Author: Hondo

  • Hugo Comes Home

    According to Reuters, Hugo Chavez has returned to Venezuela.

    He returned yesterday.  He is now hospitalized at a military hospital in Caracas.

    Chavez’s supporters are overjoyed at his return.  However, that might be a bit premature on their part.

    Chavez is still in grave condition.  There appears to be no timetable for his returning to duty as President of Venezuela. It’s unknown when – or even if – he will be released from the hospital. Indeed, there is some speculation that Chavez may have returned to effect an orderly transition of power.

    No one knows at this point. But since controlling information is much more difficult in Venezuela than in Cuba, I’m guessing we’ll know more soon.

    Perhaps it would be a good idea for Hugo to get his personal affairs in order – just in case.

  • A Quick Hugo Chavez Update

    Photos and updated information regarding the condition of Hugo Chavez were released recently.

    Bottom line:  Generalissimo Hugo Chavez is still. . . . breathing.

    He can smile, too.  And his daughters visited him recently.

    But he’s also still in Cuba.  He’s still hospitalized there, in grave condition, 69 days after his fourth cancer surgery.  And he’s still unable to speak – because he’s breathing through a tracheal tube.

    Don’t even ask if he’s able to perform his duties as President of Venezuela.

    Oh, Hugo?  That noise you hear in the background is only the chant of the ever-circling family skeletal.  I think you’ll be meeting them soon enough.

    The only real questions IMO are when you’ll meet them – and whether you’ll ever see your homeland again before you do.

  • The Butterfly Effect

    A bit over 45 years ago – on 23 January 1968 – the USS Pueblo was seized in international waters by North Korean forces.   It was only the second US Navy ship to be captured by enemy forces since the War of 1812 (the river gunboat USS Wake was captured by Japanese forces on 8 December 1941).  It remains on the roster of US Navy ships today.

    During the seizure of the USS Pueblo, one crewman – Fireman Duane Hodges – was killed by North Korean gunfire.  The rest of the crew was captured alive.

    The crew was held prisoner for 11 months in North Korea.  Conditions were abysmal, and they were indeed abused and tortured by their North Korean captors.  Calling this “a year in hell” isn’t much of an exaggeration.  Some of the accounts here are disturbing; read them when you can afford to get disturbed – and angry.

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  • A Dorner Postscript

    Decided I’d post this to “close the books” on Dorner, so to speak.

    Apparently the initial reports of a single gunshot fired inside the cabin where Dorner was holed up just before it burned were correct.  According to coroner’s reports, Dorner died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head vice from a police round, fire, or smoke inhalation.

    Perhaps the idea of getting a preview of his afterlife as the cabin burned around him was too much for him to face.

  • Five More Are Finally Home

    Looks like the good men and women at the Joint Personnel Accounting Command have been working overtime lately, and I’ve missed some of their good work.

    Yesterday I wrote about the recovery and identification of three US personnel missing from the Korean War.  In the past month or so, they’ve also identified several others.

    PFC Bobby L. Byars, formerly of Griffin, GA, was assigned to the US Army’s 31st Regimental Combat Team (RCT).  PFC Byars was lost on December 12, 1950, during the retreat of the remnants of the 31st RCT from the Chosin Reservoir.  PFC Byars’ remains were among those in 208 boxes of remains repatriated by North Korea between 1991 and 1994.  Modern technology recently allowed the positive identification of his remains.  He will be buried in his hometown on February 16, 2013.

    PFC  Glenn S. Schoenmann, formerly of Tracey City, TN, was assigned to the US Army’s 31st Regimental Combat Team.  He was initially reported killed by sniper fire, body not recovered, during an engagement near the east bank of the Chosin Reservoir on December 12, 1950.  Interviews with returning POWs in 1953 indicated that Schoenmann had indeed been wounded by sniper fire, but had survived to be taken POW.  He later succumbed to a combination of malnutrition and lack of medical care while in captivity.  PFC Schoenmann’s remains were among those in 208 boxes of remains repatriated by North Korea between 1991 and 1994.  Modern technology recently allowed the positive identification of his remains.  He was buried on January 12, 2013, in Palmer, TN.

    PFC Ernest V. Fuqua Jr., formerly of Detroit, MI, was assigned to the US Army’s 35th Infantry Regiment.   PFC Fuqua was killed in action, body not recovered, on November 28, 1950 as his unit retreated towards Unsan.   PFC Fuqua’s remains were among those in 208 boxes of remains repatriated by North Korea between 1991 and 1994.  Modern technology recently allowed the positive identification of his remains.  He was buried on January 15, 2013, in Rochester Hills,MI.

