Why Republicans Play Dirty
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Conmander_Jim — 6 years ago(February 23, 2020 09:37 PM)
Soul_Venom said...
Around 10,000 demonstrators in Germany on Sunday marched through the town of Hanau to mourn nine victims who were fatally shot by a suspected right-wing extremist last week.
Addressing the crowds, Hanau Mayor Claus Kaminsky called the past week among the “blackest and darkest” the town had ever experienced during peacetime, the Germany News agency dpa reported.
Thousands of people take part in a funeral march in Hanau, Germany, Sunday, Feb. 23, 2020.
Thousands of people take part in a funeral march in Hanau, Germany, Sunday, Feb. 23, 2020. (Nicolas Armer/dpa via AP)
But he qualified that those who want to pull apart society won't succeed, "because we are more and we will prevent that."
The armed suspect, a 43-year-old German man, fatally shot nine people in the Frankfurt suburb on Wednesday before apparently killing his mother and himself.
Five of the victims were reportedly Turkish citizens. The attacker left rambling texts and videos in which he espoused racist views, called for genocide and claimed to have been under surveillance since birth.
Turkey's ambassador to Germany, Ali Kemal Aydin, warned that Turkish immigrants in Germany are experiencing more and more hate crimes in the country.
"This cannot and this must not continue," Aydin said at the protest.
The racist killings were Germany's third deadly far-right attack in recent months. The rampage followed October's anti-Semitic attack on a synagogue in Halle and the slaying in June of a regional politician who supported Chancellor Angela Merkel's welcoming policy toward migrants.
NEW YORK CITY AIMS TO FIGHT ANTI-SEMITISM WITH AD CAMPAIGN HIGHLIGHTING JEWISH COMMUNITY
The killings come at a time when the Alternative for Germany has become the country's first extreme-right political party to establish itself as a significant force in decades. All of the victims had immigrant roots, and many are accusing the party of producing a climate where extremism and racism can flourish.
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There have been daily candlelight vigils for the victims since the shooting and another big protest against racism on Saturday that also drew thousands. A memorial for the victims is planned for later this week.
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my posts get bumped
you waste your time
just as i planned
I crushed the pathetic loser troll Cuck_Venom and rebuilt him as my toilet -
Soul_Venom — 6 years ago(February 23, 2020 09:35 PM)
Conmander_Jim said...
you lose
PROGRAMMING ALERT: On Sunday, February 23 at 10 p.m. and on Monday, February 24 at 1 a.m ET, Fox News will air the new special "Unknown Valor: A Story of Family, Courage and Sacrifice," which is the story of Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum's journey to reveal the fate of her uncle, Private Harry Gray, who was killed on Iwo Jima 75 years ago. The director's cut of "Unknown Valor,” will be available exclusively on Fox Nation.
"Is that someone that you recognize?" asked Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum, as she showed an old, yellowed picture of a young Marine to World War II veteran Charles Gubish.
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"Oh yeah," said Gubish, the weathered image sparking his recollection. "That was my buddy, Gray."
Harry Gray died 75 years ago, fighting for his country on a remote, volcanic island thousands of miles from home. He's a person who MacCallum never met, but whose story she knows well.
Harry Gray, uncle of Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum
Harry Gray, uncle of Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum
"He was my uncle," said MacCallum, visibly holding back her emotions.
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The incredible scene was the culmination of years of research that MacCallum spent closing the circle on a family story that had been passed down generations, but had never been fully completed until now.
This is all told in MacCallum's new book, "Unknown Valor: A Story of Family, Courage and Sacrifice from Pearl Harbor to Iwo Jima," and in associated Fox News and Fox Nation specials.
"In war movies there are the heroes and then there are hundreds of others," said MacCallum in the Fox Nation show. "The guys who get hit on the beach or in the villages, just trying to carry out the mission. … They are the 'extras' in the movie, but for some family somewhere, they are their 'Harry Gray.' … the line on the family tree that just ends, a young man who never got to have a life, get married, grow old."
'Minutes to Hiroshima' takes Fox Nation viewers back to WWIIVideo
MacCallum began learning about her mother's cousin, Harry, when she was a young girl.
He was 18 years old in the summer of 1944, when he left Arlington, Mass., to join the Marines and fight in World War II.
Harry and nearly 7,000 fellow Marines were killed fighting on Iwo Jima, in what would prove to be one of the bloodiest battles of the war, as the U.S. military prepared for an invasion of Imperial Japan.
"As allied forces fought the Nazis in Europe," narrated MacCallum, "America was virtually alone in the battle against the Japanese in the Pacific."
For MacCallum's family, all they knew of the fate of their son, brother and cousin, was what they could glean from the letters and official reports – that he was killed on Iwo Jima on March 13, 1945.
Harry Gray in Arlington, Massachusetts
Harry Gray in Arlington, Massachusetts
After returning from a trip to Iwo Jima, retracing her uncle's footsteps, MacCallum received a tip that would lead to a series of incredible discoveries.
"I got a call from a researcher friend," said MacCallum in the Fox Nation piece. "He asked for a picture of Harry Gray to show his friend, Charlie Gubish. We knew Charlie was in the 34th replacement draft and had also been wounded on March 13."
"He was my buddy," Gubish told MacCallum as they sat across from each other in one remarkable scene. "My foxhole buddy. He’d always call me 'Pop' because I was 24 at that time and he was 18. He’d always say, 'Pop, sleep, I’ll watch.'"
