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Gentle Reader:



I realize my opinions and the wording used to express them may cause tender souls some distress. Therefore, in the spirit of brotherly concern for my fellow man, I advise anyone who takes offense at any portion of this blog to go piss up a rope.



About Me

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The title of this blog refers to the routine evolution of pressurizing & emptying to sea a human waste tank of an American submarine built prior to the mid 70's. If you don't do it right you wind up covered with excrement. The same can be said for blogging at times. Been there, done that, got the tee shirt. I'm a retired Senior Chief A-ganger from the US Submarine Service. Revert back in the Catholic Church. Recovering alcoholic. Living in Texas. 59 years old, happily married with three children, all eight years of age or under. Fully "retired", the wife works while I take care of the kids and home.

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Monday, November 30, 2009

R.I.P. Staff Sgt. Stephen L. Murphy




Name: Marine Staff Sgt. Stephen L. Murphy

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Age: 36

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From: Jaffrey, N.H.

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Assigned to 2nd Intelligence Battalion, II Marine Expeditionary Force Headquarters Group, Camp Lejeune, N.C.

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Incident: Marine Staff Sgt. Stephen L. Murphy died Nov. 9 as a result of a non-hostile incident in Anbar province, Iraq.

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Died: November 09, 2009

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(Taken from www.ledgertranscript.com) TROY — Staff Sgt. Stephen L. Murphy, 36, of Troy and formerly of Jaffrey died Nov. 8, 2009, while serving in Iraq during Operation Iraqi Freedom.

He enlisted in the Marine Corps in February 1993. During his 16 years with the Marine Corp, he served in the U.S. European Command, Marine Corps Forces Pacific, U.S. Forces Korea and Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Born in Gardner, Mass., April 27, 1973, he was the son of Carol A. (Murray) Murphy and Steve Packard.

He grew up in Troy, and Jaffrey, attending local schools and was a graduate of Conant High School. While attending high school he participated on the school’s ski team and track and field team.

In his early childhood he was a member of the Marlborough Cub Scouts and participated in the local 4-H Group for several years.

He also attended Camp Fatima, and served as an altar boy at St. Joseph Church in Fitzwilliam.

He enjoyed playing his guitar, a prize possession, modeled after one played by Ozzy Osbourne guitarist Randy Rhodes.

He was an avid cross-country skier and while in the Marine Corps, he was training to reach his goal of participating on the Olympic cross-country ski team.

He especially enjoyed spending time with his many friends.

He is survived by his mother, Carol A. Murphy of Troy; three sisters, Lisa Voisnet of Greenville, N.C., and Shelley Murphy and Christina Metcalf, both of Hartford, Conn., an uncle, John Murray of Westfield, Mass.; several nieces, nephews and cousins.

A Mass of Christian burial will be celebrated Wednesday, at 11 a.m. at Immaculate Conception Church, School Street, Troy.

Burial with full military honors will follow in Mountain View Cemetery, Route 12, Troy.

Calling hours are from 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at Foley Funeral Home, 49 Court St., Keene.

Memorial donations may be made to Toys For Tots, Company B, 1st Battalion, 25th Marines, 4th MarDiv, 64 Harvey Road, Suite 107, Londonderry 03053, or to a charity of one’s choice.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

R.I.P.

KILLED IN ACTION: NOVEMBER 8 - 14, 2009 Please pray for the peaceful repose of the souls of those who served our nation with honor, and remember also those who mourn their loss.

Staff Sgt. Stephen L. Murphy, 36, NH
Ch. Wrnt. Offc. Mathew C. Heffelfinger, 29, ID
Chief Warrant Officer Earl R. Scott III, 24, FL
Spc. Christopher J. Coffland, 43, MD
Lance Cpl. Shawn P. Hefner, 22, TX
Sgt. Benjamin W. Sherman, 21, MA
Lance Cpl. Justin J. Swanson, 21, CA
Rifleman Samuel John Bassett, 20, England

May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

A document worthy of signing...

The Manhattan Declaration
A call to Christian conscience

R.I.P. Spc. Julian L. Berisford




Name: Army Spc. Julian L. Berisford

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Age: 25

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From: Benwood, W.Va.

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Assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 509th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, Fort Richardson, Alaska

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Incident: Army Spc. Julian L. Berisford died Nov. 4 in Paktika province, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained when insurgents attacked his unit using small arms and rocket-propelled grenade fires.

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Died: November 04, 2009

(Taken from www.theintelligencer.net) BENWOOD - The music of a bagpipe echoed through the hills of Marshall County on Monday as family, friends and fellow veterans escorted the body of U.S. Army Spc. Julian Lee Guthrie Berisford to his final resting place.

Berisford, 25, received full military honors as he was laid to rest in a family plot on Fishers Lane in Marshall County. He was killed Nov. 4 while on active duty in Afghanistan.

Hundreds attended Berisford's funeral, held at 11 a.m. Monday at Grisell Funeral Home and Crematory in Moundsville. Afterward, a long motorcade - like the one that traveled with his body from the Wheeling-Ohio County Airport to Marshall County on Friday - again accompanied Berisford on his final journey. A bagpiper played solemnly as attendees made their way to the grave site, walking behind the flag-draped casket.

Following a short committal service by Pastor Rob Berk of Trinity Episcopal Church, a bugler from the 249th Army Band in Morgantown played "Taps." An honor guard from the 16th Cavalry at Ft. Knox, Ky., fired a three-shot salute then folded the American flag that covered the casket. The flag was presented to Berisford's wife, the former Gina Marie Yankovich.

Berisford was the son of Jule and Shelley Berisford of Moundsville and a 2002 John Marshall High School graduate. He attended West Liberty State College before entering the military in 2007. He was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 509th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division based at Ft. Richardson, Alaska.

He and his widow have a daughter, 1-year-old Mya Jean.

During the Monday ceremony, Berisford was posthumously awarded a Bronze Star for his outstanding service by Maj. Gen. Brian Keller, who came from Bethesda, Md., to attend the event. In addition, he was awarded a Purple Heart, Army Good Conduct Medals, an Afghanistan Campaign commendation, Global War on Terror Commendation and NATO Campaign commendation. Also in attendance, Capt. Thomas Vetter from the 509th.

At the conclusion of the ceremony, Gina Berisford released three white doves. Keller then personally thanked the honor guard members for paying homage to the fallen hero.

Berisford was fatally wounded Nov. 4 when his patrol came under attack while he was on active duty in Pakitika Province, Afghanistan. He had been deployed to Afghanistan for his first tour of duty in March and was set to return home to Benwood on Saturday, Nov. 14, for a visit to celebrate Mya's 1st birthday.

Instead Berisford's body was returned to Marshall County Friday with thousands of people lining the motorcade route from Ohio County.

According to family and friends, Berisford was more than a soldier: He was a Mountaineers fan; an outdoorsman; a music lover and an amateur guitarist. He also was a member of the Trinity Episcopal Church of Moundsville.

Memorial contributions are being accepted on Mya's behalf. They can be sent in care of Marshall County FCU, 910 Third St., Moundsville, WV 26041.

R.I.P. Spc. Gary L. Gooch




Name: Army Spc. Gary L. Gooch

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Age: 22

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From: Ocala, Fla.

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Assigned to the 1st Battalion, 17th Infantry Regiment, 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, Fort Lewis, Wash.

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Incident: Army Spc. Gary L. Gooch died Nov. 5 in Jelewar, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device.

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Died: November 05, 2009

(Taken from www.gainesville.com) OCALA -- An Ocala soldier was killed when his vehicle was attacked with an improvised explosive device, the Department of Defense confirmed Monday.

Spc. Gary L. Gooch Jr., 22, of Ocala and Spc. Aaron S. Aamot, 22, of Custer, Wash. died Nov. 5 in Jelewar, Afghanistan. They were assigned to the 1st Battalion, 17th Infantry Regiment, 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, Fort Lewis, Wash.

The brigade deployed to Afghanistan in July 2009. This was the first deployment for both soldiers.

Gooch, a 2006 graduate of Dunnellon High School, is remembered by family and friends as someone who was always fun to be with.

“Gary was truly wonderful, always getting people to laugh no matter what the situation,” his sister Keely Murphy said by telephone on Monday. “Mom, Gary and I were like the Three Stooges.”

Murphy got out of the U.S. Army four months ago, having served in both Iraq and Afghanistan. Her unit was scheduled to be deployed to Afghanistan in 2010. Had she remained in the Army, she said she and her brother would have been in Afghanistan at the same time.

