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Adventures of the Triple B's 23 May 2013 
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War at Home & Abroad: Digital History Archive
Sunday, February 10, 2013, 06:09 AM

War at Home & Abroad: Digital History Archive


I’ve discussed a number of digital archive military projects on this website over the years including the granddaddy of them all, the Veterans History Project (by the Library of Congress).

Now, the Department of History at California State University San Marcos (CSUSM), has launched their very own digital and oral history project called, War at Home and Abroad (WAHA) that aims to give a perspective and understanding of recent wars and to contribute to the yet-to-be-written history.

Launched in November 2012, the project is in its first phase, and oral histories from CSUSM campus veterans are being gathered in what’s called the Story Lab Project.  Eventually, the plan is to expand the project to veterans in the southern California region, not just campus veterans.

Here’s how the Story Lab works, which currently has 5 videos posted online:

“All WAHA veterans and active duty service personnel use the Digital History lab to self-narrate their stories, emphasizing what they feel is important for the public to know and remember. This technique allows for narrators to be the authors of their own oral histories and for a plurality of voices to be documented.  Each participant is furnished with the training, equipment, and space to film their memories.”


The project grew out of discussions among faculty in the Department of History in 2011. 

There is also a section on the website that shares print and digital documents, as well as photos.  Some of the items include Iraq Election Ballots and a card from the card deck given to US service members to arrest former members of the Saddam Hussein government.

This project has a lot of potential for gathering a ton of information.  According to the website, “In 2012, San Diego County was home to the largest population in the nation—nearly 30,000—of returning veterans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

You can learn more about WAHA at http://www.csusmhistory.org/WAHA/



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YouTube suspended in Egypt for one month
Saturday, February 9, 2013, 11:56 PM - News Stories

YouTube suspended in Egypt for one month


An Egyptian court has suspended the website  YouTube for one month over the anti-Islamic video “Innocence of Muslims”. 

According to Reuters:

“The country's administrative court ordered the ministries of communication and investment to block YouTube, owned by Google, inside Egypt because it had carried the film "Innocence of Muslims," said state news agency MENA.

The 13-minute video, billed as a film trailer and made in the United States, provoked a torrent of anti-American unrest in Egypt, Libya and dozens of other Muslim countries in September.”


The timing probably couldn’t be worse, with renewed clashes taking place between anti-government protesters and police. 

Social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, have been used to spread information that would otherwise go unreported.

More here.



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News: Skype used to warn against chem weapons
Saturday, February 9, 2013, 04:06 AM - News Stories
US reportedly using Skype and email to warn Syrian officials against using chemical weapons. Control of information networks has been integral to the Syrian conflict, and American officials are now using those same networks to warn off people who might distribute chemical weapons. Eli Lake, national security correspondent for Newsweek and The Daily Beast, reports that after a July suicide bombing in Syria, the US government began looking for the email addresses, phone numbers, Skype names, and social media accounts of mid-level military officials who might be in charge of missiles or sarin and mustard gas...
(The Verge)

Two more Marines charged in scandal over Afghan urination video.
Two more Marines — including the first officer to be implicated — have been charged in connection with a video that became public last year showing Marines urinating on the dead bodies of insurgents in Afghanistan, the Marine Corps said Friday...
(NBC News)

Email hacker reveals Bush family photos, addresses. The Secret Service is investigating the hacking of email accounts belonging to members of the Bush family that divulged correspondence, addresses, phone numbers and a picture of a self-portrait painted by former President George W. Bush standing in a shower...
(Reuters)

Milpitas Sailor Retires from Navy via Skype. Technological advancements allow people to literally be in two places at once, whether it’s for a wedding, graduation, or even a childbirth, or in Lt. Maximiliano Pino’s case, providing the last salute at a fellow shipmate’s retirement ceremony...
(Milpitas, CA Patch)

How Social Media Journalism is Preventing Stories From Falling Through the Cracks. Students at Drury University Thursday were offered a glimpse into the world of National Public Radio’s social media senior strategist, Andy Carvin. His presentation was part of the school’s series highlighting how media and technology are changing the way we communicate...
(KSMU)

Here Is the Alleged Killer Cop’s Whistleblowing-Complaint Appeal Document.Part of ex-cop turned murder suspect Christopher Dorner's rambling manifesto, which touches on everything from his feelings about gay rights to his opinions about the actor Christoph Waltz, delves into the matter that seems to be at the heart of his breakdown...
(Gawker)

Sky News Arabia Twitter accounts hacked by 'Syrian Electronic Army'.Sky News Arabia’s Twitter and Facebook accounts were targeted by hackers last night, the broadcaster has revealed.  A group calling itself the “Syrian Electronic Army” hacked into two of the channel’s Twitter accounts at midnight UAE time and its Facebook account several hours later...
(PressGazette )


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U.S. Navy passes 800,000 Likes on Facebook
Friday, February 8, 2013, 11:17 PM - Facebook

U.S. Navy passes 800,000 Likes on Facebook


The United States Navy has passed 800,000 “likes” on Facebook, inching it closer to the 1 million “Like” mark, which the Marines, Army, National Guard and Air Force have already reached.

