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Dove
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PostSubject: Don't get mad-get even   Don't get mad-get even I_icon_minitimeThu Feb 22, 2018 7:24 am

https://archive.fo/7p1UM

We ALL should be able to stop this.  Post on TD.

See something, say something.  "O" said it, if U ever need a defense.


           
            I want to know the thoughts of God. Everything else is just details.
            A Miracle is when God makes His Reality our Experience              
                  


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PostSubject: CASTING CRISIS: Orlando’s Actors, Agents and Casualty Role Players   Don't get mad-get even I_icon_minitimeThu Feb 22, 2018 12:46 pm

WAKE UP AMERICA WAKE UP ITS ALMOST TOO LATE!!!

http://21stcenturywire.com/2016/06/18/casting-crisis-orlandos-actors-agents-and-casualty-role-players/
CASTING CRISIS: Orlando’s Actors, Agents and Casualty Role Players
JUNE 18, 2016 BY SHAWN HELTON 5 COMMENTS
Shawn Helton
21st Century Wire

Truth is often stranger than fiction when looking at the bizarre phenomena surrounding many mass casualty incidents – and the Orlando Pulse nightclub shooting was no exception.
It was recently revealed that the world’s largest security firm G4S, who had employed the man named in the Orlando pulse nightclub shooting, Omar Mateen – is a client of the mass casualty staging company called CrisisCast.
[img(566.01704px,376.01703999999995px)]http://21stcenturywire.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/CrisisCast-Capture-2.jpg[/img]
‘STAGING REALITY’ – CrisisCast specializes in replicating mass casualty events. (Screen Capture from Crisis Cast)
Training for Disaster
The heavily-stylized company CrisisCast, appears to be a revamped version of the Visionbox Crisis Actors project (a crisis actor production emerging after Sandy Hook), with a professional team of actors, elaborate film crews, expert producers and theatrical effects makeup squads mimicking real-life injuries (additional prosthetics) all focused to deliver a simulated crisis-likereality to the public, later to be managed accordingly through their public relations division via various forms of social media.
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PostSubject: Re: Don't get mad-get even   Don't get mad-get even I_icon_minitimeThu Feb 22, 2018 12:48 pm

YOU ARE IN A MOVIE OF THEIR MAKING TO GET WHAT THEY WANT!
YOU END UP THE "SUCKER" OF THE SNAKE OIL SALESMAN!
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PostSubject: Re: Don't get mad-get even   Don't get mad-get even I_icon_minitimeThu Feb 22, 2018 12:54 pm

Don't get mad-get even Boston-army-vet
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PostSubject: READ LINK .. DOD MIL   Don't get mad-get even I_icon_minitimeThu Feb 22, 2018 12:59 pm

READ LINK .. DOD MIL
http://www.militaryblood.dod.mil/viewcontent.aspx?con_id_pk=1119

Lieutenant Journeys Back From The Dead
11/09/2012 
By Patricia Kime, Staff Writer, Military Times

Don't get mad-get even 1119_con_r_img_20121109_085404
1st Lt. Nick Vogt receives the Bronze Star and NATO medals earlier this year.


In May, we featured Marilyn Durso's story—a mother who donated blood to the Armed Services Blood Program to honor several service members who were injured during their deployments.  One of those soldiers was 1st Lt. Nicholas Vogt. After stepping on a roadside bomb while deployed, Vogt was severely injured, losing both of his legs and would require nearly 500 units of blood to save his life. On Nov. 12, Vogt will celebrate his first "Alive Day" — the day his fellow soldiers saved his life. Both stories are a true testament that donated blood to the military blood program truly does save lives every day.

Nick Vogt graduated from West Point in 2010 with an acceptance to medical school and plans to become one of the Army’s top trauma surgeons.

But first, the Ohio-born 22-year-old wanted to understand the physical and mental demands on an infantryman in combat. So he went to Ranger School and Airborne and landed with 1st Stryker Brigade, 25th Infantry Division, first in Fort Wainwright, Alaska, and later, Afghanistan.

“It felt necessary for me to go out there, to experience what the soldiers experience, so when I’m a doctor, I’ll know,” said Vogt, now 24.

In Panjwai, near Kandahar, Vogt’s affable demeanor and willingness to learn quickly earned his men’s allegiance.

“I really liked the guy. He was really motivated to get out there and work with us,” recalled team leader Sgt. Adam Lundy.

But within two months, the popular lieutenant would be clinically dead, having taken a wrong step onto an improvised explosive device.

And what happened afterward is now a chapter in the annals of military medicine.

On Nov. 12, Vogt, now a first lieutenant, will celebrate his first “Alive Day,” the anniversary of the day both his legs were shorn off by a makeshift bomb. He survived, receiving 500 units of blood, more than any other casualty survivor in U.S. history.

His story epitomizes the advancements in casualty care in the past decade and illustrates just how far the U.S. military will go to save one of its own.

One bad step
“I still remember every detail of his story. The fact that he didn’t die on us just kept us going,” said Air Force Maj. Raynae Leslie, a blood bank specialist who worked at Kandahar Role 3 hospital in November 2011.


The day began eventfully for “Rage” Platoon, Bravo Company, 1/5. In the morning, during house-to-house searches, the unit discovered a weapons cache and came under small-arms fire.

During a break to rest their bomb-sniffing dogs, Vogt consulted with Lundy to set up a security zone. As the last man assumed his place on the perimeter, radio-telephone operator Spc. Calvin Pereda, standing not far from Vogt, took one small step, triggering an IED.

