SM1's BLOG 4 U: AN AGGREGATION OF CONSERVATIVE VIEWS, NEWS, SOME HUMOR, & SCIENCE TOO! ... "♂, ♀, *, †, ∞"
Saturday, January 25, 2014
JUST THREE STATES SHORT------There is still time for us to take "action"!!
Just 3 states shortThis is what Mark Levine has been talking about--a constitutional convention by the states to get back to the laws of the Constitution.This will take less than thirty seconds to read. If you agree, please pass it on. This is an idea that we should address.35 STATES SO FAR.....IT'S GROWINGOne message to forward!Governors of 35 states have filed suit against the Federal Government for imposing unlawful burdens upon them. It only takes 38 (of the 50) States to convene a Constitutional Convention.This will take less than thirty seconds to read. If you agree, please pass it on. This is an idea that we should address.For too long we have been too complacent about the workings of Congress. Their latest stunt is to exempt themselves from the Healthcare Reform that they passed ... in all of its forms. Somehow, that doesn't seem logical. We do not have an elite ruling class that is above the law. I truly don't care if they are Democrat, Republican, Independent or whatever. The self-serving must stop.If each person that receives this will forward it on to 15 people, in three days, most people in The United States of America will have the message. This is one proposal that really should be passed around.Proposed 28th Amendment to the United States Constitution: "Congress shall make no law that applies to the citizens of the United States that does not apply equally to the Senators, Representatives of Congress; and, Congress shall make no law that applies to the Senators and/or Representatives that does not apply equally to the citizens of the United States ..."You are one of my 15 (or more). Please keep this going.You can forward this message, or copy and paste it into a new message. We still have that choice!
THE CAMEL'S NOSE IS OFFICIALLY IN THE TENT!!! I bet you can't guess what this is...
•ÅÐÇ ßÇä ÏÎáß ÇáÔåÑí ÇáÅÌãÇáí ÃÞá ãä 150 ÏæáÇÑ æ 100 ÏæáÇÑ Ãæ ÃÞá Ýí ÇáÃÕæáÇáÓÇÆáÉ )äÞæÏ Ýí ÇáíÏ¡ ÇáÍÓÇÈÇÊ ÇáÌÇÑíÉ Ãæ ÍÓÇÈÇÊ ÇáÊæÝíÑ¡ ÔåÇÏÇÊ ÇáÊæÝíÑ(¡ Ãæ•ÅÐÇ ßÇä ãÌãæÚ ÏÎáß ÇáÅÌãÇáí æÃÕæáß ÇáÓÇÆáÉ ÃÞá ãä ãÌãæÚ ÅíÌÇÑß ÇáÔåÑí ÃæÞÓØ ÇáÞÑÖ ÇáÚÞÇÑí ÒÇÆÏ ÝÇÊæÑÉ ÇáÊÏÝÆÉ æÇáãäÇÝÚ ÇáÚÇãÉ¡ Ãæ•ÅÐÇ ßäÊ ãÚÏæã* ÇáÏÎá Ãæ ÃÌíÑ ãæÓãí ãÊäÞá Ãæ ÚÇãá ãÒÇÑÚ ãæÓãí æáÏíß 100ÏæáÇÑ Ãæ ÃÞá Ýí ÇáÃÕæá ÇáÓÇÆáÉ.*ÇáãÚÏæã åæ Ãä íßæä ÏÎáß ÞÏ ÊæÞÝ ÞÈá ÊÇÑíÎ ÊÞÏíã ÇáØáÈ¡ Ãæ Ãä ÏÎáß ÞÏ ÈÏÃæáßäß ÊÊæÞÚ Ãä áÇ ÊÞÈÖ ÃßËÑ ãä 25 ÏæáÇÑ Ýí ÛÖæä Çá 10 ÃíÇã ÇáÞÇÏãÉ.ÅÐÇ ßÇä Ãåá ÈíÊß ãÄåáÇð áãÚÇáÌÉ ÇáØáÈ Ýí ÛÖæä ÓÈÚÉ ÃíÇã¡ ÝíÌÈ Úáíß:•Ãä ÊÔÊÑß Ýí ãÞÇÈáÉ¡ æ•Ãä ÊÞÏøã ÅËÈÇÊÇð ÈåæíÊß ÇáÔÎÕíÉ¡ æ•ÇÓÊßãÇá ÚãáíÉ ÇáØáÈ ÈßÇãáå.áãæÇÕáÉ ÊáÞí ãÎÕÕÇÊ ÇáÅÚÇäÉ ÇáÛÐÇÆíÉ¡ ÓíõØáÈ ãäß Ãä ÊÞÏã ÅËÈÇÊÇð áãÚáæãÇÊ ÃÎÑì)ãËá ÇáÏÎá¡ ãßÇä ÇáÅÞÇãÉ¡ ...ÅáÎ(.. ÅÐÇ ÞãÊ ÈÅÚØÇÁ ÇáÅËÈÇÊ ÚäÏ ÇáÊÞÏíã¡ Ýíãßä Ãä ÊõÚØìÝÊÑÉ ÃØæá ãä ãÎÕÕÇÊ ÇáÅÚÇäÉ ÇáÛÐÇÆíÉ.