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Remembering Heroism

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A Salute to Veterans like Captain Colin McDougall

In Honor of Captain Colin McDougall, my grandfather….

 But more importantly honor YOUR personal Freedom Fighter

Get this MP3 Tribute to EVERY hero that fought for us

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Get YOUR Freedom Success Call Here - THEY fought hard for OUR freedom… YOU owe it to them to succeed…

In August of 1944 when troops entered with force to liberate Paris, Captain Colin McDougall was there . . .

When the landing craft hit the beaches of Normandy, Captain Colin McDougall was there . . .

I am known as Colin “Google” McDougall but I am also Colin McDougall III, Captain Colin McDougall was my grandfather. He was a cinematography in World War II

Because of thousands of brave and selfless people just like my Grandfather we are free today

It’s Veterans Day in the United States and other countries, here in Canada it’s Remembrance Day.

Regardless of the name we give this day, The 11th Hour of the 11th Day of the 11th month is a day to pay our respects to those brave and selfless soldiers that paid the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom.

Those that know me personally know that I enjoy “Summers of Freedom” but I NEVER forget why I have that freedom today!

Today I will be especially remembering my Grandfather who was on the beaches of Normandy on D-Day filming the landing.

A lot of the World War II footage you see in documentaries was filmed by the Canadian Army Film and Photo Unit which was led by Captain Colin McDougall.

While my grandfather didn’t speak much about the war, I do remember all the old camera equipment around his house. He passed away when I was 13 years old but I am incredibly proud to be his grandson and proud of his achievements.

We Were Kings for a Day

Here is a CBC Radio clip from 1944 where they entered Paris with Force!

Captain Colin McDougall and His Commerades

20 Seconds of History - The D-Day Photos

Click here to see how my Grandfather dangerously gathered camera equipment on the beaches of Normandy

If you have any family stories about your parents or grandparents fighting for the freedom we have today I would love to hear them.

Whether or not you have the freedom that I enjoy with my internet business, you are still free to go to work, to live your life in relative comfort.

Sometimes we may forget that we actually do live in a beautiful world and we do so because of those fallen soldiers that fought for us . . .

In honor of those that fought for the freedom I live EVERY DAY of my life, I have decided to package up some of my best material to give to you.

Watch for a notification from me in the next few days with instructions to get your absolute freedom too

We ALL deserve to be free because of the sacrifices that were made for us and are still being made by brave men and women overseas right now!

Do You Have a Friend or Family Member You Want to Acknowledge?

Yes, I am VERY proud of what my Grandfather did back in the 1940’s to capture on film what was happening in Europe!

Let’s ALL show our appreciation for those fallen soldiers, for those that fought and survived AND for those fighting for us today

I want to hear about a hero in your life that fought or is fighting for our freedom . . .

42 Responses to “Remembering Heroism”

  1. Mark Says:

    I would like to remember various family members of mine who are no longer with us but did their bit in WW2.

    Deryck Morgan Bellinger, my father flew in Lancaster bombers & ended the war as a squadron leader.

    My uncle, Stephen Oborne was one of the first paratroopers & saw some of his fellow paratroopers fall to their deaths with “roman candles” (parachutes that didn’t open)

    My uncle Aubrey who survived despite having been a Japanese prisoner of war & being put to work on the railroad of death in Burma.

    I would like to salute the above & all those WW2 war veterans who contributed to our freedom.

  2. Jerry Says:

    My Dad was probably not yet 21 years old when he was pulled out of college ROTC and commissioned a Navy officer. During WWII he was 2nd in command of a destroyer escort. He never told of any combat experience.

    But then again neither did his older brother. My uncle became a pilot in the air force. He always told his kids that he flew cargo planes during the war. It wasn’t until just before he died that we learned he had actually been on bombing missions. As far as heroes go, I think I admire my uncle at least as much as Audey Murphy. Not because he flew bombing missions in the war, but because he didn’t want to talk about it. He didn’t want his children to know that he had killed people in this way. And it probably bothered him, too.

    Actually, I’m a veteran, too. But I really do have no heroic stories to tell. If anyone did tell a heroic story about me, they’d be making it up and dishonoring some men who actually did some great things and paid a price.