“I am just glad I got out to be here for mom,” Murphy said. “She raised a wonderful, wonderful boy. She did a wonderful job.”

Samantha Cruz and Gooch became friends at Dunnellon High School.

“He was just a very fun person. Everybody knew him. He didn’t stick to a particular crowd. He was everybody’s friend,” Cruz said. “I am going to miss him a lot. He was a very good person. I wish he was still here.”

Gooch enlisted in the U.S. Army on Aug. 14, 2006 in Jacksonville, Fla. He reported to Fort Benning, Ga. on Aug. 29, 2006 for infantry training, then reported to Fort Lewis, Wash. on Jan. 9, 2007 and was assigned as a Grenadier to the 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division.

Gooch’s military awards and decorations include the Army Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, and Army Service Ribbon.

R.I.P. Spc. Aaron S. Aamot




Name: Army Spc. Aaron S. Aamot

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Age: 22

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From: Custer, Wash.

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Assigned to the 1st Battalion, 17th Infantry Regiment, 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, Fort Lewis, Wash.

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Incident: Army Spc. Aaron S. Aamot died Nov. 5 in Jelewar, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device.

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Died: November 05, 2009

(Taken from www.thenewstribune.com)A 2006 Ferndale High School graduate was killed in Afghanistan Thursday, Nov. 5, when the Stryker vehicle he was driving went over a buried explosive, according to his family.

Spc. Aaron Aamot, 22, was in the 1st Battalion, 17th Infantry Regiment and was part of the 5th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division based in Fort Lewis. He had been serving in Afghanistan since mid-July on his first deployment in the war.

Another soldier also was killed in the explosion from the improvised device buried in the road just northwest of Kandahar, said Aamot's brother, Matt Aamot.

The U.S. Department of Defense has not yet released information about Aaron Aamot's death.

Aamot's parents, Mark and Julie Aamot, were notified Thursday evening that their son was killed in action.

Aaron Aamot grew up in Custer, the fifth of eight siblings. He joined the military shortly after graduating from high school. Matt Aamot, 33, believed his brother saw the military as a stepping stone into a career in law enforcement, which he hoped to pursue when he got out of service in the next year.

Aamot had been home on leave from Oct. 11 to Oct. 25, and for that his family is thankful.

"The best thing is we were able to see him a couple weeks ago," Matt Aamot said. "Everyone is taking it hard, but we're Christians, so it's a temporary interlude until we see him again. Our faith will help us out."

The family planned to go to Dover, Del., Friday night to bring their son's body back home. A memorial service is being planned for next week.

"I'm pretty heartbroken, but I'm proud of his service," said Matt Aamot, who also served in the military. "We weren't in a combat zone, but I served in Bosnia in 1996. Aaron was trying to do same thing we were doing there: bring folks peace and freedom they'd never experienced. So that comforts me a little bit."

The grief was still setting in for Matt Aamot, who found it hard to believe his little brother was gone.

"I still think of him as a kid, even though he's 22," he said. "He was a real fun kid. He was great with his nephews and nieces, just easygoing. He was a nice brother. I'm honored to have been his brother."

The two shared interests in the military, as well as 4-H Club and FFA. Aaron raised pheasant and bobwhite quail and he had his own golden raspberry field on his parents' small farm.

"4-H was a big part of his life. Raising and showing chickens at the fair was a big deal for him," he said. "He kind of took after me."

Matt also remembered his brother's skill at baking, particularly blackberry pies. He enjoyed Civil War re-enactments, fighting on the Union side, of course. And he loved remote control anything - cars, tanks, trucks, the works.

"I'll miss having my brother around," Matt said. "He was one of those rough-and-tumble, happy-go-lucky kids."

Ferndale High School agriculture instructor and FFA advisor Mitch Davis was shocked and saddened to hear of Aamot's death Friday.

"He was a good kid, a hard worker, a real trustworthy kid," said Davis, who taught Aamot in shop class. "He was willing to give a helping hand to anybody who needed it. He was one of those guys that if you said something, he'd go do it and he'd do a good job at it, so you wouldn't have to worry."

Aaron Aamot is also survived by brothers Daniel, Benjamin, Ethan, Dale and Joshua, as well as his sister, Nellie Huisman.

Aamot is believed to be the first Whatcom County resident killed in action in Afghanistan. Cpl. Jonathan Santos, who died serving in 2004, is the only Whatcom County resident to have been killed during the war in Iraq.

Friday, November 27, 2009

R.I.P. Sgt. Charles I. Cartwright




Name: Marine Sgt. Charles I. Cartwright

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Age: 26

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From: Union Bridge, Md.

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Assigned to 1st Marine Special Operations Battalion, U.S. Marine Corps Forces Special Operations Command, Camp Pendleton, Calif.

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Incident: Marine Sgt. Charles I. Cartwright died Nov. 7 while supporting combat operations in Farah province, Afghanistan.

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Died: November 07, 2009

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(Taken from www.wjz.com) It's an especially difficult Veterans Day for one Frederick County community that has just learned a local soldier has died in Afghanistan.

Cartwright is a decorated Marine from rural Frederick County where he attended Walkersville High School and was very popular.

"He was very charismatic and enthusiastic about life. He walked into a room, the room stopped, Charlie's here," said Beth Slagle, friend.

The high school's flag flew at half-mast Wednesday, and the students and faculty stopped for a moment of silence for Cartwright.

The former wrestler stayed in touch, visiting faculty between his five tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.

People say he talked of being a Marine since middle school.

"Charlie lived the mission. He had a dream to be a Marine. He took his job and his oath to his country to heart, and he lived it," said Susan Pardo, former teacher.

Cartwright's military record is exemplary. He had two Purple Hearts after being injured twice and he had a medal for heroism for saving the life of another.

Trained as a sniper, Cartwright worked in Special Operations. He died Saturday in combat in Farah Province, Afghanistan.

His former wrestling coach says he worked hard as a team member and carried that drive into his adult life.

"When he was with us at Walkersville wrestling team, he was a very dedicated team player, very intense wrestler. He worked very hard," said Bryan Biehl, wrestling coach.

Sgt. Cartwright's parents will be holding a memorial service Monday in Union Bridge.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Happy Thanksgiving


.....WHAAATTTT??

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

SEAL Team members up on charges...

...after accusations were made by a walking shitbag.

(Taken from www.foxnews.com) Navy SEALs have secretly captured one of the most wanted terrorists in Iraq — the alleged mastermind of the murder and mutilation of four Blackwater USA security guards in Fallujah in 2004. And three of the SEALs who captured him are now facing criminal charges, sources told FoxNews.com.

The three, all members of the Navy's elite commando unit, have refused non-judicial punishment — called a captain's mast — and have requested a trial by court-martial.

Ahmed Hashim Abed, whom the military code-named "Objective Amber," told investigators he was punched by his captors — and he had the bloody lip to prove it.

Now, instead of being lauded for bringing to justice a high-value target, three of the SEAL commandos, all enlisted, face assault charges and have retained lawyers.

Matthew McCabe, a Special Operations Petty Officer Second Class (SO-2), is facing three charges: dereliction of performance of duty for willfully failing to safeguard a detainee, making a false official statement, and assault.

Petty Officer Jonathan Keefe, SO-2, is facing charges of dereliction of performance of duty and making a false official statement.

Petty Officer Julio Huertas, SO-1, faces those same charges and an additional charge of impediment of an investigation.

Neal Puckett, an attorney representing McCabe, told Fox News the SEALs are being charged for allegedly giving the detainee a “punch in the gut.”

“I don’t know how they’re going to bring this detainee to the United States and give us our constitutional right to confrontation in the courtroom,” Puckett said. “But again, we have terrorists getting their constitutional rights in New York City, but I suspect that they’re going to deny these SEALs their right to confrontation in a military courtroom in Virginia.”

The three SEALs will be arraigned separately on Dec. 7. Another three SEALs — two officers and an enlisted sailor — have been identified by investigators as witnesses but have not been charged.

FoxNews.com obtained the official handwritten statement from one of the three witnesses given on Sept. 3, hours after Abed was captured and still being held at the SEAL base at Camp Baharia. He was later taken to a cell in the U.S.-operated Green Zone in Baghdad.

The SEAL told investigators he had showered after the mission, gone to the kitchen and then decided to look in on the detainee.

"I gave the detainee a glance over and then left," the SEAL wrote. "I did not notice anything wrong with the detainee and he appeared in good health."

Lt. Col. Holly Silkman, spokeswoman for the special operations component of U.S. Central Command, confirmed Tuesday to FoxNews.com that three SEALs have been charged in connection with the capture of a detainee. She said their court martial is scheduled for January.

