19 Dec

In Country With The 81st BCT~ Ramaldi Iraq





By Col. Ronald Kapral
81st BCT Commander
81st BCT Commander Col. Ronald Kapral
For most of us, the holiday season is a special time of year, but this year is different for us. Though we are not going to have the opportunity to spend the holidays with our loved ones, we must not forget them either. The sacrifices you are making are felt by the families and friends left back home. Be sure to remember them and thank them for all they are doing to support you and keeping the home fi res burning.
The holiday season can also be a depressing time. Be receptive to your fellow soldiers. Note any changes in their behavior. Remind them that they are not alone. If you suspect something is wrong, notify your chain of command or
the chaplain.
Soldiers need to maintain their vigilance, especially during this time of the year. The enemy is also aware of this season. Always be combat ready and never take anything for granted.
Finally, I want to take the time to personally thank you and your family for serving. Your sacrifices will never be forgotten. We are writing the history that our children will read about. You are making a difference. I wish you all a merry Christmas and a happy New Year.






18 Dec

Tootsie Roll Goes To War ~ Great Story



On a Roll
Posted by Peggy Melanson
Source
Tootsie rolls and pops sweeten the lives of battle-weary men
When I was a little girl, I received 25 cents as a weekly allowance. During those days, it cost one cent for a Tootsie Pop, a penny for “littles” Tootsie Rolls and five cents for “biggies.”
We were Navy people. My father served during WWII in Hawaii; my big brother, Charlie, served in Korea, and my baby brother, Jerry, served during Vietnam.
Not having any real idea what “War” was all about, I used to write to daddy in my little-girl handwriting, telling him of all the things my friends and I were doing. I remember asking him to please hurry home because Dubble Bubble gum was being rationed and we had to stand in line for just one piece. Being my big strong dad, I was sure he would do something about it.
Often, I placed my pennies in a wooden matchbox to save enough to send him some candy along with my letters. Once I’d saved enough money, I would troop across the street to Pete’s corner store and proudly place all my pennies on the counter and ask how many Tootsie rolls and Tootsie lollipops my coppers could buy. Taking them home, I wrote my letter and wrapped the candies in old Boston Post newspaper pages and shipped them off. I always sent his favorite yellow Tootsie pops. When I could afford it, I sent “biggies” Tootsie rolls. Many times the post office didn’t charge me for stamps. Now, I realize that it was probably the counter person who paid for the postage.
When my father finally came home, he brought me a real grass hula skirt from Hawaii — and as a reminder of my gifts to him, two yellow Tootsie roll lollipops. Following that, he regularly reminded me of those little girl gifts and how happy they made him during the war. I also sent my two brothers Tootsie Rolls and Pops when they were in the Navy. They never forgot, either.
Even now, I distribute Tootsie Roll pops to my “One Woman Comedy Show” audiences thanks to Tootsie Roll Industries. It’s fun to watch adults become children again while they search the basket full of lollipops for their favorite flavor.
Tootsie Roll Industries has been a long-time friend of men and women serving their country.
History tells about a time in November, 1950, during the Korean War. The First Marine Division with part of two U.S. Army combat teams and a detachment of British Commandos along with some South Korean Policemen — about 15,000 in all — faced 120,000 Chinese Communists. The confrontation took place at a mountain reservoir called Chang Jin (the Americans called it “Chosin.”) Temperatures ranged from minus five degrees below zero in the day to minus twenty-five below zero at night. The ground froze so hard that bulldozers could not dig emplacements for Artillery. The cold impeded weapons from firing automatically. It also numbed minds and froze fingers and toes.
The troops were surrounded, outnumbered 10 to 1 and desperately in need of food and mortars. With freezing temperatures, military-supplied rations were frozen solid and inedible.
Using the code word “Tootsie Rolls” (that meant mortars, not candy) a radioman sent a message asking for ammunition.
Misunderstanding the call, the Air Force airdropped thousands of Tootsie Rolls to the trapped men in the Chosin Reservoir.
The men were close to starvation and the chocolate Tootsie Rolls (biggies) withstood the cold and provided food and energy. Some were kept close to the men’s bodies to soften them and were often used to plug holes in fuel drums, radiators and gas tanks that had been riddled with bullets after enemy attacks. Once in place, the softened Tootsie Roll froze again and made a perfect plug.
The Air Force finally caught on and sent additional mortar ammunition.
On December 10, 1950, the men fought their way out of North Korea. Overall, seventeen Medals of Honor were awarded, thirteen during the officially recognized dates of November 15 to December 10, 1950. Rarely in the annals of military history has a force been up against such unfavorable odds, both in terms of numbers and the elements, and still prevailed.
In the 1980s, Marines who survived the battle formed an organization aptly named the Chosin Few. For many years, the group held reunions and Tootsie Rolls were always present.
Over the years, the survivors formed a special relationship with the company and the candies. “We are honored to share a bond with these heroic men and will always take pride in the small role we played in this epic battle,” said Melvin J. Gordon, chairman of the board of Tootsie Roll Industries. “Tootsie Roll has been involved with every major U.S. military engagement during the last century, but this is the only incident we know of in which Tootsie Rolls saved lives.”
One survivor, Bob Weisham of San Diego, said, “No matter where or when we get together, the tables always have handfuls of Tootsie Rolls on them. “It probably sounds funny that such small things as Tootsie Rolls can make a difference.” He added, “For us, they made all the difference.”
Tootsie Roll lollipops also helped serve the men in Vietnam. Carl Jacob, a member of Delta Company 196 Light Infantry Brigade in Vietnam, sent the Tootsie Roll Company a photograph taken in 1970 depicting Jacob and several other members of his unit enjoying Tootsie Pops in the heat during some downtime.
More information about the Chosin Few and comments by other veterans whose lives have been impacted by Tootsie Rolls and Pops can be obtained on the Tootsie Roll website.