    I join Colin in thanking the men and women of the Great generation, in all countries, including those that fought against the Allies, for their commitment to causes greater than themselves, and for showing us clearly how precious freedom is.

  3. John Says:

    I’d like to honor my dad, a WWII veteran who was on the first teams to ever use radar to guide our pilots — at the time, it was a secret operation… He was a hero to me in many ways, especially in his Christian faith, humility and sense of humour. :-)

  4. Neill Neill Says:

    I would like to remember two of my uncles.

    My father’s older brother, Millard Neill, served in the trenches in France from 1914 to 1918. His army name was “Gas,” because he was in charge of getting the gas masks to the other soldiers in the unit whenever there was mustard gas attach, 70 years after WW1 ended, we celebrated his 90th birthday at the Legion where he still served on the executive. He live to 99.

    My father’s younger brother, John Neill, served in Europe in tanks from 1939 to 1945. After WW2, he went on to become Professor Emeritus at UBC with a specialty in horticulture. He spearheaded the creation of the famous Japanese Tea Garden at UBC.

    The memories are especially vivid today, after just yesterday burying my friend David Reynolds, a war hero who served as an infantryman from 1939 through WW2 and the Korean War. David was 86.

    I honour all of you Great Canadians.

  5. Neil McPherson Says:

    I guess you will moderate this. As a veteran of ten years writing about this subject for a national war memorial and museum, I have concluded that there are no heroes. There are heroic acts of course, and many a decorated “hero” told me that if he (or she) hadn’t been recognised with a Victoria Cross say, he or she would have been shot for disobeying orders. One such was the former Governor of NSW in Australia, Sir Roden Cutler.

    Until Vietnam all Australain soldiers were volunteers or professionals. But , in any war at all, all troops were subject to court marshall if they disobeyed orders - which is exactly what most “heroes” do, or they are shot in the field.

    “Ordinary people; extraordinary lives” is what sums up everyone who serve. Many are remarkable, but they are all doing theie duty, as they say.

    I respect the memories of all those who died and all who served and do so today. But it doesn’t make war worthwhile in the least. War is our last, worst alternative, always. Lest we forget.

    Those who were bombed in Germany were as heroic as those who bombed them while dodging flak.

  6. Sherry Harper Says:

    I would like to add my husband to the list of veterans to be honored today. He joined the Navy reserves when he was in high school. When he decided college wasn’t going in the direction he wanted, he went active. He trained in Michigan and was then based in San Diego until assigned to the USS Turner Joy. The ship was hit in the Tonkan Gulf and he was one of the men reported lost. Fortunately, that was an error, but he served on two swift boats and had both shot out from under him. He doesn’t talk about his service much, because he doesn’t feel he did anything special. He served as a boiler tech although that wasn’t the assignment he struck for. He does talk about coming home and being called “baby killer” and being spit at. I’m proud of my husband and the many people before who served and are currently serving. Thank you all.

  7. Robb Cheuvront Says:

    I would like to acknowledge my late father’s service in WWII as a Sargent in the US Army.

    My dad was a brilliant man who after leaving the Army, ran a barber shop with his brother while earning a bachelors degree in fine arts and starting a family.

    He then went on to receive a master degree and finally after 21 years of study while he worked he received his Phd.

    During WWII he served on an army hospital ship as a pharmacy technician, but was often pressed into service as surgical assistant as casualties were brought aboard from the battle fields of Europe.

    He volunteered for service as soon as he could, but had been warned that his eyesight was so bad he could be classified 4F and rejected.

    After completing a physical at the recruiting center, Dad was told to move to shorter line near the exit. He figured he was out.

    His disappointment did not last long as he soon found all the men standing in the short line were being expedited to basic training and then would be assigned to the medical corps.

    I never heard my dad tell many stories about the war. My uncle would only tell me he saw a lot. Not many men of his generation did have much to say. They just did their jobs, severed their country and came home to live in the freedom they helped secure.

    Thanks Dad!

