An American, Australian ,Israeli, British "Judeo Christian Friendly " blog.

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Warning to all Muslims the world over seeking asylum and protection from the manifestations of their faith.
Do not under any circumstances come to Australia, for we are a Nation founded upon Judeo Christian Law and principles and as such Australia is an anathema to any follower of the Paedophile Slave Trader Mohammad's cult of Islam.
There is no ideology more hated and despised in Australia than Islam.You simply would not like it here.
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Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.
Voltaire French author, humanist, rationalist, & satirist (1694 - 1778)
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Those who demand you believe that Islam is a Religion of Peace also demand you believe in Anthropogenic Global Warming.
Aussie News & Views Jan 1 2009
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"But Communism is the god of discontent, and needs no blessing. All it needs is a heart willing to hate, willing to call envy “justice."
Equality then means the violent destruction of all social and cultural distinctions. Freedom means absolute dictatorship over the people."
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Take Hope from the Heart of Man and you make him a Beast of Prey
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“ If you will not fight for right when you can easily win without bloodshed; if you will not fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly; you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance of survival.
“There may be even a worse case. You may have to fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than live as slaves”
Winston Churchill. Pg.310 “The Hell Makers” John C. Grover ISBN # 0 7316 1918 8
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------If language is not correct, then what is said is not what is meant; if what is said is not what is meant, then what must be done remains undone; if this remains undone, morals and art will deteriorate; if justice goes astray, the people will stand about in helpless confusion. Hence there must be no arbitrariness in what is said.
This matters above everything.
—Confucius
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'a socialist is communist without the courage of conviction to say what he really is'.
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Hontar: We must work in the world, your eminence. The world is thus.
Altamirano: No, Señor Hontar. Thus have we made the world... thus have I made it.
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Voltaire said: “If you want to know who rules over you, just find out who you are not permitted to criticize.”


--------Check this out, what an Bum WOW!!!!




When those sworn to destroy you,Communism, Socialism,"Change you can Believe in" via their rabid salivating Mongrel Dog,Islam,take away your humanity, your God given Sanctity of Life, Created in His Image , If you are lucky this prayer is maybe all you have left, If you believe in God and his Son,Jesus Christ, then you are, despite the evils that may befall you are better off than most.

Lord, I come before You with a heavy heart. I feel so much and yet sometimes I feel nothing at all. I don't know where to turn, who to talk to, or how to deal with the things going on in my life. You see everything, Lord. You know everything, Lord. Yet when I seek you it is so hard to feel You here with me. Lord, help me through this. I don't see any other way to get out of this. There is no light at the end of my tunnel, yet everyone says You can show it to me. Lord, help me find that light. Let it be Your light. Give me someone to help. Let me feel You with me. Lord, let me see what You provide and see an alternative to taking my life. Let me feel Your blessings and comfort. Amen.
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"The chief weapon in the quiver of all Islamist expansionist movements, is the absolute necessity to keep victims largely unaware of the actual theology plotting their demise. To complete this deception, a large body of ‘moderates’ continue to spew such ridiculous claims as “Islam means Peace” thereby keeping non-Muslims from actually reading the Qur’an, the Sira, the Hadith, or actually looking into the past 1400 years of history. Islamists also deny or dismiss the concept of ‘abrogation’, which is the universal intra-Islamic method of replacing slightly more tolerable aspects of the religion in favor of more violent demands for Muslims to slay and subdue infidels"

*DO NOT CLICK ON ANY SENDVID VIDEOS *


Anthropogenic Global Warming SCAM

Showing posts with label Australia's Finest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia's Finest. Show all posts

Monday, November 11, 2013

Thank You Diggers!!!! Lest We Forget, Australia's Finest Who Gave Their Today So That The Likes Of Me Might Have A Tomorrow .. Thank You




In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place: and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.


Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

John McCrae (1872–1918)

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Australian PM Abbott Visits Australian Troops in Afghanistan

Under heavy security, PM Tony Abbott visits Afghanistan and declares war over

Ian McPhedran in Tarin Kowt 
The Daily Telegraph
October 29 ,2013




PRIME Minister Tony Abbott last night declared Australia's longest conflict over, saying our soldiers were leaving Afghanistan a better place after the war on terror.

After more than a decade of battle and the loss of 40 Australian soldiers, Mr Abbott arrived at Tarin Kowt under unprecedented security for a "recognition ceremony" to lower the flag on the war





The prime minister told a large crowd of Australian and coalition forces the war was ending, "not with victory, not with defeat, but with, we hope, an Afghanistan that is better for our presence here".

"Our armed forces and our officials have done their duty. That duty never ends, although our duty here has,'' Mr Abbott said.

The prime minister and officers from four countries laid wreaths at the base memorial wall, carrying the names of 114 fallen soldiers, including the diggers who paid the ultimate sacrifice.

Governor of Oruzgan Province Amir Mohammad Akhunzada thanked Australia and other countries involved in the province from the bottom of his heart.



