Hugging the ground while enemy bullets whipped around him, he crawled toward the fortification, rammed his explosive inside and jumped back as the pillbox and its occupants were blown up.
US Army Medal of Honor Recipient Captain Bobbie Evan Brown:
On the 8th of October 1944, Army Ranger Platoon.
US Army Staff Sgt. Keith R. Bishop, 28, was Killed In Action on October 26, 2009, when the helicopter he was aboard crashed while conducting a combat mission in the city of Darreh-Ye Bum, Afghanistan while serving with the 7th Special Forces Group.
He deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom July 2009 as a member of the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force - Afghanistan. This was his second deployment in support of the War on Terror.
Rest in Peace, George Sarros. April
1925 - June 2026 Thank you for your service!
George was born on April 17, 1925 in Chicago, Illinois. After being drafted in 1943, the government granted his request to join the Navy. He attended basic training in Great Lakes, Illinois and advanced training in Farragut, Idaho.
George was assigned to LST 515 and traveled from New Orleans along the Eastern seaboard to pick up ammunition before making the transatlantic crossing with a convoy in January, 1944. Arriving in Southampton, England the ship was unloaded and the men began training for the invasion of France. George and his shipmates participated in 'Exercise Tiger' which was the last training exercise with all combined forces before D-Day. During the exercise, the German Navy picked up radio transmissions and torpedoed three of the ships. The Captain of LST 515 disobeyed a direct order and turned them around to pick up survivors.
On June 6, 1944, George landed on Utah Beach at 1pm. His ship delivered ammo, men and vehicles in exchange for wounded paratroopers to be brought back to England for medical attention. During his time overseas, George and the men of LST 515 made 65 cross-channel trips without one sailor killed or wounded. He was honorably discharged on March 14, 1946 🫡
Please help me honor Army Spc. Cory A. Hubbell, he died June 26, 2003 serving during Operation Iraqi Freedom from a non-combat related cause.
For Spc. Corey A. Hubbell, the military was important in a number of ways.
“Corey was a very friendly, likable young man who looked at the Army as personal development and training, and also as service to his country,” said Sam Furrer, Hubbell’s high school counselor.
Hubbell died after being hospitalized in Kuwait with breathing difficulties. He was a carpentry and masonry specialist based at Fort Rucker. He enlisted in 2001 after graduating from high school.
“He looked at it as a way to gain some skills and a trade and go on from there,” Furrer said.
Please help me honor Gunner's Mate 2nd
Class (SEAL) Danny Dietz who selflessly sacrificed his life during Operation Red Wings. He was posthumously awarded the U.S. Navy's second highest award the Navy Cross.
Thank you for your service.
Montgomery County Texas Deputy Erika Serrato, 24, was fatally struck on June 28 2026 after deputies had been called to assist in a crash investigation. Serrato was near two parked cruisers with lights activated, directing traffic away from the crash when she was struck by a commercial vehicle.
Serrato was transported to a hospital, where she later passed away. Serrato had served with the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office for six years.
So, Anthropic races to a TRILLION-DOLLAR valuation by accelerating AI development.
NOW… it wants a “GLOBAL PAUSE”?
Funny how the call to slow down comes AFTER it secures its lead. 🤔
Sounds less like AI safety & more like protecting market share. ⬇️
https://t.co/lqOs89G2Xt