Wild Thing’s comment………
I LOVE this story!! One of my Uncles was one of the Chosin Few if only he could be alive today I would love to show him this story.
I typed this…..the chosin few with tootsie rolls…..into Google and pages and pages of stories came up. FANTASTIC to know about this. God bless our Veterans and our troops today and God bless the Tootsie Roll company too.
Ray Davis, USMC, recalls his experience with Tootsie rolls in Korea
PLEASE CLICK HERE ALSO FOR A VIDEO OF ONE OF THE MARINES

Owing to its non-perishable quality and resistance to extreme weather conditions, the Tootsie Roll® has long been a popular military ration. Since World War II, U.S. troops stationed around the world have enjoyed Tootsie Rolls as part of their standard-issue MRE’s, appreciating their great taste, portability, and inherent quality of supplying “quick energy.”

Over the years, veterans have shared their Tootsie-related service memories, reflecting on a candy that provided energy and comfort during the most critical moments. Here are a few:

Tootsie Memories Veterans Remember
http://www.tootsie.com/gal_your.php

….Thank you Mark for sending this to me.

18 Dec

Obama’s Program Concerning His Inauguration Festivities




Obama’s program of events has been released, concerning his inauguration festivities
CBN news
The order of the program will be as follows:
Musical Selections
The United States Marine Band
Musical Selections
The San Francisco Boys Chorus and the San Francisco Girls Chorus
Call to Order and Welcoming Remarks
The Honorable Dianne Feinstein
Invocation
Dr. Rick Warren, Saddleback Church, Lake Forest, CA
Musical Selection
Aretha Franklin
Oath of Office Administered to Vice President-elect Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
By Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
The Honorable John Paul Stevens
Musical Selection, John Williams, composer/arranger
Itzhak Perlman, Violin
Yo-Yo Ma, Cello
Gabriela Montero, Piano
Anthony McGill, Clarinet
Oath of Office Administered to President-elect Barack H. Obama
By the Chief Justice of the United States
The Honorable John G. Roberts, Jr.
Inaugural Address….The President of the United States,
The Honorable ( ????) Barack H. Obama
Poem
Elizabeth Alexander – poet
Benediction
The Reverend Dr. Joseph E. Lowery…..

We know now there were no weapons of mass destruction over there. But Coretta knew and we know that there are weapons of misdirection right down here. Millions without health insurance. Poverty abounds. For war billions more but no more for the poor!” At the memorial service of Coretta Scott King

( Watch Reverend Lowery preach with Barack Obama watching !!)



The National Anthem
The United States Navy Band “Sea Chanters”

.