  8. Howard Says:

    Sir, Have you seen the news about the film canisters being found!! Check it out! More wonders from that era. My Stepfather was a paratrooper who was with the glider corps. that jumped into all those famous battlegrounds and when he returned, and when he returned he brought a pair of wooden shoes from Holland for his stepdaughter, a little single-shot .22 cal. training rifle from Germany for me, a .38 cal automatic handgun still in cosmoline from a German factory, and a 12 ga. shotgun type cannon that he went in through a window to disarm so the rest of the squad could come in thru the formerly booby trapped door. It was the same with him He was completely changed from the sweet. loving, careing person I knew before he went to war. Granted, I was only about 6 years old when he left and I was only a little bit more mature at 8.5 or so when he came back after d-day, but he had seen things that affected his personality that left him bereft of his previous persona. I was always concious of being around a stranger after he got back. I no longer had the man I had idolized and worshipped for two or more years before he left. I was always aware that this man was a hero, because he gave up his humanity in that war, and when he became involved with my Aunt Goldie in late ‘49, and the two families were destroyed by that, I really felt like I had lost my Father, my best friend, my Idol that took me hunting and fishing all the time we were a family, and although going back to the Comfort and Loving home of my Grandmother and Step Grandfather {who had me from 17 months until I joined the Air Force in May of ‘56}, in my 20th year, Until I heard he had put his 30.06 in his mouth and ate a bullet from it, after a drunken stupor had found him trying to stop a moving 18 wheeler from driving by him over in Cottonwood, Arizona. To this day I wish I could have taken that pain from him in some way, and saved him for humanity. He was a hero, but he was not equipped to deal with the horror of the war that he witnessed first hand and up close. I don’t think I could have survived for as log as he did, even the way he lived after he dropped me and my half sisters off at Grandma Newtons on Xmas Eve of 1949. I never saw him again except in some photos his Step Daughter, Mrs. M. Fiers, sent me. But I have prayed earnestly for my Personal Hero who was not physically, but Emotionaly emasculated by WAR. We need to pull our heads out of the sand and STOP these people of NO moral conviction who get us into these wars for their personal agendas, men like your Presidents, the BUSH legacy. You think your new President is strong willed enought to end our conflicts and bring all that precious young blood home from the wasteful land where it is being spilled today for WHAT? If you believe any reason you hear for not ending our involvement in all these conflicts, we are wasting our substance and your tax dollars and your childrens futures in these wars for what? A people who do not appreciate our sacrifice over there, will never be appreciative of our losses in being there, and are killing our boys and girls in an extremely cowardly and brutal manner when they get the chance. I say we need a revolution, but there will be a greater degree of hardship than in the civil war when brother was pitted agaonst brother, because the powers that control the propaganda machione and the war machine, and the money machine and the food supply and the transportation industry and all the rest of the keys to FREEDOM, will be your enemies if you want “freedom” more than life under a despotic, wasteful, GOVERNMENT like we have TODAY!! Wake up, AMERICA! The NEW WORLD ODER Is choking off your life blood and selling the future of your descendants into economic slavery!!

  9. akan udofia Says:

    i would l love to use this privilege to honour my last brother for his effort towards serving his country. he was so dedicated to his country, an hero to me and my family. may his gentle soul rest in peace.

