Jan
10
    
Posted (Nina) in on January-10-2008

Last year, an email was sent to me with the subject ‘Weird 9-11 Facts’. I know that the forwarded email was quite late but I read it because it was from a friend of mine and the topic was very interesting. Posted below is the content of the email:

UNITED WE STAND
1) New York City has 11 letters
2) Afghanistan has 11 letters.
3) Ramsin Yuseb (The terrorist who threatened to destroy the Twin Towers in 1993) has 11 letters.
4) George W Bush has 11 letters.
5) The two twin towers make an “11″
This could be a mere coincidence, but this gets more interesting:
1) The first plane crashing against the Twin Towers was flight number 11.
2) Flight 11 was carrying 92 passengers. (9 + 2 = 11)
3) Flight 77 which also hit Twin Towers, was carrying 65 passengers. (6+5 = 11)
4) The tragedy was on September 11, or 9/11 as it is now known. (9 + 1+ 1 = 11)
5) The date is equal to the US emergency services telephone number 911. (9 + 1 + 1 = 11)

Sheer coincidence..?! Read on and make up your own mind:
1) The total number of victims inside all the hi-jacked planes was 254. (2 + 5 + 4 = 11)
2) September 11 is day number 254 of the calendar year. (Again 2 + 5 + 4 = 11)
3) The Madrid bombing took place on 3/11/2004. (3 + 1 + 1 + 2 + 4 = 11)
4) The tragedy of Madrid happened 911 days after the Twin Towers incident.

Another Sheer coincidence..?! Read on and make up your own mind:
Now this is where things get totally eerie:
The most recognized symbol for the US, after the Stars & Stripes, is the Eagle. The following verse is taken from the Quran, the Islamic holy book:

“For it is written that a son of Arabia would awaken a fearsome Eagle. The wrath of the Eagle would be felt throughout the lands of Allah and lo, while some of the people trembled in despair still more rejoiced: for the wrath of the Eagle cleansed the lands of Allah and there was peace.”

That verse is number 9.11 of the Quran.

Still unconvinced about all of this..?! Try this and see how you feel
afterwards, it made my hair stand on end:
Open Microsoft Word and do the following, TRY THIS FOR REAL! I DID
IT AND IT SCARED THE LIVING CRAP OUT OF ME!

1. Type in capitals Q33 NY. This is the flight number of the first plane to hit one of the Twin Towers.
2. Highlight the Q33 NY.
3. Change the font size to 48.
4. Change the actual font to the WINGDINGS 1 {scarriest part of all}

I wanted to give a simple explanation on the various flaws in this forwarded message (no offense to the sender!) I have heard of these and I really think that these ‘facts’ are all hoax. Here’s a link that will clearly explain why: http://www.snopes. com/rumors/ coincidence. asp

I am very skeptical about “mysterious” number patterns. It’s just too easy to find meaningless so-called patterns in every day life. It’s just human to find patterns, and therefore most of these “mysteries” are no mysteries at all: they’re just our brains doing what they’re supposed to do, managing our senses so things don’t get too chaotic. I mean why spend time “thinking” about these kinds of things when the best thing to do is to pray for all the victims of the said tragedy.


 
Jan
09
    
Posted (Aurus) in on January-9-2008

With the coming of the 2008 United States presidential election in November, all eyes are on the candidates. John Sidney McCain III, Senior United States Senator from Arizona, is a candidate for the Republican Party nomination. However, the following will not be a discussion of his political positions and whatnot, rather, a brief look back at his military career.

Following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, who were both United States Navy admirals, McCain entered the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. He graduated in 1958, upon which he was commissioned an ensign, and spent two and a half years as a naval aviator in training at Naval Air Station Pensacola in Florida and Naval Air Station Corpus Christi in Texas, flying A-1 Skyraiders. He graduated from flight school in 1960 and became a naval pilot of attack aircraft. In the 1960s he served as a flight instructor at Naval Air Station Meridian in Mississippi, but eventually grew tired of his training role and requested a combat assignment. In December 1966 he was assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Forrestal, flying A-4 Skyhawks.

In 1967 Forrestal was assigned to join Operation Rolling Thunder, the bombing campaign against North Vietnam as part of the Vietnam War. McCain’s first five attack missions over the country went without a hitch, and he earned the reputation of a serious aviator. On July 29, 1967, he was almost killed in action as a Lieutenant Commander while serving on Forrestal, operating at Yankee Station. A Zuni rocket from an F-4 Phantom was accidentally fired across the carrier’s deck while the crew was preparing to launch attacks, and it struck McCain’s A-4E Skyhawk as the jet was preparing for launch. McCain was able to escape from his jet but was struck in the legs and chest by shrapnel.

