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FReeper Canteen ~ IRAQ WAR 1st ANNIVERSARY SALUTE ~ Saturday Nite Jukebox ~ MAR 20, 2004
bentfeather, Bethbg79, Diva Betsy Ross, Kathy In Alaska, and MoJo2001
Posted on 03/19/2004 8:13:10 PM PST by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
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For the freedom you enjoyed yesterday... Thank the Veterans who served in The United States Armed Forces. |
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Looking forward to tomorrow's freedom? Support The United States Armed Forces Today! |
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~ IRAQ WAR 1st ANNIVERSARY SALUTE ~ |
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A year later we know where Iraq and Baghdad Bob are located. Thanks to our brave and courageous Troops, the world is safer for all of us. Thanks to our Allies for their continued support. We pray that you stay the course. Our music dedication is mixed with some "nostalgic" reminders of the past year. Please mouse over the icons to see our selections for today. As always, don't forget that you can request songs on the thread, or by emailing us at canteenusa@canteenusa.com . Thank you!! Enjoy the selections! (Special thanks go out to Auntie Fawnn and Queenie (bentfeather) for their contributions to this thread! Thanks Divas!!)
The Canteen Deejay Crew are bentfeather, Bethbg79, Diva Betsy Ross, Kathy In Alaska, and MoJo2001. Any requests should be made towards them. (Others provide music as well. So? Don't count them out either! Just ask!) |
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~ Salute To Our Troops ~
For all of our heroes that have returned home, this one's for you! For those of you that have not returned yet, we're waiting for you!
Thank you to Auntie Fawnn for all the graphics!
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~ Axis Of Weasels: Freedom Deniers ~
~ KISS OUR BUTT LIST ~
A.N.S.W.E.R. MoveOn.org DemocraticUnderground.com France - Jacques Chirac Canada - Jean Chretien Germany - Gerhard Schroeder Belgium - Guy Verhofstadt Russia - Vladimir Putin NY Times - (except William Safire) Washington Post - (except George Will & Charles Krauthammer) Newsweek Time Hollywood Moby Dixie Chicks CNN MSNBC - (except David Bloom, RIP & Dr. Bob Arnot) Eric Margolis - (Toronto Sun) The Guardian (UK) The Independent (UK) BBC And many more.....
We make no apologies for the freedom we spread around the world. Either stand with us or get out of the way! |
~ Music Selections ~
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~ Canteen Salute To Our Guys and Gals in Uniform ~
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~ All Gave Some, Some Gave All ~
Click on the graphics to honor our fallen heroes.
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One Year Later of Shock and Awe
We saw the murderous dictator fall we cheered, we sang with glad refrain as the statue of Saddam the madman, Hussein toppled
by Iraqi people whom he oppressed and tortured gassed his own people maimed little children with no compassion or mercy
From palace to palace he¹d run hide with those bloody thug sons by his side until the day they met the business end of a soldiers gun that ended their ³fun.²
Evil spawn of evil he... found living in a spider hole that describes the end of his reign and his people will determine his plight - not his way sneaking around at night filling the people with fear oh no, he will get to hear the charges of his murderous crimes and stand before the judges of his kind spend the rest of his miserable life on earth in better conditions than he meted out...
Freedom lives now for Iraqi people conditions improve with a helping hand from nations across the worlds¹ lands They are learning to trust again and smile, study in schools, work for their livelihood unhindered by the bloody dictator Hussein Iraqi people are free to be... bentfeather a/k/a MLH Copyright © 03/18/2004 All Rights Reserved
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Lene Marlin |
Muse |
Pat Green |
Plumb |
Portishead |
Lisa Loeb |
Interpol |
India Arie |
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John Mayer |
The Sunday's |
Rosie Flores |
Jennifer Hanson |
Josh Kelly |
Tool |
Lucero |
Elastica |
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The Beat Farmers |
Guns N Roses |
Motley Crew |
FeFe Dobson |
Pearl Jam |
The Darkness |
Soul Asylum |
Arrested Development |
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Jimmy Eat World |
The White Stripes |
Violent Femmes |
Ryan Adams |
Iron Maiden |
Drowning Pool |
Midnight Oil |
Ween |
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TOPICS: Announcements; Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons; Politics/Elections; Unclassified; War on Terror; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: oifanniversary
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 741-760, 761-780, 781-800 ... 1,761-1,770 next last
To: Bethbg79
Good morning Beth BUG!
