Saturday, November 16, 2013

GIVE THEM BACK THEIR BULLETS

Britain wants its guns back - a Daily Telegraph online poll has revealed that over 80 percent of Brits would rather a repeal on the hand gun ban over various other "new law" choices. Read it & weep, Piers Morgan - S.L.


Last Friday the Daily Telegraph, Britain's most widely read broadsheet newspaper, issued an online poll asking members of the public which proposal they would like to see introduced as a Private Members' Bill in the UK's Parliament.

Private Members' Bills are introduced by Members of Parliament or Peers who are not government ministers.

The choices include term limits for Prime Ministers, a flat tax, a law to encourage the 'greening' of public spaces and the repealing of Britain's hand gun ban. Following the Dunblane massacre in 1996, in which 16 schoolchildren were killed, Parliament passed The Firearms Act of 1997, which essentially banned handguns for the atrocity.

But Britons seem unconvinced by the law. The proposer, known as "Colliemum" asked, ". . . why should only criminals be 'allowed' to possess guns and shoot unarmed, defenseless citizens and police officers?"


While the poll continues, so far over 80 percent of the 11,000+ respondents have told the Telegraph that they want to see the handgun ban repealed. The news comes as America contemplates its own new laws on gun ownership, with British talk show host Piers Morgan claiming to back a UK-style ban for the United States.

Read the rest of it HERE

STORMBRINGER SENDS

Friday, November 15, 2013

FIGURE THE ODDS


I just spent the better part of three hours crafting my greatest political satire yet, setting up the photo imagery that is the hallmark of a STORMBRINGER post, was two-thirds done with it when I hit the wrong part of the touchpad on this Windows 8 piece of shit and everything went = POOF! = into thin air.

Thank God I've got the basic verbiage & imagery saved, it will not be hard to recreate - you'll just have to wait another twenty four hours for something that's been burning inside of me since Monday.

In the meantime a little entertainment to bide you all over . . . from the greatest film ever made . . .




STORMBRINGER SENDS

Thursday, November 14, 2013

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME

What a life I've led.

If I live to be a thousand nobody will ever be able to take away from me the memory of Chu Mee, comin' at me in her black silk mini kimono, shaking her shoulders and wailin' . . .




STORMBRINGER SENDS

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

THE GREAT ESCAPE TUNNEL

Untouched for almost seven decades, the tunnel used in the Great Escape has finally been unearthed. The 111-yard passage nicknamed ‘Harry’ by Allied prisoners was sealed by the Germans after the audacious break-out from the POW camp Stalag Luft III in western Poland.

Despite huge interest in the subject, encouraged by the film starring Steve McQueen, the tunnel remained undisturbed over the decades because it was behind the Iron Curtain and the Soviet authorities had no interest in its significance.



But at last British archaeologists have excavated it, and discovered its remarkable secrets.

Many of the bed boards which had been joined together to stop it collapsing were still in position. And the ventilation shaft, ingeniously crafted from used powdered milk containers known as Klim Tins, remained in working order. Scattered throughout the tunnel, which is 30ft below ground, were bits of old metal buckets, hammers and crowbars which were used to hollow out the route.

A total of 600 prisoners worked on three tunnels at the same time. They were nicknamed Tom, Dick and Harry and were just 2 ft square for most of their length.

It was on the night of March 24 and 25, 1944, that 76 Allied airmen escaped through Harry. Barely a third of the 200 prisoners – many in fake German uniforms and civilian outfits and carrying false identity papers – who were meant to slip away managed to leave before the alarm was raised when escapee number 77 was spotted.

Tunnel vision: A tunnel reconstruction showing the trolley system.

Only three made it back to Britain . Another 50 were executed by firing squad on the orders of Adolf Hitler, who was furious after learning of the breach of security.

In all, 90 boards from bunk beds, 62 tables, 34 chairs and 76 benches, as well as thousands of items including knives, spoons, forks, towels and blankets, were squirrelled away by the Allied prisoners to aid the escape plan under the noses of their captors.

Although the Hollywood movie suggested otherwise, no Americans were involved in the operation. Most were British, and the others were from Canada, Poland, New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa. All the tunnellers were Canadian personnel with backgrounds in mining.

The site of the tunnel, recently excavated by British archaeologists.

The latest dig, over three weeks in August, located the entrance to Harry, which was originally concealed under a stove in Hut 104.

The team also found another tunnel, called George, whose exact position had not been charted. It was never used as the 2,000 prisoners were forced to march to other camps as the Red Army approached in January 1945.

Watching the excavation was Gordie King, 91, an RAF radio operator, who was 140th in line to use Harry and therefore missed out.
‘This brings back such bitter-sweet memories,’ he said as he wiped away tears. ‘I’m amazed by what they’ve found.’

Bitter-sweet memories: Gordie King, 91, made an emotional return to Stalag Luft III.

FWIW the rear-gunner off my Uncle's plane was at Luft Stalag III at the time of the Great Escape. A known escape artist with several runs already under his belt, he was not allowed to participate in the Escape as he was being watched by the Germans. The only survivor of the shoot-down, this probably saved his life a second time.

STORMBRINGER SENDS

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

MONTH OF HONOR CONTINUES . . .

Two quotes about Veterans from real 'men of letters' . . . S.L.

“As a small boy I had known a number of these men who had fought in the Army of the Potomac; they were grave, dignified, and thoughtful, with long white beards and a general air of being pillars of the community . . . yet once, ages ago, they had been everywhere and had seen everything, and nothing that happened to them thereafter meant anything much.



. . . these old gentlemen, drowsing out the greater part of their lives in the backwoods, had once been lifted beyond themselves by an experience which perhaps was all the more significant because it was imperfectly understood. They gave a tone and a color to the lives of the people who knew them, and they put a special meaning on such a word as “patriotism”; it was not something you talked about very much, just a living force that you instinctively responded to.


Bruce Catton
“The Army of the Potomac”
1951



“They will live a long time these men of the South Pacific. They had an American quality. They, like their victories, will be remembered as long as our generation lives. After that, like men of the Confederacy, they will become strangers. Longer and longer shadows will obscure them, until their Guadalcanel sounds distant on the ear like Shiloh and Valley Forge.”

James Michener
“Tales of the South Pacific”
1946




"Respect . . ."

STORMBRINGER SENDS

Monday, November 11, 2013

THOUGHTS ON THIS VETERAN'S DAY

From a member of Team STORMBRINGER . . . S.L.

We are now the ‘Old Men in Ball Caps’. The names and ribbons not only foreign but from the headlines of bygone days. Our tanks and aircraft are gone, even from the Main Gate displays at the Bases where we served. They are in museums now.

But if the temperature and humidity are just right, or I catch a faint scent in the wind or a flash in the sky, I am back there, with them. All so young and full of cynical bravado, and of life.

God how I miss it and them; and how honored I am to have served.

Rob S
USMC '68-'75



I couldn't have said it better myself. It was a distinct honor to have served "in the company of heroes" . . .

STORMBRINGER SENDS

FOR THE FALLEN

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning,
We will remember them.