According to PageData, an independent Facebook page metrics website, the Navy gained nearly 4,000 “Likes” in the past 7 days alone and topped 800K in late January 2013.

So where does that put the Navy in the grand scheme?

Here’s a look at other Facebook military pages:

United States Marine Corps – 2,886,977 likes

Marines – 2,596,210 likes

The U.S. Army - 1,709,677 likes

National Guard – 1,301,810 likes

United States Air Force - 1,192,873 likes

U.S. Coast Guard - 174,276 likes



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Research paper discusses Global Jihad Online
Thursday, February 7, 2013, 11:04 PM - Twitter

In a new research paper published in January by the New America Foundation, Aaron Zelin takes a look at the state of the global Jihad online.

The paper uses the word “jihadis” instead of “terrorists” throughout, but there’s little doubt as to the subject matter.

The interesting part of the research, which goes into detail about online forums, has to do with the use of Twitter by “online jihadis”. 

Here are some of the highlights:

Jihadis have been highly innovative in their use of the Internet, but their use of Twitter and social media has lagged behind the general public, a fact that has drawn several explanations from specialists analyzing jihadi propaganda: (1) vulnerability; (2) “if it ain’t broke [the forums], don’t fix it”; and (3) loss of authenticity.

Compared to al-Shabaab or Jabhat al-Nusra, the name al-Qaeda evokes a more visceral reaction, which might mean al-Qaeda would not use its formal name as an account since it likely would be taken down.

Jihadis, like other Twitter users, use hashtags. Hashtags are a popular way for Twitter users to follow tweets about specific topics and for tweeters to expand their audience. Al-Shabaab uses a custom hashtag (#JihadDispatches) to draw attention to events in Somalia.

It is only a matter of time before terrorists begin routinely using Twitter, Instagram, and other services in ongoing operations.

More jihadis continue to be attracted to Twitter, but that distribution mechanism is unlikely to replace the forums as the main environment for conversation and information distribution among jihadis

Twitter does, however, provide a means for jihadi organizations and individuals to provide information when breaking news occurs. Jihadis are likely to turn to Twitter for rapid response and to live-tweet extended violent events

Zelin runs down a list of Twitter accounts being used, including al-Shabab, which have been in the news more recently after Twitter suspended their account.  However, as I've written about, they’re back online under a different username. 

Zelin briefly touches on the fact that al-Shabab has been designated as a terrorist organization, but still remains online --- a common question and concern for many. 

“Twitter has never publicly commented on this”, writes Zelin.

You can read the related story here and the research paper here.

Via Fast Company


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Blog honors fallen Navy SEAL Brendan Looney
Wednesday, February 6, 2013, 08:16 PM

Blog honors fallen Navy SEAL Brendan Looney


I wanted to recognize a nice story that I read over at USNavySEALs.com that talks about a blog created by Kara Williams.

The blog honors fallen
Navy SEAL Lt. Brendan Looney, who died in 2010 in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan.  USNavySEALs.com cited another story from PEGASUSNEWS which first wrote about Kara and her vision for the blog.

According to the article, following the death of her husband, Amy Looney requested everyone perform 10 random acts of kindness by the end of 2012. The request inspired Kara Williams, who had never met Brendan or Amy, to start the website to get people to do an act of kindness in honor of Brendan and post it on the blog.

“It is our hope that Brendan’s family will be able to visit this blog and view all the good deeds that were motivated by who Brendan was and the way he lived his life,” Kara writes.

As of right now, over 100 people have shared the acts of kindness they performed.

If you'd like to learn more about Brendan Looney, The Travis Manion Foundation has several stories that talk about his life.