761
posted on
03/20/2004 9:15:58 AM PST
by
Diva Betsy Ross
(Every heart beats true for the red ,white and blue!)
To: StarCMC
Shuulltzzzz!
762
posted on
03/20/2004 9:16:00 AM PST
by
armyboy
(Posting from Sustainer Army Airfield Balad, Iraq. All Gave Some...Some Gave All. 48 more days!)
To: Fawnn
LOL He's sumthin else!
I can't wait for him to come home!
763
posted on
03/20/2004 9:16:42 AM PST
by
Bethbg79
(God bless our Troops and their families!)
To: Fawnn
Thank you BTW! :-)
764
posted on
03/20/2004 9:18:05 AM PST
by
Bethbg79
(God bless our Troops and their families!)
To: Valin
765
posted on
03/20/2004 9:18:32 AM PST
by
StarCMC
(God bless the 969th in Iraq and their Captain, my brother...God bless them all!)
To: armyboy
Hello! I'm so glad you could join us!!
766
posted on
03/20/2004 9:18:50 AM PST
by
Bethbg79
(God bless our Troops and their families!)
To: Diva Betsy Ross
Goooood morning Diva!!
767
posted on
03/20/2004 9:19:50 AM PST
by
Bethbg79
(God bless our Troops and their families!)
To: armyboy
YEAH YOU FOUND US!!!! Hello!
768
posted on
03/20/2004 9:20:22 AM PST
by
Diva Betsy Ross
(Every heart beats true for the red ,white and blue!)
To: StarCMC
Heelll-o!
769
posted on
03/20/2004 9:20:52 AM PST
by
Bethbg79
(God bless our Troops and their families!)
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; LindaSOG; Radix; 2LT Radix jr; LaDivaLoca; Severa; Bethbg79; ...
Good morning, Tonk! Good morning, Canteen Crew! Good morning, EVERYBODY!
GOOD
MORNING
TROOPS!
Me for PREZ! VOTE !!!
770
posted on
03/20/2004 9:22:39 AM PST
by
tomkow6
(get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with T)
To: tomkow6
LOL! Beer!
Good morning Tom!! (((HUGS)))
How's my rotten nephew?
771
posted on
03/20/2004 9:23:19 AM PST
by
Bethbg79
(God bless our Troops and their families!)
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; LindaSOG; Radix; 2LT Radix jr; LaDivaLoca; Severa; Bethbg79; ...
772
posted on
03/20/2004 9:23:34 AM PST
by
tomkow6
(get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with T)
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; LindaSOG; Radix; 2LT Radix jr; LaDivaLoca; Severa; Bethbg79; ...
Today's FEEBLE
YOKE:
People want to look as good as possible in photographs, which is why my husband, a professional photographer, gets a lot of
requests asking him to retouch photos.
You know, erase the crow's feet, lop off the love handles.
So I wasn't surprised when one woman, pointing to a family portrait, asked him, "Can you take 30 pounds off me?" until she
added, "And put it on my sister?"
773
posted on
03/20/2004 9:24:22 AM PST
by
tomkow6
(get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with T)
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; LindaSOG; Radix; 2LT Radix jr; LaDivaLoca; Severa; Bethbg79; ...
COUNTDOWN TO OPENING DAY
16
774
posted on
03/20/2004 9:25:01 AM PST
by
tomkow6
(get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with T)
To: Fawnn; StarCMC
I'm working on Ray Stevens Ladies!
775
posted on
03/20/2004 9:25:14 AM PST
by
Bethbg79
(God bless our Troops and their families!)
To: Valin; All
I will admit Valin, that I often skim quickly over the list you provide each day of the POW-MIA soldiers, but today this caught my eye...and my heart....
1966 MULLIGAN JAMES A.---LAWRENCE MA.
[02/12/73 RELEASED BY DRV, ALIVE AND WELL 98]
So I did some digging...this is his story.
