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To: exit82

Donald J. Trump

@realDonaldTrump

Great news for the Republican Party. RINO lawyer Charlie Spies is out as Chief Counsel of the RNC. I wish him well!

May 05, 2024, 11:42 PM


405 posted on 05/06/2024 4:46:55 AM PDT by exit82 (Either the Democrat Party will survive or America will survive. But not both.)
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To: exit82

Laura Loomer
@LauraLoomer
·
5h

I love how Israel issued an evacuation order in Rafah today, on Holocaust Remembrance Day.

It really drives the point home to all of the Jew haters and HAMAS lovers.

Actions have consequences as the jihadists are finding out.


406 posted on 05/06/2024 4:51:32 AM PDT by exit82 (Either the Democrat Party will survive or America will survive. But not both.)
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To: exit82

Sarah Emma Edmonds specialized in disguises. It was a way of life you could say. One which began in her teens.

Back then, she lived on a farm in New Brunswick, Canada, being raised by a doting mother and an abusive father who resented Emma for not being born a boy. He wasn’t good to her. And when he tried to marry her off at fifteen, she decided to leave.

She traveled alone to the U.S. And this is where Emma Edmonds became Franklin Thompson, probably because Franklin had more opportunities than Emma did. And Franklin became a bible salesman living in Hartford, Connecticut, and then a bookseller in Flint, Michigan.

Soon the Civil War started. Emma, an ardent supporter of the Union, felt a duty to serve. So, she joined. As Franklin, of course. Physical checks were sparse then.

Emma worked as a nurse but yearned for something more. She wanted to become a spy.

That chance came.

Emma needed to infiltrate the Confederate camp stationed near her own. So, Emma did what Emma knew how to do well. She changed her identity. Using silver nitrate to darken her skin, Franklin Thompson became Cuff, a southern black man. And then she wandered near the Confederate camp, expecting to be picked up for some work need. Which she was.

Over a few days in camp, she learned important information, including the Army building “Quaker Guns,” or cannons that looked real from a distance but were just wooden logs in reality. Then she escaped from the camp and returned to her own, where she told leadership what she learned.

Emma, or Franklin, or Cuff, or an Irish peddler by the name of Bridget O’Shea, which was a future identity, would take part in eleven spy missions during the war.

At the end of the war, in 1865, she published a popular fictional account of her experiences as a nurse and a spy. She married in 1867 and thereafter, moved often. Emma was eventually granted a military pension, the only woman to have ever received a regular pension from the Civil War, and when she died in 1898, was buried with honors at Washington Cemetery in Houston, Texas.

There have been many books written about her and one movie. Still, we should know her better.


427 posted on 05/06/2024 8:57:24 AM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell God how big your storm is ~~. tell the storm how BIG your GOD is! )
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To: exit82

Sarah Emma Edmonds specialized in disguises. It was a way of life you could say. One which began in her teens.

Back then, she lived on a farm in New Brunswick, Canada, being raised by a doting mother and an abusive father who resented Emma for not being born a boy. He wasn’t good to her. And when he tried to marry her off at fifteen, she decided to leave.

She traveled alone to the U.S. And this is where Emma Edmonds became Franklin Thompson, probably because Franklin had more opportunities than Emma did. And Franklin became a bible salesman living in Hartford, Connecticut, and then a bookseller in Flint, Michigan.

Soon the Civil War started. Emma, an ardent supporter of the Union, felt a duty to serve. So, she joined. As Franklin, of course. Physical checks were sparse then.

Emma worked as a nurse but yearned for something more. She wanted to become a spy.

That chance came.

Emma needed to infiltrate the Confederate camp stationed near her own. So, Emma did what Emma knew how to do well. She changed her identity. Using silver nitrate to darken her skin, Franklin Thompson became Cuff, a southern black man. And then she wandered near the Confederate camp, expecting to be picked up for some work need. Which she was.

Over a few days in camp, she learned important information, including the Army building “Quaker Guns,” or cannons that looked real from a distance but were just wooden logs in reality. Then she escaped from the camp and returned to her own, where she told leadership what she learned.

Emma, or Franklin, or Cuff, or an Irish peddler by the name of Bridget O’Shea, which was a future identity, would take part in eleven spy missions during the war.

At the end of the war, in 1865, she published a popular fictional account of her experiences as a nurse and a spy. She married in 1867 and thereafter, moved often. Emma was eventually granted a military pension, the only woman to have ever received a regular pension from the Civil War, and when she died in 1898, was buried with honors at Washington Cemetery in Houston, Texas.

There have been many books written about her and one movie. Still, we should know her better.


428 posted on 05/06/2024 8:57:58 AM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell God how big your storm is ~~. tell the storm how BIG your GOD is! )
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