United States Central Command declined to discuss the detainee, but a legal source told FoxNews.com that the detainee was turned over to Iraqi authorities, to whom he made the abuse complaints. He was then returned to American custody. The SEAL leader reported the charge up the chain of command, and an investigation ensued.

The source said intelligence briefings provided to the SEALs stated that "Objective Amber" planned the 2004 Fallujah ambush, and "they had been tracking this guy for some time."

The Fallujah atrocity came to symbolize the brutality of the enemy in Iraq and the degree to which a homegrown insurgency was extending its grip over Iraq.

The four Blackwater agents were transporting supplies for a catering company when they were ambushed and killed by gunfire and grenades. Insurgents burned the bodies and dragged them through the city. They hanged two of the bodies on a bridge over the Euphrates River for the world press to photograph.

Intelligence sources identified Abed as the ringleader, but he had evaded capture until September.

The military is sensitive to charges of detainee abuse highlighted in the Abu Ghraib prison scandal. The Navy charged four SEALs with abuse in 2004 in connection with detainee treatment.

You. Must. Be. Shitting. Me.

Has anyone heard of such charges being leveled by prisoners in the custody of the terrorists? Stupid question because there are no such prisoners, anyone captured by those scum are tortured, mutilated and killed. Period.

Poor baby, got 'im a booboo from those nasty SEALS. Awww.

They should turn him over to the families of his victims. One hour per family.

When the hell do we start actively backing our military involved in Iraq & Afghanistan? Let's stop the bullshit, remove the restrictions on them and let them do what the hell they're trained for.

Instead they're constantly micromanaged, given minimal trust, constantly second guessed in their prosecution of the war and generally treated as if they were criminals.

As proof of this I'd cite the crap following the Abu Gharib fiasco. First of all, how many folks know that hit the MSM while the military was already engaged in an investigation of possible wrongdoing? Far too many clueless civilians feel it was the MSM who brought it to light.

After it hit the newstands every fool who could get air time was solemnly pronouncing how we were no better than the regime of Sadam Hussein. As if the fratboy level pranks pulled by a bunch of imbeciles was equivalent to the genuine torture inflicted by Hussein's henchmen. Torture that resulted in loss of life and limb.

Sorry, but I don't think posing naked in a pyramid is the same as having an eye gouged out. Maybe I miss the fine "nuance" necessary but there ya go.

I'd further cite the requirements our troops have for not leveling a weapons storage facility if it also does double duty as a mosque. Once again, you have got to be shitting me.

Another example? Remember the Marine who caught hell after an MSM embedded photographer reported on his shooting a severely wounded terrorist in answer to the question, "Is he dead?" and replying, "He is now."

It's a war. The guy was not an innocent noncombatant. He could have been making his last act the activation of a grenade to take that Marine and some others (including the dipshit photographer) out of this life.

But the Marine was pilloried because, "We don't do that sort of thing, we're so much better."

I'll agree we can be so much more stupid at times.

Our "leaders" in Foggy Bottom should give general directions to the military. Something along the lines of, "We need this country subdued, give us an estimate of what you'll need. After you get it call us back when the fighting is over. Try to not demolish too many things we might have to rebuild."

That would be infinetly preferable, more cost effective and supportive of our troops than the present crap as epitomized by this absurd story regarding the SEAL team members.

Our military is at war while our nation is at the mall. That is just flat wrong.

R.I.P. Spc. Jonathan M. Sylvestre




Name: Army Spc. Jonathon M. Sylvestre

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Age: 21

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From: Colorado Springs, Colo.

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Assigned to the 1st Battalion, 10th Field Artillery Regiment, 3rd Heavy Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Benning, Ga.

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Incident: Army Spc. Jonathon M. Sylvestre died Nov. 2 in Kut, Iraq, of injuries sustained from a noncombat-related incident.

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Died: November 02, 2009

R.I.P. Staff Sgt. Amy C. Tirador




Name: Army Staff Sgt. Amy C. Tirador

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Age: 29

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From: Albany, N.Y.

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Assigned to the 209th Military Intelligence Company, 1st Squadron, 14th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, Fort Lewis, Wash.

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Incident: Army Staff Sgt. Amy C. Tirador died Nov. 4 in Kirkush, Iraq, of injuries sustained from a non-combat-related incident.

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Died: November 04, 2009

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(Taken from www.thenewstribune.com) A 29-year-old Fort Lewis soldier on her second tour of duty in Iraq died Wednesday in what the Department of Defense is calling a noncombat incident, according to a news release issued Friday.

Staff Sgt. Amy C. Tirador, of Colonie, N.Y., died in Kirkush, the release said. She was a member of the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division – the Army’s original Stryker brigade – which deployed to Iraq in August for the third time since 2003.

Tirador was assigned to the 209th Military Intelligence Company. Family members said she worked as an Arabic-speaking interrogator.

According to unit records, she enlisted in March 1999 and reported to Fort Lewis in January 2008. Along the way, she was trained and served as a medic, a tracked-vehicle driver and mechanic, and finally as a military intelligence collector with Arabic-language training.

In 2004, she was credited with saving an American soldier shot during a convoy mission, according to military reports cited by her hometown newspaper, the Albany Times Union.

“I’m very proud of my daughter,” her father, Gerard Seyboth, told the Times Union on Thursday.

She met her husband, Mickey, while stationed in Germany, and they married two years ago, according to the newspaper.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Lesbian to get ex-lover's child (and it ain't hers)

VIRGINIA, November 24, 2009 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A Vermont judge on Friday granted sole custody of a Virginia woman's 7-year-old daughter to be transferred to the woman's former lesbian lover by the end of this year.

Lisa Miller had given birth to her daughter Isabella through artificial insemination while still living in a civil union with Janet Jenkins in Vermont, but left Jenkins and the lesbian lifestyle about a year later. Jenkins, who has no biological or legal relationship with Isabella, later pursued custody of Miller's daughter through the courts.

Judge William Cohen issued the order despite Miller's insistence that Isabella has shown signs of trauma from previous court-ordered visitations with Jenkins, including a complaint from Isabella that Jenkins forced the girl to bathe naked with her. It was for this reason, according to Miller, that she refused to comply with the visitations that Cohen had ordered.

Miller is expected to give up Isabella by January 1, 2010.

Miller's attorney, Mathew Staver, told the Rutland Herald Friday that Miller would appeal Cohen's decision to the Vermont Supreme Court, while contesting in the Virginia Court of Appeals against the enforcement of Vermont orders conflicting with Virginia law. The Virginia court will hear oral arguments December 9 in Alexandria.

"We're certainly not happy with the order. I think Lisa is devastated that the court would grant custody to Jenkins - a person who Isabella doesn't know," said Staver. "The only person known to her is her mother."

"We will ask the court to stay enforcement while the appeal moves forward. It's premature to set dates while the appeal is pending."

Concerned Women for America president Wendy Wright condemned the ruling, saying the Vermont judge "showed little understanding of the case or sensitivity to children" by claiming "the change in parental custody, which includes moving to a new home, school, and state to live with a virtual stranger, would cause some disruption for Isabella but would not be out of the norm for a child."

"This decision could influence custody battles beyond Vermont," said Wright. "It treats a partner in a civil union no differently than a biological or legal parent in a custody battle.

Now if it were a hetero man who wanted custody of his daughter, lotsa luck. This judge is pandering to the cause of the gays. Period.

R.I.P. Spc. Tony Carrasco Jr.



(Taken from www.lcsun-news.com)LAS CRUCES - As the American flag waved at half-staff over Gadsden High School's annual Veterans Day assembly on Tuesday, students who gathered with faculty and staff to pay tribute to those who have served were reminded that sometimes war hits much too close to home.

During the ceremony, which honored veterans around the world along with more than a dozen in attendance, the assembled students observed a moment of silence for Army Spc. Tony Carrasco Jr., who was killed Nov. 4 in Ad Dawr, Iraq, after being hit by sniper fire, according to Army officials. Carrasco, 25, was a 2003 graduate of GHS.

Carrasco's former teacher at GHS, Christina Lessau, who described herself as a close family friend, spoke during the ceremony, describing Carrasco as man who was protective of his family and of his country.

"Tony is one of my heroes," she said in a voice strained with emotion. "Today we dedicate this to Tony Carrasco, who was a unique human being."

Lessau wiped away tears as she embraced members of Carrasco's family, who received red carnations and purple irises from the students.

