Monday, June 30, 2008

The Laundry Day Care Package

Our military service members love care packages, but you don't have to spend a lot to send a creative and fun care package straight from your heart.

Here's just one of the many ideas you can use to create a sweet surprise for the service members you support:

Laundry Day Care Package

Tide To Go pen
Shout It Out stick
Shout Wipes Stain Treater Towelette
Woolite Liquid Cold Water Wash
Febreeze
Laundry Detergent
Fabric Softener
Dryer sheets
Mini Sewing Kit

These are just suggestions to help get you started. You can pick up many of these items at bulk centers like Sam's Club, BJ's Wholesale or Costco. You can pick up party themed items, decoration and other fun stuff inexpensively at party stores like Party City.

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Thursday, June 26, 2008

Happy Birthday Chesty Puller

Today is the birthday of the greatest, most decorated Marine in American history: Lieutenant General Lewis Burwell “Chesty” Puller. He was born June 26, 1898.

General Puller’s heroism, esprit de corps, and leadership are legendary and saying that he is an inspiration is an understatement.

Lieutenant General Lewis Burwell "Chesty" Puller (June 26, 1898 – October 11, 1971) was an officer in the United States Marine Corps and is the most decorated Marine in history. Puller is the only United States Marine to receive five Navy Crosses, the United States Navy's second highest decoration after the Medal of Honor. During his career, he fought guerillas in Haiti and Nicaragua, and participated in some of the bloodiest battles of World War II and the Korean War. Puller retired from the Marine Corps in 1955, spending the rest of his life in Virginia.

In Depth

Born in the peaceful village of West Point, Virginia, where his father had a wholesale grocery business, Puller was reared on tales of Confederate glory. His grandfather, Maj. John Puller, a heroic cavalryman, was killed in 1863.

Determined on a military career, Puller completed one year at the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) before enlisting in the U.S. Marine Corps in August 1918. VMI may have given him the exaggerated military bearing for which he was nicknamed, but it was during more than four years as a Marine NCO and concurrent lieutenant of the Gendarmerie d’Haiti (1919–23) that Puller developed his distinctive leadership techniques: perfectionism; mission overachievement; and fearless, inspirational conduct under fire. Varied assignments followed his commissioning in 1924, including two tours in Nicaragua, in each of which he was awarded the Navy Cross. His third and fourth Navy Crosses came during World War II at the Battle of Guadalcanal and at Cape Gloucester on New Britain Island; and the fifth in Korea where Puller commanded the 1st Marine Regiment in the assault landing at Inchon, the seizure of Seoul, and the fighting at the Chosin Reservoir.

Fuller was promoted to brigadier general in 1951 and to lieutenant general upon retirement in 1955. During the 1950s, the colorful and outspoken Puller gained attention as a champion of tough, realistic training; a defender of the basic soundness of American youth; and a critic of higher leadership. His legend continued to grow; photographs of his bulldog visage hung in homes and service clubs across the country as a symbol of invincible heroism and fidelity to traditional military standards.

Among Puller’s most famous quips:
“All right, they’re on our left, they’re on our right,
they’re in front of us, they’re behind us…they can’t get away this time.”


“Great. Now we can shoot at those bastards from every direction.”

“We’re surrounded. That simplifies our problem of getting to these people and
killing them.”

“Remember, you are the 1st Marines! Not all the Communists in Hell can
overrun you!”

“Take me to the Brig. I want to see the real Marines.”

“Alright you bastards, try and shoot me!” (to Korean forces)

“Where do you put the bayonet?” (upon seeing a flamethrower for the first
time)

“You don’t hurt ‘em if you don’t hit ‘em.”

“Hit hard, hit fast, hit often.”


While exact counts of Puller's total number of decorations vary from source to source, an accepted number of 52 separate, subsequent, and foreign awards is commonplace. The reason for difficulty in assigning an exact total comes from the variety of foreign decorations that each carry different protocols in regard to wear and display.

You can read so much more about Lieutenant General Lewis Burwell “Chesty” Puller at his entry on wikipedia. What an amazing man he was.

Happy Birthday Chesty and Semper Fi!


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Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Turn Your Old Cell Phones Into Talk Time

It's official! We've partnered with Cell Phones for Soldiers, joining a network of more than 3,000 collection sites across the country, so you can recycle your old cell phones and have them turned into talk time for our military service members.

“Americans will replace an estimated 130 million cell phones this year,” says Mike Newman, vice president of ReCellular, “with the majority of phones either discarded or stuffed in a drawer. Most people don’t realize that the small sacrifice of donating their unwanted phones can have a tremendous benefit for a worthy cause like Cell Phones for Soldiers.”

