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Love," he will respond, answering his own question. "I loved my men and they loved me ... I just couldn't give them up, just like a mother couldn't give up the child."7 *"
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Hard work and discipline lead to economic success. Government handouts and unsupervised policies of pity only rob people of incentive. If tax money continues to be wasted, it becomes morally wrong for our government to confiscate huge percentages of income and property from Americans, even if they are wealthy.
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Bill O'Reilly |
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behaving in an almost giddy fashion, some slathering on sunscreen in
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Remember the Alamo" was the battle cry that led Sam Houston's troops to victory at the Battle of San Jacinto six weeks later--and Americans have never forgotten the sacrifices made there."
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Bill O'Reilly |
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You only have to travel to Europe to see the difference that an entitlement culture makes. While the United States is a vibrant, creative, and exciting place, Europe today is largely stagnant. Workers there have little incentive to move ahead, because the rate of taxation is punishing and the governments guarantee a certain standard of living.
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Bill O'Reilly |
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KRAUTHAMMER: Well, remember they're not the same as us because it was the more independent ones, the ones who didn't like the strictures of government, the regulations, the religious oppression, who came here. This spirit of being independent and not wanting to be controlled by the government is something that is intrinsic in America, it's the essence of America, it's what distinguishes Americans who are essentially refugees of the old soci..
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Corporal
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Bill O'Reilly |
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All great philosophers, even the atheists, realized that one of the essential attributes of a civilized people is a belief that good will be rewarded and evil will be punished. In
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Bill O'Reilly |
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If you live your life subject to the rules of Judeo-Christian tradition (or Buddhist, Islamic, or another religious tradition), then you will do more good than harm on this earth. You will love your neighbor and help other people out. You will not do things that hurt others or yourself. So, if everyone was religious wouldn't the world be a much better place in which to live? Of course it would. And if there is no God at the end of it all, w..
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Bill O'Reilly |
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baboon's behind" and filling his legs with wooden splinters as it ripped his"
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Bill O'Reilly |
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No one embodied the spirit of the frontier more than Daniel Boone, who faced and defeated countless natural and man-made dangers to literally hand cut the trail west through the wilderness. He marched with then colonel George Washington in the French and Indian War, established one of the most important trading posts in the West, served three terms in the Virginia Assembly, and fought in the Revolution. His exploits made him world famous; h..
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Bill O'Reilly |
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But not in Mississippi. Though police
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Bill O'Reilly |
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James Butler Hickok was the most famous gunslinger of the Old West; a man known to be reluctant to shoot, but when it became necessary, his draw was "as quick as thought" and his aim was always true."
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Bill O'Reilly |
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and has created an atmosphere of suspicion
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Bill O'Reilly |
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is completely
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Cole Younger led eight men into Russellville, Kentucky, on May 20, 1868, and rode out with exactly $9,035.92. As the gang made its escape, shooting into the air to discourage gawkers, one member shot at the metal fish weather vane atop the courthouse, sending it spinning. Almost a century later, that historic weather vane, with a bullet hole through it, could still be seen on the roof of the new courthouse, where it had been placed to honor..
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Early American history has been told--and often exaggerated--by the pen and the paintbrush. Daniel Boone's fame as a bear hunter is depicted by Severino Baraldi (above), while this portrait of the lone woodsman was painted by Robert Lindneux. Boone blazing the trail west in George Caleb Bingham's 1851-52 oil painting, Daniel Boone Escorting Settlers through the Cumberland Gap Boone was not a man who relished a fight, but he never backed awa..
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Bill O'Reilly |
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With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations,
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Bill O'Reilly |
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faith is vital when it comes to doing the impossible.
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Bill O'Reilly |
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most
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Many are convinced that the Second World War will be the war to end all wars, but Patton knows better. As a reminder to himself that war is inevitable, he has been reading Julius Caesar's Gallic Wars each night before bed. The memoir recounts Caesar's battles in Gaul4 and Germany from 58 to 51 BC. The words rise up off the page for Patton, and he feels a personal connection to the action.
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Bill O'Reilly |
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comes the one more
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Bill O'Reilly |
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infantry, cavalry, and artillery begin slogging
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Thomas Cole's Daniel Boone Sitting at the Door of His Cabin on the Great Osage Lake, Kentucky,
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Bill O'Reilly |
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By the time Doc Holliday rode into Tombstone in 1880, the town already had an estimated 110 saloons, 14 gambling halls, a plentiful number of brothels, and 1 bowling alley.
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Bill O'Reilly |
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The Wehrmacht soldiers have the advantage of surprise and know this terrain far better than their enemies do. They slaughter the men of the Third Army where they lie hiding, killing them one by one. The last words many of the Americans will ever hear are spoken in German, in the quiet whisper of an assassin. Last
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Bill O'Reilly |
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In his lifetime, Stalin will murder millions of people. Some will be shot, others will be denied food and ultimately die of starvation, millions will be sent to die in the deep winter snows of Siberia, and many will be tortured to death. Already, during one infamous murder spree in April and May of 1940, some twenty-two thousand Polish nationals were shot dead. What began as an attempt to execute every member of the Polish officer corps soo..
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Bill O'Reilly |
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provost said
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Bill O'Reilly |
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microaggressions, detailing
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Bill O'Reilly |
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meritocracy,
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Luddite you
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Bill O'Reilly |
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bathroom--if you
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Bill O'Reilly |
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fight the
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Fantasy island before
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Bill O'Reilly |
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American Sniper
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Bill O'Reilly |
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sway.
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Bill O'Reilly |
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brook it.
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Bill O'Reilly |
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success--and he
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Bill O'Reilly |
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The press knows Patton's arrogance. The British understand his competitive nature. The Germans believe him to be America's top general. But now he is battling his own generals, who despite the rapid American advance toward Messina are appalled by his willingness to embrace unnecessary danger. But only those close to him understand how emotional he becomes at the sight of wounded American soldiers. He is deeply moved by their bravery, and th..
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Bill O'Reilly |
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Two days after slapping Kuhl, he writes a memo to each of his commanders, ordering them not to allow men suffering from combat fatigue to receive medical care. "Such men are cowards and bring disgrace to their comrades," he writes, "whom they heartlessly leave to endure the danger of battle while they themselves use the hospital as a means of escape. You will see that such cases are not sent to the hospital." On"
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Bill O'Reilly |
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transgendered experience.
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Bill O'Reilly |
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mankind,
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Bill O'Reilly |
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pass/pass
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Bill O'Reilly |
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And what's happened to you?" Patton asks the young man. His name is Pvt. Paul Bennett. He has been in the army four years, serving with C Battery of the Seventeenth Field Artillery Regiment. He is just twenty-one years old. Until a friend died in combat, he had never once complained about battle. But he now shakes from convulsions. His red-rimmed eyes brim with tears. "It's my nerves, sir. I can't stand the shelling anymore." "Your nerves, ..
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Bill O'Reilly |