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Bring Our Heroe's Home!



Last Updated: 11/19/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Country: US

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July 23, 2008 - Wednesday 

Category: Friends

Please pass this along to all your friends, Its important we get the people to respond and demand actions....Thank you...BOHH, MySpacer.



Many of our military servicemen and women are still behind and left on foreign lands and waterways. The DOD seems to have all but forgotten our women personnel as well. Please join or myspace and call the government into action, adopt a POW/MIA member today and help spread the word and lets bring our men and women home where they belong...here on American soils.



For many the chapters are not closed, their loved ones need to be reunited and respect paid for service rendered no matter the era or time of service.



Remains from WW-II to present day are being found and turned over to the government, this is all well and good, but there are so many still un-accounted for and others known to be left behind. On my page I have links to various govenmental agencies..please use them, contact your States Representatives, Congress, and even the Capital itself and demend action be taken, these heroe's need to come home now...America we can no longer hide our faces and emotions, its your turn to step up to the plate for them...

Please add yourself to our space as friends and adopt a POW./KIA member today....thank you and a thank you from our missing American heroe's..

>>>>>    <<<<<

Visit the http://www.ojc.org/ Website today and get started...

If you have adopted a POW/MIA member please feel free to take this small token of appreciation and display it proudly on your page so that others can see you have done so. Also please feel free to forward an addy of any memorial pages you may have created for your adopted servicemember.

Please leave a link on your page so that others may visit the memorial page as well.

>>>>>>     <<<<<<

Thank You for your care and concern for our fallen and missing servicemen and women, and thank you for your participation and spreading the word.

Together we can make a difference.

July 20, 2008 - Sunday 

You know how and when you get the urge to randomly say thank you to a soldier, airman, or sailor for service rendered in honor of country…sometimes its just better to let that urge pass. I am not saying don't show your thanks for all they have given and sacrificed, on the contrary…but it is in the manner in which you do, that makes the true difference from a soldiers point of view.

Many veterans, myself included would rather see action, than hear words uttered from individuals hiding behind their own inadequacies and inability to step up to the plate for this country. There is one question that doesn't even warrant a response, and should you ask that question, chances are you will get less than a favorable answer from any soldier. Do us all a favor and avoid asking "What was it like over there" 'cause if you truly wanted that answer…. You would be there yourself. Maybe not fighting the front lines along side them but in one of the many other capacities one can be of service in.

Our servicemen and women are in dire needs 24/7 during and long after a war campaign. Our returning injured and vets are being dealt lower than standard benefits and medical treatment, governmental monies are being splurged on electoral campaigns by the millions while the government is shutting down medical facilities across the nation. The people of the war torn areas as well as service members are in constant need of treatment, supplies, communications, and the list goes on… If you truly want to know what it's like….get off your back-half and volunteer to help alleviate these concerns and issues. Travel to these areas, put yourself in the mix of emotions, battles, and desecrated areas of the war zones.

Extend your hands to the crying child that may or may not have all their limbs, or may or may not have shrapnel burning and tearing their flesh.

Extend your hand to the servicemen and women over there doing what is required to stay alive so they may once again return to the homeland.

Extend your hand to the people in harms way, carry another human on your back in an effort to save or remove them from harms way.

Stand yourself in the pool of blood from a fellow American, and try not to feel the pain, and smell the stench of burning flesh or pooled blood….

Think again before you ask the question "What was it like over there"…. think again before you express thanks mearly out of courtesy or to ease your own conscience.

Do you know what they really want? A simple welcome home….. And somebody that will stand up for them when they return. They want somebody that can say thanks by way of actions… they want somebody that will watch their backs as they did ours when it comes to getting medical benefits, and appropriate help with settling their financial debts that occurred due to sacrificing their jobs and incomes to fight for us. They want a home to return to as they once had before the left. They want and need the people to show byway of actions they are just as committed to their wellbeing as they were for us.

Yes a Thank You is appreciated, but it mearly scratches the surface for most…

I dare suggest that instead of a thank you, you simply just say WELCOME HOME and then thank you.. And then…what can we do for you??????

Just my opinion and thoughts from a veteran….

                                                                  Grizz, HM3,USN/FMF. 2nd Mar.Div (Ret)

July 18, 2008 - Friday 

Thank You "GBOAH" and  a special thanks to DPMO

 

Soldiers Missing From The Vietnam War Are Identified
Thu, 17 Jul 2008 16:14:00 -0500



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

IMMEDIATE RELEASE No.

610-08
July 17, 2008


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Soldiers Missing From The Vietnam War Are Identified


The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced today that the remains of two U.S. servicemen, missing from the Vietnam War, have been identified and will be returned to their families for burial with full military honors.



They are Chief Warrant Officer Bobby L. McKain, of Garden City, Kan.;

 and Warrant Officer Arthur F. Chaney, of Vienna, Va.,

 both U.S. Army. McKain will be buried on Aug. 11 in Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, D.C., and Chaney will be buried Sept. 16 in Arlington.



Representatives from the Army met with the next-of-kin of these men to explain the recovery and identification process, and to coordinate interment with military honors on behalf of the secretary of the Army.



