TheSourcerer's Posts
Nairaland Forum › TheSourcerer's Profile › TheSourcerer's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 (of 436 pages)
Daum:good point ! |
wunderkindkayod:Vawulence comrade |
Jeon:your siblings are awesome!!! |
Be calm and content like froggie here
|
If you've ever made indomie and then immediately dropped it on the floor, you know how this bird feels.
|
...
|
You may be having a bad day but at least you didn't literally get shit on, like this ox.
|
Shalommy: but any life is precious |
I can hear the scoffing
|
That giraffe must have really wanted to say "what's up?" to the passengers on that plane.
|
Its a cat taking a fuvking selfie ,so what....?! Look and see what climate change has done to these leaves.
|
When you're meeting an online date but you realize you added a few inches to your height in your profile.
|
Let's act human ,say chesse its going on Snapchat.
|
Yup I'm comfortable and that all that matters in this photo
|
Shhhh she's coming! Act Natural.
|
Now where did I keep all that weed
|
Walking dog crossing the street , nothing to see here ....
|
When your food arrives at a restaurant and you start eating before realizing that nobody else got their meals yet.
|
When youre out of business and have to get into another persons business. Mind yo business or you get eaten
|
Waking up before your alarm goes off knowing fully well you'll just go right back to sleep
|
Natures got me covered
|
When earbudding....
|
Excuse me, may I be the first to tell you you're beautiful.and I'll like to see the manager ''
|
It's day one of my plant-based diet! I’m doing GREAT.
|
Eugene Bullard Eugene Bullard was the first African American fighter pilot — but he flew for France because the U.S. didn't accept his service during WWI. Flying instead for the French, Bullard fearlessly embarked on 25 to 27 missions in a plane painted with the motto, "Tout sang que coule est rouge," or "All blood runs red." He later also served as an Allied spy in Paris during WWII.
|
Hiroo Onoda For 29 years after WWII ended, the dedicated Japanese soldier Hiroo Onoda refused to believe that the conflict was over. Instead, he hid out in the jungle of the Philippines and continued waging a war. Onoda refused to believe that the war had truly ended until his former superior officer flew to where he was camped out. The officer confirmed the news and relieved Onoda from duty. He was eventually pardoned for the crimes he committed while he believed the world was still at war. Keystone-FranceGamma
|
Ruby Bradley A WWII surgical nurse, Ruby Bradley was captured three weeks after Pearl Harbor and sent to a POW camp in Manila. There, she became an "angel in fatigues," performing over 230 surgeries and assisting in childbirths under the camp’s inadequate conditions, all while smuggling in food and medical supplies. Five years later, Bradley went to the front lines of Korean War as the Chief Nurse of the 171st Evacuation Hospital. As 100,000 Chinese soldiers advanced on her hospital, Bradley refused to leave until she'd evacuated all the injured and sick. Bradley managed to leap aboard her plane just as an enemy shell struck and destroyed her ambulance.
|
Richard Bong Called the "Ace of Aces" Major Richard (Dick) Bong took down a record 40 aircrafts in his career as a WWII pilot and earned the Medal of Honor. Once, he even shot a crocodile from the air when he noticed it following his fellow soldiers. Bong was chosen to test a P-80, the Army Air Forces' first jet on Aug. 6, 1945. But the test went terribly wrong and Bong lost his life. Because he died on the same day as the bombing of Hiroshima, Bong's death received little notice at the time.
|
Matthew Urban During his tour in WWII, Lieutenant Colonel Matthew Urban earned seven Purple Hearts. He was critically injured time and time again but always wanted to stay on the battlefield with his men. Urban once even left an English hospital without permission, hitchhiked back to France, and re-joined his regiment to finish a fight cementing his nickname of "the Ghost." He repeatedly took shrapnel and bullets (even getting shot in the neck) but survived and came out the other side as an American hero.
|
John Rabe John Rabe may strike many as an unlikely war hero after all, he was an enthusiastic Nazi. But Rabe proved himself a hero during the Japanese takeover of Nanjing in 1937. Sent to China for business, Rabe nevertheless stepped up and helped shelter some 200,000 from certain death. Rabe even saved women from rape by wielding his Nazi badge.Good Job buddy for a Nazi!
|
Virginia Hall The Gestapo called Virginia Hall "the most dangerous of all Allied spies." They underlined the importance of tracking down the woman with a limp, which was from Hall’s use of a prosthetic leg. Hall was the first female operative of Britain’s Special Operations Executive to be sent into France, where she worked as an Allied spy. She spied there for three years until she was forced to escape on foot through the Pyrenees Mountains. Hall later requested to be sent back into occupied France as a wireless radio operator, reporting the movements of German troops before she joined the CIA in 1951.
|
"Mad Jack" Churchill WWII war hero Jack Churchill didn't use a rifle or drive a tank. Instead, this British Army officer wielded a Scottish broadsword and sometimes a longbow As a commando, Churchill gained notoriety for charging into battle, playing the bagpipes, and throwing grenades. Even after a stint at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp (from which he escaped) he continued his military escapades, walking 93 miles to rejoin the Army in Italy.
|
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 (of 436 pages)

but any life is precious