"I hope that friendly countries will continue their help through the central Government in order to keep Afghanistan stable and self-sufficient," Mr Amir said.

He said the enemies of Afghanistan should understand that their ideas of regaining power are "delusionary and mad.''

Following a secret dash from Sydney to the Middle East, Mr Abbott arrived at Camp Holland for his first visit as prime minister, accompanied by Opposition leader Bill Shorten, Defence Minister David Johnston and Defence Chief General David Hurley.


The camp will be formally handed over to Afghan security forces in mid-December.

The giant C-17 transport jet, with Mr Abbott in the cockpit, was shadowed into TK airfield by US Apache attack helicopters and army snipers took up overwatch positions in towers overlooking the arrival bay.

Mr Abbott had been wearing body armour and a helmet on the flight into Tarin Kowt but emerged from the cockpit of the C-17 wearing an open neck shirt and pullover.

It was a stark contrast to Kevin Rudd who strode off the plane wearing a bullet proof vest when he visited the country before the election campaign.

Inside the base a gaggle of special forces bodyguards and infantry and RAAF "guardian angels'' took up positions on every corner as Mr Abbott was taken inside the headquarters for secret briefings by the Commander of Combined Team Uruzgan, Colonel Wade Stothart, and the US commander of Regional Command South, Major General Paul LaCamera, and deputy ISAF commander British General John Lorimar.



The memorial at which the wreaths were laid last night is due to be painted over, broken up and buried, as revealed by News Corp on Sunday, prompting anger from soldiers and the families of diggers.

Families and soldiers have reacted angrily to the plans saying that they want the wall returned home to the Australian War Memorial.

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Australia's Finest: Captain Gordon Phillips

What a great LIFE / story!!! Congratulations Captain Gordon Phillips.

Small piece of Australian aviation history ends with retirement of Captain Gordon Phillips

HENRY BUDD 
The Daily Telegraph
June 29 2013

WHEN Captain Gordon Phillips stepped out of his Qantas A380 cockpit in Sydney on Wednesday morning, a small piece of Australian aviation history came to end.

The moment marked the end of an incredible 45-year career for Capt Phillips who, until that moment, was the longest-serving Qantas pilot still in the job.

Capt Phillips, 64, was given a rousing cheer by his passengers as he completed his final flight, ending a remarkable journey that began as a teenager on a farm in Swan Hill, Victoria.

With a childhood dream to fly, the then 16-year-old applied for both the air force and Qantas, which had just begun its cadet program. He was accepted into both, but chose the civilian route.

The following year he relocated to Sydney to begin training at Mascot and less than two years later was presented with his wings by the then Governor-General Lord Richard Casey at a ceremony inside a Qantas hangar at Sydney airport.

 But instead of flying Qantas passenger planes, the 20 graduates first had to get some experience, with Capt Phillips picking up work for a company in the Solomon Islands, flying in and out of jungle airstrips, many cut during WWII.

For a young man from rural Victoria who had never left Australia it was the experience of a lifetime - flying small aircraft into remote airstrips and soaking up the island life.

"That time is still a very precious part of my career," he said yesterday.

After 14 months, Capt Phillips returned to Australia and began training to fly Qantas' flagship Boeing 707, a four-engine jet aircraft larger and more powerful than anything he had flown before.

"It was pretty exciting and a bit scary for guys who had been flying around in light aircraft," he said. 

His first commercial flight for Qantas was to London as a second officer in training. That was in May, 1970, an era when pilots were globetrotters.

"I don't think my colleagues believe. A typical London trip was nine or 10 days, 16 legs," he said.

"We would do something like Sydney-Bali-Singapore. Overnight (in Singapore) then do Singapore-Kuala Lumpur-Colombo-Bahrain. Then maybe Bahrain-Istanbul-Rome and London." 

Out of the scores of places he has flown to, Capt Phillips listed Bermuda at the top.

"We didn't have long there, but we would jump on our pedalos (pedal-start motorbikes) and race around the island. It was a different atmosphere out there. You could almost feel the pirate ships in the coves," he said.

Over the following 33 years, Capt Phillips flew Boeing 747s, 767s and 747-400s before making the switch to the giant Airbus A380 five years ago - a plane with technology that was unimaginable when he began flying. 

In his 45 years as an aviator, Capt Philips has flown the equivalent of 400 laps of the globe and carried just under a million passengers.



With such a long record, he was bound to have had a few hair-raising mid-air moments.

He said he had experienced his fair share of "lost" engines - an event he describes as an "inconvenience".

"I've been on flights where we've had to shut engines down or they have failed. It's what we train for," he said.

With his 65th birthday looming in February - the age at which international pilots must retire - Capt Phillips made the decision to give up the life of a pilot.

He made his final trip to London and back this month with his wife, Ruth, joining him for the entire journey.
Before he left Dubai to fly into Sydney he was surprised by his son Alexander, who flies for Shenzhen Airlines in China and will soon follow in his dad's footsteps and become a Qantas pilot.