You can read more over at PEGASUSNEWS and visit the blog here: http://brendanlooney.wordpress.com/



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Kidnapped journo's family turns to Facebook
Wednesday, February 6, 2013, 04:47 PM - News Stories
Family of U.S. journalist kidnapped in Syria takes to Facebook to drum up leads.  It's been over two months since a U.S. freelance journalist was kidnapped by gunmen in Syria - and now his family is turning to social media for help.  Relatives of James Foley, who disappeared in the war-torn country in late November, have published ads on Facebook asking for information about the whereabouts of the teacher-turned-reporter...
(NY Daily News)

James McClean Twitter 'kill threats': Ex-soldier quizzed by police.
AN ex-soldier has been ­questioned by police over alleged threats to kill ­Premier League star James ­McClean.  The Sunderland winger who comes from Northern Ireland, refused to wear a Remembrance Day poppy on his shirt during a match at Everton in November.  Images of bullets were posted on a Twitter account with comments about ­McClean, 23, being shot...
(Mirror Online)

Matt Farmer Booted from American Idol for BS War Story.  So much for Matt Farmer being crowned the American Idol Season 12 champion.  Following a successful audition in Long Beach, Farmer has come out and admitted that he's one giant liar.  That whole tale he told? About being injured in an IED explosion in Iraq? And being diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury? And how the medication he was assigned would supposedly make him sterile, until he ended up fathering a daughter named Cadence who joined him in front of the judges?  LIE, LIE, LIE...
(The Hollywood Gossip)

North Korean Propaganda Video Imagines a Brighter World, Without Manhattan.  When aliens strike, the climate goes berserk, the Russians invade, an asteroid threatens the Earth, New York City is often the first place to be destroyed. Hollywood has long used the city’s skyline to demonstrate what destruction looks like in action movies and video games. It seems as if North Korea, in seeking to show how an assault on America would play out, also has Manhattan squarely in its cross hairs...
(The Lede)

Tracking Rape In Syria Through Social Media.  Rape has long been a weapon of war, but documenting sexual violence usually happens after a conflict is over. Researchers are taking a new path with the Syrian conflict: tracking the incidents of rape as they occur.  The Women Under Siege project is live-tracking how sexualized violence is being used in Syria. What's new is the data: information collected through crowdsourcing — reports on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube from inside the country — which is then analyzed by public health researchers at Columbia University...
(NPR)

Military blogger cautions against PTSD speculation in death of ‘American Sniper’. In his latest dispatch from the frontlines today, military blogger and photographer Michael Yon reflected on the shocking death of former Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle. Among his comments came a warning against knee-jerk speculation surrounding Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) being a driving force behind the senseless killing:
(The Blaze)

MOH Recipient Slams Ron Paul Over Kyle Tweet. Medal of Honor recipient Dakota Meyer criticized former Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul on Twitter Monday night after Paul posted a controversial tweet about former Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle, who was killed Saturday at a Texas gun range.  Meyer sent his tweet in response to one by Paul that read: “Chris Kyle's death seems to confirm that "he who lives by the sword dies by the sword." Treating PTSD at a firing range doesn't make sense.”
(Military.com)

54 killed in clashes over kidnapped journalist. Manila: Around 54 people were killed, several wounded and 300 families displaced in clashes between a former separatist Filipino-Muslim rebel group and militant Islamists over the custody of a Jordanian broadcast journalist who was kidnapped in southern Philippines eight months ago, sources said...
(GulfNews.com)


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Al-Shabab terrorist account back on Twitter
Tuesday, February 5, 2013, 05:29 PM - Twitter

Al-Shabab terrorist account back on Twitter


Nearly two weeks ago when the militant Islamist group al-Shabab was suspended on Twitter, it was already suspected that other accounts run by the terrorist group were springing up online.

Reuters reported earlier today that al-Shabab is back to tweeting, using a similar username (@HSMPress1) to their previous one (@HSMPress).

Among the online death threats and other TOS violations made by al-Shabab under @HSMPress, the group also published photographs of a dead French soldier in mid-January.

The new account, which was launched on February 3, has already gained nearly 2,000 followers.

It’s unknown whether the new account is the real thing or just a copycat, but hopefully Twitter keeps better on top of these things.

The company reacts fast to shut down scam accounts, but takes forever to cleanup these types of accounts, even though they are in blatant violation of its own rules.



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This Ain't Hell in the news over SEAL impostor
Monday, February 4, 2013, 07:44 PM - Milbloggers in the News
The military blog This Ain’t Hell got a mention in the news today, when The Times-Standard’s Luke Ramseth wrote about Ike Densmore, a Navy SEAL impostor.

Densmore committed suicide nearly two weeks ago, months after being outed for lying about his military credentials.

According to The Times-Standard, back in November 2012, “Densmore falsely claimed he was a member of the United States Seal Team One, and that he earned a Silver Star, Bronze Star, three Purple Hearts, two presidential unit citations, and six Navy commendation medals.”

The news about Densmore was first broke by This Ain’t Hell, which to date, has helped to uncover nearly 100 people who have faked military credentials and awards. 

Jonn Lilyea, a blogger at This Ain’t Hell, told the Times-Standard that the website receives 7,000 hits a day, and that readers of the blog are often to thank for tips and information.

Lilyea published several stores about Densmore. 