    PFC Weldon A. Davis, formerly of Tioga, TX, was assigned to the US Army’s 2nd Infantry Division.  He was reported missing in action near Somindong, North Korea, in late November, 1950.  Interviews with returning POWs in 1953 indicated that Davis had been captured alive, but had died of malnutrition and lack of medical care while in captivity.  His remains were recovered in 2005 by a joint US-DPRK recovery team.  He was buried on February 6, 2013, in Dallas, TX.

    2LT William R. Parkinson, formerly of Norfolk, Va., was lost on May 7, 1945.  2LT Parkinson was the pilot of a B-24D that was lost with all hands when it crashed in the mountains southeast of Lae, Papua New Guinea.  The crash site was rediscovered and excavated in 1973.  Remains were discovered at that time, but could not be individually identified and were buried in a group gravesite at Arlington National Cemetery.  The crash site was revisited in 2008 and additional remains were discovered.  2LT Parkinson’s remains were positively identified and were buried in Conyers, GA, on January 16, 2013.

    Welcome home, my elder brothers in arms.  Rest now in peace.

    Over 7,900 US personnel remain unaccounted for from the Korean War, while over 73,000 remain unaccounted for from World War II.  If you are relative of someone who didn’t come home, please read this link to see if you might qualify to submit a mtDNA sample.  If you qualify and your missing relative is someone for whom a mtDNA sample is needed, please give one.  You may be able to help identify US remains that have been repatriated but not yet positively identified.

    Everybody deserves a proper burial.  That’s especially true for those who gave all.

  • Earnest G. Smith, Georgia Idiot

    You would think that a state lawmaker should be at least passingly familiar with the US Constitution.  After all, there is this little thing called the “Supremacy Clause” in the US Constitution that says if state and Federal law conflict, Federal law takes precedence.  Plus there’s also that pesky little fact that the US Constitution is the “supreme law of the land”.

    Well, apparently someone forgot that.  As in Earnest G. Smith, Representative for the Georgia House of Representatives District 125.

    Seems that Smith is none too pleased about a recent rather crude but arguably complimentary bit of Photoshop satire which imposed his head on the body of a porn star.  So he’s come out in favor of  making such vulgar satirical use of Photoshop illegal in Georgia.  “No one has a right to make fun of anyone,” he says.

    No, I’m not kidding.

    What a freaking idiot.  But he managed to get elected anyway.

     

  • Three More Are No Longer Missing

    I’m a bit late with this.  However, three more soldiers have come home from the Korean War.

    CPL Robert G. Archer, formerly of Brazil, IN, was assigned to the US Army’s 31st Regimental Combat Team.  He was reported missing in action east of the Chosin Reservoir on November 29, 1950.  Interviews with returning POWs in 1953 indicated that Archer had been captured alive, but had died of malnutrition and lack of medical care while in captivity.  His remains were recovered in 2005 by a joint US-DPRK recovery team.  He was buried in his hometown on February 8, 2013.

    CPL Robert W. Scott, formerly of Detroit, MI, was also assigned to the US Army’s 31st Regimental Combat Team.  He was reported missing in action after his unit was attacked by vastly superior forces along the eastern banks of the Chosin Reservoir on 1 December 1950.  CPL Scott’s remains were among those in 208 boxes of remains repatriated by North Korea between 1991 and 1994.  Modern technology allowed the identification of his remains.  He was buried in Sarasota, FL, on February 11, 2013.

    MSG Robert A. Stein was assigned to HHB, 57th Field Artillery Battalion.  He was lost on February 4, 1950, near the Chosin Reservoir.  He was accounted for on February 6, 2013.  No further information concerning MSG Stein is readily available.

    Rest now in peace, my elder brothers-in-arms.

    Over 7,900 US personnel remain unaccounted for from the Korean War.  If you are relative of one of the individuals listed here, please consider reading this link to see if you qualify to submit a mtDNA sample – and if you do qualify, please do so.  You may be able to help identify US remains that have been repatriated but not yet positively identified.

    Everybody deserves a proper burial.  That’s especially true for those who gave all.

  • Another Comes Home

    PFC James Hare went overseas in 1949.  Not long afterwards he ended up in Korea.

    He was captured.  He died in a POW camp, and was buried in a mass grave.

    His remains were in a group of 450 sets of remains returned by North Korea in the early 1990s.  It took a while, but PFC Hare’s remains were finally positively identified.

    PFC Hare will be laid to rest today near Cumberland, MD.

    Rest in peace, my elder brother-in-arms.  Rest in peace.