Nearly simultaneously, a second detonated under Vogt’s feet.

Lundy, two feet to Vogt’s left, was hurled into a wall. After recovering from the impact, he crawled through dust and dirt toward Vogt’s screams.

When he got to the lieutenant, his training overcame instinctual horror, he said. Vogt’s left leg had been pulverized, with nothing left but a mass of indiscernible blood and froth. The right, still wearing a combat boot, had been stripped of skin and muscle midthigh down.

“I took care of the left leg first. Normally, with that kind of wound, you put a tourniquet on it. But he didn’t have anything there to wrap,” Lundy said.

So the sergeant “grabbed what was left and squeezed it together to slow the bleeding” and called for medic Spc. Tom Underhill.

Underhill was working on Pereda. The radio operator also had lost his legs but was conscious.
“It seemed like I could get him stabilized,” Underhill recalled.

Hearing Lundy, Underhill moved over to Vogt and began treating the right leg. Lundy fashioned an abdominal tourniquet around Vogt’s torso and attempted to revive the lieutenant, who by then had lost consciousness.

When Vogt’s breathing stalled, Underhill performed a cricothyroidotomy, puncturing a hole in the officer’s neck to allow in more air.

And he administered the synthetic starch Hextend, which boosts fluid levels, through a line he placed in Vogt’s sternum — one of many moves that helped save Vogt’s life.

The line would stay in Vogt for the next 24 hours, a portal that allowed doctors and nurses to continue giving him lifesaving medications.

Catastrophic wounds
Combat survivability in Iraq and Afghanistan is higher than in any American war: Only 10 percent of all injuries in operations Iraqi and Enduring Freedom have resulted in death, compared with 16.1 percent in Vietnam and 19.1 in World War II.

The biggest killer of troops has been roadside bombs, which are responsible for about 75 percent of the U.S. casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan.

On the dust-off, Vogt nearly became another casualty: His heart stopped for the first of five times.
“They had to get out those little paddles,” said Lundy, also on the helicopter because he had suffered head, neck and shoulder injuries in the blast. “I was pretty sure the lieutenant was not going to make it.”

Ten minutes after arrival, Pereda, a 21-year-old from Fayetteville, N.C., succumbed to massive internal injuries.

And Vogt’s heart stopped again, forcing the physicians to crack his chest open to perform manual heart massage. The gaping chest wound now contributed to Vogt’s blood loss.

“It was coming out faster than we could pump it in. Right from the start, we knew he needed blood, but I didn’t know he was going to go through our entire supply,” Leslie said.

Vogt ran through the hospital’s stock of platelets, whole blood and plasma. And as he was prepped for surgery, Leslie knew he’d need more.

“The doctors wanted reserves so they could stay ahead of him,” Leslie said.

By this time, Lundy had been cleaned up and allowed to leave. Sitting with Sgt. Stephen Dodson, his battalion’s wounded soldier liaison, the two discussed how they could help.

Leslie, pressing doctors for more information on Vogt’s blood requirements, began organizing a team. Lundy, Dodson and Spc. David Beaudoin stepped up to volunteer. Their plan: to rally blood donors from across the Kandahar post.

“We hopped in a truck and drove anywhere there would be people,” Lundy said. “I’m pretty sure a message went out on the Big Voice telling people to get to the hospital.”

On their way back to the hospital, Lundy and Dodson got pulled over for speeding — “Yeah, they do that over there,” Lundy said, but they talked their way out of a citation. Arriving at the hospital they found a line of coalition and U.S. forces — Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines — winding out the door and along the sidewalk.


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PostSubject: Re: Don't get mad-get even   Don't get mad-get even I_icon_minitimeThu Feb 22, 2018 1:00 pm

https://www.garysinisefoundation.org/projects/rise/nick-vogt#
Nick Vogt

US Army CPT

Don't get mad-get even Nick-vogt
US Army CPT Nicholas Vogt grew up in a small Catholic community in north central Ohio. He is the oldest of five siblings. At a very young age, Nicholas knew he wanted to join the military. He was accepted to West Point in 2006 where he began his formal military training.
During his deployment to Afghanistan in 2011, Nicholas served as a Platoon Leader. On November 12, 2011, he and his team were on foot patrol when they discovered a weapons cache. While investigating, Nicholas stepped on an improvised explosive device (IED).
Immediately Nicholas was rushed to Kandahar, a city in Afghanistan, for treatment. In late November, he was transported to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for extensive surgeries.
Nicholas suffered both leg amputations at his hips, severe brain injury, and a seizure disorder. His recovery was extremely difficult with many complications preventing him from adapting to a wheelchair or prosthetics. He became frustrated and closed off.
A turning point came in June 2013 when Nicholas met his nurse, Lauren. They fell in love and married. Nicholas and Lauren currently reside in a small apartment in Virginia and welcomed their first baby in February 2017. The Gary Sinise Foundation is proudly building the couple a specially adapted smart home to give Nicholas the accessibility he needs to be independent.
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PostSubject: Re: Don't get mad-get even   Don't get mad-get even I_icon_minitimeThu Feb 22, 2018 1:44 pm

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PostSubject: Re: Don't get mad-get even   Don't get mad-get even I_icon_minitimeThu Feb 22, 2018 2:11 pm

Anyone following that Boston Marathon massacre really needs to see the link below. Way to much in the link to post here. Damning pictures and damning info. We need to keep this subject alive. Same goes for Las Vegas, Sandy Hook, and all the rest.

https://sites.google.com/site/911whatyoumighthavemissed/boston-bombing/anomalies/jeff-bauman


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