In the latest post, published at the end of January, Lilyea discussed the death of Densmore, saying, “While we grieve for the family Ike left behind, we’re still secure in our decision to bust him out. As I said before, he made the decision to be a phony and he made the decision to abandon his family so he could avoid the consequences of the other choices he had made.”

Last June, This Ain’t Hell was featured on MSNBC after outing "America's Got Talent" contestant Timothy Michael Poe, who had told the television audience and judges that he was injured in Afghanistan in 2009 by an RPG.

Read more about Ike Densmore at The Times-Standard.


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News: Journey to Syria started on Facebook
Monday, February 4, 2013, 04:41 PM - News Stories
After uniting on Facebook, Syrian Americans travel to war’s edge.  A journey that brought eight young Syrian Americans to the edge of a war zone for their winter break began on Facebook.  But it was a common urge to witness the turmoil in their parents’ homeland that cemented the bonds among them, as they joined a parade that is bringing volunteers from around the world to the Turkish-Syrian border, each eager to play some role in supporting the two-year-old revolution against the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad...
(The Washington Post)

Sharing war stories: WWII first-hand. World War II veterans had a chance to share their stories that are bigger and better than any textbook could tell.  14 veterans came together at the National Museum of World War II Aviation Saturday afternoon.  A crowd of nearly 100 people, old and young, military and civilian gathered to hear their personal accounts of combat, travel and lessons learned...
(FOX21NEWS)

Israel Strike On Syria YouTube Video: Syria Releases Footage of Alleged Israeli Attack. An airstrike in Syria raised eyebrows last week when a small convoy of vehicles was reportedly wiped off the map near Damascus, while intelligence officials privately indicated Israeli forces were likely behind the attack. Now, Syria has released footage of what they say is the aftermath...
(policymic)

BBC Arabic and the complexities of the Arab world. It is no secret that recent Arab uprisings have placed enormous burdens on the shoulders of BBC Arabic journalists responsible for reporting news from the region.  Covering the Arab world is not always an easy task - we need to mix sensible caution with a dose of courage in covering political issues that attract so many disputed views among Arabic-speaking audiences...
(BBC)

Malaysian journalist killed in firearm mishap in Lebanon.  Claudia Theophilus, 42, who worked as a web producer  with Al-Jazeera English news agency, died after a rifle -  which she was taking a look at, went off accidentally at about  2.30am local time (about 8.30am Malaysian time). The incident happened in Baakleen - located about 45km  southeast of Beirut.  Malaysian ambassador to Beirut Ilango Karuppannan said  Theophilus died shortly after she arrived at a general  hospital in the district...
(New Straits Times)

Incredible war story of pilot who survived a Russian gulag and trekked hundreds of miles to India before making it to Britain to fly Spitfires for the RAF. A Polish war hero with an incredible story of survival during World War Two has died aged 91.  Flight Lieutenant Czeslaw 'Tony' Rogers braved a 830-mile trek on foot across the Soviet Union's frozen wastes to India after being freed from a prison camp before eventually making it to Britain...
(Daily Mail)


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People pay respects to Chris Kyle on Twitter
Sunday, February 3, 2013, 06:11 AM - Twitter, News Stories

People pay respects to Chris Kyle on Twitter


Image of Chris Kyle via Craft International

People from all walks of life have taken to Twitter to pay their respects to former Navy SEAL and “American Sniper” author Chris Kyle, who was one of two people shot and killed at a Texas gun range on Saturday.

According to news reports, "Kyle was shot point-blank" while helping another man who was recovering from post traumatic stress syndrome.

Shortly after the tragic news broke, people began paying tribute on the social networking site Twitter.

Tim Kennedy
‏(@TimKennedyMMA) wrote: RIP CHRIS KYLE. You were a great sniper, honorable navy seal, and great human being.

Eve Torres (@EveMarieTorres) wrote: I was utterly devastated to hear that American hero, and friend, Chris Kyle was taken from us today. Please pray for his wife Taya, & kids.

Sarah Palin (@SarahPalinUSA) wrote: Our thoughts and prayers go out to the family and many friends of former Navy SEAL Chris Kyle tonight.

SEALofHonor
‏(@SEALofHonor) wrote: Damn Few R.I.P. Chris Kyle, “The Devil of Ramadi” NAVY SEALs and Marine Sniper 1974-2013    

Nick Lachey (
@NickSLachey) wrote: devastated to hear of the murder of chris kyle. i was honored to have spent time with him.....a TRUE American hero. senseless. #RIPCHRIS

Greta Van Susteren (
@gretawire) wrote: Stunning that Chris Kyle / Navy Seal survived so much danger in war to die like this..very sad

Jim Norton ‏(@JimNorton) wrote: Very sad news about soldier Chris Kyle being murdered. He was a great guest, I wish he'd come on more than once

Robert Stoneman (
@robert_stoneman) wrote: Friend of mine was lost yesterday, RIP to Chris Kyle

5.11 Tactical (
@511Tactical) wrote: Our deepest condolences to the family and friends of slain American Hero and friend to 5.11, former SEAL Chris Kyle. He will be missed.