It's simple and FREE! Every phone you donate will help increase the amount of talk time we're able to provide to our troops! It's easy too, all you need to do is drop off your old cell phones to us locally, mail them to us or ship them directly to Cell Phones for Soldiers.

Cell Phones for Soldiers hopes to turn old cell phones into more than 12 million minutes of prepaid calling cards for U.S. troops stationed overseas in 2008. To do so, Cell Phones for Soldiers needs to collect 15,000 cell phones each month.

You can help the charity even more by applying your own postage. If you pay for the postage, Cell Phones for Soldiers can put more money toward calling cards for our troops! If you can't afford to pay for postage, that's ok too. You can print a pre-paid postage label here.

If you'd like to become even more involved, have your business, company, apartment complex, school or church, etc. register as a drop off point here. You may also locate drop off points in your town here.

Get creative! You can host "recycle cell phone events" and donate the cell phones received to Cell Phones for Soldiers. Not only will you be helping the environment but you'll be helping our troops as well and that's something everyone can feel good about.

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Did You Know...

This is part of our ongoing series called Did You Know?

This series, which you can follow by clicking on the labels/categories in our sidebar, will give you interesting facts about all things military.

At eMail Our Military (eMOM) we want to do more than help support our troops, we want to educate people and help them understand about "all things military". We realize that when you know more about a specific group, you'll be better able to understand them and in turn be better equipped to relate to them.

Corps: Did you know that the corps is the largest tactical unit in the U.S. Army? The Corps is responsible for translating strategic objectives into tactical orders. It synchronizes tactical operations including maneuvering, the firing of organic artillery, naval firing, supporting tactical air operations, and actions of their combat support, bringing together these operations on the battlefield. Each corps will have between two and five divisions, depending on the mission.

Now you know!

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Monday, June 23, 2008

The Peanut Gallery Care Package

Our military service members love care packages, but you don't have to spend alot to send a creative, fun care package straight from your heart.

Here's just one of the many ideas you can use to create a sweet surprise for the service members you support:

Peanut Gallery Care Package

Trail Mix
Sunflower Seeds
Peanuts
Cashews
Macadamia Nuts
Roasted Almonds
Hot Nuts
Corn Nuts

Include a variety of nuts and lots of them!

These are just suggestions to help get you started. You can pick up many of these items at bulk centers like Sam's Club, BJ's Wholesale or Costco. You can pick up party themed items, decoration and other fun stuff inexpensively at party stores like Party City.

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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Welcome Home Sailors

U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kristopher S. Wilson


Aviation Boatswain's Mate (Handling) 3rd Class Nicholas Beyer holds his 4-month-old son for the first time during homecoming celebrations for the crew of the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75) and embarked Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 3 at Naval Station Norfolk. Beyer and several other new fathers were among the first allowed to walk off the ship in order to meet and hold the children whose births they were forced to miss due to the deployment. Nearly 7,500 Sailors have returned to their homeports from a scheduled deployment with the Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group (CSG) supporting maritime security operations in the 5th and 6th Fleet areas of responsibility.


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Did You Know...

This is part of our ongoing series called Did You Know?

This series, which you can follow by clicking on the labels/categories in our sidebar, will give you interesting facts about all things military.

At eMail Our Military (eMOM) we want to do more than help support our troops, we want to educate people and help them understand about all things military. We realize that when you know more about a specific group, you'll be better able to understand them and in turn better equipped to relate to them.

Company: Did you know that company-sized units, 130 to 150 soldiers, are normally commanded by captains? They consist of two or more platoons, usually of the same type, a headquarters unit and some logistical capabilities. Companies are the basic elements of all battalions.

Now you know!

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Soldier In Iraq Watches Daughter Graduate

U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Chris Seaton
Task Force 12, Multinational Division Baghdad

Army Sgt. Elias Lantigua, of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, Task Force 12, Camp Taji, Iraq, smiles as his daughter, Micaela, takes the stage during her graduation ceremony June 7, 2008, in Ansbach, Germany. Lantigua was one of a few soldiers in 12th Combat Aviation Brigade who had an opportunity to see the ceremonies via streaming video on the Internet.


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Monday, June 16, 2008

The Movie Night Care Package

Our military service members love care packages, but you don't have to spend alot to send a creative, fun care package straight from your heart.

Here's just one of the many ideas you can use to create a sweet surprise for the service members you support.

