Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Soldier adopts military dog that saved his life (VIDEO)


Before It's News | Popular Lifestyle

Soldier adopts military dog that saved his life (VIDEO)


A soldier adopted a bomb-sniffing dog after she saved his life during a tour in Afghanistan.


Staff Sgt. Julian McDonald sent in Layka, a bomb-sniffing dog, to clear a building. While inside, Layka encountered an enemy combatant and was shot four times. But that didn’t stop her from subduing the shooter and protecting her handler, Huffington Post reports.


Layka was seriously injured, but survived, and McDonald felt immediately like he needed to fix her.


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Staff Sgt. Julian McDonald said Layka has adapted well to her environment, and sometimes she even helps train other military dogs.


“On the day Layka got shot in May, instantly I felt the sense of urgency to fix her,” McDonald told National Geographic. “I owe this dog every moment I have from here on out with my son, with my mother, with my family. I owe her everything.”


Even though some thought Layka was too aggressive to be in a family environment, McDonald adopted her anyway, and said she’s been nothing but completely sweet.


“If you bring them in to a home environment they will become a product of that environment,” McDonald said. “Because all animals learn to adapt and survive, and that’s ultimately what they’re doing: coming home, adapting and surviving, and becoming a part of the family.”


[ Huffington Post ]


The post Soldier adopts military dog that saved his life (VIDEO) appeared first on Guns.com.



Malaysia flight MH370 in China? How did it get there? Explanation here.

Missing Malaysia flight MH370. Spotted at an isolated airfield in China?


If so, this is the most likely way it got there.


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It was commandeered by experienced Chinese military pilots. The skilled flying needed was easy for these military pilots. The “pings” showing it headed to the south Indian Ocean is explained below. 

 

It was easy for them to get onboard, using stolen passports. Planned well in advance, several Chinese passengers could have “disappeared” on their way to the airport, either in China on a flight to Malaysia, or in Malaysia just before heading to the airport. A possible group to target for such passport thefts would have been the 19 Chinese artists, though it could have been anyone who closely resembled the commandeering pilots. Sneaking on a plane with a stolen passport is known to be quite easy. The friends and relatives of the “disappeared” believe they were on the plane.

 

Onboard security was known to be slack. The cockpit could have been rushed when one of the pilots opened the cockpit door to use the lavatory. The crew could have been killed or incapacitated without weapons, using violent martial arts methods. At that time, a long range military plane from China could have rendezvoused with them, and flown close by. This is not difficult for military pilots used to air to air refuelling and that sort of thing. Both planes would appear as one blip on a radar screen. The Malaysian plane’s transponder is then turned off, and it is diverted to a course off the east coast of Vietnam. The long range Chinese military plane keeps it’s transponder on for a few minutes, and then turns south west. It earlier recorded one or more “pings” from the Malaysian plane, and can re-broadcast them at the designated intervals, as it diverts south west, and then west towards the Bay of Bengal. It would re-broadcast the pings at the designated times. The hight altitude climb and then a descent would all be part of a plan to suggest there might be a struggle in the cockpit, or that the pilots were starved of oxygen or otherwise incapacitated. It was done to confuse the searchers. 

 

It would be very simple for the highly trained military pilots to fly the Malaysian Air plane northeastward, off the coast of Vietnam, avoiding the very limited radar in that area.  Once over China, the Chinese radar operators would be told it is a military exercise and to keep their mouths shut. The plane was then flown to western China and landed at an isolated airfield. 

 

Meanwhile, the long range military plane continued to re-broadcast the false pings, and flies over the known very deepest part of the Indian Ocean. It then drops a false emergency locator pinger where it sinks to the absolute worst possible place for recovery. (That is why no wreckage of any sort has been found.) 

 

It then retraces it’s path and lands in China. 

 

The possible reasons for doing this will be covered in an article HERE. 

 

 



Taking photos of cops... ruled legal by the 1st circuit court of appeals. You can bet money cops will keep fighting this. They hate being caught on...

The First Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld a lawsuit against a local New Hampshire police department, affirming the right of citizens to film police carrying out their duties in public.

Carla Gericke attempted to film Sergeant Joseph Kelley as he pulled over her friend Tyler Hanslin on the night of March 24, 2010. Gericke was later arrested and charged with several crimes, including violation of New Hampshire's wiretapping statute. She was not brought to trial, but nevertheless filed a lawsuit against the Town of Weare, its police department, and the arresting officers. Gericke's complaint was that the wiretapping charge constituted "retaliatory prosecution in violation of her First Amendment rights."

In his ruling on the case, Judge Kermit V. Lipez explained that the gathering of information about government officials, including police officers, is a right protected by First Amendment that "not only aids in the uncovering of abuses, but also may have a salutary effect on the functioning of government more generally."

"Those First Amendment principles apply equally to the filming of a traffic stop and the filming of an arrest in a public park," Lipez wrote.

Found on http://www.dailydot.com/news/film-police-first-amendment-right-court/




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