Jason Whitely (
@JasonWhitely) wrote: "My heart is breaking," said director of FITCO Cares Foundation about Chris Kyle's murder. Kyle founded the group that helps vets w/ PTSD.

John Rieber (
@John__Rieber) wrote: If y'all don't know who Chris Kyle is, he's the deadliest sniper in American history, a true hero who is with God now.

WFAA-TV published an update earlier today noting that the second victim was identified early Sunday morning as 35-year-old Chad Littlefield.  Eddie Routh, 25, is in custody in connection with the shootings, reports WFAA.

Rest in peace, Chris Kyle and Chad Littlefield.



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News: WH warns to not manipulate gun photo
Sunday, February 3, 2013, 03:27 AM - News Stories

News: WH warns to not Photoshop Obama gun pic


White House Warns: Don't Photoshop Obama Gun Pic. The White House has released a picture purporting to show President Obama "skeet shooting" at Camp David.  An activity he claims he does "all the time."  The White House also warns all you mischievous internet types to not mess around with the picture...
(BREITBART)

'America's most lethal sniper' dead: Best-selling author and ex Navy SEAL shot at gun range. Former US Navy SEAL and best-selling author Chris Kyle has been shot dead along with another man on a gun range, police in Texas said.  Newspaper reports said Erath County Sheriff Tommy Bryant had confirmed that Kyle, 38, who wrote the book 'American Sniper', and a second man were found dead yesterday afternoon at Rough Creek Lodge's shooting range, west of Glen Rose, about an hour south west of Fort Worth...
(Mirror Online)

Army: Satellite network isn’t for Facebook. Soldiers are using a war zone logistics satellite network to surf Facebook, Twitter and other sites that are off limits on Army computers.  And the Army is ordering them to knock it off.  An Army bulletin warns soldiers that the mobile satellite network is not for non-Army uses like file-swapping networks, checking e-mail or visiting non-Army web sites. Army deputy chief of staff for logistics Lt. Gen. Raymond Mason issued the message Jan. 13...
(Army Times)

Science Fiction and Fantasy Authors Who Served in the Military, and How it Changed Their Work. So much of science fiction's core topics intersect with war, one way or the other. Rapid social change and technological innovation both get supercharged during wartime, and some of our greatest explorers are also warriors. So it's not surprising that many of science fiction's most well-known authors served in the military at some point — especially during the era when we had a compulsory draft.  But how did serving in the military shape these writers' books? Here's a look at 15 of the authors who served in the armed forces, and how their work reflects that experience...
(io9)

Red-handed: Associated Press caught inserting “assault rifle” into Alabama hostage standoff. Jimmy Lee Dykes has no business having firearms. A violent Vietnam vet with PTSD who beat a neighbor’s dog to death, threatened to shoot school children, and did shoot into an occupied vehicle, that Dykes wasn’t already incarcerated is a complete failure of the mental health and criminal justice system in this nation. All that happened before he murdered a school bus drive and took a 5-year-old hostage earlier this week in an on-going standoff.  In reading up on the hostage situation today, however, I caught an edit to the established facts...
(Bob Owens)

“Fighter Pilot’s” book panned. Hilariously. Unless you like to get pummeled in the ready room, this is exactly what you shouldn’t do before you try to become a fighter pilot.  Ensign Shannon Ray Anderson wrote a self-help book that promises to show anyone who is interested the path to become a fighter pilot. But there’s a catch: Anderson is not a fighter pilot.  Nope.  He’s a student at Training Wing 2, flying T-45 Goshawks...
(MilitaryTimes)

Marine survey lists concerns on women in combat. Male Marines listed being falsely accused of sexual harassment or assault as a top concern in a survey about moving women into combat jobs, and thousands indicated the change could prompt them to leave the service altogether...
(SFGate)

Video of protester stripped and beaten fires Egypt fury. After eight days of protests that killed nearly 60 people, a video of one demonstrator stripped naked, dragged across the ground and beaten with truncheons by helmeted riot police has fired Egyptians to a new level of outrage...
(Yahoo! News)



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AFB posting pics of uniform violations online
Saturday, February 2, 2013, 04:23 AM - News Stories

Maxwell AFB to publish real uniform violations online


I learned of this story when I visited Reddit today. 

Apparently, Team Maxwell-Gunter at Maxwell Air Force Base earned very low marks for standards in 2011.  "Disregarding them shows a lack of attention to detail and a lack of respect to our service. It shows disregard to our core values." writes Jeff Bergdolt of the 42nd Air Base Wing Plans Office.