FACT FILE:

WHO: Retired captain Gordon Phillips

Entered service: 30 March 1968
Retired: 26 June 2013 

Miles flown: 10million, the equivalent 400 times around the world.
Hours flown: 26,000
Lost engines: 4
Best airport: Singapore
Worst airport: Harere, Zimbabwe.

Planes flown:
Cessna 172
Victa Airtourer
Mooney M20
Piper Aztec
Beechcraft Baron
de Havilland Dove
Cessna 182
Britten-Norman Islander
Hawker Siddeley 125
Boeing 707
Boeing 747
Boeing 767
Boeing 747-400
Airbus A380

Tuesday, May 07, 2013

A Mothers Love ...thanks from a Daughter, when Angels live among us and quietly go about their business, surely WE can HELP, even just a little.

Dear Mum, Love Turia

Ali Smith
60 Minutes
http://sixtyminutes.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=8652218
Thursday, May 2, 2013

Sunday, May 12 is Mother's Day - a time to thank our mums for their unconditional love and unwavering selflessness.

Over the years, 60 Minutes has met some very special mothers and Celestine Vaite is one of them.

She's nurtured her daughter, Turia Pitt, back to health after Turia was severely burnt while competing in the Kimberley ultra-marathon.

For this Mother's Day, Turia has written her mum a letter to say "thank you".

Dear Mum book featuring Turia Pitt's letter: www.randomhouse.com.au

Turia Pitt is an advocate for DonateLife: www.donatelife.gov.au

Contribute to Turia's Making a Difference fund at makingadifference.gofundraise.com.au

If you would like to help burn victims through the Sydney Burns Foundation, download the Concord Burns Unit Donation Form here.
http://www.sswahs.nsw.gov.au/Concord/PDF/donate_advice_burnsunit.pdf

So what happened to Turia Pitt?

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Australia's Finest,Private Nathanael Galagher.



"Then there was a knock at my door," Lance-Cpl Feeney said. "There were three men in army uniform standing there and I knew then.
" I knew instantly."


Digger's boy has father's fighting spirit

EXCLUSIVE LAURA SPERANZA
The Sunday Telegraph
January 27, 201312:00AM

HE has the same fighting spirit as the father he never met.


Three months before Jack Galagher was born, Private Nathanael Galagher died beside his mates on the battlefields of Afghanistan.

But even though the man she loved is gone, Jack's mother Lance Corporal Jessie Feeney rejoices every day that she has been blessed with a son who is so like him.

"He has his nature - he's really easy-going and happy in his own skin," Lance-Cpl Feeney said yesterday. "Nate was exactly the same."

Cradling her newborn boy, Lance-Cpl Feeney said one day she will tell him how special his Dad was.

"I want Jack to know his Dad like I did, like he's still here with us," Lance-Cpl Feeney said. "When Jack gets older, I'll be able to explain what happened. I want him to know his dad is a hero."

If one day Jack decides to follow his father's path and join the army it will come as no surprise to Lance-Cpl Feeney, who is a storewoman based at Holsworthy Barracks.

"If that's his choice, I will back him 100 per cent and I'll be proud of him," she said. "I'll be able to understand why, because he knows his Dad was a hero and he might want to follow in his footsteps."

Pte Galagher, 23, from Narrabri in the state's north, and Lance-Cpl Feeney, 22, met in 2007 while training in the Army. But it wasn't until they were both posted to Townsville that they fell in love - two years ago today. As they excitedly awaited the birth of their son, Pte Galagher departed for his second deployment in Afghanistan in July.

"He kissed my belly and he said 'I'll see you when I get back'," Lance-Cpl Feeney said.


He was killed beside his idol, Lance-Cpl Mervyn McDonald, on August 30 when their helicopter crashed in Helmand province as they were preparing for a late-night raid on a Taliban position.

When Lance-Cpl Feeney heard about the crash, it didn't cross her mind that her partner could be involved.

The pair had spoken via Skype just hours before.

"Then there was a knock at my door," Lance-Cpl Feeney said. "There were three men in army uniform standing there and I knew then.

" I knew instantly."

She was six-and-a-half months pregnant. Over the Australia Day weekend she reflected on and remembered her beloved "hero" who lived for the Army.

Never far from her thoughts are the troops still in Afghanistan. Her message to them is a simple one: "Keep your heads up. You're doing a great job and all of Australia respects and admires your hard work.

"Hopefully you'll be home soon to see your families.

"If anyone says to our troops they shouldn't be there, they don't agree with that. That's their job and that's what they love to do." As for her own future, she said: "It was only after I'd had Jack, it hit me that this was my life now Nate was gone and I was going to be a single mum."

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Australia;s Finest Rememberd






Corporal Daniel Keighran VC's tribute to his fellow Diggers

Katherine Danks 
The Daily Telegraph
November 11, 2012 10:00PM

AUSTRALIA'S newest Victoria Cross recipient Daniel Keighran honoured the nation's fallen soldiers at a Remembrance Day ceremony in Sydney yesterday.