ÇáãÞÇÈáÇÊ ÇáãÚäíÉ ÈÈÑäÇãÌ ÇáÅÚÇäÉ ÇáÛÐÇÆíÉ)Food Assistance Program: FAP(íÌæÒ ÇáÊäÇÒá Úä ÅÌÑÇÁ ãÞÇÈáÉ æÌåÇð áæÌå æÅÌÑÇÁ ãÞÇÈáÉ åÇÊÝíÉ Ýí ÇáÍÇáÇÊ ÇáÊí íÔßáÐáß Úáì Ãåá ÈíÊß ãÔÞÉ. æÊÊÖãä ÇáãÔÞÇÊ Úáì ÓÈíá ÇáãËÇá æáÇ ÊÞÊÕÑ Úáì ÇáÊÇáí:•ÇáãÑÖ.•ÕÚæÈÇÊ Ýí ÇáäÞá.•ÏæÇã ÓÇÚÇÊ ÇáÚãá ÇáÐí íãäÚ ãä ÇáÇÔÊÑÇß Ýí ãÞÇÈáÉ ãßÊÈíÉ.ÅÐÇ ßäÊ ÊÚÇäí ãä ãÔÞÉ æÊÍÊÇÌ Åáì ÅÌÑÇÁ DHS ÃÎÈÑ ÇáÃÎÕÇÆí ÇáãÓÄæá Úäß ÝWell, it's part of the instructions for how to apply forfood stamps in the great state of Michigan .Read on:I actually called the Michigan Dept. of Human Services to check this out and it is true.Have we gone completely nuts!!THE CAMEL'S NOSE IS OFFICIALLY IN THE TENT IN MICHIGAN !!!Muslim men are allowed to have as many as 4 wives. Many Muslims have immigrated into the U.S. and brought their 2-3-or 4 wives with them, but the U.S. does not allow multi marriages, so the man lists one wife as his, and signs the other 2 or 3 up as extended family on welfare and other free Government programs!Michigan has the highest population of Muslims in the United States .When President Obama took office the United States paid several millions of dollars to have a large number of Palestinians, (All Muslim), immigrated here from Palestine . Why? We don’t pay for other persons to immigrate here, and I’m sure that some of those Muslims moved into Michigan with the large current number of Muslims already established there.So now in Michigan when you call the Public Assistance office you are told to “Press 1 for English. Press 2 for Spanish, or Press 3 for Arabic”! CHECK IT OUT YOURSELF - Here is the number 1-888-678-8914 .Every time you add a new language to an American program it requires an additional number of persons fluent in that language to process those persons who refuse to learn English in order to live here at an additional cost to the taxpayer! Why are we even allowing persons to immigrate here who cannot provide for themselves, and putting them in our welfare system?Press 3 for Arabic.This is quite alarming!!! This seems to have happened clandestinely, for, as far as I know, no public announcement, or opportunity to vote on this was offered to the American people. They're just adopting an official stance, and very likely using tax-payer money for it, in various capacities, without public knowledge or approval.The following link takes you into the State of Michigan Public Assistance page,(as in Food Stamps etc). You won't have to scroll far before you see the assistance-letters options for ... (get this) ... English, Spanish, and ARABIC!!!When did the ARABIC option sneak into our culture? Will we soon have to listen to our governmental offices, stores, and other venues offer us the option of "pressing 3 for ARABIC?"Check it out for yourself.Please inform every red-blooded American you know, that this is happening. It is outrageous! The camel's nose is literally now OFFICIALLY under the tent!YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK!!