Movie Night Care Package

DVDS
Popcorn
Potato Chips
Nacho Chips
Doritos
Fritos
Sour Patch Kids Candy
Jelly Beans (Various flavors)
Gummy Worms Candy
Mike and Ike Candy
Red Hots Candy
Hot Tamales Candy
Lemonheads Candy
Jolly Rancher Candy
Tootsie Rolls
Lollipops
Gum (Various kinds and flavors)
Nuts
Trail Mix
Pretzels (Various flavors and styles)
Beef Jerky (Various flavors)
Slim Jim (Various flavors)
Granola Bars
Chewy Granola Bars

Plus anything you can think of that you'd get in a movie theater. (No chocolate) You can add some drink mixes to this as well. Get ideas from our beverage care package.

These are just suggestions to help get you started. You can pick up many of these items at bulk centers like Sam's Club, BJ's Wholesale or Costco. You can pick up party themed items, decoration and other fun stuff inexpensively at party stores like Party City.

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First Lady Visits Troops in Bagram Afghanistan

First Lady Visits Troops in Bagram Afghanistan
Photo by Pfc. Christina Sinders
June 09, 2008

First Lady Laura Bush poses with service members at Bagram Air Field. She visited service members to thank them for their efforts in Afghanistan.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Hooah and Happy 233rd Birthday

Army Birthday Celebrates Congressional Partnership
Photo by J.D. Leipold
June 11, 2008

Two hundred and thirty-three years ago, the United States Army was established to defend our Nation. From the Revolutionary War to the Global War on Terror, our Soldiers remain Army Strong with a deep commitment to our core values and beliefs. This 233rd birthday commemorates America’s Army – Soldiers, Families and Civilians – who are achieving a level of excellence that is truly Army Strong both here and abroad. Their willingness to sacrifice to build a better future for others and to preserve our way of life is without a doubt, the Strength of our Nation.

Read the White House 2008 Army Birthday Letter


Read the 2008 Army Birthday Message (PDF)


Read the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Birthday Message


About the photo: Army and Congressional leaders celebrated the Army's 233rd birthday and the Army's partnership with Congress yesterday at a cake-cutting ceremony on Capitol Hill. Secretary of the Army Pete Geren told the audience it was a great occasion to celebrate an institution, a partnership that is older than the nation: "It was really an adoption more than a birth because Soldiers were in the field laying siege to the British in Boston when the Continental Congress decided to create an Army on June 14, 1775 -- they said, 'those guys in the field; they are our Army.'" From left to right: Rep. Chet Edwards of Texas, Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. George W. Casey Jr., Secretary Geren, Sgt. Maj. of the Army Kenneth O. Preston and Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma.

Celebrate

From all of us here at eMail Our Military to all of you, Hooah and a Very Happy Army Birthday!

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Today Is Flag Day

Today Is Flag Day!

Flag Day commemorates the official adoption of the US flag by the Second Continental Congress in 1777. It celebrates the history and symbolic meaning of the American flag, and is also an opportunity to remember those who fight to protect it and the nation for which it stands. Although it has been celebrated since the Civil War, President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed that it would be celebrated on June 14th in 1916. However, it is not officially a federal holiday, and only Pennsylvania has adopted it as a state holiday.

According to legend, in 1776, George Washington commissioned Philadelphia seamstress Betsy Ross to create a flag for the new nation. Scholars debate this legend, but agree that Mrs. Ross most likely knew Washington and sewed flags. To date, there have been twenty-seven official versions of the flag, but the arrangement of the stars varied according to the flag-makers' preferences until 1912 when President Taft standardized the then-new flag's forty-eight stars into six rows of eight. The forty-nine-star flag (1959-60), as well as the fifty-star flag, also have standardized star patterns. The current version of the flag dates to July 4, 1960, after Hawaii became the fiftieth state on August 21, 1959.

Famous Flag Folks

Betsy Ross was a seamstress who made clothes for George Washington. In June, 1776, Washington approached her to make the country's first flag and the rest is history.

Francis Scott Key Inspired by the British bombardment of Fort McHenry, Francis Scott Key penned the lyrics to our national anthem as he witnessed the event as British rockets whizzed in the air while our American Flag flew in the breeze

Did you Know?

If you like to study flags, then you are a Vexillologist!

There is a very special ceremony for retiring the flag by burning it. It is a ceremony everyone should see. Your local Boy Scout group, VFW or American Legion Hall knows the proper ceremony and performs it on a regular basis. If you have an old flag, give it to them and of course, attend the ceremony.

Flag Etiquette & Standards of Respect

The Flag Code, which formalizes and unifies the traditional ways in which we give respect to the flag, also contains specific instructions on how the flag is not to be used. They are:

The flag should never be dipped to any person or thing. It is flown upside down only as a distress signal.

