SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: longnshort who wrote (117678)11/15/2011 9:42:11 PM
From: LLCF  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 224757
 
You seemed enamoured with all sorts of sordid acts... of course you have shown that repeatedly in a psychotic manner... so nothing new there. Have at it... and let me know when you and your wacko candidates endorse someone reasonable... i.e. one of mine: Paul, Huntsman, Gingrich.

Of just keep head in sand... maybe your friend Sandusky will give you a little push from behind to get in line.

LOL

DAK



To: longnshort who wrote (117678)11/16/2011 11:11:11 AM
From: joseffy4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224757
 
Remember that Tough Ole Coot in Virginia Who Refused to Lower Old Glory...?
.............................................................................
November 16, 2011
reaganiterepublicanresistance.blogspot.com

"Leadership is about submission to duty ---- not elevation to power"




Ever met an actual hero before?

Here's your chance...

You might remember a news story that began a couple years back, re. the 'stubborn' old man who defied his homeowners association, refusing to take down the 21-foot flagpole and full-size US flag he'd recently erected on his property.



A little bit of background might help you understand his point: the man in question was born Van T. Barfoot -a Choctaw Indian, actually- in Edinburg, Mississippi on June 15, 1919.




Twenty-five years later, a world away near Carano, Italy, the lanky, 6'4", Van T. Barfoot -who enthusiastically volunteered to enlist in the US Army in 1940- was looking to outflank Nazi machine gun positions which were raining-down lead upon his fellow soldiers.His unit had been battered in amphibious landings at Sicily, Salerno, and Anzio.

But nicknamed the "Minefield Warrior" by his men, Barfoot's resourceful memorization of minefields and other Axis defenses while on night patrol made him extremely valuable. With the Americans pinned-down by withering enemy fire outside Anzio on May 23. 1944, Van T Barfoot requested and subsequently received permission to advance through the minefields that lay at the foot of the German defensive position on his own.

Working his way through the mines and then down the Wehrmacht's defensive line, he single-handedly eliminated three gunner's nests, hopping right into the trench with a tommy gun once, where a whole (shocked) company promptly surrendered to him. Lt Barfoot returned to American lines with 17 fresh German POWs in tow.

Later that same day, the young Lieutenant directly confronted a German tank column, fearlessly stepping out into the middle of the street with a bazooka and putting a big hole in the lead Tiger (heavy) tank @ 75 yds.

Spooked, two more behind it then bailed for the flanks as the massively outgunned Barfoot had endured a vicious armored counter-attack upon his freshly gained positions. He had accomplished this feat with little more than sheer audacity.

Afterwards, Lt Barfoot slung two injured commanders he happened-upon across over his shoulders, carrying them a mile to safety...



Even all that didn't make much news back then, given the overwhelming scope and scale of WWII, but those historic acts of gallantry did earn Van T. Barfoot -who retired as a colonel after also serving in Korea and Vietnam as a helicopter pilot- our armed forces' highest award, the Congressional Medal of Honor.

This astonishingly brave man also wears Silver and Bronze Stars for 'valor in the face of the enemy'- in-addition to three (!) Purple Hearts.

clydemcdonnell

What did make the national news though was when a 90-year-old Van T Barfoot erected a simple flagpole in 2009. His suburban Virginia homeowners' association only allowed 'house-mounted brackets', locking horns with Barfoot over the issue.

What were they possibly thinking... anybody can tell you that 'backing down' against principle is not how it works with this guy: the discrepancy was on it's way to court, and eventually had Senators and others weighing-in on his behalf. In the end, it was the Sussex Square homeowners' association backed down in December, 2009.... and the flag still flies.

Nothing less than an inspiration to us all...




May God Bless You, sir