While news of uniform violations may not be all that interesting, here's where the story gets juicy.

In the coming months, Maxwell AFB photographers will capture pictures of standards violations across Maxwell Air Force base and post them in the Dispatch.  Then readers will be challenged to identify the violation. 

Fashionistas are going to have a field day with this.

The picture above is the first photograph posted online asking readers to comment.  It was also posted to the base’s Facebook page.  While no one commented on the picture, one reader left a separate comment about a violation they witnessed. It involves a taco. 

Concerned Old Dude writes, “I saw a female at the food court today with a group of six other people during lunch who had her PT gear on including her jacket. She had the jacket sleeves tucked up to her elbows while devouring a taco. She managed to keep these sleeves up while conversing and prancing around the food court looking like a crazy. She did not pull them down until going outside only because I assume she was cold. I am wondering why she was even wearing PT gear at noon”.

In case you’re wondering, the photo above is not Photoshopped. 

The airman is miraculously able to walk with both hands in her pockets.  God willing, she made it to her destination without toppling over.



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Military blogs added to Milblogging (Jan' 13)
Friday, February 1, 2013, 11:53 PM

The newest batch of blogs added to Milblogging.com includes quite an array of categories and countries.  The list includes blogs written by Afghan nationals, military spouses, reporters, the Coast Guard, and more.  There’s something for everyone.

Endeavor to Persevere, Rebecca Johnson, United States, Military Ethics Twitter Course

Nasim Fekrat - Afghanistan Through My Eyes, Nasim Fekrat, Afghanistan, Nasim Fekrat is an Afghan blogger who has also wor...

Afghanistan's Realities, Farzad Lami, Afghanistan, Afghanistan-born Ahmad Farzad Lami (or Lameh) is a...

Mufid Perspective, Hadi Mufid, South Korea, Hadi Mufid, was born in Ghazni, Afghanistan. On th...

CPJ Journalist Security blog, Covering the news in a dangerous and changing worl...

Love and the Air Force, Marley Marie, United States, My husband and I were recently married and are now...

Buoyed Up, Ollie, United States, 3 May 2012 changed the lives of more than 176 men....

It All Fades, Jay Christopher, United States, The content posted here is a mixture of both perso...

Becoming A Navy Wife, Julie, United States, He's the "Steely Eyed Killer of The Deep" & I'm th...

My Home Is With You, Meara Bodle, United States, Sharing snippets of our ordinary lives, under extr...

Alice Swan's Blog - DCMilitary Family Life, Alice Swan, United States, So as another of your site bloggers, I hope to sha...

Navy Wives Unite, Jen Hatzung, United States, A place where Navy Wives {or husbands too} can gat...

White Coat Revolt, Unknown, United States, Adventures of a Spec Ops Flight Surgeon

The Navy's Grade 36 Bureaucrat, Ryan Haag, United States, One-stop shopping for all your questions related t...

After Action, Group blog, United States, Your military sports report

FlightLines, Group blog, United States, Air Force Times blog for airmen

Afghanbattlefox's blog, Afghanbattlefox, Afghanistan, I am a photojournalist for the U.S. Army and, with...

Stan R Mitchell, Stan R Mitchell, United States, I often write about Afghanistan, National Security...

Jenny the Military Spouse, Jennyspouse.com, United States, Jenny follows the adventures of a young Air Force ...

The TSA Blog, United States, This blog is sponsored by the Transportation Secur...

Coast Guard Auxiliary Live, United States, This is an official blog of the U.S. Coast Guard A...

Active Duty Dad, Theron Bostic, United States, A collection of tips, thoughts, and random rants f...

Lily and the Roses ~ Creativity with Autism, Twins and Military Adventures, Lily Rose, United States, I am a composer, pianist, artist and an Air Force ...

Mal's Miles, Mallory Whitt, United States, Lifestyle blog of an Army wife, runner, teacher, p...


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"Women in Combat" term dominates headlines
Thursday, January 31, 2013, 02:49 AM

“Women in Combat” term dominates headlines


A major headline that has dominated the military news this past week is "Women in Combat". It’s a hot term in the news and there are literally thousands of articles on the subject.

Facebook pages have sprang up.  There's a Wikipedia page dedicated to "Women in Combat".  There's even a domain company called BuyDomains that has the web address for sale for $1,894.  

I decided to run down some of the more interesting news headlines of the week and post them below.  It gives you an idea of what journalists are thinking.

Women In Combat: What Do Troops In Afghanistan Think?

BOYKIN: Common sense, emotion and women in combat. A lack of front-line privacy would be humiliating

Why women in combat is a mistake

Jon Stewart Tackles Women In Combat Controversy (VIDEO)

Panetta's cowardice on women in combat

The Truth About Little Women Carrying Big Wounded Men in Combat

Women in combat: It's their choice

Women in combat: But don't girls just wanna have fun?