In honor of Carrasco and Maj. Eduardo Caraveo, 52, a former counselor at the school who was killed in last week's shooting at Fort Hood, members of the Navy JROTC Drill Team at Gadsden High School performed a maneuver patterned after the aerial salute known as the missing man formation, in which one jet abruptly veers away from the formation.

Petty Officer 1st Class Rodrigo Robles, 16, a junior, represented the "missing man" in Tuesday's performance, which also honored all fallen military personnel.

"It was a great honor doing it," he said after the assembly. "It was just to thank them for the job they do."

Carrasco and his wife, Johana, and stepchildren were stationed at Fort Riley, Kan. Members of Carrasco's family declined to be interviewed, but in comments provided by Lessau, Johana Carrasco, who is expecting the couple's child, described her husband as the love of her life, who treated her and her children with love and respect.

Other family members expressed their shock at his death, and described Carrasco as a happy, playful person. His parents praised his bravery in choosing to join the Army and fight for freedom.

The Army lists Berino, N.M., as Carrasco's hometown, but Lessau said he and his family lived in nearby Anthony, N.M. Carrasco was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division in Fort Riley.

Carrasco is survived by his parents, Antonio and Juana Carrasco; wife, Johana Carrasco, and unborn child; stepdaughter, Ilse, and stepson, Axel; sisters, Rosie Carrasco (Raymond Flores), Susana Carrasco (Adrian Cardona) and Jessica Carrasco (Steven Lopez), nephew Raymond Flores Jr. and niece Kayla Flores, as well as other family members and friends.

A viewing for Carrasco will be held 2 p.m. Friday at Iglesia Jesucristo Apostolica in Berino. A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the same church.

Monday, November 23, 2009

R.I.P.

KILLED IN ACTION: NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2009 Please pray for the peaceful repose of the souls of those who served our nation with honor, and remember also those who mourn their loss.

Spc. Tony Carrasco Jr., 25, NM
Staff Sgt. Amy C. Tirador, 29, NY
Spc. Jonathon M. Sylvestre, 21, CO
Rifleman Philip Allen, 20, England
Sgt. Charles I. Cartwright, 26, MD
Spc. Aaron S. Aamot, 22, WA
Spc. Gary L. Gooch Jr., 22, FL
Sgt. Phillip Scott, 30, England
Spc. Julian L. Berisford, 25, WV
Cpl. Steven Boote, 22, England
Warrant Officer Class 1 Darren Chant, 40, England
Guardsman James Major, 18, England
Sgt. Matthew Telford, 37, England
Cpl. Nicholas Webster-Smith, 24, Wales

May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Attorney for 9/11 jihadist; "They'll use the trial to air criticisms..."

(Taken from the YAHOO news service) NEW YORK – The five men facing trial in the Sept. 11 attacks will plead not guilty so that they can air their criticisms of U.S. foreign policy, the lawyer for one of the defendants said Sunday.

Scott Fenstermaker, the lawyer for accused terrorist Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, said the men would not deny their role in the 2001 attacks but "would explain what happened and why they did it." (Explain? Expect a diatribe.)

The U.S. Justice Department announced earlier this month that Ali and four other men accused of murdering nearly 3,000 people in the deadliest terrorist attack in the U.S. will face a civilian federal trial just blocks from the site of the destroyed World Trade Center.

Ali, also known as Ammar al-Baluchi, is a nephew of professed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

Mohammed, Ali and the others will explain "their assessment of American foreign policy," Fenstermaker said.

"Their assessment is negative," he said. (Really? Who'd a thunk it?)

Fenstermaker met with Ali last week at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. He has not spoken with the others but said the men have discussed the trial among themselves.

Fenstermaker was first quoted in The New York Times in Sunday's editions.

Critics of Attorney General Eric Holder's decision to try the men in a New York City civilian courthouse have warned that the trial would provide the defendants with a propaganda platform. (Which is exactly what is happening.)

Dean Boyd, a spokesman for the Department of Justice, said Sunday that while the men may attempt to use the trial to express their views, "we have full confidence in the ability of the courts and in particular the federal judge who may preside over the trial to ensure that the proceeding is conducted appropriately and with minimal disruption, as federal courts have done in the past." (Horseshit. Look for the present administration use this to deflect attention from whatever is their most pressing PR problem at the time. Expect Bushbashing to continue.)

Last week, the Senate Judiciary Committee questioned Holder for hours about his decision to send the five 9/11 suspects to New York for trial.

Critics of Holder's decision — mostly Republicans — argued the trial will give Mohammed and his co-defendants a world stage to spout hateful rhetoric. Holder said such concerns are misplaced, and any pronouncements by the suspects would only make them look worse. (He knows this how?)

"I have every confidence that the nation and the world will see him for the coward that he is," Holder told the committee. "I'm not scared of what Khalid Sheikh Mohammed has to say at trial — and no one else needs to be, either." (What a putz. Hey dummy, remember the furor over the supposed flushing of Korans down the toilet? How did the world see that fantasy?)

The attorney general said he does not believe holding the trial in New York — at a federal courthouse that has seen a number of high-profile terrorism trials in recent decades — will increase the risk of terror attacks there. (My ass. The Big Apple will become the #1 target of opportunity for every fired-up jihadist that hears the crap coming out of their fellow followers of the Pedophile Prophet.)

Here's my prediction, may God grant I be completely wrong. The jihadists will use the trial as a pulpit for their "grievances" to be aired. Islamists the world over will hang on every word and act out violently as they see fit. The present Administration in D.C. will equivocate, try to avoid being "judgmental" and the President's Apology Tour will continue with a new phase. The "Blame America First" mentality will shift into high gear.

This won't stop a new rash of bombings and killings now happening here in the continental USA. When they do happen, Homeland Security will fall all over itself to insure the safety of Muslims within the country. Since the folks at HS already believe potential right-wing extremists pose a greater threat than anyone else, take a guess at who'll they'll go after first.

Look for the suspension of habeus corpus for starters after that. There'll be a mobilizing of a "civilian corp" to protect the country, ostensibly to avoid conflict with the doctrine of Posse Comitatus. Volunteers from SEIU, ACORN and the like will swell the ranks. I wonder if they'll be issued brown shirted uniforms? Then look for an increasing number of government designated troublemakers to be taken into custody.

By the time 2012 rolls around no opportunity provided by this self-generated crisis will be left unexploited.

The genesis of all of this tinfoil hat thinking of mine is the thought that "the ends justifies the means" is a major mindset in this administration. I've no doubt there are lofty goals in mind, the desire for peace on Earth and goodwill to all. But I've also no doubt that if it takes spilling a little blood here and there it'll be willingly accepted. Hey, our present Commander-in-Chief has such a disdain for human life he voted AGAINST the Illinois version of the Born Alive Act that procures basic medical care for babies that survive abortion. If that doesn't denote a severe emotional disconnect with his fellow human beings I'll eat this keyboard.

So beginning with that mindset, what price would be too high to achieve the goals of world peace, brotherhood among all, etc? Good intentions true enough, but there are roads paved with those intentions.

It's zealous thinking at it's best. Zealots, no matter what their beliefs, make me nervous because of the "ends justifies the means" rationale.

Stock up on the bullets, beans, Bibles and rosaries, (the last item is optional). We'll be needing them all in the showdowns that come to each of us.

I really wish I didn't believe this crap will happen. Really, someone tell me to take off the tinfoil hat and give me some reassurance it's just my paranoia kicking in.

Now I'm going to go pray for a while. In all honesty, I've really amped up on that in the last year.

R.I.P. Sgt. Eduviges G. Wolf




(Taken from www.examiner.com) Army Sgt. Eduviges G. Wolf, 24, a wife and mother from the Los Angeles area was killed Sunday in Afghanistan's Kunar province when insurgents attacked her vehicle with a rocket-propelled grenade.

Wolf, who was from the city of Hawthorne and had a husband and two young daughters, was assigned to the 704th Brigade Support Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, out of Fort Carson, Colo.

Her husband Josh, whom she met at the Fort Bragg, Colo. Army base, was serving in another unit in Afghanistan at the time of her death. He has since left the country to be with the couple's two young daughters, Valerie, 1, and Isabel 3, who are staying with his mother in South Dakota.

Sergeant Eduviges Wolf bravely fought to defend our country overseas, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said in a prepared statement. "Her honorable service to our country will forever be remembered with great respect.”
A Fort Carson spokeswoman says this is the deadliest single month for the post since the war in Afghanistan started in 2001 and Iraq was invaded in 2003.