Wild Thing’s comment……
I bet you all were holding your breath waiting to get this report. hahahaahhaa
I got the hilarious image of Bush from RAC and was waiting for this list for the inaugration to use it. LOL

……Thank you RAC for sending this to me.
RAC has a website that is awesome. 336th Assault Helicopter Company
13th Combat Aviation Battalion – 1st Aviation Brigade – Soc Trang, Republic of Vietnam

18 Dec

Government Bailout Made Clear ~ LOL

How the US government came up with the great American bailout




Wild Thing’s comment…..
Well now that explains it all. hahahhaa

18 Dec

Bataan Death March Survivor Awarded Bronze Star, Purple Heart




Command Sgt. Maj. David D. Holmes spends time with World War II veteran Chief Master Sgt.-retired Charles Dragich after a ceremony Wednesday in which Dragich received medals for his service.

Bataan Death March survivor awarded Bronze Star, Purple Heart
Star Telegram
ARLINGTON — Charles Dragich survived the fighting in the Philippines, the Bataan Death March, a “hell ship,” two bouts of malaria, near starvation, an air raid and slave labor.
He emerged from a Japanese prisoner of war camp in 1945 at half his normal weight of 160 pounds, then promptly re-enlisted. He wore the uniform of the Army, and later the Air Force, for 26 years, retiring in 1964 as a chief master sergeant.
Rather improbably and inexplicably, Dragich left the military without any decorations for fighting and surviving one of World War II’s most inhumane episodes — a forced 65-mile march in which thousands perished.
But on Wednesday, the 92-year-old Dragich received his due.
Army Lt. Col. Ronnie Williamson, commander of the Dallas/Fort Worth recruiting battalion, pinned a Bronze Star, Purple Heart, POW Medal and Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal on Dragich during a ceremony in Arlington attended by several dozen family members and friends.
“Mere words cannot measure the amount of gratitude we have for your service to our nation,” Williamson said. “Your sacrifices and the sacrifices of your comrades during World War II and the Bataan Death March have paved the way for many of us serving today, including myself. So, please, let these medals represent just a token of our country’s appreciation for all that you have done.”
Dragich, one of only a few hundred men still alive who survived the Bataan Death March, said he had accomplished everything he had ever wanted in life, without the medals.
He survived captivity, fathered seven daughters, worked in flight operations at General Dynamics, earned a commercial pilot’s license, and even served as a translator for the Romanian gymnastics team on a trip to the U.S. That’s a pretty full life by any measure.
“You know, I could not speak English in the first grade,” he said. “I failed first grade.”
He knew he had earned at least some of the medals, but didn’t really pursue a correction in his records because “I was not hard over on medals.”
His family and friends, though, took up his cause.
It started about two years ago with Kay Alexander, who works at the Veterans Affairs dental clinic in Fort Worth, who couldn’t imagine why he did not have a Purple Heart. She called Roy Dell Johnson, a Korean War veteran and leader in the Military Order of the Purple Heart.
He called U.S. Rep. Kay Granger, R-Fort Worth, and she contacted the Air Force.
“The Air Force kept turning him down,” Johnson said.
They then asked the Army to investigate the matter, and in a few weeks, Dragich had a chest full of decorations.
His wife, Ana, and six of his daughters plus their families attended the ceremony, as did Alexander and Johnson. His daughter, Debra Keeton, who lives in Dallas, said her family was so familiar with his stories of being a POW that they never considered he didn’t have the medals from it.
“I know when he goes home today that he will do a lot of reflecting on that period in his life,” Keeton said. “This might have been a secret dream of his. I know he is moved. And as his family, we are so grateful and so glad that this happened now and wasn’t done posthumously.”
Still spry and quick-witted (he joked about having a “motor mouth”), Dragich said he owes much of his good health to his wife’s cooking and a regular exercise regimen.
“I’m a very lucky man,” Dragich said.


Wild Thing’s comment…….
This is an incredible story of an incredible and brave man. This is long overdue.
Something else I would like to mention.
20th Annual Bataan Death March ….March 29th, 2009
http://www.bataanmarch.com/

The Bataan Memorial Death March is a challenging march through the high desert terrain of White Sands Missile Range, N.M., conducted in honor of the heroic service members who defended the Philippine Islands during World War II, sacrificing their freedom, health and, in many cases, their very lives.