Friday, January 24, 2014
O'Regime Thuggery...It's the Chicago way!
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/2016-obamas-america-filmmaker-indicted-673670
Pentagon to launch blimps to guard against cruise missiles
http://www.drudgereport.com/
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Quote of the Day by Ronald Reagan...
I believe it's time for honest men and women who work in all levels of government to begin a dialog about reversing the power flow and returning some of the authority usurped by the Federal Government. |
RONALD REAGAN |
3/3/1982 |
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
RIP Helen Denton, 91, Keeper of the world’s biggest secret...
Wednesday, December 11, 2013 - Submitted by The Citizen
The woman who typed General Dwight D. Eisenhower’s final orders authorizing the June 6, 1944 D-Day Normandy invasion in World War II died Dec. 3 in Fayetteville.
Helen Kogel Denton, 91, who kept that secret even from her husband of nearly four decades, was buried in the Jonesboro City Cemetery on Dec. 7, 2013, Pearl Harbor Day.
The short obituary said this: “She retired from Delta Air Lines where she was a secretary in the Maintenance Department. She was preceded in death by her husband Noel Denton and her son Jon Denton. She is survived by numerous extended family members and many loving friends. She was an active member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #3650. She also served for many years as a volunteer for the American Red Cross.”
The Citizen’s sister publication, Fayette Woman, in October 2005 featured the story of this remarkable woman, who knew how to keep a secret — for a time, the biggest secret in the world. That story is reprinted below.
By Sherri Smith Brown
Helen Kogel Denton has led a rich and rewarding life. But she has one regret.
“I wish that I had told Noel,” she says. “It just never seemed important at the time. Our life was so full. And, I had been so conditioned to NOT tell what I had done. To forget it. And I guess that’s what I did. But, you know, I’ll see him someday — him and Jon both — and the first thing I’m going to tell them ... is my story.”
The room was small – about 10 x 10 – with one long, black curtained window drawn to keep any light from filtering out to the bomb plagued streets. In front of the window sat a long table, used by various officers—two Americans, a Canadian, a Brit, an Australian. A door was on one wall; a fireplace on another, usually lit during those late winter English months.
Corporal Helen Kogel sat in the center of the room at a desk just large enough for her Royal manual typewriter and the stack of papers that were her duty to type. There was little talking except for the dictation she would take from the officers in the mornings. No one discussed with her what she was doing. But she knew.
Usually, her brown, curly head was bent over the typewriter; her hazel eyes intent on the words she typed meticulously in order not to make a mistake. She had three carbon copies to make with every page of type. Mistakes were a nuisance—just something to slow the process down even more.
For nearly eight weeks, five days a week, eight hours a day, the routine was the same. She would type from the dictation and from the stack of papers that were brought to her as the various officers came in and out. Each newly typed page was stamped TOP SECRET.
At the end of the day, the original and the three copies would be placed into four different notebooks; and the MP, who kept constant watch outside the door, would take her three sheets of carbon paper and the typewriter ribbon she had used that day and put it in the fire. After they watched it burn, the MP escorted the corporal back to her hotel on Barclay Square and she would join the rest of her fellow WACs for dinner.
She told no one of her assignment and no one asked where she spent her days. After all, they were all part of General Dwight D. Eisenhower’s staff, it was 1944 during World War II, German bombs were falling on London, and their work was top secret.
One day in late April, Corp. Kogel typed the last page of her assignment. One of the officers placed the pages into their respective notebooks, which were several inches thick by now, and said, “Would you like to go with us to take this to Gen. Eisenhower?”
The corporal had worked as a secretary on the General’s staff for nearly a year, but had never spoken to him, only saluted from a distance. She was honored to go to his office.
