Posted on 12/14/2003 12:04:30 PM PST by Diva Betsy Ross
If someone could help me post this (photos) here I think it would be great for today.
Jeff Head had posted on but old thread ( Red Blooded Message) does not have working link. Here is the current link:
http://www.jeffhead.com/attack/warning.htm
Cheers to Jeff Head. God bless our troops and Merry Christmas all.
Not that it bothers me that women's breasts are his idea of "conservative news" . I guess he would have been more supportive if we had been paying homage to half naked girls instead of our troops.
Oh well, I figured it would get pulled if the powers that be were being strict today.
Note: I did not post in breaking news.. I thought I was doing pretty well myself.
You did an excellent job!
It's a good day to remember what this is all about!
No More Gore Anymore asked me earlier today fif he could repost it and I said he absolutely could.
I wrote this over two years ago right after the 911 attack. Our operations in Afghanistan and now in Iraq have been the literal fulfillment of my own hope and wish as regards these animals who have been praying on our citizens for so many years.
IMHO, we have more work yet to do.
Here's my site regarding operations in Iraq. I will have a big addition to that site either late tonight or tomorrow regarding the activities associated with Hussein's capture. Just klick on the picture...you'll like the site:.
Send deployed troops message on SoldiersRadio.com
SoldiersRadio is again this year providing a way to let you tell Service members worldwide that you care and are thinking about them during the Holidays. |
I knew someday I would re-post it as a tribute to your foresight, and to what was a beacon to me at a very dark time ( original thread Sept 13, 2001) .
I have revisited your thread over the last few years to remind myself that America was right in this War effort ,and remind myself to be not afraid...
You have a great gift, and I appreciate it, very much, that you share that with your FRiends.
P.S. I am a she ;]
The cowardly terrorists who struck us on 9-11, and many of their ilk, have badly misjudged the soul of America. Oh, sure, our popular culture is decadent and sometimes hopelessly vain, naive, and nasty- but that is not the real America.
The real America gets up every day, takes care of its family, and goes to work, doing things that will never be lauded, or even appear, on the media's radar.
But that doesn't mean we aren't real, or out there in flyover country.
Not too long ago, a largely agrarian America was jarred out of dreams of isolationism by a nasty group of totalitarians and mass-murderers called the Axis.
It took us, what? Four years to turn that "Thousand-Year Reich" into a smouldering heap of rubble.
A wee bit longer to hammer down the "Greater Southeast Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere."
( Don't you just love the names these Jackals give themselves? )
And we used nuclear weapons in the end to finish it.
I know one thing- it takes longer than a generation or two for the Iron to leech out of a nations' soul-- my Mom & Dad participated in WWII, because they had no other choice than to become Axis slaves.
When I look in the eyes of my two dear nieces- the closest ones to children I'll ever have- guess what? I see the Iron is still there. The blood runs true in America.
The self-deluded fools in the Middle East goosed the Eagle, and now, there's Hell to be paid.
The blood runs true...
Posted on 10/03/2001 4:53:49 PM PDT by Gamecock
After a lifetime in which he cheated it many times, death caught up with Rick Rescorla halfway up the south tower of the World Trade Center.
But like a good soldier, he didnt sell his life cheaply. Death took him only after he had cheated it again, helping to save 2,700 lives by relying on the instincts and the preparation that had served him well in battles on two continents.
Rescorla was a retired Army Reserve colonel and the head of security for Morgan Stanleys Individual Investor Group at the World Trade Center. But many readers will be more familiar with him as Lt. Rick Hard Core Rescorla, one of the heroes of the 1965 battle of the Ia Drang Valley in Vietnam.
Rick was the best combat leader I ever saw in Vietnam, said Pat Payne, the 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiments reconnaissance platoon leader in Ia Drang.
Featured in book
Rescorlas role in that battle is recounted in detail in the book We Were Soldiers Once And Young, a searing account of the action by retired Lt. Gen. Harold Hal Moore and Joe Galloway. In 1965, Moore was a battalion commander in the center of the battle, and Galloway was a UPI reporter who covered the entire engagement.