The flag should not be used as a drapery, or for covering a speakers desk, draping a platform, or for any decoration in general. Bunting of blue, white and red stripes is available for these purposes. The blue stripe of the bunting should be on the top.

The flag should never be used for any advertising purpose. It should not be embroidered, printed or otherwise impressed on such articles as cushions, handkerchiefs, napkins, boxes, or anything intended to be discarded after temporary use. Advertising signs should not be attached to the staff or halyard.

The flag should not be used as part of a costume or athletic uniform, except that a flag patch may be used on the uniform of military personnel, fireman, policeman and members of patriotic organizations.

The flag should never have placed on it, or attached to it, any mark, insignia, letter, word, number, figure, or drawing of any kind.

The flag should never be used as a receptacle for receiving, holding, carrying, or delivering anything.

When the flag is lowered, no part of it should touch the ground or any other object; it should be received by waiting hands and arms. To store the flag it should be folded neatly and ceremoniously.

The flag should be cleaned and mended when necessary.

When a flag is so worn it is no longer fit to serve as a symbol of our country, it should be destroyed by burning in a dignified manner.

The Proper Way To Display Your Flag

  • The flag is normally flown from sunrise to sunset.

  • In the morning, raise the flag briskly. At sunset, lower it slowly. Always, raise and lower it ceremoniously.

  • The flag should not be flown at night without a light on it.

  • The flag should not be flown in the rain or inclement weather.

  • After a tragedy or death, the flag is flown at half staff for 30 days. It's called "half staff" on land, and "half mast" on a ship.

  • When flown vertically on a pole, the stars and blue field , or "union", is at the top and at the end of the pole (away from your house).

  • When the flag is displayed from a staff projecting from a window, balcony, or a building, the union should be at the peak of the staff unless the flag is at half staff.

  • When the flag is displayed over a street, it should be hung vertically, with the union to the north or east. If the flag is suspended over a sidewalk, the flag's union should be farthest from the building.

  • The American flag is always flown at the top of the pole. Your state flag and other flags fly below it.

  • The flag of the United States is always the first flag raised and the last to be lowered.

  • When flown with the national banner of other countries, each flag must be displayed from a separate pole of the same height. Each flag should be the same size. They should be raised and lowered simultaneously. The flag of one nation may not be displayed above that of another nation.

  • When flown with flags of states, communities, or societies on separate flag poles which are of the same height and in a straight line, the flag of the United States is always placed in the position of honor - to its own right. The other flags may be smaller but none may be larger. No other flag ever should be placed above it. The flag of the United States is always the first flag raised and the last to be lowered.

  • The union is always on top. When displayed in print, the stars and blue field are always on the left.

  • Never let your flag touch the ground, never. Period.

  • Fold your flag when storing


Parading and Saluting the Flag

When carried in a procession, the flag should be to the right of the marchers. When other flags are carried, the flag of the United States may be centered in front of the others or carried to their right. When the flag passes in a procession, or when it is hoisted or lowered, all should face the flag and salute.

The Salute To Salute; all persons come to attention. Those in uniform give the appropriate formal salute. Citizens not in uniform salute by placing their right hand over the heart and men with head cover should remove it and hold it to left shoulder, hand over the heart. Members of organizations in formation salute upon command of the person in charge.

The Pledge of Allegiance and National Anthem

The Pledge of Allegiance should be rendered by standing at attention, facing the flag, and saluting. When the national anthem is played or sung, citizens should stand at attention and salute at the first note and hold the salute through the last note. The salute is directed to the flag, if displayed, otherwise to the music.

The Flag in Mourning

To place the flag at half staff, hoist it to the peak for an instant and lower it to a position half way between the top and bottom of the staff. The flag is to be raised again to the peak for a moment before it is lowered. On Memorial Day the flag is displayed at half staff until noon and at full staff from noon to sunset. The flag is to be flown at half staff in mourning for designated, principal government leaders and upon presidential or gubernatorial order.

When used to cover a casket, the flag should be placed with the union at the head and over the left shoulder. It should not be lowered into the grave.

More Americana...

For more patriotic goodies, check out our Americana category on our sidebar. Enjoy!

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Burn That Flag

Burn That Flag, Just Ask Permission
Written by Tom Adkins (7/1/98)

What do we do about people who want to burn the American flag? Those folks who want to stomp all over it, or spit on it to make some sort of "statement." Some say the first Amendment gives us the right to desecrate the American flag. Others want to make it illegal. This is a tough one. What should we do? I can solve this one easily. I believe we should have a simple requirement. Let flag desecration be legal, but you have to have three sponsors who will give you written permission. Those sponsors should be from a panel of experts who might be considered "qualified" to give such permission.


