Terry A Johnson

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Terry A Johnson

Terry A Johnson

@DrTerryAJohnson

Child of God. Devoted to my Family. I love America. This is my personal Twitter account. Follow me if you are a friend—if you are not, why would you care?

Katılım Eylül 2012
996 Takip Edilen1.7K Takipçiler
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Terry A Johnson
Terry A Johnson@DrTerryAJohnson·
God bless you, friend—whoever you are, wherever you’re from, whatever you look like. Terry 25 November 2020
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History With Jacob
History With Jacob@HistoryWJacob·
Even decades after Vietnam, shrapnel from his 37 wounds kept randomly working its way out of his body. Roy Benavidez’s daughter would be driving with him and suddenly notice blood trickling down the back of his head. Roy would just reach back, yank the metal fragment out with his fingers, flick it away, and keep chatting like it was a stray piece of lint on his shirt. Just another Monday for the most badass American to ever do it.
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Barnaby Breaks History 🇺🇸@CorpBarnaby

🇺🇸 Most Badass Americans You Don’t Know: #1 Roy Benavidez Roy Benavidez is the badass of American badasses. A doctor was zipping him into a body bag. He spit in his face to prove he was still very much alive. Born in 1935 in Cuero, Texas, to Mexican and Yaqui Indian parents. Orphaned young. Raised poor. Dropped out of school at 15 to shine shoes and pick crops. He enlisted anyway. Became a Green Beret with the 5th Special Forces Group. In 1965, on his first Vietnam tour, he stepped on a landmine during a reconnaissance patrol and was badly wounded. Paralyzed from the waist down. Doctors said he’d never walk again and started his medical discharge papers. He refused to accept it. Every night when the hospital was quiet he crawled out of bed and dragged himself across the floor to the wall to force his body to stand. Night after night he fought for every inch of strength until after more than a year in hospitals he walked out ready to return to combat.. May 2, 1968, west of Loc Ninh near the Cambodian border. A 12-man Special Forces recon team plus nine Montagnard allies was surrounded by over 1,000 NVA troops. Benavidez was back at the forward base listening to the desperate radio calls. He volunteered instantly. Armed with nothing but a knife and a medical bag, he jumped from a hovering helicopter straight into the kill zone. He sprinted 75 meters through withering fire to reach the pinned-down team. Wounded in the leg, face, and head before he even got there. Took command anyway. Repositioned the survivors. Directed their fire. Threw smoke to guide the birds in. Carried and dragged wounded men to the extraction helicopter while under constant fire. Went back for the team leader’s body and the classified documents on it. Hit again — small-arms fire ripped into his abdomen, grenade fragments shredded his back. His intestines were hanging out. The extraction helicopter’s pilot was mortally wounded at the exact same moment. The aircraft, riddled with bullets, crashed hard into the jungle. Benavidez pulled the stunned survivors from the overturned wreckage and formed a tiny defensive perimeter. He moved through heavy fire passing out ammo and water, encouraging the men, calling in air strikes and gunship runs. Wounded a third time — shot in the thigh while treating another soldier. In brutal hand-to-hand fighting an NVA soldier clubbed him from behind and bayoneted him. Benavidez yanked the bayonet out of his own body, drew his knife, and killed the man. Spotted two more enemies rushing the second extraction chopper. Grabbed an AK-47 and dropped them both. Made trip after trip carrying wounded men aboard while taking devastating fire. 37 separate wounds — gunshots, shrapnel, bayonets. Only after every surviving man and every classified document was safely loaded did he allow himself to be pulled aboard the last helicopter. He collapsed as it lifted off. Medics later thought he was dead and put him into a body bag. A friend recognized him and called a doctor over for help. The doctor, convinced he was gone, began to zip the bag shut. Benavidez spit in the doctor’s face to prove he was still alive. Roy Benavidez saved at least eight men that day. He was initially awarded only the Distinguished Service Cross. The Medal of Honor was denied multiple times — at the time no living eyewitnesses corroborated his actions, and Benavidez himself believed the entire team had been wiped out. Twelve years later the team’s radioman, Brian O’Connor, was on holiday in Australia when he read a newspaper story about Benavidez. He sat down and wrote a detailed 10-page eyewitness report that verified everything, then came forward and finally made the upgrade possible. President Ronald Reagan personally presented him the Medal of Honor in 1981 and said if the story were a movie script, no one would believe it. Roy Benavidez is an American Legend 🇺🇸