Corporal Keighran, 29, was a guest of honour at a sombre service attended by Governor Marie Bashir and Premier Barry O'Farrell in Martin Place, 94 years after the end of World War I.

Corporal Keighran - awarded the Victoria Cross of Australia for repeated heroics during a 2010 firefight in Afghanistan - laid a wreath of Australian native flowers with General Peter Cosgrove.

As his wife Kathryn looked on, Corporal Keighran momentarily touched the monument after laying the wreath, before joining General Cosgrove in a salute.

"Today, I'm remembering my mates that have passed away," he said later.

"I'm remembering my family that have been involved in wars throughout the years as well, that's what I'm remembering today, especially (during the) minute's silence."

Master of ceremonies John Gatfield paid tribute to the men and women who have died in battle.

"Remembrance Day is to remember the sacrifice of those who died or those who suffered in Australia's cause in all wars and in other conflicts," he said.

After the service, Corporal Keighran was mobbed by supporters who wanted to meet Australia's newest hero.

Corporal Keighran transferred to the active reserve last year and began a new career in the mining industry, and said he did not really enjoy the attention although he was getting "a little bit better at it".

"I don't think I will ever get used to it," he said.

Reservist Ian Cleland asked Corporal Keighran to sign his order of service and congratulated him on the medal.

Eight Australian soldiers marked Remembrance Day by completing a 4500km bike ride from Perth to Sydney.

The month-long Ride 4 Recovery passed through Adelaide, Melbourne and Canberra and arrived at Martin Place ahead of the service.

The team raised thousands for Mates 4 Mates, a charity that provides support and guidance for wounded military personnel and their family.

Meanwhile in Canberra, Governor-General Quentin Bryce and Prime Minister Julia Gillard laid wreaths on the Stone of Remembrance and in the Hall of Memory at the Australian War Memorial.

Sunday, July 08, 2012

Australia's Finest Sergeant Blaine Diddams, coming home.


Sergeant Diddams farewelled from Tarin Kot








The members of the Special Operations Task Group (SOTG) have farewelled Sergeant Blaine Diddams in a moving Memorial Service at Camp Russell.

Sergeant Diddams was shot during an engagement with insurgents on 3 July, while on a mission targeting an insurgent commander who was known to be in the Chorah region at the time.

SOTG Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Colonel J, paid tribute to a well-respected and highly experienced Special Forces soldier during the service in Tarin Kot, Afghanistan.

“Today we farewelled a husband and father, a mate and brother who will be forever missed but never forgotten,” Lieutenant Colonel J said.

“He died doing what he loved in the only way he knew how - to lead his men from the front. Blaine was the relaxed professional whose quick wit and sense of humour could turn a smile in even the worst of situations.

“Blaine endeared himself to everyone who knew him due to his quirky sense of humour and love of a joke.

“He was a devoted father and husband who lived life to the fullest. He thrived on adventure and time with his mates and he was the type of person that if you were in trouble or on a winning streak, you wanted to share the experience with,” he said.

The Memorial Service was held in Camp Russell at Multi-National Base – Tarin Kot, before his casket was moved to a waiting Australian C-130 Hercules aircraft.

Soldiers from SOTG along with Australian, Afghan and coalition forces personnel lined the route to salute their comrade.

The Commander of Australian Defence Forces in the Middle East, Major General Stuart Smith, said the loss of Sergeant Diddams was deeply felt by all ranks.

“Sergeant Diddams was an elite soldier, working with a professional team, on a vital mission to support security and safety for the people of Uruzgan,” 
Major General Smith said.

“As a military family we mourn his loss, but we put aside our grief to continue on important work in Afghanistan as our tribute to his dedication and 

Friday, July 06, 2012

Sergeant Blaine Diddams,Aussie Warrior coming home, God Bless.


Sergeant Blaine Diddams' body on its way home


Daily Telegraph
July 05, 20129:11PM


THE body of fallen Australian digger Sergeant Blaine Diddams, killed during a firefight in Afghanistan, is on its way home after being farewelled by colleagues in Tarin Kowt.


Sergeant Diddams was killed on Tuesday after his patrol was dropped by helicopter, in pursuit of an insurgent.


He was shot in the chest and died at a medical facility in Tarin Kowt despite wearing combat body armour.


"Today we farewelled a husband and father, a mate and brother who will be forever missed but never forgotten," said an Australian Special Operations Task Group commander who can only be identified as Lieutenant Colonel J for security reasons.


"He died doing what he loved in the only way he knew how - to lead his men from the front."

His memorial service was held in Camp Russell at Multi-National Base, in Tarin Kowt, before his casket was moved to a waiting Australian C-130 Hercules aircraft.


Sgt Diddams, known as "Didds" to his mates, was a devoted family man, father of two, as well as a dedicated professional soldier.