CAPT JAMES A. MULLIGAN, USN (RET.) Captain Mulligan had served in the Navy for 24 years when he was shot down over North Vietnam on 20 March 1966. Stationed aboard the USS ENTERPRISE as Executive Officer of VA-36, he was flying his A-4 Skyhawk just south of Vinh, when he was struck by a Surface to Air Missile (SAM), and was forced to eject. He was immediately captured by North Vietnamese regulars, and then transported to Hoa Lo Prison in Hanoi, the infamous Hanoi Hilton. As one of the more senior Navy POWs, he endured torture, abuse, and miserable conditions for nearly seven years, until his release in February 1973. What prepared him to survive a captivity experience, which included 42 months of solitary confinement? In response to that question, Captain Mulligan cites the process of receiving a liberal education, i.e., undergoing the intellectual preparation necessary to find out who he was. He recalls that the first time he ever heard the Code of Conduct, he thought to himself, Why do we need this? Why is this necessary? Isnt this basic to who and what we are? Doesnt everybody know this? The answer, as he discovered during his years in the Navy was, no, not everybody does understand what integrity, commitment, and loyalty mean. For Captain Mulligan, imprisonment in North Vietnam was a supreme test of those values embodied in the Code of Conduct, values of right and wrong. Captivity was an experience in which a prisoner had to live off of whatever was in his head. When it was all over, Captain Mulligan was able to recall some of what he felt on the day of release, as described in his book, The Hanoi Commitment: This was the only good day I would ever have in North Vietnam, and it would only become good when I boarded that plane and flew out of this damn country. I had spent 2522 days here and I hated every damn one of them. They were firmly etched deep in my mind. I couldnt forget them even if I wanted to. They were as much a part of me as an arm or a leg. In one way I had been a loser for all of those days, yet in another way I had much to be thankful about. For out of the miseries had come strength; out of the suffering, compassion; out of hate, love. If nothing else, I would come home a better man than when I entered there. Life would be more meaningful in every aspect from now on. Freedom, integrity, moral character had new and stronger meanings for me. I knew that I could face the future with faith and hope. I had learned firsthand that in lifes darkest hours in Hanoi, Gods grace had shone down upon me. In my heart I knew that during my captivity I had lost all the battles, but had won the war because I had done my best. I had paid the price. I had day by day put myself on the line for what I believed in. Alone and in solitary, when no one knew and no one cared, I and the others had fought the good fight. If nothing else, I cared, and they cared. There was no easy way. When the chips were down we did what we had to and we paid the price with physical and mental pain. Now that it was over, we could go home with heads held high. We would walk erect as free men taking our rightful place in a free world. The man who appreciates freedom the most is the free man who has become a slave. We were leaving Hanoi, slaves no more. Captain Mulligan recalls that the greatest challenge he faced during his imprisonment was the process of living out his convictions and beliefs about who he was in the face of the loss of self-respect. Prior to captivity, he had experienced and understood divine forgiveness; he also knew of human forgiveness; but he did not really know, nor had he fully experienced, personal forgiveness. Survival in the dehumanizing environment of Hoa Lo Prison was critically dependent on his ability to forgive himself, and then come back to fight another day. Indeed, it was self-forgiveness and inner fortitude that enabled the POWs, as a unit, to win a moral war in 1971, even though victory came at the expense of a hard won battle for group living. Following Christmas of 1970, the North Vietnamese began housing prisoners together in rooms of 45 to 50 each. For many of the prisoners, this move marked the first time they had ever met one another face to face. Nevertheless, they were willing to risk small cells and solitary confinement once again for the sake of the right to worship. As Captain Mulligan recounts what was later referred to as the Church Riot, the Vietnamese became upset when each room conducted Sunday worship services. Apparently, group worship posed such a threat, perhaps because of the evident spirit of unity that resulted, that all such services were subsequently forbidden. As the senior POWs met to discuss what action they should take, most favored the politically smart course: not making an issue of the worship services, lest the Vietnamese retaliate by moving everyone back into small or solitary cells. Captain Mulligan took the opposite position, that making a moral stand on the freedom of religion took precedence over political strategy. In the overall assessment of what would be lost and what would be gained, he concluded, We dont have a choice. The agreement of the group was unanimous. Because he and the other prisoners were confronted daily with time slipping away, time which they were missing with their families, especially their children, Captain Mulligan and others developed their own special responses to the question, If you had just five minutes to spend with your kids, what would you pass on to them? His answer was: 1. Live a life of order, i.e., as to the priority of things. 2. Live a life of discipline, i.e., absolute self-discipline to do what is right, and not to do what is wrong. 3. Live a life of moderation, i.e., there is plenty to go around share the wealth! As for himself, what are the lessons which 42 months in solitary confinement gave him the time to think through and assess? · With God all things are possible (Matthew 19:20). · Permissiveness is the corruption of Freedom. · Anarchy is the corruption of Democracy. · Immorality is the corruption of Morality. A free democratic moral society has the right as well as the obligation to resist the incursions of those perversions, which would lead to its destruction. A free society requires order, discipline, and moderation. Thus it follows that rights and freedoms demand corresponding duties and obligations from all citizens. Man is an imperfect creature living in an imperfect world but he should always strive to be better than he is. In this struggle he should never, never, never, give up!