R.I.P. Spc. Brandon K. Steffey




(Taken from www.record-eagle.com)LANSING – Governor Granholm ordered United States flags throughout the state of Michigan and on Michigan waters lowered for one day Wednesday in honor of Army Specialist Brandon K. Steffey of Sault Ste Marie who died in Laghman province, Afghanistan, while on active duty supporting Operation Enduring Freedom. Flags should be returned to full-staff Thursday, November 5.

Spc. Steffey, age 23, died October 25 of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device. He was assigned to the 178th Military Police Detachment, 89th Military Police Brigade, 111 Corps, Fort Hood, Texas.

Funeral services will be held 4 p.m.Wednesday, November 4, at Sault Area High School.

Spc. Steffey was serving his second tour of duty, having first served in Iraq. He became a dog handler during his tour in Afghanistan. His dog Maci was trained to find militants who build, place and detonate IEDs. Spc. Steffey saw Maci as a fellow soldier and his best friend. They were inseparable.

R.I.P. Capt. Kyle R. Van De Giesen




(Taken from www.thesunchronicle.com) NORTH ATTLEBORO - The community is mourning the death of a young man who was fulfilling his dream of being a helicopter pilot for the U.S. Marines when he was killed Monday in Afghanistan.

Marine Capt. Kyle Van De Giesen, 29, a 1998 North Attleboro High School graduate, was killed in one of two separate helicopter crashes in that embattled country, his family confirmed.

Van De Giesen's death came just a week before he was set to end his tour, in time for the birth of his second child.

"It is with sadness today that we learned that our son, brother and husband Marine Capt. Kyle R. Van De Giesen was killed today in the line of duty in Afghanistan," his family said in a statement Monday. "He fulfilled his lifelong dream of becoming a Marine helicopter pilot, protecting his family and serving his country."

The two helicopter crashes Monday involved a total of three choppers, two of which collided in midair in the south of the country, and a third that went down in the wake of a firefight in Afghanistan's west, according to the NATO force and American officials.

It was not immediately clear in which crash Van De Giesen was killed.

Van De Giesen was a star quarterback for the North Attleboro High School football team and a 2002 graduate of St. Anselm College in Manchester, N.H.

He was stationed at Camp Pendleton in San Diego.

In 2005, Van De Giesen was inducted into the Attleboro Area Football Hall of Fame.

In addition to his wife Megan, who is pregnant with the couple's second child, and daughter Avery, Van De Giesen is survived by his parents, Ruth Ann and Calvin Van De Giesen; his sister Caitlin; and two brothers, Ryan and Christian.

Funeral arrangements are pending, and will be announced later this week, his family said.

Van De Giesen, who was on his third tour of duty, having served previously in Iraq, was well-known in the community.

Friends reacted with shock and devastation as news of his death began circulating in North Attleboro.

"He was a great kid," said Sandy Vandette, a friend. "Our sons played football together. Kyle was the quarterback and Mark was the wide receiver. Kyle was always determined, focused and well liked.

"He always knew he wanted to fly helicopters. It's so sad because he was such a wonderful kid. You hear on the news about people getting killed overseas, and you pray for them, but you never expect it to hit home here in North Attleboro. It's really hard."

Town Administrator Mark Fisher volunteered as a trainer with the North Attleboro High School football team when Van De Giesen was the team's quarterback.

"Everyone in the community who knew Kyle over the years is just shocked and stricken by this tragedy. All our prayers are with his wife, daughter, parents, brothers and sister," Fisher said. "Everyone is absolutely devastated.

"I had the opportunity to know Kyle when he was in school with my daughter Katie," Fisher said. "He was an outstanding young kid. I hate to use the word kid - he was always a gentleman and truly a bright shining star."

Tony Calcia, who also volunteered with North Attleboro High School's football team while Van De Giesen was the quarterback, said, "Kyle was a brave young man who is somebody that anyone who knew him can be proud of."

Calcia said Van De Giesen distinguished himself at North Attleboro High School - both academically and on the football field - as well as during his military career.

"He cared enough about the country, his community and his family to make sacrifices to protect us all," Calcia said. "We all should remember the debt of gratitude we owe to young men and women like Kyle who serve in the military. This is a terrible loss for us, and more importantly, his family."

Kurt Kummer, North Attleboro High School athletic director, called Van De Giesen "one of the best."

"He was a great student, kind to everybody, a leader," Kummer said. "He was the kind of kid who makes a difference. We're pretty devastated right now."

Principal Robert Gay this morning planned to tell students about Van De Giesen during a morning announcement.

"I will give a brief overview of what Kyle was about when he was at North Attleboro High School," Gay said Monday night. "I am going to talk about how he was a successful quarterback who led the team to the championship, was a member of the track team, voted best looking, was an officer with the SADD chapter, an officer in peer group leadership.

"He was just a very mature, special young man who decided to go off and serve his nation, and unfortunately paid the ultimate price."

While Gay came to the school after Van De Giesen graduated, his sister and brother were at the school during his tenure.

"I got to know him and met him several times," Gay said, adding he also knows Van De Giesen's parents. "Kyle would show up for games and be around the school. He certainly was a very impressive young man. I just think for the town it is just a devastating blow."

After graduating from North Attleboro High, Van De Giesen went on to St. Anselm College in Manchester, N.H., where he became the first varsity quarterback after the college's return to intercollegiate football in 1999.

However, Van De Giesen cut short his football career after that year, college officials said, preferring to concentrate on his studies.

Professor Peter Candella, chairman of the department of criminal justice at St. Anselm, said becoming a military pilot was an enduring dream for Van De Giesen.

"His leadership is what set him apart," Candella said. "He made connections with just about every constituency on campus, and he was very focused on becoming a pilot."

R.I.P. Spc. Nickolas A Mueller




(Taken from www.wfrv.com) Little Chute (WFRV) - The parents of a fallen Little Chute soldier are calling him a “giving, compassionate and loving hero.”

26 year-old Nickolas Mueller died in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan last week.

Larry and Sharon Mueller told Channel 5’s Jenna Sachs they had spoken to their son less than 24 hours before.

“He was a soldier’s soldier,” said Larry Mueller. “He loved the service. He loved the unit he was with. He loved the guys.”

The Muellers have returned from Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, where they witnessed their son’s body returned, and met with President Obama.

“We never expected him to give so much attention to us individually,” said Sharon Mueller about the president. “It was emotional. There were tears in his eyes.”

The Muellers say Nick seemed destined to become a member of the Nightstalkers, his elite special operations unit. As a child, he chose wallpaper of fighter pilots.

Nick’s parents believe he will be remembered for his contagious smile, and selfless nature.

“Always put other people first,” said Larry Mueller. “He always did. We loved that he did that.”

The Muellers say they had discussed the possibility of death with their son. When asked about a burial, he told them “a soldier belongs in Arlington.”

R.I.P. CWO4 Michael Montgomery


(Taken from www.legacy.com) Michael P. MONTGOMERY Chief Warrant Office Four, Michael P. Montgomery, 36, died October 26, 2009, when his MH-47 Chinook helicopter crashed while conducting military operations in Western Afghanistan. Michael enlisted in the Army National Guard in October 1991.
In 1995 he applied and was accepted to the Army Warrant Officer Candidate School and graduated from Flight school in 1996. He was a dedicated soldier and pilot serving in many different positions while assigned to the 185th Aviation Regiment at Camp Murray, WA.
He received his Bachelors of Science Degree from Embry Riddle Aeronautical University in 2002. In October 2004 he was assigned as the senior instructor pilot and Instrument Flight Examiner at the Western Army National Guard Aviation Training Site in Arizona.
In 2006, he applied for and was accepted into an active duty position with the 160th Special Operation Aviation Regiment Nightstalkers in Savannah, Georgia. While he was assigned there, he served as an electronic warfare officer, instructor pilot and instrument flight examiner. He was qualified in the UH-60 Blackhawk and was a Scout Pilot and an instrument pilot in the OH-58 Kiowa and MH-47G Chinook. He was a combat veteran with seven deployments, two in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom and five in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.
Michael received numerous awards including the Air Medal, two Army commendation medals, the Army achievement medal,4 Army Reserve component Achievement medals, 2 national Defense Service Medals, Afghanistan campaign Medal - Campaign Star, the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, the Humanitarian Service Medal, Armed Forces Reserve Medal, NCO Professional Development Ribbon, the Army Service ribbon, Combat Action Badge, and the Senior Aviator Badge. He was posthumously awarded the Bronze Star Medal, the Meritorious Service Medal and the Air Medal.
He was proud to serve his country as a Nightstalker aviator, performing the most challenging and dangerous training and missions in support of US Special Operations, and living the motto that "Nightstalkers Don't Quit".
Michael was a devoted and loving father to his son Riley and a beloved best friend and husband to his wife Anita. He is also survived by his mother, Mary Montgomery; father Mark Montgomery; brother Merrill (Sokhaley) Kincade; and a large extended family.
Family and friends are invited to attend a Funeral Service in his honor, Saturday, November 7, 2009 at 11:00 am, at St. Jude Parish, 10526 - 166th Ave NE, Redmond, WA 98052. A Visitation will take place, Friday, November 6, 2009 from 4:00 - 8:00 pm, Sunset Hills Funeral Home, 1215 - 145th Place SE, Bellevue, WA 98007.
Remembrances may be shared at www.mem.com.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Nanny State: Today the university, tomorrow the nation...