Born in Canberra in 1971, Sgt Diddams enlisted in the Army in April 1990 and was posted to the 1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment in Townsville, Queensland, later that year.


In 1995 he was posted to the elite SASR in Perth after completing the selection course.





Sgt Diddams was on his seventh tour of Afghanistan since 2001 and had deployed previously to Somalia, East Timor and the Solomon Islands.


Highly decorated, he was awarded a number of honours during his career and served in various operations over his 22 year career.


He is survived by his wife Toni-Ann, their daughter Elle-Lou and their son Henry, his parents Peter and Cate, and siblings Nikki, Sian, Christian and Luke.





So so sorry Mate, Thank you .


Saturday, July 02, 2011

Damien Thomlinson, Australian.:"Twist your ankle playing footy?" Thomlinson smiled and said: "No, drove over a bomb." Australia’s FINEST. ANZAC !!!!!!

For honour and a dead friend - walking the Kokoda Track
Paul Kent
The Daily Telegraph
July 02, 2011
2 7 2011 Damien Thomlinson LAST week at a restaurant in Sydney, above a bar in Oxford St, Damien Thomlinson stood on legs of carbon fibre and spoke of life as a commando in Afghanistan.
His message came back to one small truth.
"The greatest asset of any soldier," he said, "is the man standing next to him."
Off to the side with his hands in his pockets stood a small man behind a big moustache who smiled a lot.
Thomlinson walks with a slight limp on his carbon fibre legs. The limp is pronounced enough for people to notice but subtle enough for a man recently to ask: "Twist your ankle playing footy?"
Thomlinson smiled and said: "No, drove over a bomb."
The man laughed. "Seriously, twist your ankle playing footy?"
"No, seriously," Thomlinson said, "drove over a bomb."
He can't remember the explosion. He was driving a night patrol near Tarin Kowt in Afghanistan when the bomb, an improvised explosive device, went off directly under him. It knocked the soldier in the passenger seat out the side door and the soldier in the back seat through the back window.
Right above it, Thomlinson had nowhere to go. So his right leg turned into red mist, gone forever.
His left leg was shredded and broken, severed below the knee.
His right elbow came out of a hole in his arm, his hands were broken, a wrist broken, his left shoulder dislocated, his nose broken and his lip torn open so badly blood was running down his throat into his lungs, which was a good thing.


As the soldiers in the following vehicle began working on their two ejected companions they heard wheezing from inside the car and, hearing a man choking on his own blood, realised the lump was a body.
One of the first to begin working on him was Private Scott Palmer.
That night, Palmer called his dad, Ray, at home in Darwin and told him what happened, and that "Iceman" Thomlinson was on his way to Germany and a lot of boys were shook up by what happened.
"I don't think he's gonna make it," Palmer said.
That was April, 2009. In the many months since, Thomlinson has learned to walk and resume a life close to what it once was, working in development at Holsworthy Barracks. When he heard in June last year that an army chopper went down in Afghanistan, and three commandos were killed in action, a chill ran through him because he would almost certainly know the soldiers on board.
One of those killed was Palmer.
Palmer's dad is Ray, the little man behind the big moustache.
Towards the end of last year Ray called Thomlinson and told him that he and his son had always planned to walk the Kokoda Track together.

Now his son was gone he was wondering if Thomlinson would do it with him.
Until then Thomlinson's answer had always been the same - he's had about four approaches - but when Ray asked he thought back to that one small truth, of mateship, and the soldier next to you.
He said: "Absolutely."
For months now they have been training, and will head off in just under a fortnight.
As it nears both men have their reservations, for different reasons.
Thomlinson knows about a dozen able-bodied people who have come back from it - and all have described how tough an effort it was. "For me," he says, "it's going to be extremely challenging, there's going to be nothing easy.
"When I weighed up why do I want to do it - I've got to do it for my own reasons.
"Ray said to me that him and Scott were going to do it and that it's really important to him. From there, there's no real way you can say no."
Ray has been training as often as he can, but not as often as he needs.
Living in the Northern Territory, there have been trips to Sydney and Brisbane for events concerning his son, broken routines that have interfered with the 10km walks, with a backpack, he tries to do daily.
And, anyway, he knows that physically he will get there.
Emotionally might be a problem.
He was at home on a Monday night when he got a phone call telling him his son had died. He was back at work the following morning.
"(Scott) would have said, 'Dad, don't sit at home and mope over me'," Ray says.
"I didn't want it to happen, but I thought it might happen one day because of the job he's in.
"So even though you don't want it to happen, the voice saying your son has just died that night was shattering to me and, to be honest, that evening I was more in shock.
"I'd only just talked to him on the Saturday night ... he was coming home."
EXPRESSING emotions isn't easy for him. As Thomlinson spoke last week, Ray smiled before saying a few words himself. And it was almost unsettling to hear him talk about his lost son.
"This won't bring Scott back. This trip isn't about that or about replacing Scott with Damien. My son's dead. This is about all those blokes who are the ones going to suffer now," he says.
In all, 25 wounded soldiers will be going, and there will be moments when it gets the better of him.
Often, when training, the backpack is not the only load he carries. Often his thoughts drift to his boy, and there have been days walking under his load when the thoughts have come rushing, about what was there and what was lost and, well, he doesn't like to admit it, but there are tears.
"I do get very cut up about what's happened, I'm sorry to say. I've shed a lot of friggin' tears but, mainly, I've shed a lot of tears by myself," he says.
Kokoda tests everyone who walks it. They know that. Indeed, part of commando training is to increase the physical duress in a bid to strengthen - or break - the mind. And given the emotional load they will take in with them, Kokoda will be not a whole lot different. That's what awaits them.
"I have nerves in regard to how emotional it's going to be," Ray says. "I can't tell you how emotional I'm going to get over there."
Ray knows when it is over people will say they're proud of him, that he put others before himself and they are proud. Those are not his thoughts. They are what he knows his son would say.