For women in combat, the big threat isn’t behind enemy lines

Women in Combat: Listening to Those Who Have Been There

Women in combat no victory

Women in Combat: A Debate that Deserves More than Giggles

Women in Combat Already Here

Women in combat a dangerous experiment

A Brief History Of Women In Combat

Image credit: Defense.gov



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News: GI Film Festival holds Officer auction
Wednesday, January 30, 2013, 07:37 PM - News Stories
An Officer and an Auction. Sips with Socialites and the GI Film Festival cordially invite you to our January Fundraiser hosted at the GIFF January Fundraiser at The Embassy of Austria.  Join us on Thursday, January 31 -- from 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm -- to take part in a military bachelor auction.  Bring your highest bid to win a dinner date with the single gentleman of your choice, or come to test your luck on great raffle prizes, free drinks, appetizers and a very special musical performance by C*A*M*M*O*...
(GIFF)

Al Jazeera America Has Received More Than 8,000 Applications. Within 24 hours of posting openings for the majority of their new positions, Al Jazeera America received 5000 applications for open positions, a number that has grown to 8,063 over the past three days, a network source told BuzzFeed.  Al Jazeera caused a stir earlier this month when it was announced that the Qatar-based network had bought the struggling liberal channel Current from Al Gore for $500 million, and would use it to expand into American coverage...
(BuzzFeed)

Mark Bowden's War Stories, From the Killing of Bin Laden to U.S. Drone Bombers. The day after President Obama announced the U.S. military had killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, former Philadelphia Inquirer columnist and Black Hawk Down author Mark Bowden was approached by a film producer who felt Bowden should be the one to write the movie version of the raid. So he emailed Obama press secretary Jay Carney and asked if he might be able to interview the players involved...

(Philadelphia Weekly)

Caution: Graphic Images - Sixty-Five Found Executed In Syria's Aleppo -Activists. Amateur video purports to show dozens of dead bodies with their hands bound lying by a small river. Activists said that at least 65 people, apparently shot in the head, were found dead with their hands bound in a district of the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Tuesday (January 29)...
(YouTube)

Humanitarian law, ethics, and journalism in Syria. A small number of journalists reporting from Syria have recently interviewed prisoners of war under highly coercive circumstances. In doing so, they have ignored the protections that are due to prisoners under international humanitarian law, or IHL...
(CPJ Journalist Security Blog)

Group Launches Second Mil-Writing Contest, Anthology. The Warriors Arts Alliance has published a call for submissions to a second volume of military-themed fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and photography. The non-fiction category includes creative non-fiction, essay, and oral history.  Both the anthology and a related contest are open to all military personnel, veterans, and military family members...
(Red Bull Rising)

In Mali, a war 'without images and without facts'. The French army is often called la Grande Muette, or "the Great Silent." The war in Mali confirms the French military's well-deserved reputation of being secretive about front-line actions. "Locking the information is more in the culture of the French army than of the U.S. army," says Maurice Botbol, director of La Lettre du Continent. In the first two weeks of military operations against Islamist militant groups in Mali, the French army has released only a blurry video of an air attack at an undisclosed location...
(CPJ Journalist Security Blog)


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Quad amputee war vet shares story on Twitter
Tuesday, January 29, 2013, 03:52 AM - Twitter, News Stories

Quad amputee war vet Brendan Marrocco who received a double arm transplant shares story on Twitter


Image of Brenda Marrocco via Twitter

A number of news sites and blogs, including The New York Daily News, are reporting that Brendan Marrocco, a soldier who lost all four limbs in 2009 in Iraq, is recovering after undergoing a double arm transplant and a bone marrow transplant.

But it’s not just the media reporting about the transplant and recovery, Marrocco himself is sharing his story with the rest of the world through the microblogging site Twitter.

A month after the operation took place on December 18, 2012, at John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, Marrocco tweeted, “Ohh yeah today has been one month since my surgery and they already move a little”.

Marrocco (who tweets under the username @BMarr86) joined Twitter on December 2011, and to date, has published nearly 2,000 tweets.

With a Twitter tagline of “Live Fast, Love Hard, #DieYoung #EatBacon”, Marrocco has been tweeting nearly daily, only taking off a few days for the 13-hour operation.

Since the news broke yesterday about the transplant, Marrocco has continued to remain lighthearted and cheerful on Twitter, sending messages to followers that included:

“ahhhhhhahahaha!!! Seems I’m way more famous then last time. This is like legit famous”

“I guess it’s a decent day to be that Brendan Marrocco kid”

“Wow front page of yahoo…maybe I really am a big deal.”