On May 3, 1968, these men flew an AH-1G Cobra gunship

on an armed escort mission to support a reconnaissance team operating west of Khe Sanh, in Quang Tri Province, South Vietnam. Their helicopter was hit by enemy anti-aircraft fire, exploded in mid-air and crashed west of Khe Sanh near the Laos-Vietnam border. The crew of other U.S. aircraft flying over the area immediately after the crash reported no survivors, and heavy enemy activity prevented attempts to recover the men's bodies.



In 1985, an American citizen with ties to Southeast Asian refugees turned over to U.S. officials human remains supposedly recovered from an AC-130 aircraft crash in Laos. While subsequent laboratory analysis disproved the association of the remains to the AC-130 crash, some of the remains were those of McKain and Chaney.



Between 1989 and 2003, Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC) investigative teams working in Laos and Vietnam made five attempts to locate the crew's crash site, but could not confirm the location.



Among other forensic identification tools and circumstantial evidence, scientists from JPAC and the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory also used mitochondrial DNA and dental comparisons in identifying the remains.


Your coming home.... Welcome Home Gentelmen, welcome home... May you now rest in peace on your homeland with your brothers and sisters. It's been a long time and journey but you are home....A heartfelt Thank You for your service and sacrifice.

July 15, 2008 - Tuesday 

Taken from the following source: http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/piestewa.html

On March 23, PFC Lori Piestewa and her company were ambushed near Nasiriyah, Iraq. She and her company were considered MIA. After an attempt to free American prisoners of war it was learned that Lori Piestewa, as well as several other members of her company, did not survive the ambush.

Since then many people have joined to make sure that Lori Piestewa's memory is not forgotten. Here are some highlights of those efforts:

The American Indian College Fund announced it has established a college fund in honor of Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, who is believed to be the first American Indian woman killed in combat. Piestewa, a Hopi Indian from Tuba City, Ariz., died in southern Iraq. She was a single mother with a son, 4, and a daughter, 3.

The scholarship will go toward any remaining unmet financial needs for college that her children have when they become college age, after taking into account other scholarships that have already been established for them. Any remaining funds will be used to underwrite an annual scholarship to a tribal college or university for a female American Indian military veteran.

A fund has been set up for the family of Lori Piestewa, a mother of two children who was the first U.S. female soldier killed in the Iraq war. During the National Indian Gaming Association's (NIGA) 2003 Annual Trade Show and Convention in Phoenix, Arizona, a moment of silence was observed and prayers were offered, led by Color Guards from the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation and the Oneida Indian Nation of Wisconsin. An honor song was performed by Southern Nation drum group. Over the three-day conference, NIGA received over $85,000 in pledges to be given to the Lori Piestewa Memorial Fund.

The Grand Canyon State Games announced the inaugural Lori Piestewa National Native American Games to honor Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, believed to be the first Native American woman killed in combat. The games were held July 17-20, 2003 throughout northern Arizona and attracted thousands of participants from as far away as Alaska and Hawaii.

"We are grateful that the family of Lori Piestewa is allowing her name to be used with the inaugural National Native American games, " said Erik Widmark, executive director Grand Canyon State Games. "We accept this honor with great humility and profound responsibility. Lori's passion for sports will be emblematic of the energy, enthusiasm and commitment the participants will put forth in this inaugural national competition."

Piestewa Peak

Piestewa Peak named for Lori Piestewa

Squaw Peak in north-central Phoenix will be renamed Piestewa Peak. The State Board on Geographic and Historic Names waived its five-year waiting period and approved the change by a 5-1 vote before a cheering crowd after a four-hour hearing. The board sided with dozens of supporters who said that the word "Squaw" is offensive and that the mountain should be renamed after Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, pronounced py-ESS-tuh-wah. The Hopi from Tuba City was the first female American Indian soldier to be killed in combat.

July 14, 2008 - Monday 

How many of you recognize or even care about these names?

2nd Lt. Carol Ann Elizabeth Drazba
2nd Lt. Elizabeth Ann Jones
Capt. Eleanor Grace Alexander
1st Lt. Hedwig Diane Orlowski
2nd Lt. Pamela Dorothy Donovan
1st Lt. Sharon Ann Lane
Lt. Col. Annie Ruth Graham
Capt. Mary Therese Klinke

Even furthur: How many recognize or even care about these names?:

Evelyn Anderson

Beatrice Kosin

Betty Ann Olsen

Eleanor Ardel Vietti

All of these above women were true patriots of the Americas..having given their lives in honor of country and freedom. Countless others served in many capacities throught war torn ereas and era's. Several beloged to the following associations,

American Red Cross:
Army Special Services
Catholic Relief Services
Central Intelligence Agency
Journalists
Missionaries and the list goes on.

My challange for you is to choose a name above, learn all that you can about that individual, and to create a rememberance page for them. Honor their service and remember their historical significance to our country and your freedom.

Its time America, and especially the government recognizes the efforts and services of women throughout our history.

Please take the challange, choose a name above, create a page or rememberance for them, and join in enlightening the people of America... Help to educate the masses and those not giving much thought to our fallen anymore.

If you choose to participate in this challange, please forward your rememberance page addy and I will be honored to highlight and post it here on my page for all to see...

Thank you for remembering our women patriots and for accepting the challange. Thank you more for taking the time to learn about the significant roles our American women have played in our recent history.

Thank you even more for REMEMBERING!

>>>>>>> Addendum <<<<<<<

Memorial/rememberance pages that have been created for this challenge are listed below. Just click the link to read the posts...

     Eleanor G. Alexandra   Thank you Rooty..