 
To think that this Australian Hero has endured all he has,whilst those,whose ideology,Islam,the reason he lost both legs,are alive and well in HIS country,the Country he was prepared to die for,our Australia,are they are demanding to enforce the very same Satan inspired ideology, he so bravely fought against in Afghanistan, and almost paid the ultimate price,is flourishing via the ACTU/ Get Up funded Australian Labor Party /Green /”Independents” Minority Socialist Australian Government’s patronage of, and direct funding via Multiculturalism, “Harmony Days” and the Left’s “All Cultures Religions are equal”, is a sick JOKE,a sin against all Australians, but then again, that is, what,after all, Multiculturalism / Communism / Socialism,Islamism is,a sick joke, a crime against Humanity.

As Damien Thomlinson talks about his plans to Honour the memory of his mate,Private Scott Palmer,with Scott’s eternally Loving Dad,and the Daily Telegraph’s “Fair Dinkum” journalist,Paul Kent ,Evil,Wicked, Islamic “men” and “women”, who celebrated the slaughter of 911 on the streets of Sydney’s “Occupied Territories”, and  the Death of Private Scott Palmer and the maiming of Damien Thomlinson and every other Australian Soldier killed or wounded in Afghanistan and Iraq or anywhere else on the planet, will meet, less than 20 kilometers from the Sydney CBD this Sunday, the third of July 2011,celebrating Islam and plotting more ways to advance the manifestations of the Koran,and how to kill more Australian Soldiers, whilst celebrating those already killed by their fellow Islamic Terrorists.

So what are those Ignoble Swine,who are sworn to destroy us, doing this weekend ? Hizb ut-Tahrir Conference this weekend at Sydney Mosque.

During WW2 I am sure NAZI’s walked and lived amongst us, but at least the Labor Government of the day did not facilitate their meeting and plotting the downfall of Australian Troops in Europe and the Pacific via the present day Labor Party’s / Green / “Independent’s” Minority Socialist Union / Get Up funded Australian Federal Government’s ( aka.“Co Party”) Trojan Horse of “Multiculturalism”
There is, in my opinion,an overwhelming case for the removal of all Australian Military,from their foreign deployments,returned to Australia, and deployed going door to door through the various “Multicultural” Ghetto’s, the Islamic “Occupied Territories” Australian No Go Zones, of South Western Sydney for example, that have been imposed upon Australians by the Australian Labor Party at State and Federal levels of Government.
Once Australia and it’s cities,towns and suburbs are declared “clear” of Muslims by our ADF,then and only then, should any Australian Government deploy Australian Soldiers off shore to engage an enemy that is NOW as of July 2 2011 entrenched,resident,active,terrorist and combat ready on Australian soil.

More on the incredibly brave ANZAC.

The Irony of the videos below is that the reporter who is doing the report is a serial apologist for the Left,Multiculturalism and former Guantanamo Bay inmate,Mohammed Dawood, aka. “Our David” aka. David Hicks.










Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Sarah Oh Sarah

If Lachlan could sing I am sure he would sing something like this perhaps,

Sara, oh Sara
Glamorous nymph
with an arrow and bow
Sara, oh Sara
Don't ever leave me,
don't ever go..
  

Monday, April 25, 2011

Australia: ANZAC Day. Thank You to Australia’s Army,Navy and Air Force




AnzacGallipoli_wideweb__470x313,0

Gallipoli1915

Gallipoli 1915


In Flanders’ Fields
In Flanders’ Fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved, and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders FieldFlanders Field

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders’ Fields.
Oh! You who sleep in Flanders’ fields,
Sleep sweet – to rise anew;
We caught the torch you threw;
And holding high we kept
The faith with those who died.
We cherish, too, the Poppy red
That grows on fields where valour led.
It seems to signal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies,
But lends a lustre to the red
Of the flower that blooms above the dead
In Flanders’ Fields.
And now the torch and poppy red
Wear in honour of our dead
Fear not that ye have died for naught
We’ve learned the lesson that ye taught
In Flanders’ Fields.
ANZAC-Day

They shall grow not old, as we who 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."
Lest we forget ...