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A Pennsylvania university's requirement that overweight undergraduates take a fitness course to receive their degrees has raised the hackles of students and the eyebrows of health and legal experts.

Officials at historically black Lincoln University said Friday that the school is simply concerned about high rates of obesity and diabetes, especially in the African-American community.

"We know we're in the midst of an obesity epidemic," said James L. DeBoy, chairman of Lincoln's department of health, physical education and recreation. "We have an obligation to address this head on, knowing full well there's going to be some fallout."

The fallout began this week on Lincoln's campus about 45 miles southwest of Philadelphia, where seniors - the first class affected by the mandate - began realizing their last chance to take the class would be this spring.

Tiana Lawson, a 21-year-old senior, wrote in this week's edition of The Lincolnian, the student newspaper, that she "didn't come to Lincoln to be told that my weight is not in an acceptable range. I came here to get an education."

In an interview Friday, Lawson said she has no problem with getting healthy or losing weight. But she does have a problem with larger students being singled out.

"If Lincoln truly is concerned about everyone being healthy, then everyone should have to take this gym class, not just people who happen to be bigger," she said.

The mandate, which took effect for freshmen entering in fall 2006, requires students to get tested for their body mass index, a measure of weight to height.

A normal BMI is between 18.5 and 24.9. Students with one that's 30 or above - considered obese - are required to take a class called "Fitness for Life," which meets three hours a week.

The course involves walking, aerobics, weight training and other physical activities, as well as information on nutrition, stress and sleep, DeBoy said.

As of this fall, DeBoy estimated about 80 seniors - 16 percent of the class - had not had their body mass index tested nor taken the fitness class. Some of those students will likely be exempt from taking the class once they get their BMI results, he said.

Health experts applaud the school's intent, if not its execution. Mark Rothstein, director of the bioethics institute at the University of Louisville's School of Medicine, said being forced to disclose such health information is "at least awkward and often distasteful."

And it doesn't necessarily lead to the best outcomes, he said, noting that "when the (health) goals are imposed on people, they don't do that well in meeting them."

DeBoy stressed that students are not required to lose weight or lower their BMI; they must only pass the class through attendance and participation.

"It's the sound mind and the sound body concept," DeBoy said. "I think the university, to its credit, is trying to be proactive."

Some experts said recent amendments to the Americans with Disabilities Act might lead to exemptions for morbidly obese students, who could argue that participating in the class would be dangerous.

Also, students need more than exercise, said Marcia Costello, a registered dietitian in the Philadelphia area. The university should make sure its dining halls and vending machines offer healthy choices, she said.

Costello, an assistant professor of nursing at Villanova University, also noted that body mass index can be misleading. Since muscle weighs more than fat, "it is possible to be overweight and still be physically fit," she said.

Lawson, a mass communications major, said while she believes her current BMI would exempt her from the class, she's going to take it anyway "because I would like to be healthier."

"This was a decision that I made," she wrote in The Lincolnian, "and that's the way it ought to be."

The BMI method is one of the least accurate ways to measure body fat. I'm speaking from personal experience. It was the method used when I was in the Canoe Club and while I'd always pass it always showed me as being a lardass. This despite being a gym rat who ran circles around men twenty years my junior.

If the "nanny-state mentality" is going to be pursued, they could at least use a more reliable method.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Well, we knew he had a thing for royalty...

Found this at Lucianne.com;

My kind of doctor...

Although the first words to me would include, "Lose some weight, fatboy." Found this via Lucianne.com;

RALEIGH Dr. Earl Sunderhaus, an Asheville eye doctor, has what might charitably be described as a brusque bedside manner.

That much is not in dispute.

But the N.C. Medical Board may decide Sunderhaus overstepped the bounds of decency when he recently told a patient she was irresponsible for being unemployed, on Medicaid, and relying on taxpayers to cover another pregnancy after giving birth less than a year earlier.

What really galled her, the patient complained, is that Sunderhaus poked her thigh and told her she is fat.

"When I got home I was very upset about the way I was treated by him," the patient wrote in a private complaint to the board. Efforts to contact the patient were not successful.

Sunderhaus, who describes himself as a plainspoken old German, escalated the conflict by later writing the patient to drive home his points using numbered paragraphs, signed "sincerely."

Then he fired off opinionated missives to the board, which called him to Raleigh on Thursday for a closed-door meeting.

Sunderhaus' point - that doctors need to advise patients to lose weight, because obesity is not just a personal issue, it's a $147 billion public health crisis - may have gotten lost in the delivery.

The board, which licenses and disciplines doctors, has not decided whether to charge Sunderhaus over the patient's complaint. The worst that could happen is he'd lose his license.

Most problems arising from an insensitive comment are handled with a quiet tut-tut by the board - perhaps a recommendation that the practitioner take a refresher course in effective doctor-patient communication, said Jean Fisher Brinkley, the board's spokeswoman.

Usually, doctors appreciate the confidentiality.

Sunderhaus, by contrast, stormed the beaches to defend his honor.

Defiant in face of criticism

He wrote Gov. Bev Perdue, saying the patient's "irresponsible orgasm" resulted in children whose medical care is provided by Medicaid.

He fired off numerous letters to the medical board, noting that its rules make him nauseous and, among other things, that "the biggest hoax on mankind" is the Drug Enforcement Administration.

And Sunderhaus notified The (Raleigh) News & Observer that he was about to be "screwed" by the medical board, admitting he told the patient that thick eyeglasses would not cause her to go blind, "but her thick thighs and diabetes would."

"I poked her thigh to emphasize that diabetes is the leading cause of blindness," he said Thursday. "People have got to accept criticism without getting their bowels in an uproar."

Sunderhaus, a trim man who appeared before the board wearing cargo pants and sporting a backpack, makes no apologies for his actions. He blew off a psychiatric test the board arranged, and flouted protocol by talking about his case, which the board likes to keep secret.

At the end of a conversation with this reporter, Sunderhaus offered $20 for her efforts. She returned it, but not before he tucked it in her sweater. (Guess he figures she's hot.)

After 30 years of practice, Sunderhaus said, he is prepared to take whatever discipline the board issues, even the loss of his license.

"I'm 77," he said. "I can tell them to stick the darn thing."

This ain't Marcus Welby, we could use more like him.

Faith or stupidity?

You tell me. My initial reaction was, "What a moron!". But then the little light went on and I considered the following; 1) I've never had 40K of financial assets, this woman evidently does. 2) What she expected was exactly what she got i.e., her valuables safely guarded for her.

So who would more readily qualify as a moron? Here's the story;

HAGERSTOWN, Md. – A woman quietly left $40,000 worth of rare U.S. coins near a Catholic shrine for safekeeping so the Virgin Mary could watch over her life savings while she was out of town, and apparently it worked: The money was returned to her when she got back a week later.

Operators of the National Shrine Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes near Emmitsburg thought they had been blessed with a big donation when a groundskeeper found the two plastic freezer bags filled with gold and silver while raking leaves.

But Shrine Director William Tronolone said the woman approached him after a noon Mass Sunday, six days after the discovery, to ask whether anyone had found some coins she had hidden beneath fallen leaves at the site on the campus of Mount St. Mary's University.

"I said, 'Why did you leave it there?' And she said, 'Well, I had to go away and I was afraid to leave it and I wanted the Blessed Mother to watch over it for me — and evidently she did because you found it,'" Tronolone said.

By then, university officials had had the coins appraised, notified police and placed the money in a safe while awaiting word from investigators.

Tronolone refused to identify the woman. He said she had been out of town about a week.

After the school's security director returned the coins Monday, he accompanied the woman to her bank and persuaded her to put them in her safe deposit box, Tronolone said.

