TheBadFoodie posted: "Social media users are calling to rescue Ukrainian officer Nadiya Savchenko, who has been taken hostage by Donbas terrorists. For this all those impartial are being asked to post the photograph of the aviator, who has already been dubbed "G.I. Jane," o"
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"I'm here to Destroy Corporate Owned Politicos, Like: Cynthia Lummis, John Barrasso and Mikey Enzi, the Scourge of Wyoming Politics. They All Feed off the Teats of Corporate Lobbyists and their Benefactors. They're destroying American Democracy and must be Removed from Office ASAP!"
Saturday, June 21, 2014
Heroic Ukrainian female officer taken hostage by the terrorists “blew up” social media.
TheBadFoodie posted: "Social media users are calling to rescue Ukrainian officer Nadiya Savchenko, who has been taken hostage by Donbas terrorists. For this all those impartial are being asked to post the photograph of the aviator, who has already been dubbed "G.I. Jane," o"
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Monday, June 16, 2014
Maine Rep. Lawrence E. Lockman is truly one Ignorant, F'in Village-Idiot!
Republican Maine state Representative Lawrence Lockman is under fire for comments he's made in the media regarding rape, abortion, and homosexuality.
An investigation by Mike Tipping, an activist with Maine People's Alliance, found numerous offensive comments made by the Republican in various newspaper interviews.
Perhaps the most inflammatory was a press statement from 1995 in which Lockman says "If a woman has (the right to an abortion), why shouldn't a man be free to use his superior strength to force himself on a woman? At least the rapist's pursuit of sexual freedom doesn't (in most cases) result in anyone's death."
That wasn't all.
According to the report, Lockman once implied that the HIV virus can be spread through mosquitoes and bed sheets. Lockman also asserted that liberals helped exacerbate the AIDS epidemic by assuring "the public that the practice of sodomy is a legitimate alternative lifestyle, rather than a perverted and depraved crime against humanity."
In a letter to Bangor News, Lockman once wrote "Clearly the practice of sodomy is learned behavior, and those addicted to this form of biologically-insane sex are at high risk for all manner of serious medical problems."
Lockman also spoke out against HIV infected students attending school, saying "It's peculiar that the government is telling health care workers that surfaces contaminated with bodily fluids should be thoroughly disinfected, but at the same time they are telling us that toilet seats have some magical property that they are able to resist viruses."
He also tried to alert people to a "secret gay affirmative action plan," saying "You can bet the rent money they will demand that employers set up goals and timetables to achieve 10 percent homosexual representation in the workforce and in government contracts."
Ben Grant, the chairman of the Maine Democratic Party, called for Lockman to resign in light of these statements, calling them "hateful, vicious, and offensive." Grant also called Lockman "disturbed individual who holds some of the most abhorrent beliefs ever heard from a public official in Maine."
Lockman has refused to respond to direct questions but released a statement, saying "I have always been passionate about my beliefs, and years ago I said things that I regret. I hold no animosity toward anyone by virtue of their gender or sexual orientation, and today I am focused on ensuring freedom and economic prosperity for all Mainers."
By: Igor Derysh | March 4, 2014
Friday, June 6, 2014
Ukrainians Made an Enormous Contribution to Allied Victory in World War II!
Staunton, 4 June – Moscow propagandists have criticized the plans of Ukrainian President-elect Petro Poroshenko to attend the 70th anniversary commemorations of the D-Day landings in Normandy suggesting that Ukraine was not one of the allied countries and that Ukrainians supported the Nazis.
But those implications are untrue, Yury Shapoval, a member of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, says, and in fact, "Poroshenko is going to France as the representative of a people which made an enormous contribution to the victory over fascism".
In an article in yesterday's Nezavisimaya Gazeta, the historian cites the words of Saturday Evening Post writer Edgar Snow in January 1945 that the eastern front during World War II was not so much an example of "Russian glory" but rather "in justice should be recognized in the first instance as a Ukrainian war."
"World War II was for many reasons a 'Ukrainian' [conflict]," the Kyiv author says. On March 15, 1939, Hungarian forces invaded Carpathian Ukraine, "which had just proclaimed state independence." The Ukrainians fought back against what was the first military attack by an ally of Hitler, but they lost and were absorbed by Hungary.
And at the other end of the war, on 2 September 1945, the Ukrainian historian continues, "a young general of Ukrainian origin, Kuzma Derevyanko signed the act of capitulation by Japan on the American battleship Missouri."
The war passed across Ukraine twice, once "from west to east" and then "from east to west." On its territory were at one time "up to 60 percent of the divisions of the Wehrmacht and almost half of the military units of the Red Army." In the latter, there were between six and seven million Ukrainians.
Although Moscow has done everything it can to understate the Ukrainian contribution, there were more than 300 generals of Ukrainian origin in the Red Army. The number was in fact larger. Although Shapoval does not mention it here, officers of Ukrainian origin were allowed to change their nationality to Russian upon reaching the rank of colonel.
And the Ukrainians showed they knew how to fight. Nearly one in every five Soviet soldiers named a hero of the Soviet Union was a Ukrainian. Of the 115 who were given the award twice, 32 were Ukrainians, and ne Ukrainian – pilot Ivan Kozhdeub — received it three times.
Ukrainians did not just fight in the Soviet Army or on the territory of their republic, Shapoval points out. Between 35,000 and 50,000 Ukrainians served in the Canadian military during the war, approximately 11 percent of that country's uniformed services. Almost 40,000 Ukrainians took part in the Overlord operation as part of the American military.
Five thousand Ukrainians in France fought in that country's Foreign Legion, and many rose to leadership positions in the Resistance. Every eighth member of General Vladyslav Ander's Polish forces was a Ukrainian, even though in most cases, they called and were called Poles.
"The Ukrainian theme sounded loudly and tragically in the apocalyptic symphony of the Second World War," the Kyiv academic concludes. "One should not forget about that," however much Russian propagandists and those elsewhere who follow their lead try to obscure the facts of the case.
Poroshenko thus has every right to be in Normandy as the representative of a nation which gave so much of its blood and treasure to defeat the common enemy of the United Nations. That is especially the case because unlike the Soviet Union which Vladimir Putin likes to celebrate, Ukraine did not use the end of the war for liberation to enslave others.
Thursday, June 5, 2014
Thoughts for the Day!
c I HOPE YOU ENJOYED THESE REFLECTIVE MOMENTS. Live simply, expect little, give much! | ||
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