“Corporal, do you know what you’ve typed?” asked Gen. Eisenhower. Corp. Kogel said, “Yes, sir. These are the battle plans that you will use for the invasion of France.”
Corp. Helen Kogel, a 23-year-old from South Dakota, had just become a part of history. She had typed the complete battle plans for the invasion of the Normandy Coast and the liberation of Europe — Operation Overload, D-Day. And she was unable to confide in anyone.
She knew the number of ships, aircraft and men, what units would be deployed, where each army involved would land. She knew ship movements, people movements. Where planes would drop bombs. She knew that the 101st Airborne – where two hometown friends served – would go in first to cut railroad lines, blow up bridges, and seize landing strips. She knew everything except the date it would begin. But she guessed it would be soon. And she could not discuss with it with anyone, in fact, she was told to forget what she had typed.Below, Helen Denton pictured during the war.
When hundreds of Allied planes began flying over London day and night toward the coast, she suspected that the invasion might be beginning but said nothing. Even when she heard Sir Winston Churchill speak on the radio on June 6, and realized that Gen. Eisenhower, supreme commander of the United States Army, was setting in motion the Allied Invasion of Europe, the greatest military operation the world has ever known, she did not confide her knowledge to anyone.
As the Allied troops stormed the Normandy beaches, Corp. Kogel and the rest of Gen. Eisenhower’s staff made preparations for going to France themselves. General Eisenhower would need his office staff as soon as possible after the Allied forces got to Paris.
German V-2 bombs were making life in London hellish, and the 30-girl staff was sleeping three floors underground in bunkers at night. It would be safer to get to France.
A few days before her departure, Corp. Kogel arrived at a telegraph office to wire her parents not to send any more mail to her until she contacted them again with a new address.
Suddenly, a “V-2” bomb whistled overhead, the sound stopped suddenly — an indication that the bomb was on top of you and about to drop — and the office where she stood blew up. The force knocked her down and out. She awoke screaming with shattered glass covering her entire body and someone shaking her, telling her she was going to be OK.
A few days later, Corp. Kogel’s WAC unit left London for Southampton, where they boarded a Navy transport ship and crossed the English Channel in the dark of night with lights out. When the ship was within a few miles of Utah Beach, Corp. Kogel’s unit was told to put on their knapsacks, climb over the ship’s rail and down the gigantic ship’s rope ladder to a smaller landing craft on the water that would take them as close to the beach as possible.
Like the troops just a few weeks before them, the women walked out of the landing craft into waist high water toward the flatness of Utah Beach. This time, however, there were no bombs blowing up around them — only the red glow and sound of gunfire in the distance.
Told not to move once they reached the beach, Corp. Kogel and her group sat until daybreak when a truck came from the base camp. Standing in line for mess and still wet from their landing, she remarked to a friend that she would be happy to get some dry clothes and wondered how soon they would be able to get their personal bags that had been floated to shore. A young sergeant standing behind her offered to get a jeep and take them to find the bags. His name was Noel Denton.
For the next six weeks, Corp. Kogel and the other 29 women lived on Utah Beach in two-person tents in a special holding area. During that time, she listened for daily news from the front line, which was just a few miles away, ate meals with the troops, watched Bing Crosby and Bob Hope from the back of a pickup truck for hundreds of troops at Utah Beach, walked on the beach around her area, heard that Paris had been liberated ... and fell in love.
*******
A diminutive, silver-haired Helen Kogel Denton sits on the couch in her Fayetteville home. “Noel was a staff sergeant in the Signal Corps. He and his men would go into towns after they had been taken by the Allied forces and set up telephone wires then come back to the base camp at night. They were also waiting to go to Paris to set up lines in Gen. Eisenhower’s office so they could talk to London and Washington.”
Dating on a Normandy Beach during the invasion of France was not easy, but the couple found a way. “We would walk out to a little farm that had apple juice and Cognac,” reminisces Helen, “and we would sit on a log and drink and talk....”
Gen. Eisenhower’s staff was flown into Paris as soon as it was liberated on August 25, 1944. The tall, handsome Sgt. Denton was there, too – for about three weeks. Then the romance was confined to telephone calls from the front lines and weekend passes to Paris.Below, Helen’s husband, Noel Denton.