  10. Howard Says:

    Sir, Have you seen the news about the film canisters being found!! Check it out! More wonders from that era. My Stepfather was a paratrooper who was with the glider corps. that jumped into all those famous battlegrounds and when he returned, he brought a pair of wooden shoes from Holland for his stepdaughter, a little single-shot .22 cal. training rifle from Germany for me, a .38 cal automatic handgun still in cosmoline from a German factory, and a 12 ga. shotgun like cannon that he went in through a window to disarm so the rest of the squad could come in thru the formerly booby trapped door. It was never the same with him, He was completely changed from the sweet, loving, careing person I knew before he went to war. Granted, I was only about 6 years old when he left and I was only a little bit more mature at 8.5 or so, when he came back after D-day, but he had seen things that affected his personality that left him bereft of his previous persona. I was always concious of being around a stranger after he got back. I no longer had the man I had idolized, loved, and worshipped for two or more years before he left. I was always aware that this man was a hero, because he gave up his humanity in that war, and when he became involved with my Aunt Goldie in late ‘49, and the two families were destroyed by that, I really felt like I had lost my Father, my best friend, my Idol that took me hunting and fishing all the time we were a family, and although going back to the Comfort and Loving home of my Grandmother and Step Grandfather {who had me from 17 months until I joined the Air Force in May of ‘56}, in my 20th year, Until I heard he had put his 30.06 in his mouth and ate a bullet from it, after a drunken stupor had found him trying to stop a moving 18 wheeler from driving by him, over in Cottonwood, Arizona, I missed the man I had known. To this day I wish I could have taken that pain from him in some way, and saved him for humanity. He was a HERO, but he was not equipped to deal with the horror of the war that he witnessed first hand and up close. I don’t think I could have survived for as long as he did, even the way he lived after he dropped me and my half sisters off at Grandma Newtons on Xmas Eve of 1949. I never saw him again except in some photos his Step Daughter, Mrs. M. Fiers, sent me. But I have prayed earnestly for my Personal Hero who was not physically, but Emotionally emasculated by WAR. We need to pull our heads out of the sand and STOP these people of NO moral conviction who get us into these wars for their personal agendas, men like your Presidents, the BUSH legacy. You think your new President is strong willed enough to end our conflicts and bring all that precious young blood home from the wasteful land where it is being spilled today, & for WHAT? If you believe any reason you hear for not ENDING our involvement in all these conflicts, we are wasting our substance and your tax dollars and your childrens’ futures in these wars,& for what? A people who do not appreciate our sacrifice over there, will never be appreciative of our losses in being there, and are killing our boys and girls in an extremely cowardly and brutal manner when they get the chance. I say we need a revolution, but there will be a greater degree of hardship than in the civil war when brother was pitted against brother, because the powers that control the propaganda machine and the war machine, and the money machine, and the food supply and the transportation industry, and all the rest of the keys to FREEDOM, will be your enemies if you want “freedom” more than life under a despotic, wasteful, GOVERNMENT like we have TODAY!! Wake up, AMERICA! The NEW WORLD ODER Is choking off your life blood and selling the future of your descendants into economic slavery!! THAT IS THEIR PLAN FOR THE REST OF THE WORLD INTO THE FUTURE!

  11. nuttley Says:

    I would like to tell my 4 military children thank you for keeping America safe.

  12. wanza Says:

    Today is the most appreciated day of the year for me as an american. The constitution,and God was honored in my young days. MY father,brother,uncle and husband all served in the USA forces and all come home safe.They were never the same mentally. They were all very dedicated to serve our great country. I was married on November 11, l950. I am a widow age 75. I pray for God to return our country ,all military personell,and to honor all that have been in the military for the Rebublic of which it stands.For Liberty and justice for all. The constitution has been igored for years.Lets honor what our fore fathers died for so we could be free.GOD BLESS ALL AMERICANS and Others who faught for our FREEDOM.

  13. Robb Cheuvront Says:

    Colin,

    Thank you for staring this conversation.

    You inspired me to take the day off from blogging about computer technology and dedicate all of my postings today to thanking our veterans.

    In fact, I decided that I will dedicate all my blog postings and my websites to thanking veterans every Veterans and Remembrance Day from here on out.

    I will do much more advanced planning next year and make a huge deal out of it.

    If anyone would like to post on my one of my computer websites about their remembrances or give thank yous to our vets you are more than welcome.

    http://www.littletoncomputers.com/276/littleton-computers-salutes-our-veterans/

    We can’t thank our Vets enough!!!!

    AND Howard,

    I am sorry for the pain war has caused in your life. I will pray for you and pray that you find peace.

  14. Lesa Sims Says:

    We buried my uncle today, William ‘Bill’ Sims. He was 88 years old and a veteran of World War II. I think he planned it this way, he always stood up for our soldiers and would take down anyone who slandered this country that he fought so bravely to defend. He knew that today would be a day that people would remember and he wanted people to remember, his never ending love and kindness, and his savior and mine, Jesus Christ. Rest in peace, Uncle Bill.

  15. Paul Says:

    There is not much to say except for the fact that most of my reletives were all shot an killed in the wars……two great grandfathers, three great uncles and six cousins….as well as many others that were reletives. There is really no one left of my family except for my father and one uncle. Strange as it may seem one grandpa (my Mom’s dad) was with the allies and one was forced to be in the hitler German army with a death threat if he did not comply….he died in vain. He did not support the hitler movement along with many other Germans.