Jim Mulligan May 1984
I'm sorry it's so long, but I wanted to share it with you all.
776
posted on
03/20/2004 9:26:07 AM PST
by
StarCMC
(God bless the 969th in Iraq and their Captain, my brother...God bless them all!)
To: tomkow6; All
Good morning Tomkow here more headlines
Well Xinurea news wire report that China is pretty happy that refuendrum of independance of Taiwan has went down in defeat
Also report off Interfax KGB busted Chechen soldier who has tied MAYBE Ties to Binny group and another report off Debka that Pakstein found out last night that Al Zabuaria try get escape from Cheynea they found some emails at some dude crib in capitol city of Pakstein at this hour
OH OH
777
posted on
03/20/2004 9:26:32 AM PST
by
SevenofNine
("Not everybody , in it, for truth, justice, and the American way,"=Det Lennie Briscoe)
To: StarCMC
Werner Klemperer was a classically trained, Jewish actor who played Colonel Wilhelm Klink in the TV series Hogan's Heroes, winning two Emmys for the role. Hogan's Heroes was loosely based on Billy Wilder's 1953 movie Stalag 17 and ran from 1965 to 1971. Klemperer, citing his Jewish heritage, was sensitive to criticism from those who thought that comedy in a Nazi prisoner-of-war camp was tasteless, and only agreed to play Klink if he could portray him as a fool who lived in terror of his superiors and was constantly outwitted by the prisoners.
Klemperer was born in Cologne, Germany on 22 March, 1920. He was the son of noted German conductor Otto Klemperer who fled Germany with his family in 1935, two years after Adolf Hitler came to power. Werner made his stage debut in the 1940 production of 'The Trojan Horse' opposite Jeff Chandler and then served in the U.S. Army during World War II. After his discharge, he made his Broadway debut in 'Heads or Tails' (1947) and was featured with Tallulah Bankhead in 'Dear Charles' (1955). While continuing his work as a stage actor, Klemperer also appeared in a number of movies, most notably in Stanley Kramer's 1961 film 'Judgment at Nuremberg'. Klemperer also appeared in 'Houseboat' (1958), 'Youngblood Hawk' (1964), and 'Ship of Fools' (1965). He was then cast as Col. Klink in 1965 and, in the years after the cancellation of Hogan's Heroes, continued to work steadily . Klemperer died on December 7, 2000 in New York. He was 80.
778
posted on
03/20/2004 9:28:19 AM PST
by
Valin
(Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
To: LaDivaLoca
The Ladies get all the credit!
I just posted it!.
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; LindaSOG; Radix; 2LT Radix jr; LaDivaLoca; Severa; Bethbg79; ...
Chicagoland Weather
March 20, 2004 |
Chicago, IL |
Sunrise |
5:52 AM (CST) |
Sunset |
6:02 PM (CST) |
Hrs. of Daylight |
12 Hrs., 10 Mins |
780
posted on
03/20/2004 9:29:20 AM PST
by
tomkow6
(get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with TomKow6 for prezident!..get in step with T)
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