Saturday, March 05, 2011

Australia. Sapper Jamie Larcombe laid to rest on Kangaroo Island

 

Sapper Jamie Larcombe farewelled on Kangaroo Island

Michael McGuire
The Advertiser

March 05, 2011

IT felt like too nice a day to say goodbye. The clouds had parted to let the autumn sun shine through, the wind was gentle and faraway surf crashed.

High on a bluff on Kangaroo Island, overlooking a sparkling blue sea, the younger sister of Sapper Jamie Larcombe read a poem farewelling her beloved brother, her voice catching on emotion and tears.

Sapper Larcombe was killed in Afghanistan two weeks ago.

 
 
 
5 3 2011 Sapper Jamie Larcombe farewelled on Kangaroo Island 2

"I miss being your little sister," Emily Larcombe began. "I miss hearing the sound of your voice. I wish I got to say I love you before you were given to the sky."

On a day when the heroism and valour of Sapper Larcombe, of the 1st Combat Engineer Regiment, was commemorated at his funeral service, it was the voice of his family that brought the devastating loss of war home to the 1000 people gathered at Flagstaff Hill on Kangaroo Island. Sapper Larcombe's three sisters all read poems in honour of their brother as his parents Steven and Tricia looked on. The pain and the grief was in their voices and words, and in the hush of those who had gathered to pay their respects to the 23rd Australian to die far from home, fighting a ruthless enemy in Afghanistan.

They came from everywhere to say goodbye. Climbing the hill from Kingscote were the young and the old, the workers and the retired, those who never knew Jamie Larcombe and those who'd known him forever.

There was Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Opposition Leader Tony Abbott, Defence Minister Stephen Smith and Acting Premier John Rau.

It was a sad and solemn day but there were moments of lightness and laughter when family friend Ted Speed delivered the eulogy for Sapper Larcombe.

There were old tales of horse rides gone wrong, motorbikes that had crashed, injuries to sisters.

Mr Speed spoke of the gratitude that Sapper Larcombe's long-time girlfriend Rhiannon Penhall had been able to speak to her boyfriend less than 24 hours before he was killed. He told the life story of a boy who became a man who was widely loved and respected. A fanatical Crows supporter, a keen fisherman who always got seasick, a member of the Country Fire Service who lived by the motto "Give it a Go".

His hero was Crows' legend Andrew McLeod. Larcombe sported McLeod's number 23 when playing for the Western Districts Football Club and Mr Speed noted the irony that Sapper Larcombe was the "23rd Australian to pay the ultimate price in Afghanistan". "Jamie left me in no doubt that he fought for what he believed in and he believed in what he fought for," Mr Speed said. "He was courageous, he was strong and a caring young man."

Sapper Larcombe grew up in the small community of Parndana. Fittingly, it was established as a soldiers' settlement after World War II and features the Soldiers Settlement Museum. All his schooling was done in Parndana and he graduated from the local area school in 2007.

He joined the army in 2008 and he was killed four months into his first tour of Afghanistan. Brigade Commander Gus McLauchlin told the crowd that sappers such as Larcombe were the heart and soul of the regiment. Often dirty, regularly cheeky, most likely to be found in the pub, the sappers of the 1st Combat Engineering Regiment also took on the most dangerous jobs the army had to offer.

The regiment had a motto that said simply: "Follow the Sapper".

On the day he was killed, Sapper Larcombe was at the head of a mission that was forging into the Taliban strongholds in the Mirabad Valley, not far from Tarin Kowt, to establish forward bases for Australian and Afghan forces . His job was to clear improvised explosive devices from the way ahead to make the route safe for others to follow.

Sapper Larcombe was doing his job when he was cut down by Taliban gunfire in an ambush. As Anzac Day approaches, Brigadier McLauchlin reminded us that: "He shall not grow old as those that are left behind grow old. Age will not weary him, or the years condemn.

 

Copy of 5 3 2011 Sapper Jamie Larcombe farewelled on Kangaroo Island

"Whoever reads the Ode this year is talking about Jamie Larcombe. We will remember him just as he is for the rest of our lives."

Sunday, February 13, 2011

QANTAS The Safest and Greatest Airline in the World. The Hero’s of Flight QF 32

Qantas 'hero' pilot retains faith in A380
Daily Telegraph
February 13, 2011
THE pilot of last November's Airbus flight from Singapore, in which the engine exploded, has declared the Qantas A380 aircraft "absolutely" safe.
Richard de Crespigny managed to land the aircraft after the engine exploded mid-air, resulting in more than 60 separate system failures.
"This is the biggest testament to Airbus. Some people might think the aircraft collapsed under the onslaught but no aircraft is ever designed to take the beating that this aircraft got," Mr de Crespigny told the Nine Network's 60 Minutes tonight.