19th Annual Bataan Memorial Death March

The Bataan Memorial Death March is more of a memorial than a race. The history and memoriam of the Bataan Death March is what this event is all about. A record number of soldiers and civilians came together at the White Sands Missile Range Base to pay tribute and to honor to the soldiers who were in the original march in the Philippines during WWII. It also pays tribute and honor to the sacrifices of those who have gone before them. This year the Bataan survivors answered the roll call during the opening ceremony

Thirty two amputees from Iraq and Afghanistan also took part in the Bataan Memorial Death March with almost all completing the entire 26.2 mile distance. Soldiers and civilians alike, in the heavy division, carried a minimum of 35 pound packs the entire distance. It was a perfect day until the wind picked up in the afternoon adding yet another obstacle to the runners and marchers.

NO MAMA, NO PAPA, NO UNCLE SAM ………… REMEMBER BATAAN

And there is also this fantastic book called ” Ghost Stories”.
The Forgotten Epic Story of World War II’s Most Dramatic Mission
by Hampton Sides

18 Dec

One Of The Many Faces Of Chicago’s Political Corruption

One of the many faces of Chicago’s political corruption



The Patriot Post

“Is there any system of governance or economics that can withstand rampant corruption or self-entitlement? … Has the astounding success of American capitalism spawned people who consider themselves completely removed from the ethical guidelines that govern mere mortals? Has the wholesale abandonment of religion for secularism produced a moral vacuum? … No system can survive when its prime movers and shakers are fundamentally corrupt — most especially when they don’t consider themselves to be so.” –columnist Arnold Ahlert

“So, do the rest of you now have some idea of the depth of corruption in Chicago and Illinois, and why some of us were so concerned about electing a president who emerges from this cesspool? … Brazen, appalling, unbelievable, they say. But for those of us who have spent a lifetime covering the news here, it’s how it works.” –Chicago columnist Dennis Byrne

“Reality check: The chances of House Democrats opening an ethics investigation into either [the junior Jesse] Jackson’s or [Rahm] Emanuel’s involvement [in the “Blago” scandal] is exactly zero. Ethics. Democrats. Say that three times fast.” –columnist Rich Galen

“The automakers’ contention that they pay workers $73 an hour takes into account the cost of pensions and health insurance for retirees. Still, no one disputes that Detroit’s unionized active workers cost a good $10 an hour more than the nonunionized work forces that build Toyotas, Hondas and BMW’s in the largely nonunionized South.” –columnist William Murchison

“[Illinois Gov. Rod] Blagojevich allegedly assumed someone would be willing to pay dearly to be a U.S. senator. I’m sure he was right. But if government were less important in our lives, politicians would have fewer goodies to trade. In return, we’d have more money and more freedom. That’s one more reason to limit government power.” –ABC News’ “20/20” anchor John Stossel

“It looks as if we are going to have to relive all of the mistakes of the 20th century one more time — let’s hope it is one last time — before we relearn the big lesson of that century: the moral and material superiority of capitalism and the disastrous consequences of socialism in all its forms.” –columnist Robert Tracinski


Wild Thing’s comment…….
Some excellent quotes about the corruption that really is not only in Chicago but also in Washington D.C.


….Thank you Mark for sending this to me.

18 Dec

Gov. Palin Proposes 7 Percent Cut In State Spending



Palin proposes 7 percent cut in state spending
Alaska News Service
ANCHORAGE, Alaska
Gov. Sarah Palin released her proposed budget for next year, and if the Legislature follows her lead, the state will be spending less money.
Palin’s $4.9 billion budget proposes an overall 7 percent cut in state spending, although state agencies would see a slight increase in the operating budget.
The governor is proposing cuts in capital projects to achieve the decrease in spending. Palin, surrounded by her budget staff and state commissioners, made the announcement Monday morning in Juneau.
With oil revenues on the decline, she says the state is forced to adjust the way it spends money.

“We of course are going to be prudent,” Palin said. “We’re going to live within our means. We don’t want any Alaskans to assume that government is the answer to all of the challenges and issues and problems that any individual faces.”

The governor’s budget cuts state spending for capital projects like roads and schools by 57 percent. But her operating budget for state agencies calls for a 2 percent increase.
In total, it’s a 7 percent decline, and she expects to have money left over.