First, you need a signature of a war veteran. How about a Marine who fought at Iwo Jima?


The men who raised that flag over Iwo Jima did so on the bodies of thousands of dead Americans, who gave their lives so a few could raise the flag in defiant claim of that last island in a long, bloody march to defeat the Japanese. What did those Marines think about the flag as they watched their comrades get slaughtered? Every battle with the Japanese was horrific. Each day meant half of everyone you knew would be dead tomorrow. Your own future was a coin flip away from a bloody death in a place your family couldn't pronounce. Or you could ask a Vietnam vet who spent years in a POW prison, tortured in small, filthy cells unfit for a dog. Or Korean War soldiers who rescued half a nation from communism, or the Desert Storm warriors who repulsed a bloody dictator from raping and pillaging an innocent country, to find people from a foreign land kiss our flag as we drove through their streets.


To every American soldier who ever fought for the United States, that flag represented your mother and father, your sister and brother, your friends, neighbors, your fellow countrymen.In fact it stands for your freedom, guaranteed by your nation. Those who fought, fought for that flag.Those who died, died for that flag. I wonder what they would say if someone asked their permission to burn a flag?


Next, you need a signature of an immigrant. Preferably one who left their family behind. Their brothers and sisters languish in their native land, often subject to tyranny, poverty and failure, while America offers freedom and prosperity.


Some have seen friends and family be tortured and murdered by their own government for daring to do many things we take for granted every day.Many give their lives in the struggle just to touch our shores, even as America turns its back and returns them to face persecution once again in their native land. For those who risked everything simply for the chance to become an American, what kind of feelings do they have for the flag when they pledge allegiance to it for the first time? Go to a naturalization ceremony and see for yourself, the tears of pride, the thanks, the love and respect of this nation, as they finally embrace the flag of our nation as their own. Then, walk up and ask one of them if it would be OK to spit on the flag.


Last, you need a signature from someone living in a foreign land who cannot get here. Say, Rwanda. Or maybe Bosnia. Maybe even Haiti. You might have to move fast, as they flee oppressors who attack them with machete's or shoot at them randomly in a marketplace. I'm sure they will never question your sanity as they duck for cover.


The writers of the Declaration of Independence are long gone. I wonder what they thought of the American flag as they drafted that document? They knew such an act would drag the nation into war with England, the greatest power on earth. Did the flag mean anything to them?


They knew failure of independence meant more than just a disappointment. It meant a noose would be snugly stretched around their necks. I wonder how they'd feel if someone asked their permission to toss the flag in a mud puddle?


In the absence of family, the absence of the precious shores of home, in the face of overwhelming odds and often in the face of death itself, the American flag inspires those who believe in the American dream, the American promise, the American vision...


Americans who don't appreciate the flag are usually those who don't appreciate this nation. And those who appreciate this nation appreciate the American flag.


So if you would, before you desecrate the American flag, before you spit on it, before you ignore it or despise it...please ask permission. Not from the constitution. Not from some obscure law. Not from the politicians or the pundits.


Please ask permission from those who founded the nation. Please ask those who defended our shores so that we may be free today. Please ask those who fought to reach our shores so that they may partake in the American dream.


And then, please ask permission from those who died wishing they could, just once... or once again... see, touch or kiss the flag that stands for our nation, the United States of America... the greatest nation on earth.



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Friday, June 13, 2008

Active Duty Dads Get Free BabbleSoft Memberships

Father’s Day is this weekend, June 15! I'd like to wish all the fathers out here a very happy Fahter's Day filled with love and laughter. I'd also like to extend an invitation for new dads to try Babble Soft's baby applications.

Times have changed. Now more than ever before, fathers are taking an increasingly hands on approach in the care and nurturing of their children, especially while they're little.

For all those new military dads who can’t be there when their babies are born or who'll have to ship out soon after, we're proud to partner with BabbleSoft.com to offer FREE subscriptions to their applications. These applications are a great way to stay connected with your baby back home and keep up with its routine.

For all the rest of the dads out here and the other fathers you know who might like to be actively involved in caring for their newborns, you can receive 15% off purchases of all subscriptions through June 15 using code FATHER#1. What better reason for new dads to be on the internet or their mobile devices than keeping up with baby’s activities and milestones?

So this year, in addition to all of those typical "dad gifts" for Father’s Day, surprise a new or expecting dad with a fun and easy way to get involved in his baby's first milestones.

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