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Just Ger 🇺🇲
Just Ger 🇺🇲@BigGer_1970·
Actor Ernest Bognine served in the U.S. Navy before WWII & reenlisted during WWII. Serving upon the USS Lamberton and the anti-submarine USS Sylph, patrolling the Atlantic searching for German U-boats. His military service inspired his acting career. Another great American 🇺🇸
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A Soldier's Whisper
A Soldier's Whisper@SoldiersWhisper·
"Soldier, would you mind standing up? I'd like to take your picture,” Robert Capa said to me. “It was the last good picture of my right leg.” — James Conboy Jr. At just 19 years old, James Conboy Jr. of Philadelphia, PA, served with the 513th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 17th Airborne Division. On March 24, 1945, during Operation Varsity, he jumped near the Rhine River in Germany. A 20mm shell shattered his right leg during the mission, leading to its amputation. For his bravery and sacrifice, he received a Purple Heart. The iconic photograph by legendary war photographer Robert Capa, taken just before Conboy boarded the plane to Germany, was later featured in Life Magazine and became a poignant reminder of the human cost of war. #WWII #AATW #AirborneAllTheWay #History #NeverForgotten
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Jim Koenigsberger
Jim Koenigsberger@Jimfrombaseball·
"I served in the Air Force, went into combat in October 1943 and flew 18 missions as a tail gunner on a B-l7. We were shot down before the D-Day invasion, on the first daylight bomber raid on Berlin, March 6, 1944. That day 68 bombers were shot down. We got hit, so the crew bailed out and I broke my ankle. I got captured and taken to Frankfurt. I spent about 15 months in prison camps. We changed camps three times; the Germans kept moving us around so the Russians couldn’t liberate us. They took us to Stettin, a port on the North Sea, and crammed us into the hold of a ship for two days. There must have been 2,500 of us in there, hot as hell, no water, no toilet. You had to go on deck to take a leak, but no way you could have a bowel movement. When they took us off the ship, they chained two guys together at the wrists, and ran us about three miles to, "Stalag Luft VI." Another prisoner and I escaped, and were on the run 10 days before locals turned us in. The penalty for escaping was to work for a week cutting timber for fortifications, digging trenches and burial pits, and stuff like that. The burial pits were for the Russians, who didn’t get a military burial like the Allies under the Geneva Convention; they were just dumped into the pit. After about three months, the Russians liberated us in April, 1945." Augie Donatelli. Professional Baseball Umpire. Legend!!! With Willie Mays and Ray Fosse.
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Collin Rugg
Collin Rugg@CollinRugg·
Just two years after telling rich Republicans to jump on a bus and head to Florida, NY Gov Kathy Hochul begs rich taxpayers who are in Florida to come back to New York so they can pay more taxes. Hochul says she needs "high net worth" people to cut her checks to fund New York's social programs. "I need people who are high net worth to support the generous social programs that we wanna have in our state right now." "...Cut me the checks... The first step should be to go down to Palm Beach and see who you can bring back home, because our tax base has been eroded."
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Gary Mathis
Gary Mathis@Damfool65·
Thanks for your service sir 🤠💯💪
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Casselberry, FL 🇺🇸 English
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Thomas Sowell Quotes
Thomas Sowell Quotes@ThomasSowell·
The Covid era will be studied as one of the most ridiculous periods in recent history.
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We Have It All
We Have It All@WeAreWoke1776_3·
Remember…. When the dogs are let loose. It’s over before it even began.
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Governor Mike DeWine
Governor Mike DeWine@GovMikeDeWine·
In honor of the life and service of three members of the Ohio Air National Guard killed during Operation Epic Fury, I have ordered flags lowered on all public buildings and grounds throughout the state. bit.ly/3PhCKQj
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U.S. Army
U.S. Army@USArmy·
From civilian to Soldier. 🇺🇸 After 9 demanding weeks of Basic Combat Training, these trainees have earned the right to wear their unit patch at the “Turning Green” ceremony, marking their transition into U.S. Army Soldiers and the next step in One Station Unit Training. 🎥 @MCoEFortBenning
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Thomas Sowell Quotes
Thomas Sowell Quotes@ThomasSowell·
This is our military’s morning routine. Nothing but respect.
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Lee Zeldin