“Based on the fall revenue forecast, the spending level we propose in (fiscal year 2010) would result also in a surplus, about a $388 million surplus,” she said.

The governor’s proposed budget is only where the conversation starts. The real budget will emerge from the Legislature after months of hearings.

“We can’t act as we’re broke,” Speaker of the House John Harris said. “We certainly aren’t broke, but if we’re going to spend money we need to invest it in things that are good long-term for the state of Alaska.”

Some lawmakers fear the administration’s oil price forecast is overly optimistic, which could increase the downward pressure on state spending.

“I am very uncomfortable with the numbers the Department of Revenue came out with for projected oil prices,” said Rep. Mike Hawker, co-chair of the Finance Committee. “That’s going to be one of our first projects — evaluating what we should be using as a proper number.”

And some lawmakers say slashing capital projects could accelerate a decline at a time the economy is showing signs of strain.

“With federal spending likely to be trailing off you have to look at what the private sector is doing, and the oil industry and the tourism industry, and so forth,” Sen. Hollis French, D-Anchorage, said. “And you want to make certain you’re not adding to a problem when you could be helping the economy by spending a little bit more.”

But lawmakers are neither critical of, nor applauding, the governor’s proposed budget, because they know it is only a beginning.
Palin is proposing the same level of revenue sharing for cities and municipalities, $60 million.
Outgoing Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich applauded that move, although he says he is somewhat concerned about the shrinking capital budget.


Wild Thing’s comment…….
Sarah is wonderful, conservatives are the best!!
“We of course are going to be prudent,” Palin said. “We’re going to live within our means. We don’t want any Alaskans to assume that government is the answer to all of the challenges and issues and problems that any individual faces.”
Yessssss, thank you Sarah, I wish the rest of the country would listen to you.
She doesn’t just talk our principles, she displays them in life and career.

18 Dec

Top General: Large Military Presence at Inauguration



Top General: Large Military Presence at Inauguration
Roll Call
More than 10,000 active-duty military and National Guard personnel are expected to help with security or participate in next month’s presidential inauguration, a top military officer said Wednesday morning.
Air Force Gen. Victor Renuart, head of the Defense Department’s Northern Command, which oversees military support for homeland security, told the Defense Writers Group that about 7,500 active-duty military personnel and 4,000 National Guardsmen were due in town for the Jan. 20 inauguration of President-elect Barack Obama.
Renuart said there have been no specific threats to the inauguration, but he called it “prudent” to have military forces available to deter or respond to a potential threat. Officials are anticipating more than 1 million people will descend on the city for the event.
Renuart would not provide a more specific breakdown, but he said some of those troops would be supporting federal law enforcement efforts and others would have a ceremonial role, such as walking in the parade or providing honor cordons. He stressed that the Secret Service has the lead role in providing inaugural security but said the military would be an “active participant.”

For example, the four-star general said the military will provide enhanced air-defense patrols over Washington during the festivities and will have chemical response teams available in the event of a nuclear, biological or chemical attack. He said the military has provided similar support for the national political conventions and Super Bowls.

Additionally, the Metropolitan Police Department is expected to have 8,000 personnel on duty, half of which will come from law enforcement agencies across the country. That’s 1,000 more officers than at President George W. Bush’s inauguration in 2005.
Other federal agencies, including the Secret Service and National Park Service, have yet to say how many personnel they will have on hand. All 1,600 Capitol Police officers also are expected to help out.


Wild Thing’s comment…….
President Bush’s second inauguration. Obama’s numbers seem slightly up – but not by that much. And here I thought he was their Messiah. hahaha
19 January 2005

The second inauguration of George W. Bush will be held Thursday under a massive police/military presence. Some 6,000 police are being deployed, backed by 7,000 troops who will be placed on alert. Sniper teams will be stationed on rooftops. Plainclothes specialists looking for chemical, biological or radiological agents will mingle through the crowd, carrying hand-held detectors. Twenty-two checkpoints will be set up to search spectators and screen them with metal detectors.