Marrocco and surgeons plan to discuss the transplant at a news conference later today.

You can follow Marrocco and his amazing story on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/BMarr86



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Soldier discusses viral Afghanistan war video
Tuesday, January 29, 2013, 03:05 AM - News Stories
Hear from the unseen soldier behind widely viewed Afghan war video. Hear from the Army private whose first-person video of a firefight in Afghanistan has received more than twenty-three million views on YouTube. The small, mountable cameras are often used for tactical means, but hours of combat footage taken by these helmet cams have also been viewed by millions on the Internet.
(Washington Post)

Looking behind the sightlines of an American soldier under Taliban fire. The video would be viewed more than 23 million times, making it perhaps the most-watched footage of the Afghan war. It began last April when Pfc. Ted Daniels pressed the record button on his helmet camera. 
(Washington Post)

Timbuktu library – a treasure house of centuries of Malian history.
Timbuktu's main library, officially called the Ahmed Baba Institute of Higher Islamic Studies and Research, is a treasure house containing more than 20,000 manuscripts covering centuries of Mali's history. 
(Guardian)

Twitter launches advertising services in Middle East.
Twitter Inc launched advertising services in the Middle East and North Africa on Sunday as the social media firm seeks to exploit a tripling of its regional subscriber base following its widespread use during the Arab Spring protests.
(Reuters)

Group seeks World War II veterans to tell their stories. The Potomac Highlands World War II Roundtable is seeking veterans who want to tell their stories of serving in the military as part of a preservation project sponsored by the Friends of the National World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C.
(herald-mail.com)

Women train for Afghanistan frontline. The women of this Air Force group are training for the frontline of battle in Afghanistan. CNN's Don Lemon reports
(CNN)

Dan Nygard’s war stories explore military life at home and away. There is a lot of pressure to get it right when you write a war story. You must balance humanity with violence, explain impossible politics, convey the essence of a military culture that is largely hidden from society, and move through constant tragedy without getting bogged down.
(MinnPost)

Sniper! On Embedded Journalism and the Killing of an Al Jazeera Reporter. Journalism is a tough job. It’s a tough job, that is, if you aren’t one of the people who are content to sit in plush air-conditioned offices regurgitating material handed to you by various interested parties or randomly pulled off the internet and passed off as “news
(Subversify)

Iranian journalists arrested in raids on newspapers. Security officials in Iran have raided at least four newspapers and arrested several journalists in what appears to be concerted action aimed at intimidating the media in advance of the presidential elections in June. 
(Guardian)


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Milblogger Lee Kelley lands major book deal
Monday, January 28, 2013, 02:59 AM - Bloggers turned Writers
Some very cool news this weekend for fans of military blogger Lee Kelley, who was once featured in the December 2006 Time Magazine “People of the Year” issue.

This e-mail just landed in my inbox:

Former Army Captain and milblogger Lee Kelley (Wordsmith at War) has landed a major book deal, which is described in a recent issue of Publisher's Weekly:

“St. Martin’s Press has acquired a new book about the “first” helicopter. Michael Flamini bought world rights, at auction, to Marine Colonel Ray “Frenchy” L’Heureux’s Inside Marine One: Flying the World’s Most Famous Helicopter. L’Heureux, who’s flown the vehicle for several presidents (from George H.W. Bush through Barack Obama), was represented by agents Todd Shuster and Jacob Moore of Zachary Shuster Harmsworth Literary; L’Heureux is co-writing with military blogger Lee Kelley.

The book will explore the helicopter itself, as well as the elite squad that operates it (and that L’Heureux oversaw), HMX1. The book is slated for spring/summer 2014.”


Click the link, then scroll down to the section titled "SMP Boards Presidential Chopper" to learn more.

If you’d like to catch up on what’s been happening with Lee Kelley over the years, I wrote up a “Where are they now?” story on Kelley last June.


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Syrian Activists find love on Facebook
Sunday, January 27, 2013, 11:31 PM - Facebook, News Stories
Social media has played an important role in the Arab Spring that began in 2010.

Facebook, Twitter, Skype, YouTube and other social networking sites have been used to spread information, images and video directly to the masses.

But that’s not all the sites are good for…

A story published on NPR’s website tells how activists have found love on Facebook during the Syrian uprising.

“Mohsen, an activist from Hama, says he first met Sara, his girlfriend of nearly two years, on Facebook.

She sent him a friend request because she saw he worked in the field of journalism, and for months they chatted casually about the Syrian uprising. Then, after government troops stormed Hama, Moshen fled to Damascus, where he and Sara finally met face to face.

"The revolution is what brought us together. ... It was the thing that pushed us toward each other," he says. "Without the revolution we were never going to meet in person."


Full story here.


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