Anonymous ID: 7a517f May 31, 2021, 8:02 a.m. No.13799753   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9913 >>0153

>>13799137 (You) 82,000 still missing in action

 

I found this military reporting site with all the MIAs

 

Total for Vietnam MIA from all branches

Army 512

Air Force 490

Navy 352

Marine corp 202

 

Here's the report

 

https://www.dpaa.mil/Our-Missing/Vietnam-War/Vietnam-War-POW-MIA-List/

 

Last Update: May 28, 2021

 

The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency's mission is to provide the fullest possible accounting for our missing personnel from past conflicts to their families and the nation. Within this mission, we search for missing personnel from World War II (WWII), the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Cold War, the Gulf Wars, and other recent conflicts. Our research and operational missions include coordination with hundreds of countries and municipalities around the world.

 

As this map shows, at present, more than 81,700 Americans remain missing from WWII, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Cold War, and the Gulf Wars/other conflicts. Out of the more than 81,700 missing, 75% of the losses are located in the Indo-Pacific, and over 41,000 of the missing are presumed lost at sea (i.e. ship losses, known aircraft water losses, etc.).

 

This is the link for all wars and map

 

https://www.dpaa.mil/Our-Missing/Past-Conflicts/

Anonymous ID: 7a517f May 31, 2021, 8:14 a.m. No.13799813   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9828

>>1379967

She is not a constitutional attorney and never has been, report from NYT and WSJ published on this

 

Jenna Ellis has become a star player on President Trump's legal team, billing herself as a "constitutional law attorney" taking part in the effort to overturn the 2020 election results. But according to the New York Times, Ellis' credentials aren't what they're cracked up to be. She has become one of Trump's most visible defenders and on Wednesday lashed out at Attorney General Bill Barr for saying he had not seen any evidence of widespread voter fraud.

 

"…a review of her professional history, as well as interviews with more than a half-dozen lawyers who have worked with her, show that Ms. Ellis, 36, is not the seasoned constitutional law expert she plays on TV," write the Times' Jeremy W. Peters and Alan Feuer, adding that since she graduated from law school in 2011, "nothing in her record in the courtroom — limited mostly to appearances in state court as a prosecutor or as counsel for clients charged with assault, prostitution, theft and domestic abuse — shows any time spent litigating election law cases."

 

While she styles herself as an expert on the Constitution, the Times reports that a national databases of federal cases shows she has never appeared in federal district or circuit court. She also does not appear to have played a major role in any cases beyond her criminal and civil work in Colorado. Out of around 50 election-related lawsuits filed by the Trump campaign, Ellis has not signed her name or appeared in court to argue a single one.

 

"I find it astonishing that she's gotten to this point," Stephanie Stout, a lawyer who worked with Ellis a few years told the Times. Stout said Ellis was fired from a case they both worked on because she "not up to the job."

 

"She just didn't have the legal chops," Stout added. "After that, Jenna decided that I had stolen the case from her."

 

https://www.alternet.org/2020/12/jenna-ellis/

 

Jenna Ellis (born November 1, 1984)[1] is an American lawyer, known for her work as a member of Donald Trump's legal team.[2] She is a former deputy district attorney in Weld County, Colorado and a former assistant professor of legal studies at Colorado Christian University.[2] As a private lawyer, she has litigated cases in state courts.[2] In 2015, she self-published The Legal Basis for a Moral Constitution, a book arguing that the Constitution of the United States can only be interpreted in accordance with the Bible.[1] Since 2018, Ellis has presented herself as a "constitutional law attorney" during cable news appearances, though The New York Times reported her background did not reflect such expertise and The Wall Street Journal reported she had no history in any federal cases.[1][2]

 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenna_Ellis

Anonymous ID: 7a517f May 31, 2021, 8:50 a.m. No.13800042   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13799657

Good catch up. They sure are afraid of sunlight and conservatives aren’t they, just wait until the damn breaks and the MSM cannot repeat their lies, when the head of the snake of the media is cut off, they have no more mouthpiece or cover by them. The whole world will know

Anonymous ID: 7a517f May 31, 2021, 9:20 a.m. No.13800230   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0244 >>0253

>>13799866

I didn’t know that, so that’s why there were coins on my dad’s stone.

 

Fun fact my dad served on the USS San Jacinto as a torpedo man in WW2, with GHWBush. He didn’t know him he said.

 

Jews put stones on them, why?

Anonymous ID: 7a517f May 31, 2021, 9:24 a.m. No.13800253   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13799866. Instead of coins on tombstones for fallen hero’s Jews place rocks on Tombstone, kind of sick reason below

 

>>13800230

As awareness of this ancient Judaic custom has spread—thanks in large part to the Internet—even people from other religious faiths have embraced the idea of leaving visitor stones at the burial sites of their loved ones. In addition, several companies now provide commercially made and/or personalized versions of these stones, such as Remembrance Stones and MitzvahStones, among others.

 

Depending upon the gravesite, it is not uncommon to see a few pebbles or rocks to a veritable "mountain" of visitor stones denoting previous visits from family members, friends and loved ones who honored the deceased with their presence.

 

The Possible Explanations

 

Not unlike many of the traditions, customs and superstitions surrounding modern funeral, burial, and mourning practices, the origin of mourners leaving pebbles, stones or rocks at the site of Jewish graves is unfortunately lost to time. Many theories exist, however, such as:

 

Depending upon your interpretation and beliefs, the Talmud (the written compendium of Jewish oral tradition) can suggest that the human soul remains in the grave with the body after death—possibly for a few days, a week, a year, or until the final resurrection and judgment.1Thus, mourners might have originally placed stones on the graves of loved ones in order to prevent souls from leaving their burial spots

 

This sounds satanic to me

Whereas the previous explanation was intended to keep something in, another theory suggests that people wanted to keep something out.

 

Placing pebbles and rocks on Jewish graves might have prevented evil spirits and demons from entering burial sites and taking possession of human souls, according to superstition.2

 

The Bible relates the story of God commanding Joshua to create a memorial in Jordan comprising 12 stones that would represent the "children of Israel for ever." Thus, this symbolic stone representation of the people of Israel might have been echoed later in the practice of leaving pebbles and rocks on the headstones of the dead.

 

https://www.verywellhealth.com/why-do-mourners-place-stones-on-jewish-graves-1132587

Anonymous ID: 7a517f May 31, 2021, 9:28 a.m. No.13800264   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13800244

No I found the answer below, and “I’m outraged that’s a stereotype that Jewish are titewads!” Kek

 

My dads 2nd wife was Jewish, she would clip coupons and drive 20 miles to save $1.00, it’s really true!