Liberated Paris was a wonderful experience for Corp. Kogel who loved to dance at the USO, visit museums and travel the countryside. She witnessed the lights coming back on in Paris from the rooftop of her hotel as well as the V-Day Celebration. “The day after the lights were turned on, we marched in a parade down the Champs Elysees,” said Helen, proudly showing a photo of her unit marching as throngs of Parisians cheered. “We polished our shoes and our buttons and pressed our uniforms. It was thrilling.”
With a story like that, Helen, who was raised on a South Dakota farm, says she knew when she returned home in October of 1945 after the war was over, that she was not going to be a farmer’s wife. So did Noel Denton.
He had grown up in College Park and returned to the job he had with Southern Bell in Atlanta before the war. A few months later, Noel traveled to South Dakota to ask for Helen’s hand in marriage — a marriage that would continue the love that had begun on a beach in Normandy during the D-Day invasion.
Helen and Noel spent 36 wonderful years together, living in Clayton County where they raised show Collies, a passion of Noel’s. In 1954, the couple adopted a 5-month-old baby, Noel Jonathan Junior, who became the center of their life.
With Jon in tow, the Dentons traveled the country showing Collies they had raised at their Deep South Kennel in Clayton County. In 1967, with Jon in junior high school, Helen went to work for Delta Air Lines where she was employed until she retired 15 years later.
As an employee of Delta, Helen took the opportunity to travel with Noel and Jon, going back often to London and Paris as well as Germany, Belgium and other parts of France, including Normandy and Utah Beach.
But in all their years together, and their trips abroad, Helen never told Noel — nor anyone else — about the role she had played in history.
In 1982, Helen and Noel lost Jon in an accident and a few months later, Helen’s beloved Noel died from a heart attack.
“You know, they are gone, but they’re still with me,” says Helen, pointing to the wall of photos next to her bed. “I see them first thing every morning and the last thing every night,” she smiles. “And I have a lot of memories.”
After his retirement from Southern Bell, Noel had become the treasurer of the Collie Club of America and an accredited AKC judge, traveling around the country and the world. Helen carried on his dream by fulfilling his position as treasurer of the club and, later, being elected president of the club’s foundation.
“I had to do something. I had to keep going,” she says. Volunteering became a priority in Helen’s life. She has served as Post Commander of the Riverdale Chapter of the Veterans of Foreign Wars for the past eight years and District Commander of that same organization.
She is an active member of the Delta Pioneers – an organization of retired Delta employees – raising funds for The March of Dimes, United Way, CARE and Cancer drives. She has served on the Red Cross Speakers Bureau, on the South Metro Advisory Committee and is a member of the Office of Volunteer Administration.
Plaques and proclamations attest to the time she has spent helping others: recipient of the DAR Community Service Award, the Clara Barton Award of Meritorious Service, the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Non-violent Social Change Award. A letter from President Bill Clinton congratulates her on being nominated for the Golden Rule Award for community service.
But not until 1994 and the 50th anniversary of D-Day did Helen tell anyone that she had typed the battle plans for the invasion.
“A friend asked what women had done during WWII and if any women were involved in the invasion and I mentioned it,” remembers Helen. The next thing she knew, the friend had called a local TV station and from that she was asked to speak about her experiences at Fort Gillem.
And as Helen says, “I’ve been telling my story ever since.”
Helen says the more she speaks about her experience, the more she realizes how much she wants people to know that women served in WWII and played a significant part. She frequently speaks at civic functions and at area schools where she takes her medals and dog tags to show students. She is often the topic for media coverage, most recently interviewed by NBC. In 2004, she traveled to Washington, D.C., to participate in the World War II Memorial dedication.
She says one of her biggest thrills was speaking before a couple hundred people at Fort McPherson this past June. On Nov. 5, 2005, the city of Riverdale will name a street in her honor followed by her participation in the city’s Veteran’s Day Parade.
“I’m a very lucky woman. A very lucky woman,” she says.
[This story originally appeared in the October 2005 Fayette Woman, the cover of which is shown below.]
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS - Cecil B. DeMille
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