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I guess I am one of 156 million

 => Received from my mom today - this one really nails it....

I guess I am one of 156 million

Presidential candidates Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John Edwards were flying  to a convention. 

Barack looked at Hillary, chuckled and said,"You know,I could throw a $1,000 bill out of the window right now and make somebody very happy." Hillary shrugged her shoulders and replied,  "I could throw ten $100 bills out of the window and make  ten people very happy." John  added, "That being the case, I could throw one hundred $10 bills out of the window and make a hundred people very happy."

Hearing their exchange, the pilot rolled his eyes and said to his co-pilot, "Such big-shots back there. I could throw all of them out of the window and make 156 million  people very happy."

I know I'm one of the 156 million!  If you're  one of those 156 million, PLEASE forward!

GDW

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Officer remembers the fallen on Memorial Day

This article reprinted with permission of the USAF AETC Website really drives home the meaning of Memorial Day, with regard to the sacrifice this important day symbolizes.

Memorial Day Commentary

Officer remembers the fallen on Memorial Day

Commentary by Maj. Mike Nachshen
Public Affairs Education with Industry Partner


5/18/2007 - SAN ANTONIO, Texas  -- Soon it will be Memorial Day, and I'll remember.

I'll remember Eric. I'll remember how even though I only met him two or three times, his wife was my deputy and I knew him through her eyes. I'll remember that every time she talked about the love of her life, her face would come alive and her sparkling eyes would light up the whole room. I'll remember that even though my wife and I couldn't make it to their wedding, we got the newlyweds a silver-serving spoon they had listed on their registry. I'll remember when I last saw him, Eric and his wife were holding hands, and they looked the way people do when they're madly in love with each other.

And because it will be Memorial Day, I'll remember. I'll remember hearing we lost a plane in Iraq. I'll remember how I figured the odds were pretty slim that it was someone I knew. I'll remember the sepia-toned West Texas landscape as we drove for what seemed like an eternity to the memorial service, 90 long miles away. And I'll remember the way the eyes of Eric's wife glistened with tears as she contemplated being a widow at 26 while walking down that long aisle dressed in black and all alone. 

And because it will be Memorial Day, I'll remember my friend Sarah. I'll remember how Sarah would stop by my desk every time she had business in my building and how her smile and laughter would burst into every nook and cranny and drop kick your rotten mood into the trash can. I'll remember how she would put funny pictures in my staff meeting slides when I stepped away from my desk for more than 30 seconds without locking my computer. And I'll remember Friday evenings at the officer's club, as we tried to solve world hunger and cure cancer while we washed down fried food with endless pitchers of frosty beverages.

And because it will be Memorial Day, I'll remember. I'll remember how excited Sarah was when she told me about her upcoming deployment ... and how as I looked at her, I recalled what it felt like to be a high-speed, low-drag young lieutenant headed overseas for the first time on what promised to be a giant adventure. I'll remember being deployed for Hurricane Katrina relief efforts, opening that e-mail from my boss back home, and reading the message which began "Mike, there is no easy way to tell you this ..." And I'll remember what the dirt felt like on my hands as I threw it on her coffin while her parents and brothers cried and tried to understand what strange law of physics could allow a small wooden box to contain Sarah's irrepressible energy.

And because it will be Memorial Day, I'll remember to make my way down to the local Veteran's cemetery and remember the lives that were and the lives that should have been. I'll remember Eric and Sarah had dreams and goals and aspirations. And while Eric and Sarah are surely heroes who died for their country, I'll remember them not as towering figures to be worshipped, but as people who laughed, loved and brought others happiness while trying to make the world a better place. And perhaps most importantly, I'll remember that they had people who loved them, and still miss them and think about them every day.

And I'll remember I'm on sacred ground and that each marker represents the crushed dream of a wife, a parent, a brother. I'll run my hand over the marble stone that marks some stranger's final resting place and remember that below my feet lies someone's Sarah, someone's Eric.

And because it will be Memorial Day, I'll remember my other brothers and sisters. I'll remember the Irish soccer fanatic we nicknamed Pikey, and his beautiful baby girl who will grow up never knowing her father. I'll remember Meagan, whose warmth and can-do attitude infected you from 6,000 miles away. I'll remember Ben, who lived three houses down from me and was always working in his yard. They are all heroes now. But they are all real people to me. Now they're gone. I'll never forget them.

And, because it will be Memorial Day, I will forget some things. I'll forget the killer deals on new cars, plasma-screen TVs and deluxe dining room sets. I'll forget the crass commercialism. I'll forget the things that don't matter in life.

Because it will be Memorial Day, I'll remember the important things instead. I'll remember to kiss my wife and tell her I love her. I'll remember the friends I lost and the friends I'll never get a chance to meet. I'll remember they had names and faces. I'll remember ... I'll remember.

This article can be found at:
http://www.aetc.af.mil/news/story.asp?storyID=123052305

GDW

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A Teacher with Courage & Pride

 <From a note from my Mom>      "A teacher with courage & pride"

In September of 2005, a social studies schoolteacher from Arkansas did something not to be forgotten. On the first day of school, with permission of the school superintendent, the principal, and the building supervisor, she took all of the desks out of the classroom.

The kids came into first period, they walked in; there were no desks. They obviously looked around and said, "Where's our desks?"  The teacher said, "You can't have a desk until you tell me how you earn them."

They thought, "Well, maybe it's our grades."
"No," she said.

"Maybe it's our behavior."
And she told them, "No, it's not even your behavior."

And so they came and went in the first period, still no desks in the classroom.

Second period, same thing.

Third period.

By early afternoon television news crews had gathered in the class to find out about this
crazy teacher who had taken all the desks out of the classroom. 

The last period of the day, the instructor gathered her class.  They were at this time sitting on the floor around the sides of the room.  She said, "Throughout the day no one has really understood how you earn the desks that sit in this classroom ordinarily.  Now I'm going to tell you."

She went over to the door of her classroom and opened it, and as she did U.S. veterans, wearing their uniforms, walked into that classroom, each one carrying a school desk.  And they placed those school desks in rows, and then they stood along the wall.  By the time they had finished placing the desks, those kids, for the first time I think perhaps, in their lives understood how they earned those desks.

Their teacher said, "You don't have to earn those desks.  These guys did it for you.  They put them out there for you, but it's up to you to sit here responsibly, to learn, to be good students and good citizens, because they paid a price for you to have that desk, and don't ever forget it."

Source: Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee speech to CPAC, 02 March 2007>
Verified at Snopes.com:   http://www.snopes.com/glurge/nodesks.asp"

"Friends, I think sometimes we forget that the freedoms that we have are freedoms not because of celebrities. The freedoms are because of ordinary people who did extraordinary things, who loved this country more than life itself, and who not only earned a school desk for a kid at the Robinson High School in Little Rock, but who earned a seat for you and me to enjoy this great land we call home, this wonderful nation that we better love enough to protect and preserve with the kind of conservative, solid values and principles that made us a great nation." 

"We live in the Land of the Free because of the brave."


GDW
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Remember to pray for our country today (and everyday)

Today is the (still legal) National Day of Prayer.

Please remember to pray for our country today (and everyday) while you still can.
The current US House & Senate do not have ours or the country's best interests in mind so the US of A needs our prayers now, more than ever.  She also needs our attention & our votes in the coming elections.   
GDW
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