The shrine, about 50 miles northwest of Baltimore, features a replica of the grotto in Lourdes, France, where Catholics believe Mary, the mother of Jesus, appeared to a French schoolgirl named Bernadette several times, beginning in 1858. The Emmitsburg replica draws more than 200,000 visitors annually, Tronolone said.

Grotto visitors often leave anonymous donations, including a $3,000 cash gift two weeks ago.

"Up here at the grotto, you get a lot of people that are very, very faithful," Tronolone said, "and they do things you and I would never even attempt to do."

Faith without works is dead?

Showdown with the Culture of Death?

UPDATE: The below listed document may be signed by going here; http://manhattandeclaration.org/index.php

I've been wondering what the next step would be after passage of a healthcare bill that funds abortion, despite the protests of Catholic bishops who were merely thrown a bone in the form of the Stupak-Pitts Amendment (IMO, soon to be deleted from the final bill). Seems there may be some people ready to back up all the rhetoric. All bold emphases and the comments in red are my own;

Washington D.C., Nov 20, 2009 / 06:21 am (CNA).- An unprecedented coalition of prominent Christian clergy, ministry leaders, and scholars has crafted a 4,700-word declaration addressing the sanctity of life, traditional marriage, and religious liberty. The declaration issues “a clarion call” to Christians to adhere to their convictions and informs civil authorities that the signers will not “under any circumstance” abandon their Christian consciences.

The statement, called “the Manhattan Declaration,” has been signed by more than 125 Catholic, Evangelical Christian, and Orthodox leaders, and will be made fully public at a noon press conference in the National Press Club in Washington DC on Friday.

“We are Christians who have joined together across historic lines of ecclesial differences to affirm our right—and, more importantly, to embrace our obligation—to speak and act in defense of these truths. We pledge to each other, and to our fellow believers, that no power on earth, be it cultural or political, will intimidate us into silence or acquiescence,” the statement says.

“We recognize the duty to comply with laws whether we happen to like them or not, unless the laws are gravely unjust or require those subject to them to do something unjust or otherwise immoral,” the signatories explain.

But they also made clear that “we will not comply with any edict that purports to compel our institutions to participate in abortions, embryo-destructive research, assisted suicide and euthanasia, or any other anti-life act; nor will we bend to any rule purporting to force us to bless immoral sexual partnerships, treat them as marriage or the equivalent, or refrain from proclaiming the truth, as we know it, about morality and immorality and marriage and the family.”

The Manhattan Declaration is the result of several months of dialogue among Orthodox, Catholic, and evangelical Christian leaders culminating in a gathering of approximately 100 leaders in New York City on September 28, 2009.

Attendees considered an early draft of the “Manhattan Declaration, A Call of Christian Conscience,” but the document was entrusted to a drafting committee that included Dr. Timothy George of Beeson Divinity School at Samford University, Dr. Robert P. George of Princeton University, and renowned Evangelical leader Charles Colson.

The signatories explained that they speak now because in order "to defend principles of justice and the common good that are now under assault." (its about time)

"We will fully and ungrudgingly render to Caesar what is Caesar’s, but we will under no circumstances render to Caesar what is God’s." (Can someone give me an "Amen"?)

The signatories of the Manhattan Declaration explain that although public sentiment has moved in a pro-life direction, "pro-abortion ideology prevails in many places of power and influence." (too true)

"Our government promotes and funds scientific research in which the lives of tiny human beings in the early embryonic states of development are treated as disposable research material."

They also contend that "public policies contribute to the weakening of the institution of marriage, including the discredited idea of unilateral divorce," while "influential individuals and organizations are seeking to redefine marriage to embrace same-sex partnerships and to recognize multiple-party sexual unions that are beyond same-sex marriage.”

Signatories of the declaration include Cardinal Justin Rigali, Archbishop of Philadelphia; Cardinal Adam Maida, Archbishop Emeritus of Detroit; Charles J. Chaput, Archbishop of Denver; Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York; Donald W. Wuerl, Archbishop of Washington, D.C.; John J. Myers, Archbishop of Newark; John Nienstedt, Archbishop of Saint Paul and Minneapolis; Joseph F. Naumann, Archbishop of Kansas City; Joseph E. Kurtz, Archbishop of Louisville; Thomas J. Olmsted, Bishop of Phoenix; Michael J. Sheridan, Bishop of Colorado Springs; Salvatore Joseph Cordileone, Bishop of Oakland; Richard J. Malone, Bishop of Portland; and David A. Zubik, Bishop of Pittsburgh.

Other signatories include Metropolitan Jonah Paffhausen, Primate of the Orthodox Church in America; Most Rev. Peter J. Akinola, Primate of the Anglican Church of Nigeria; Jody Bottum, Editor of First Things; Chuck Colson, Founder of the Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview; Marjorie Dannenfelser, President of the Susan B. Anthony List; Dr. James Dobson, Founder of Focus on the Family; Dr. William Donohue, President of the Catholic League; Most Rev. Robert Wm. Duncan, Primate of the Anglican Church in North America; Fr. Joseph D. Fessio, Founder and Editor of Ignatius Press; Maggie Gallagher, President of Institute for Marriage and Public Policy; Dr. Robert P. George; Fr. Chad Hatfield, Archpriest of St Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary; Jerry Jenkins, Chairman of the board of trustees for Moody Bible Institute; Jim Kushiner, Editor of Touchstone; Dr. Richard Land, President of The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the SBC; Rev. William Owens, Chairman of the Coalition of African-American Pastors; Tony Perkins, President of the Family Research Council; Michael Timmis, Chairman of Prison Fellowship International; Juan Valdes, Chaplain of Florida Christian School and George Weigel, Senior Fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center.

The full document will be available http://www.manhattandeclaration.org/ following the press conference.

Wonder what's next? Speaking strictly for myself, I'm damned glad this public pronouncement is being made.

Christ in a Pez dispenser?

Found this at puritysolutions.org via Father Z and the Opinionated Catholic.

Purity Communion Host Dispenser

Use the Purity Communion Host Dispensers during the cold and flu season to prevent the passing of germs or use it all year long to reduce the cost, time and personnel needed to provide communion by as much as 50 percent.

The Purity Communion Host Dispenser is capable of dispensing communion hosts and is small enough to be used by clergy to provide communion when visiting homes, hospitals, senior living and care centers. It can also be used in the field by military chaplains.

Most recipients prefer to receive communion from clergy. Reducing the time and personnel needed to provide communion will allow clergy to provide communion to the entire congregation.



No way, no how. Even for a retired turdchasing Aganger, this is too flippant and frivolous.

R.I.P. Sgt. 1st Class David E. Metzger




Name: Army Sgt. 1st Class David E. Metzger

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Age: 32

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From: San Diego

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Assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), Fort Bragg, N.C.,

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Incident: Army Sgt. 1st Class David E. Metzger died Oct. 26 of wounds suffered when the MH-47 helicopter he was aboard crashed in Darreh-ye Bum, Afghanistan. Also killed were Army Chief Warrant Officer 4 Michael P. Montgomery, Staff Sgt. Keith R. Bishop, Chief Warrant Officer Niall Lyons, Staff Sgt. Shawn H. McNabb, Sgt. Josue E. Hernandez Chavez and Sgt. Nickolas A. Mueller.

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Died: October 26, 2009

(Taken from www.wavy.com) NORTH CAROLINA - Sgt. 1st Class David E. Metzger Bio:

Sgt. 1st Class David E. Metzger, 32, died on Oct. 26 when the helicopter he was aboard crashed while conducting a combat mission in the Afghan city of Darreh-Ye Bum, Afghanistan while serving with Company B, 3rd Battalion, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne).

He deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom July 2009 as a member of Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force – Afghanistan. This was his third deployment to Afghanistan in support of the War on Terror.

Metzger, born in San Diego, California, enlisted in September 1996 as an Ammunitions Specialist. He later attended the SF Qualification Course, graduating in 2007, as an 18E Special Forces Communications Sergeant and was assigned to 3rd BN, 7th SFG(A).

Metzger’s military education includes the Warrior Leader Course, Basic Non-Commissioned Officer Course, Advanced Non-Commissioned Officer Course, Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape Course, SF Communications Sergeant Course, Special Forces Advanced Urban Combat Course, Air Movement Operations Course, Basic Airborne Course and Jumpmaster Course.