Even those only vaguely familiar with the book have seen Rescorlas image he is the gaunt soldier on the cover with the 2-day old beard and the bayonet fixed to his M16.
When Rescorla showed up for Basic Training at Benning in 1963, hed already seen more adventure than most soldiers do in a lifetime. Born in Cornwall, England, he joined the British armys Paratroop Regiment as a teen-ager, then became a military intelligence warrant officer. He served in that position in Cyprus during the violence that wracked that island in the 1950s, then left the British Army for a London police job in Scotland Yards famous Flying Squad of detectives.
He left England for another military job, this time as a commando in the Rhodesian Colonial security force in Africa. From there he came to seek his fortune in the United States.
After breezing through basic training, Rescorla was picked up for Officer Candidate School. Last year he was inducted into the OCS Hall of Fame.
He graduated as a second lieutenant in 1965, just in time to ship out to Vietnam with the 1st Air Cavalry Division. In November of that year, still a British citizen, he would draw on all his youthful experience in the battle of the Ia Drang.
Headed the Hard Corps
Ia Drang was the Armys first major battle in Vietnam, and one of its bloodiest. The battle claimed 305 American lives, soldiers who died in fierce combat with a North Vietnamese regiment that also took heavy losses. Rescorla commanded 1st Platoon, B Company, 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment, and was almost worshipped by his soldiers, who called themselves the Hard Corps after his nickname. But his courage and infectious optimism resonated beyond those under his immediate command.
Payne remembers Rescorla leaping off [a] chopper and strutting into our small very beat-up group of survivors during the night. After placing his men to fill the gaps in Paynes line and pausing to speak quietly to each soldier, he walked toward Payne.
I was so amazed to see him walking around because we had all been crawling on our stomachs for eight hours, Payne said. Speaking in a low, confident voice, Rescorla complimented Payne on establishing good fields of fire.
Then he looked me in the eye and said, When the sun comes up we are going to kick some ass. I will never forget his words or the look in his eye. He said it in a confident, matter-of-fact way. He was not boasting, it was resolve.
Rescorla earned a Silver Star for his actions at Ia Drang, and, in Moores words, went on to establish himself as a living legend in the 7th Cav in Vietnam.
But behind the swagger and the self-confidence, Rescorla hid a keen intellect, according to Dan Hill, a former captain who met Rescorla at basic and remained his best friend. This fine mind served Rescorla well when he left the Army in the late 1960s and put himself through college and law school, before going on to establish himself as a specialist in security for financial firms.
His will to live came to the fore again three years ago, when he was diagnosed with inoperable cancer and given six months to live. Against the odds, he beat the disease into remission.
As Morgan Stanleys security chief, Rescorla brought his belief in the seven Ps proper prior planning and preparation prevents poor performance to bear, to the immense good fortune of his co-workers.
Morgan Stanley was the largest tenant in the south tower, with about 2,700 employees in 20 floors. But incredibly, only six, including Rescorla and two security folks who worked for him, still are missing. Everyone else made it out alive.
Obsessed with preparation
Those survivors owe their lives in no small part to Rescorlas quick thinking at a time of crisis, and his obsession with being prepared for every eventuality.
Hed take every possible contingency that could happen, and hed come up with a plan for it, Hill said. When the first plane hit the north tower, the Port Authority told workers in the south tower to stay put. But Rescorla disagreed and immediately executed an evacuation plan he had made the employees rehearse twice a year.
The plan worked, and when the second plane hit the south tower, almost all Morgan Stanley employees were on their way to safety. So was Rescorla, who made it to the ground floor, singing God Bless America to calm the nerves of the evacuees.
But he insisted on going back upstairs to check for anyone left behind. He was probably still climbing when the building collapsed.
His wife, Susan, and his two children likely will remember Rick Rescorla for his generosity of spirit and his dry English wit.
But middle-aged veterans of a hellish battle long ago in the sun and the elephant grass are more likely to remember Rick Rescorla as Bill Lund, another second lieutenant in that battle, does: This was the bravest man I ever knew.
I will never forget.
I hope they have some vindication today. I hope they have more coming soon!
I really will never forget,and I know you won't either!
Yes, I'm bragging, because it is coming to my county!!!!!
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