"The wing was cluster bombed, the aircraft had phenomenal damage to all systems - and it didn't just recover, it performed brilliantly. It is indestructible."
Just minutes into the QF32 flight from Singapore on November 4 of last year there was a small oil leak in the intermediate pressure turbine of engine number two.
The oil ignited causing a turbine disk to explode at high speed.
Two pieces smashed through the wing severing the plane's controls while a third did the same underneath the plane.
"Electrically the left hand side of the aircraft was dead. We'd lost 50 per cent of the hydraulics system. The brakes underneath the wings were reduced to 30 per cent braking conditions," he said.
The pilot has been praised for his cool head as he managed to land the plane under these conditions.
"I think it was my finest moment, I think I should give up aviation now and leave on a high because I think it was a good landing under tough conditions," he said.
Mr de Crespigny has been flying with Qantas for 25 years and before that was a pilot with the Airforce.
"I'm so confident that there is nobody in this world who knows that aircraft better than Rich," his wife Coral de Crespigny said.
Ms de Crespigny didn't know about the incident until after her husband was safely on the ground and she got a call from his boss at Qantas.
"He said I need to tell you that Richard's safe and he's on the ground and I said why are you telling me this.
"He said there's been an incident so I immediately turned on the news and I saw that wasn't...well I assumed there had been a crash.
"I'm just so glad he didn't stuff up that landing," she said.
Mr de Crespigny doesn't like being deemed a hero as he said he was just doing his job and was supported by an extraordinary crew with lots of experience.
"I would ultimately be responsible if people died and I am so proud of everyone and all the teams that helped out. I was proud to be in command of that aircraft," he said.
The pilot said that he didn't think an airbus aircraft had ever been challenged as much as this one.
"I think a Rolls Royce engine has never failed so spectacularly... there was so much collateral damage....it was a flight that you could never train for.
"You might practice one or two emergencies, not 60," he said.
Qantas is now completely confident Rolls Royce has fixed the engine fault on the jet.
QANTAS It ain’t perfect,and does not pretend to be, but when the shit hits the fan I know what Airline I would want to be flying on, God bless this Captain and his crew of no nonsense no BS Aussies, thinking clearly, with nothing on their minds other than saving the lives of their passengers and landing safely. Mission accomplished.

Friday, February 04, 2011

Australia’s Finest:"I MET this really amazing girl." Corporal Richard "Rich" Atkinson.

 

Love, loyalty and loss of our Digger Richard Atkinson

Gemma Jones and Ian McPhedran
The Daily Telegraph

February 04, 2011

"I MET this really amazing girl."

Corporal Richard "Rich" Atkinson had a shy "little boy" look on his face as he told his friend about meeting karate instructor and school teacher Dannielle Kitchen.

Copy of 4 2 2011 Love, loyalty and loss of our Digger Richard Atkinson 

"He was cute, he had that cute little boy look on his face. He was so in love. I thought, 'This is the best thing.' They were perfect together. They couldn't wait for the wedding," his friend Stephanie Heazle- wood recalled.

Shortly before the 22-year-old was deployed to Afghanistan in October with the Darwin-based 1st Combat Engineer Regiment, Cpl Atkinson asked Ms Kitchen to marry him. The answer was "Yes".

His family said he was looking forward to starting a family.

But an insurgent bomb ended those dreams at 9.25am on Wednesday in a cold valley in Afghanistan, a long way from the balmy Darwin sunsets the couple enjoyed before he went to war.

One of his sapper mates from Darwin was badly wounded by the blast.

Ms Kitchen was yesterday devastated, along with his parents Dr Ross Atkinson, a Launceston GP, his wife Kate and their son James.

"We are just so sad," Mrs Atkinson said from the family's home in Tasmania.

Mr Atkinson said his son loved the army and had a real knack for adventure.

"He enjoyed being deployed," he said.

"He was just a lovely boy. He was funny. He loved playing sports. He was a much-loved son and a loved brother to James."

He was a family man who was very close to all of his relatives and was looking forward to coming home at the end of his tour about June to spend time with them in Tasmania.

The young sapper joined the army in 2007 and his natural leadership skills took him quickly through the ranks.

"He was a dedicated soldier with career aspirations," his family said.

"He shared a strong mateship with those he left behind in Afghanistan and all his mates in Australia. He will be missed by all and not a day will go by that he won't be thought of."

Mr Atkinson said the family was in shock and still battling to come to terms with their loss.

"We're just getting our heads around that he's not coming back. It's hard. It's all pretty unreal," he said.

Acting Defence Chief Lieutenant-General David Hurley said it was unclear whether the blast had been remotely detonated, but he conceded the area had become a "hot spot" for Australian soldiers.

"It's a difficult area for us, yes," he said yesterday.

Cpl Atkinson was the 22nd Australian soldier to die in the bloody war in Afghanistan.

Australia: Corporal Richard Edward Atkinson killed in Afghanistan.  Video

 

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