are being taught, and not taught. That's a good
start. I leave you with a bit of wisdom from Senator John McCain: "For I have learned the truth: there are greater pursuits
than self-seeking. Glory is not conceit. It is not a decoration for valor. It is not a prize for being the most clever, the
strongest, or the boldest.
Glory belongs to the act of being constant to something greater than yourself, to a cause,
to your principles, to the people on whom you rely, and who rely on you in return.
No misfortune, no injury, no humiliation
can destroy it."
Frank Hall
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http://www.examiner.com/article/vietnam-vet-alleges-corruption-conflict-of-interest-new-jersey-courts
STAND
WITH A PROUD VIETNAM VETERAN
We are nearing 13,000 total supporters and nearing 11,000
petition signers. End this Political Abuse of Power now...
We, the undersigned
People of the United States, are deeply concerned how the State of New Jersey has denied a decorated, combat veteran of the United States, his due
rights as the plaintiff against a corrupt state government lawyer, Robert Correale, his former law
firm, Maynard & Truland and all state government politicians and state officials who have protected them.
We ask that you give John "Jack" Cunningham his Due Process that the State of New Jersey has denied
him for over a decade.
( Please press the next link for Details: http://www.americans-working-together.com/the_real_chris_christie/id13.html ) "
Signed, Jack Cunningham
TYRANNY starts when court officials judge the citizens based on the laws,
yet ignore these same laws for themselves and friends.
Here's a great example of
TYRANNY starting in a State's Supreme Court.
Why did the New Jersey Supreme Court
attorney ethics authority insist Supreme Court Ethics Attorney Robert Correale be judged for violations
by the same ethics committee that he was Vice-Chairman of...
More details at: https://www.causes.com/actions/1746185-american-war-veterans-petition-to-governor-chris-christie
Attorney Corruption Starts At The Top Of The Federal Department Of Justice In this state, attorney corruption starts in the Supreme Court
A taxpayer voting for Barack Obama is like a chicken voting for Colonel
Sanders
"A man good enough to shed his blood
for his country, is good enough to receive a square deal afterwards . . ." -- Theodore Roosevelt
"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall
be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation."
Exposure to
traumatic events~such as natural disasters, abuse, crime, accident, rape, war etc.~ millions of people develop PTSD with symptoms raging from nightmares
to headaches, flashbacks, withdrawing from people, profound sadness, anxiety, anger, guilt, fatigue, pessimism, sexual problems
and emotional numbing.
.
PRESS PICTURE TO LINK TO STORY |
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WEBMASTER |
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WEBMASTER |
"The American
Indians found out what happens when you don't control immigration."
"A true friend is someone who thinks you are a good egg
even though he knows
you are slightly cracked."
..
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THE LIFE COVER FOR A LARGER COPY |
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----- Original Message -----
PLEASE PRESS THE CARTOON FOR A LARGER COPY |
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Watch the man in the picture! |
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Watch the man in the picture! |
GOD
BLESS AMERICA |
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"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be
directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation." -
George Washington
PLEASE PRESS FOR A LARGER COPY TO READ |
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PLEASE PRESS FOR A LARGER COPY TO READ |
HONORABLE VETERAN MOCKED FOR HIS PTSD
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Webmaster, Former CAP Marine and Disabled Veteran Jack Cunningham and his
wife, Joan
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John Forbes Kerry Timeline
TODAY'S BRAVE AND HONORABLE MILITARY
IS TOMORROW'S VETERANS
WITH THE HELP OF INTERNET
SUPPORTERS, Former CAP Marine, Veterans Advocate
And Webmaster Jack Cunningham, Takes On New
Jersey's Office Of Attorney Ethics' Corruption...
FOR THE NEW JERSEY SUPERIOR COURT SYSTEM TO LOSE A COURT TRANSCRIPT,
BEFORE IT CAN BE TYPED AND RELEASED AS EVIDENCE IN A FOLLOW-UP ETHICS CASE AGAINST A STATE OFFICIAL IS A DISGRACE AS WELL
AS A CRIME.
After reviewing the clear evidence for yourself, please support Jack in his battle against
New Jersey State Corruption by emailing or calling New Jersey State Officials on his behalf.
The picture immediately below is the picture from the above newspaper
article.
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Above is Jack Cunningham with one of the boys from the
Duc Duc Resettlement Village.
Below is the full picture of the same scene.
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WHY GOD MADE PETS
MORE PET PICTURES
WILD ANIMAL PICTURES
PLEASE PRESS
THE NEXT LINK TO LEARN ABOUT A MASSACRE THAT THE AMERICAN
NEWS MEDIA DID NOT COVER.
PLEASE PRESS THE PICTURE
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