His awards and Decorations include the Bronze Star Medal, the Army Commendation Medal, the Army Achievement Medal, Army Superior Unit Award, the Army Good Conduct Medal, the National Defense Service Medal, Kosovo Campaign Medal, Afghanistan Campaign Medal, Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Non-Commissioned Officers Professional Development Ribbon, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Ribbon, NATO Medal. Metzger also earned the Combat Infantryman’s Badge, Parachutist Badge, and the Special Forces Tab.

Metzger is survived by his sons, David and Grant, who reside in Fort Bragg, North Carolina. He is also survived by his parents David Metzger and Lisandra Holstein, as well as his grandmother Dolores of San Diego, Calif.

R.I.P. Staff Sgt. Shawn H. McNabb




Name: Army Staff Sgt. Shawn H. McNabb

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Age: 24

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From: Terrell, Texas

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Assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 160th Special Operations Regiment (Airborne), Hunter Army Airfield, Ga.

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Incident: Army Staff Sgt. Shawn H. McNabb died Oct. 26 of wounds suffered when the MH-47 helicopter he was aboard crashed in Darreh-ye Bum, Afghanistan. Also killed were Army Chief Warrant Officer 4 Michael P. Montgomery, Sgt. 1st Class David E. Metzger, Staff Sgt. Keith R. Bishop, Chief Warrant Officer Niall Lyons, Sgt. Josue E. Hernandez Chavez and Sgt. Nickolas A. Mueller.

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Died: October 26, 2009

(Taken from www.terrelltribune.com) US Army Staff Sgt. Shawn Henry McNabb of Terrell, Texas passed away while protecting our nation's freedom in Afghanistan on October 26, 2009.

He was born on born May 14, 1985 in Dallas, Texas to David and Ann McNabb. Shawn attended Terrell Public Schools and graduated from Terrell High School in 2003. While in school he was active in sports, but his bravado, talent and his love of the Terrell Tiger band was demostrated when he won many awards and was also selected to the All State Band. Shawn had a passion for the medical field where he was preparing to attend Physicians Assistant School.

Stationed at Hunter Army Air Field in Savannah, Ga.; Staff Sgt. McNabb was a soldier in the 160th Special Operations Regiment “SOAR” serving in the Third Battalion as an Airborne Flight Medic. He has been awarded for his heroism, dedication, and meritorious service receiving the Bronze Star, the Air Medal, the Army Commendation Medal for Valor, and the Purple Heart posthumously.

Shawn is survived by his loving parents: David and Ann McNabb of Terrell; sister: Heather Gray and husband Josh of Waxahachie, TX; fianceé: Sarah Jane Kirk of Savannah, GA; grandparents: George and Teresa Rock of York, PA; aunt and uncle: Sharon and Gordon Bennett of Athens, TX; plus numerous other aunts, uncles, as well as a host of friends and family. He is preceded in death by his grandparents: David Henry and Virginia McNabb.

Funeral arrangments are pending. Interment will follow at DFW National Cemetery in Dallas.

R.I.P. Chief Warrant Officer 3 Niall D. Lyons




Name: Army Chief Warrant Officer 3 Niall Lyons

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Age: 40

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From: Spokane, Wash.,

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Assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 160th Special Operations Regiment (Airborne), Hunter Army Airfield, Ga.

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Incident: Army Chief Warrant Officer 3 Niall Lyons died Oct. 26 of wounds suffered when the MH-47 helicopter he was aboard crashed in Darreh-ye Bum, Afghanistan. Also killed were Army Chief Warrant Officer 4 Michael P. Montgomery, Sgt. 1st Class David E. Metzger, Staff Sgt. Keith R. Bishop, Staff Sgt. Shawn H. McNabb, Sgt. Josue E. Hernandez Chavez and Sgt. Nickolas A. Mueller.

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Died: October 26, 2009

(Taken from www.spokesman.com) A decorated Spokane soldier was among the seven U.S. servicemen killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan this week, the Department of Defense announced Thursday.

Chief Warrant Officer Niall D. Lyons, 40, died Oct. 26 in Darreh-ye Bum, Afghanistan while assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 160th Special Operations Regiment, based in Savannah, Ga. Three federal drug agents also were killed in the crash. Another crash the same day killed four soldiers.

Lyons graduated from Shadle Park High School in 1988, earned a bachelor’s degree in geography from Eastern Washington University in 1995 and spent three years as a soldier before being accepted into the Army Warrant Officer program, where he graduated from flight school in 1999.

He worked as a flight instructor and was deployed in Iraq before being deployed to Afghanistan, according to a biography posted on the Army’s Web site. Lyons won several awards for his army service, including two air medals and four army commendation medals.

He is survived by a son in Alabama and two brothers, a sister, and his mother and father, all of Spokane.

R.I.P. Capt. Eric A. Jones




Name: Marine Capt. Eric A. Jones

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Age: 29

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From: Westchester, N.Y.

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Assigned to Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 169, Marine Aircraft Group 39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif.

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Incident: Marine Capt. Eric A. Jones died Oct. 26 in a collision between a UH-1 and an AH-1 helicopter in Helmand province, Afghanistan. Also killed were Cpl. Gregory M.W. Fleury, Capt. David S. Mitchell and Capt. Kyle R. Van De Giesen.

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Died: October 26, 2009

(Taken from www.boston.com) Captain Eric A. Jones, a US Marine attack helicopter pilot, spared his parents the details of combat in Afghanistan and Iraq. “Just another day in the sandbox,’’ he told them on the phone.

Yesterday, Captain Jones’s parents, Cindy and Ken of Mashpee, stood on the tarmac at the Coast Guard air station in Bourne as six Marines brought their only child’s body home.

“He died a hero,’’ said his father. “I know he was my hero.’’

Captain Jones and three other Marines were killed just before sunrise Oct. 26 when two helicopters collided over Afghanistan in Helmand Province. He was 29.

Another Massachusetts Marine, Captain Kyle R. Van De Giesen, 29, of North Attleborough, also died in the crash when his Huey and the AH-1 Cobra attack copter piloted by Captain Jones collided.

Van De Giesen’s funeral will be held tomorrow at 9 a.m. in St. Mary Church in North Attleborough. A private burial service will follow in the National Veterans Cemetery in Bourne.

Captain Jones - who grew up in Westchester, N.Y., and was stationed at Camp Pendleton in California - had deployed to Afghanistan in July after serving two tours in Iraq. He was scheduled to return home later this month, according to his family.

At 6-foot-3 with a dimpled chin and chiseled features, his good looks turned heads. “It was fun to walk with him through restaurants and watch everyone,’’ said his mother, a retired elementary school teacher.

“He was good inside, too,’’ she said. “He always took the high road in everything. Life was grand for him. He always had so many friends.’’

Captain Jones dreamed of flying planes as a boy and began taking lessons as a student at Northeastern University, where he earned a business degree in 2004.

He came home from college one day and told his mother he was joining the Marines. “I said: ‘Eric, don’t you realize you could die? You could get killed that way.’ And he said, ‘Mom, I can’t think of a more honorable way to die.’ ’’

Born in Pound Ridge, N.Y., Captain Jones was a 1999 graduate of Fox Lane High School in Bedford, N.Y., where he swam competitively and played football.

He played lacrosse during his freshman year at Northeastern and considered a career in finance before joining the Marines in 2004. He earned his wings in flight school in April 2007.

Captain Jones was assigned to Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 169, Marine Aircraft Group 39, the Third Marine Aircraft Wing, and the First Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Pendleton.

His parents moved to Mashpee in 2005.

Since his death, friends and neighbors have been sharing stories with his parents of their son’s kindness. One neighbor was struggling to move a bureau into her home when Captain Jones “just ran out of the house to help, Cindy Jones said. “She said all of sudden this bureau just lifted up from our shoulders, and he said, ‘Where do you want it?’ ’’

Captain Jones also was known for his quick wit. “He was the king of the one-liners,’’ his father said.

His uncle Anthony DeStefano of Hollis, N.H., said his godson had a gift for making people laugh.

“If he could make people laugh, he would do it,’’ DeStefano said. “He was just a beautiful man. He was the best.’’

Captain Jones’s mother said her son told her he intended to start a life with his girlfriend, Jackie Guidry of Calgary. The couple met while Captain Jones was in flight school in Florida. “I know they had planned on a future together,’’ Cindy Jones said.

The day after his death, the Joneses traveled to Dover Air Force Base to claim his body.

“Not many of us are brave enough to put our lives on the line every day and then get up and do it again,’’ his mother said. “Our Armed Forces do that every day, and we need to honor that.’’

A funeral service is planned for 10 a.m. Saturday in John Wesley United Methodist Church in Falmouth. Burial will follow in the National Veterans Cemetery in Bourne.

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