Fox Nation's 'Minutes to Hiroshima'Video
"To find Charlies after all these years was not something I had ever anticipated," said MacCallum, reflecting on that interview. "His story lined up perfectly with everything we knew about that day and he was able to tell us things about Harry we would never have known."
Gubish remembered the day that Harry was killed, as they marched to the front for the very first time, providing the only first-hand account of his death.
"A mortar shell landed on the right-hand side, about 50 feet and nobody paid no attention," said Gubish. "Then there was one on the left-hand side, about the same distance. I hollered, hit the deck. They got us right in the middle. Well, that’s what killed him."
As MacCallum neared finishing her book, she decided to make another attempt at tracking more close acquaintances of her uncle, and again, it paid off.
She located Harry's friend, George Colburn, who had also enlisted in the Marines and lived in nearby Medford, Mass.
George Colburn of Medford, Massachusetts
George Colburn of Medford, Massachusetts
"George was alive at 93 years old!" said MacCallum in the Fox Nation special. "The same age as his old buddy, Harry Gray."
"When George a -
Conmander_Jim — 6 years ago(February 23, 2020 09:39 PM)
Soul_Venom said...
PROGRAMMING ALERT: On Sunday, February 23 at 10 p.m. and on Monday, February 24 at 1 a.m ET, Fox News will air the new special "Unknown Valor: A Story of Family, Courage and Sacrifice," which is the story of Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum's journey to reveal the fate of her uncle, Private Harry Gray, who was killed on Iwo Jima 75 years ago. The director's cut of "Unknown Valor,” will be available exclusively on Fox Nation.
"Is that someone that you recognize?" asked Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum, as she showed an old, yellowed picture of a young Marine to World War II veteran Charles Gubish.
Original Shows and Documentaries that Celebrate America every day.
Fox Nation is an entertaining streaming service featuring your favorite Fox News personalities, with original shows and documentaries that celebrate America.
Start Your Free Trial
"Oh yeah," said Gubish, the weathered image sparking his recollection. "That was my buddy, Gray."
Harry Gray died 75 years ago, fighting for his country on a remote, volcanic island thousands of miles from home. He's a person who MacCallum never met, but whose story she knows well.
Harry Gray, uncle of Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum
Harry Gray, uncle of Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum
"He was my uncle," said MacCallum, visibly holding back her emotions.
Like What You're Reading?
Sign up to get updates about Fox Nation
Enter Email Address
Submit
The incredible scene was the culmination of years of research that MacCallum spent closing the circle on a family story that had been passed down generations, but had never been fully completed until now.
This is all told in MacCallum's new book, "Unknown Valor: A Story of Family, Courage and Sacrifice from Pearl Harbor to Iwo Jima," and in associated Fox News and Fox Nation specials.
"In war movies there are the heroes and then there are hundreds of others," said MacCallum in the Fox Nation show. "The guys who get hit on the beach or in the villages, just trying to carry out the mission. … They are the 'extras' in the movie, but for some family somewhere, they are their 'Harry Gray.' … the line on the family tree that just ends, a young man who never got to have a life, get married, grow old."
'Minutes to Hiroshima' takes Fox Nation viewers back to WWIIVideo
MacCallum began learning about her mother's cousin, Harry, when she was a young girl.
He was 18 years old in the summer of 1944, when he left Arlington, Mass., to join the Marines and fight in World War II.
Harry and nearly 7,000 fellow Marines were killed fighting on Iwo Jima, in what would prove to be one of the bloodiest battles of the war, as the U.S. military prepared for an invasion of Imperial Japan.
"As allied forces fought the Nazis in Europe," narrated MacCallum, "America was virtually alone in the battle against the Japanese in the Pacific."
For MacCallum's family, all they knew of the fate of their son, brother and cousin, was what they could glean from the letters and official reports – that he was killed on Iwo Jima on March 13, 1945.
Harry Gray in Arlington, Massachusetts
Harry Gray in Arlington, Massachusetts
After returning from a trip to Iwo Jima, retracing her uncle's footsteps, MacCallum received a tip that would lead to a series of incredible discoveries.
"I got a call from a researcher friend," said MacCallum in the Fox Nation piece. "He asked for a picture of Harry Gray to show his friend, Charlie Gubish. We knew Charlie was in the 34th replacement draft and had also been wounded on March 13."
"He was my buddy," Gubish told MacCallum as they sat across from each other in one remarkable scene. "My foxhole buddy. He’d always call me 'Pop' because I was 24 at that time and he was 18. He’d always say, 'Pop, sleep, I’ll watch.'"
Fox Nation's 'Minutes to Hiroshima'Video
"To find Charlies after all these years was not something I had ever anticipated," said MacCallum, reflecting on that interview. "His story lined up perfectly with everything we knew about that day and he was able to tell us things about Harry we would never have known."
Gubish remembered the day that Harry was killed, as they marched to the front for the very first time, providing the only first-hand account of his death.
"A mortar shell landed on the right-hand side, about 50 feet and nobody paid no attention," said Gubish. "Then there was one on the left-hand side, about the same distance. I hollered, hit the deck. They got us right in the middle. Well, that’s what killed him."
As MacCallum neared finishing her book, she decided to make another attempt at tracking more close acquaintances of her uncle, and again, it paid off.
She located Harry's friend, George Colburn, who had also enlisted in the Marines and lived in nearby Medford, Mass.
George Colburn of Medford, Massachusetts
George Colburn of Medford, Massachusetts
"George was alive at 93 years old!" said MacCallum in the Fox Nation special. "The same age as his old buddy, Harry Gray."
"When George and I connect