17 Dec

Bush Prepares Crisis Briefings to Aid Ayers Friend Obama



Bush Prepares Crisis Briefings to Aid Obama
New York Times
WASHINGTON
The White House has prepared more than a dozen contingency plans to help guide President-elect Barack Obama if an international crisis erupts in the opening days of his administration, part of an elaborate operation devised to smooth the first transition of power since Sept. 11, 2001.
The memorandums envision a variety of volatile possibilities, like a North Korean nuclear explosion, a cyberattack on American computer systems, a terrorist strike on United States facilities overseas or a fresh outbreak of instability in the Middle East, according to people briefed on them. Each then outlines options for Mr. Obama to consider.
The contingency planning goes beyond what other administrations have done, with President Bush and Mr. Obama vowing to work in tandem to ensure a more efficient transition in a time of war and terrorist threat. The commission that investigated the Sept. 11 attacks, noting problems during the handover from President Bill Clinton to Mr. Bush, called for a better process “since a catastrophic attack could occur with little or no notice,” as its report put it.

“This is very unusual,” said Roger Cressey, a former Clinton White House counterterrorism official who was held over under Mr. Bush. “We certainly did not do that. When the transition happened from Clinton to Bush, remember it was a totally different world. You had some documents given that gave them a flavor of where things were at. But now you’ve got two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and a hot war against Al Qaeda.”

In addition to the White House contingency memorandums, the Department of Homeland Security said it had given crisis training to nearly 100 career officials who may fill in while Mr. Obama’s appointees await Senate confirmation. Starting before the election, those career workers have conducted exercises alongside departing political appointees to test their responses.

The administration has invited members of the Obama agency review teams to observe some of those so-called tabletop exercises between now and the inauguration, on Jan. 20. The Bush team has also invited Obama transition officials to attend a “national level exercise” set for Jan. 12 and 13 that may play out what would happen if the top leadership of the nation were wiped out in a single stroke, officials said.

At the same time, senior counterterrorism officials plan to hold personal briefings for their counterparts on the biggest threats they see. And the White House has drafted as many as three dozen other long-term policy memorandums outlining various pressing issues that will confront the new team and how Mr. Bush’s aides see the status of each of these issues as his presidency comes to a close.
The White House said the flurry of briefings and memorandums was meant to be helpful to the incoming administration, not an attempt to dictate to it, and members of the Obama team said they were taking it in that light.

“It’s a good-faith effort to provide potential information on some hot spots and some ideas about what they can do,” said Gordon D. Johndroe, a White House spokesman. “We just want to provide them, especially in the first few weeks, the basis for which they can have some information to make their decisions.”

The contingency plans, he said, provide the new president a variety of possible responses to certain situations rather than a specific course of action. “It’s a menu of contingencies and potential options,” he said. “It’s not exhaustive, and it’s not exclusive, and it’s not prescriptive, as if to say, ‘These are the only things you can do.’ ”

Mr. Bush said Tuesday that a top priority in his final days in office is to help Mr. Obama get ready to govern. “We care about him,” he said in an interview with CNN. “We want him to be successful, and we want the transition to work.”

A spokeswoman for Mr. Obama’s office said she had no comment. But other Democrats working with the transition said they appreciated the Bush team’s efforts. “This doesn’t absolve the Bush administration of some of their judgments they’ve made over the years, but this is the right thing to do,” said a Democrat close to the transition who did not want to be named to avoid alienating the team. “This is when enlightened self-interest works.”
Mr. Cressey, who has been a critic of Mr. Bush’s national security policy, said: “I give them a lot of points for doing this. There could be zero down time for the new team coming in.”
The attention to national security in this postelection interim period stems in part from the recognition that terrorists have struck during moments of flux in national leadership before. Al Qaeda’s first attack on the World Trade Center in 1993 came weeks after Mr. Clinton was sworn in. A series of bombings on a Madrid commuter train system in 2004 came three days before national elections. And an attack on a Glasgow airport in 2007 came days after Prime Minister Gordon Brown took office in Britain.
Here in the United States, the Department of Homeland Security declared the fall election and transition a period of heightened alert because of the concern. Under the authority granted by intelligence legislation Mr. Bush signed in 2004, the government has processed security clearances for Obama transition officials earlier than ever before and Mr. Obama has named his top nominees faster than any other modern president-elect.
Beyond terrorism, Mr. Obama could face an early unexpected international test on any number of fronts, as his running mate, Joseph R. Biden Jr., predicted on the campaign trail. During the transition between the administrations of the first President Bush and Mr. Clinton, a humanitarian crisis in Somalia prompted Mr. Bush to send United States troops to intervene.
While Mr. Obama’s national security résumé is relatively thin, many members of his national security team come with deep experience. He is keeping Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and has tapped Gen. James L. Jones, a retired NATO supreme commander, as national security adviser.
Yet returning Clinton veterans have not been in government since Sept. 11. There was no Department of Homeland Security then, no director of national intelligence. The world has changed, and so have the structures to cope with it.
And there are things that cannot be put in a briefing or memorandum. James Jay Carafano, a national security expert at the Heritage Foundation, said much of the apparatus of government would know what to do in the event of a crisis. The real test for Mr. Obama will be projecting leadership.
“For a president thinking about crisis management,” Mr. Carafano said, “the most important thing is not decision making, it’s public relations.”

