Recent Posts

Pages: [1] 2 3 4 ... 10
1
The Holocaust survivor who became a Medal of Honor recipient
By Jon Guttman
 Friday, May 3
 
When Tibor Rubin received the Medal of Honor in 2005, he largely had his sergeant to thank. Said sergeant constantly sent him on missions intended to get him killed. By then, however, Rubin had a history of defying the Reaper.

Born in Pásztó, Hungary, on June 18, 1929, Tibor Rubin was 13 when the Nazis sent him to Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria. He survived 14 months before the U.S. Third Army liberated the camp. His family was less fortunate — his stepmother and sister died in Auschwitz and his father perished in Buchenwald.


In 1948 Rubin emigrated to the United States, working first as a shoemaker and then a butcher in New York City. He also strove to fulfill a promise that “if the Lord helped me go to America, I’d join the Army.”

He failed the language test in 1949 but enlisted after a second try. In July 1950 Private First Class “Ted” Rubin was shipped to Korea as a member of Company I, 8th Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division.

https://www.militarytimes.com/off-duty/military-culture/2024/05/03/the-holocaust-survivor-who-became-a-medal-of-honor-recipient/
2
11 minutes ago
Trump once pretended to fire me: testimony
By Kyle Schnitzer

Former Trump Organization controller Jeff McConney testified Monday morning that Donald Trump once told him he was fired — only he wasn’t.

Describing the moment that sounds like it could've come straight from "The Apprentice," McConney said that once when he walked into Trump’s office, Trump, who was on the phone, jokingly told him that he was fired because his cash balances went down the week before.

“Jeff, you’re fired,” McConney testified, adding that Trump, when he got off the phone, told him: “You’re not fired but my cash balances went down from last week.”

Trump then told McConney to “negotiated my bills,” according to the witnesses.

McConney said it was a “teaching moment” for him.
3
Breaking News4 min(s) ago
Ex-top Biden DOJ official now prosecuting Trump was once paid by DNC for 'political consulting'

EXCLUSIVE: The Democratic National Committee paid Trump prosecutor Matthew Colangelo thousands of dollars for "political consulting" in 2018, Fox News Digital has learned.

Colangelo delivered opening statements in the unprecedented criminal trial of former President Trump and serves as a top prosecutor with Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's Office on the case.

Colangelo joined Bragg’s office in December 2022 after the resignations of Mark Pomerantz and Carey Dunne — prosecutors who were investigating Trump and resigned in protest of Bragg’s initial unwillingness to indict the former president. Colangelo left a senior role at the Biden Justice Department to join Bragg's team. Bragg afterward brought charges against the former president in April 2023, raising questions among some in the GOP about alleged politicization of the case.

Posted by Brooke Singman
Fox News
4
 ////00000////

... on the brightside, more Gazan Air BnB's and VRBO's will be available for Summer rentals.

5
After this brief interlude of soothing music, I hope y'all have a wonderful, beautiful day! 

:grouphug:
6
Isn't Marine Corps Intelligence an oxymoron?

KIDDING!  JUST KIDDING! 000hehehehe
7
Bullets and I.E.D.'s are color blind.
8
Judge Big Juan dares Trump to cross this line.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkzWyOaS8kU

 :laugh: Appropriate cartoon.  :beer:

Yes, he's just waiting to throw him in the slammer.  Trump needs to think things through--what does he think they're going to do with him or to him once they have him out of the public eye???
9
 ////00000////

On Boston's MBTA, trains usually collide, derail, catch fire, kill unsuspecting passengers, and lose power between stations ... haven't gone off a cliff ... yet ... in due time.

10
Marine Corps Offering Thousands of Dollars in Bonuses in Push for More Intelligence Specialists
 
Military.com | By Drew F. Lawrence
Published May 03, 2024 at 10:49am ET

The Marine Corps needs more counterintelligence and human intelligence specialists, also known as CI/HUMINT, and is offering some Marines thousands of dollars in bonuses to transfer into those jobs.

The service has labeled the military occupational specialty, or MOS, as "high-demand, low-density," adding that "the need for qualified Marines to lateral move to this MOS will remain high for the foreseeable future," according to an official administrative message posted in late April.
 
The effort is aimed at recruiting current corporals, sergeants or staff sergeants from any other Marine Corps job. Lance corporals and gunnery sergeants can also apply, but must be "determined exceptionally qualified" for the role based on the screening process, according to the message.
 

CI/HUMINT specialists conduct "sensitive and complex" intelligence operations in support of Marine units, like the Marine Air-Ground Task Force, or MAGTF, around the world, according to the message.

gopbriefingroom.com/index.php?action=post;board=60.0
Pages: [1] 2 3 4 ... 10