  16. Paul Says:

    My late father fought in France in WWII and my family and I have many photos he had taken, as well as many memories of the stories he told from his time there fighting for freedom. He was a wonderful father and man, who touched so many lives. After that war, he worked in broadcast engineering with a few other vet friends for a station with the call letters, WVET. The letters are different today.

    My dad was also my Boy Scout Scoutmaster, and produced too many Eagle Scouts to remember. Three of them are me and my two brothers. The most important thing I know he did was to instill his love for the Lord Jesus Christ. He passed away during a difficult time for me and my family on Christmas Eve 2004.

  17. Bruce Says:

    In honour to the grandfather I never got too know.
    Flew with the RAF as a tail gunner in a lancaster
    bomber. Shootdown and buried somewhere in Germany.

    ” Lest We Forget “

  18. Maya Says:

    Sure we should love and honour our forfathers. After all, without them we would not exist.

    BUT, I also firmly believe that we should finally let go the past. As long as we focus on the past we are doomed to repeat history over and over again. It is like driving your car while constantly looking into your rear-view mirror instead of looking ahead of you and focus on the road that leads you to your destiny.

    Through the Law of Attraction we know that everything we focus on will be manifested in our lives. And since no one wants to have war, we should focus on peace and not on the past.

    Although I’m not an American I know what great things this country has achieved - thanks to your grand-fathers. I love the American constitution, for instance. But I can also see where America COULD be if her leaders would more stand to the contstitution.

    However, I don’t like Veteran’s Day. These poor veterans have once a year to look at all their horrible experiences again and again, instead of finally forget them and to move on.

    Wouldn’t it be much nicer to celebrate a Peace Day once a year and to focus on what America and the world want to achieve?

  19. David Solomon Says:

    “Let go of the past” is the last thing we want to do or we will repeat the past. Do I want to forget that touching a hot frying pan is hot and will burn me and do it again and again? No, I think not. The past IS REPEATED because we do not remember just how horrible war really is. There would be much more war than there is now if we were to “let go of the past”.

    I have stood beside veterans who were honored at some events and watched how proud they were. Some honored for the first time. Honored - which says to them - thank you. And we do thank you for even the freedom I have now of writing exactly what I please and feel without fear of being dragged off to prison.

    Should there be a Peace Day - why not? I’m for peace, but not at the expense of giving up my freedoms which have been earned with the blood of our veterans.

    I never thanked my Dad - Charlie Ray Solomon WWII Veteran who fought behind enemy lines. I was too young when he died to realize just what he had sacrificed.

    But now I can, thank you Dad!

  20. ivon t hughes Says:

    A VERY INSPIRING STORY AND TRIBUTE TO THOSE WHO SERVED.

    IVON T HUGHES

  21. Patrick Gunning Says:

    I would like to join you in the respect and admiration you have for your grandfather. Here in the states I come from a military heritage as well. My father and Mother served in WWII, Dad, John Gunning was a gunner in the Navy, stationed off the coast of Africa and Mom Marguerite (Kelly) McCord served in the Marines stationed in San Diego as a military postal worker. Dad passed some years back but Mom is staying with us now relaxing and enjoying life at 88 years old.

    From those in battle to the many behind the scenes everyone contributed to the stand for freedom. Many of the very brave military press would find themselves in the difficult situation where they had to abandon their camera to retrieve a weapon from a dead or wounded soldier and join in the fight.

    Facing an enemy unarmed is a shining testament to their bravery. They understood the importance of their job in helping boost the moral of those in the country they were fighting for. Those photos brought hope to the millions of wives, sons and daughters, mothers and fathers, friends and families who sent their soldiers to war not knowing when or if they would return.

    I want to express my deepest gratitude to you, all of the others who have posted here and to all of those brave men and women whose sacrifices contributed to the wonderful freedom that my family and I enjoy today!

    Also Colin, thank you for allowing me to contribute my thoughts as well.

    For my wife Gina Sprenkle-Gunning and Mother Marguerite (Kelly) McCord,

    God Bless,

    Pat Gunning

  22. sandra muse williams Says:

    well my dad was in the army all his life,he went in whenhe was sixteen and just out of school.he loved his country,he wasin wwii,korea and served two tours in vienam.he was in the hundred and first airborne,and the green berets,and he also could fly any kind of aircraft.he wasawardedthe follinghonors,wwii victory medal,two silver stars,purple heart,sr.parachutist badge,and many more for his serve to his country.he was my hero now he is gone.but he loved his country,and i just wanted to talk about him .thank you to all our heros that keep our country free.sandra muse williams

  23. Randy Heslip Says:

    Very nice tribute Colin.