.


Wild Thing’s comment……….
““This is very unusual,” said Roger Cressey, a former Clinton White House counterterrorism official who was held over under Mr. Bush. “We certainly did not do that. When the transition happened from Clinton to Bush”
Now they admit they didn’t brief President-Elect Bush. Besiudes all the destruction in the offices they did, to computers, stealing furniture etc.
“A spokeswoman for Mr. Obama’s office said she had no comment. But other Democrats working with the transition said they appreciated the Bush team’s efforts. “This doesn’t absolve the Bush administration of some of their judgments they’ve made over the years, but this is the right thing to do,” said a Democrat close to the transition who did not want to be named to avoid alienating the team. ” “This is when enlightened self-interest works.”
No good deed goes unpunished. This has to be the most condescending bunch of moral effetes ever to see Washington.
Can you believe the attitude and how ungrateful Obama’s team is about all of this. SCREW them ALL !
President Bush to do this FOR Obama, just trying to help shows class on his part and also a concern for the country. Obama’s team by what they have said shows these things imo.
1. they could give a rats ass about our country
2. they care less about the safety of the citizens of the USA
3. they are soooooo political that they cannot get past their PARTY loyalties that they can’t see anything else. Like good communist party members one and all.
They speak of uniting America…..LMAO…. put that where the sun does not shine and cement it SHUT!
4. Obama has NO experience to be President. And his background and motives and beliefs are DANGEROUS FOR OUR COUNTRY.
He is a weak person and has had a lifetime growing up with the influence of communists all around him. Every mentor Obama has had is anti-American and he has been a good sheep to each one of them. Or is it GOAT. Yes I am pissed, I will always be ticked when I see a person reach out to help and do what will make this country safe and better and protected and the low life, blue lipped Obama and his team cannot get past their hate for the right side of the isle, their hate for Bush and his people wanting to help Obama before he is sworn in.
So Obama you freakazoid you have sealed the door closed now behind you, you and your team. You have been given a chance, just a chance mind you to respond like a future ” leader” of the most powerful country in the world. A country that the enemy wants badly and have made many attempts on us since 9-11 that Bush and his cabinet have stopped. YES they have stopped possible attacks and Obama you brain dead POS need to wake up.
Bush should say to Obama……Here’s what I’ve been doing for eight years, Sonnyboy. Have a seat and get used to not sleeping through the night.
Maybe the one of those briefings, should be to discuss the crisis of having Obama as President?
Hey Barack……..Starting with this….. This is NOT the Red Button!!!!



Whew now I feel better. hahaha Rants always wear me out. I am a lover not a ranter by nature.
LOL

17 Dec

Time Magazine Names Barack Hussein Obama Person Of The Year






VILE Time Magazine

Obama: The College Years

In 1980, when Obama was a freshman at Occidental College in Los Angeles, he was approached by an aspiring photographer named Lisa Jack, who asked him if he would be willing to pose for some black and white photographs that she could use in her portfolio.

Photographer discovered the old photos of Obama (taken while she was an aspiring photographer) once Obama became prominent – and then she locked them away until after the election to ensure no one would know much at all about B. Hussein before he was elected.






He looks like a shorter haired, more stoned, Jimmy Hendrix.




A New Orleans woman shows off one of the many victory t-shirts produced after the November 4 election.


Wild Thing’s comment…….
I am already sick of him how the heck will I last 4 years of his BS and hate for our country and his agenda.
HELP!!!

….Thank you Mark for the article.