Lee Zeldin@LeeMZeldin·
35 Years Ago Today. It doesn’t get better than Whitney Houston’s version of the National Anthem at Super Bowl XXV.
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Christopher Wipper
Christopher Wipper@SGTWipper1Each·
On this day in 1996 – Retired US Admiral Arleigh Burke, remembered for his World War II heroics, died at Bethesda Naval Hospital at age 94.
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U.S. Department of Labor
May God continue to bless our Great Nation and her People as we enter our 250th year. America will Prevail. ‘George Washington praying at Valley Forge’ —John C. McRae
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Remember The Fallen
Remember The Fallen@44MagnumBlue1·
U.S. Marine Corps Lance Corporal Willie B. Walker Jr was killed in action on January 2, 1970 in Quang Ngai Province, South Vietnam. Willie was 20 years old and from Cordele, Georgia. CAP 1-4-3, CACO 1-4, 1st CAG, Combined Action. Remember Willie today. He is an American Hero.🇺🇸
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Unidentified Recon Marine with face paint and bush hat decorated with grenade pins rests after a sweep near the U.S. Marine base at Kha Sahn. AP Wire photo 1968 Taken in 1968 near the U.S. Marine base at Khe Sanh, the image shows an unidentified Marine reconnaissance trooper resting after a sweep. His face paint is smeared from sweat and movement, his eyes alert even at rest. A cigarette hangs from his mouth, a small comfort in a landscape defined by constant danger. Recon Marines operated far ahead of main forces, moving quietly through jungle and hills to gather intelligence, set ambushes, and detect enemy movement. Their missions often lasted days or weeks and were conducted with minimal support. The bush hat, worn low and softened by use, is decorated with grenade pins, a personal touch that blends bravado, superstition, and identity. Such adornments were unofficial but common, especially among elite units. The photo was taken the same year as the Siege of Khe Sanh, when U.S. and North Vietnamese forces clashed in a brutal standoff that drew global attention. While the siege itself became a symbol of large scale warfare, images like this show the quieter reality: exhaustion, vigilance, and the psychological toll carried by individual soldiers. Recon Marines in Vietnam often traveled in teams of six or fewer, and casualty rates in reconnaissance units were among the highest of any Marine Corps specialty during the war. © Reddit #archaeohistories
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Time Capsule Tales
Time Capsule Tales@timecaptales·
During combat operations over the Philippines, U.S. Navy gunner Loyce Edward Deen was lost while flying aboard a TBM Avenger. The damage was so severe that his crewmates could not recover him from the aircraft. In a final act of respect, they committed the plane to the sea with Deen still inside (1944).
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Military Support
Military Support@MilitaryCooI·
29 DEC 1967, USAF Combat Controller Paul L. Foster, a SSgt, was a crew member on a Douglas Counter Invader Attack Aircraft (A-26A) on a mission over the Ho Chi Minh Trail, Laos. The aircraft was hit by hostile fire when it was about fifteen miles northwest of Sepone, Savannakhet Province due west of the Demilitarized Zone and crashed. His remains were recovered on March 17, 1993, and identified on October 18, 1995. Paul L. Foster was promoted to the rank of Senior Master Sergeant during the period he was maintained missing, he was 22 years old. He may be gone from us, but he is Never Forgotten & Always Remembered. 'It has been said that a man is not dead while his name is still spoken, that we are only truly gone when we've disappeared from the memories of those who loved us' - Terry Pratchett
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Military Support
Military Support@MilitaryCooI·
Today, we honor and celebrate the extraordinary life and service of Command Master Chief Britt Slabinski, one of only 61 living Medal of Honor Recipients. Please join us in wishing him a very happy birthday! After his team's helicopter was hit and a teammate was thrown onto a 10,000-foot mountain, he rallied his men and led a rescue attempt under heavy fire. Reinserting into the fight, he charged toward enemy positions, cleared a bunker, and repeatedly exposed himself to engage a second one as casualties mounted. Forced down the mountain by intense fire, he carried a wounded teammate through deep snow, coordinated close air support, and kept his team fighting for over 14 hours until reinforcements secured the area. His courage and leadership reflect the highest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.
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Fascinating
Fascinating@fasc1nate·
26 code words in the Phonetic Alphabet
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