On October 26, 1967, McCain was flying as part of a 20-plane attack against a thermal power plant in central Hanoi when his A-4 Skyhawk was shot down during its approach run by an SA-2 anti-aircraft missile. McCain fractured both arms and a leg, and he nearly drowned after parachuting into Truc Bach Lake in Hanoi. He was transported to the city’s main prison, and although badly wounded, his captors refused to put him in the hospital. Only when the North Vietnamese discovered that his father was a top admiral did they give him medical attention and announce his capture. McCain was held as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam for a total of five and a half years.

McCain became a celebrity upon his return to the United States, appearing in publications and participating in several parades and personal appearances. He underwent treatment for his injuries, and attended the National War College in Fort McNair in Washington, DC from 1973 to 1974. Few doubted his capability to fly again, but by late 1974 he had recuperated just enough to pass his flight physical and have his flight status reinstated. He became Executive Officer and then Commanding Officer of the VA-174 Hellrazors, the East Coast A-7 Corsair II Navy training squadron stationed at Naval Air Station Cecil Field outside Jacksonville, Florida, and the largest attack squadron in the Navy. McCain is credited for improving its aircraft readiness and pilot safety metrics, and winning the squadron its first Meritorious Unit Commendation.


 
Jan
07
    
Posted (Jules) in on January-7-2008

It was nearly two years after the Hussein regime was toppled and major combat operations ended but still, U.S. and coalition troops are still fighting an Iraqi insurgency.  As of January 7, 2008, there have been 4,210 coalition deaths in the war in Iraq.  It was on May 1, 2003 that President George Bush addressed the nation not from the White House but from the dramatic setting of the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln

“Major combat operations in Iraq have ended.”

Aircraft weapons used in the war by the U.S. Coalition Forces are bombers, cargo, fighter/attack, refueling, special operations, surveillance, UAVs, Canberra, Harrier GR7, Jaguar GR1, Nimrod, Tornado GR1, Tornado GR4, Tornado F3, Puma helicopter, VC10C1K, Lynx helicopter and Merlin helicopter.  The Iraqi forces deployed Mirage F1 fighter, MiG-29 fighter, SU-25 plane, MiG-21 short-range fighter, An-26 basic transport aircraft, An-12 cargo plane and helicopters.   

Warships used by the U.S. Coalition Forces include the Abraham Lincoln, USS Constellation, USS Kitty Hawk, USS Harry S. Truman, USS Theodore Roosevelt , carrier battle group ships, guided-missile cruiser, guided-missile destroyer, attack submarine, guided missile frigate, amphibious assault ship, oiler, fast combat support ships, amphibious transport/dockship, landing craft, air cushioned.  The Iraqi forces only used the Zhuk patrol ship. 

As of September 25, 2003, 1,268 U.S. military personnel were listed as wounded during Operation Iraqi Freedom.  Iraq has not released details of military casualties. 

“3,240 Iraqi civilians were killed, based on records from 60 of Iraq’s 124 hospitals, including almost all of the large ones.”

Associated Press 

As for most people, the war in Iraq couldn’t have been avoided; there are the pros and cons of war and consequently, the pros outweigh the cons.  It was really fortunate that the long war in Iraq have finally been put to an end.  You could just imagine how many civilians and innocents were killed in the process.  Sadly, blood of the innocents must be spilled to regain order and peace.  In the long run, we all know that war is for the better good.  It was indeed a bittersweet victory.


 
Jan
07
    
Posted (admin) in on January-7-2008

The SR-71’s maiden flight took place on December 22, 1964 at Burbank airport. It was launched in the air 17 years after Chuck Yeager first broke the sound barrier with the Bell X-1.

The SR-71 is capable of Mach 3.2 and it was reported that the Blackbird could exceed its speed capability. Pilot Brian Shaul admitted that he once pushed a Blackbird to Mach 3.4 while hastily leaving the Libyan airspace. He reported that the SR-71 had flown smoother than ever at those remarkable and unbelievable speeds, cruising over 80,000 ft.

The SR-71 flying speed at Mach 3+ resulted the aircraft’s skin to be subjected to extreme heat due to the friction generated at that speed. The SR-71’s Titanium-composite alloy reflects its revolutionized high-speed design. During operation sortie in 1968, a total of 32 aircraft were built before the tooling was ordered to be destroyed. The aircraft’s on and off operation with the USAF resulted to retirement from military use of the last three SR-71s in 1998, although there were several SR-71s that were flown by NASA until October 9, 1999, which is the final flight schedule of the aircraft.

The Blackbird still remains a legendary aircraft since no other aircraft could exceed the Blackbird’s raw speed, mobility and technological might to such an impressive degree.