  24. Jimmy Kelly Says:

    I salute the three oldest surviving WW1 Veterans,who were
    leading the parade in wheelchairs,representing the Army,Airforce and Navy.
    Eldest 112 yr old determined to place his reath on the steps of Senataph in Whitehall London.
    We must get to the Root of all Wars,solve our opponents problems.Leaders In Industry & Governments need Constant Conversation.

  25. innergold Says:

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  26. aljaws Says:

    Yes. I am proud to know a veteran who was in the Baa-tan death march. who survived 3years in a Japanese concentration camp who at 17 years of age saved a Battalion of Mari es His name is Col. Glenn Frazier. Who lives here in Mobile, Al

  27. Jacque, Joe & Linda Says:

    We are proud of our Dad, Jack J. Thompson a WWII U.S. Navy veteran who survived Okinawa at the age of 17 years. He was born in a train stop called Prairie, AZ and lived in Globe-Miami, AZ during the depression.(Prairie is really a fence post). Our Dad with mild altheimers, currently lives in Glendale, AZ with the care of my Mom, Janette. His brother, Benjamin Thompson, a Navy Seal, was able to survive his sinking ship. Benny was transferred to a separate ship which also sank. He was one of three men who survived one of the WWII ships by swimming through oil and debree. My Dad and Uncle Ben had an older Brother, Lawrence, who retired from his lifelong Navy career in Concord, California. During WWII, my Grandmother, Marian Thompson, became a patriotic member of the VFW, Vetrans of Foreign Wars, because she was proud of her three heroic sons, Jack, Benny and Lawrence Thompson. Thanks for this opportunity to share about our beloved heroes. I plan to share the names of the Navy ships they were on.
    Jacque & Family

  28. Anja Says:

    Thanks Colin III or Google Colin for sharing your family story and for the great mp3 file download.
    It’s important to honor people and people who fought in a war. Most important for me is to honor them regardless on which side they fought. All of them did so, because there country called them and they followed that call.
    Anja

  29. Harry Johnquest Says:

    In World War II, sent to Europe, Gilbert Tabor was a peacenik, a well-liked college student, an all around good guy. He enlisted as a noncombatant to be a medic. His father was a doctor and he would be some day. Gilbert Tabor saved lives and he was shot a few times rescuing wounded American soldiers. He died, highly decorated, in a hospital months later of his wounds. They flew him home in a coffin, boarded it onto a train that was met by a military escort who marched with the coffin all the way to the cemetary where he was burried with honors. A peacenik.

    He was my father’s best friend. A few years after the war, Gilbert Tabor’s mother sent to my father, G.T.’s silver star and such; Dr. Tabor had passed on and G.T. was an only child. More years passed, my father named my brother Gilbert Tabor Johnquest for his friend’s sake. He said he felt guilty because Gilbert Tabor had died and not him. My father, not a peacenik, had been sent to Burma in WW II where he served as a radio operator, a safe assignment as it turned out. He once fired his weapon into the jungle thinking he might have seen a tiger.

    Just this year, 2008, my father was contacted to supply information about Gilbert Tabor for the American Legion. He donated the silver star, old letters and such for a permanent exhibit at the post where they honor a genuine hero, a peacenik, Gilbert Tabor.

    Sincerely,
    Harry Johnquest

  30. Colin "Google" McDougall Says:

    Hey folks,

    I am very touched by ALL your stories about YOUR heroes!

    While logging into my computer tonight I saw a “Google Alert” come in on what I thought was my name…

    Nope, it wasn’t a Google Alert about me….

    It was a Google Alert about my grandfather which came in from this blog:

    http://oshawaremembers.wordpress.com/2008/11/22/story-fifty-three-w-sam-magee-medic-on-the-fly/

    Here is the picture they posted with my grandfather (cigarette in mouth on the left…)

  31. Mel Bernstein Says:

    THANK YOU from someone whos people spent the war on the other side of the barbed wire,

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