Hello Susan. My sweet auntie was caught up in a scam. It messed with her emotions so bad. She was the sweetest woman heart of gold. Good luck Darlene in tn
@tvtravelshop536817 күн бұрын
So nice🎉
@SusanSaline17 күн бұрын
Thanks 🤗
@LasaleLasale-g6e27 күн бұрын
STEVE LIPSKY good video
@SusanSaline9 күн бұрын
Thank you so much really appreciated
@JohanJohan-we6yyАй бұрын
very Beutyfoul view cruise travel
@SusanSaline9 күн бұрын
Thank you
@SEOBYROBIUL-g9eАй бұрын
Very nice travel
@SusanSalineАй бұрын
Thank you so much
@SusanSalineАй бұрын
Thank you
@follow_jonasАй бұрын
Acute Rehabilitation Center should bill like a hospital stay.
@SusanSalineАй бұрын
thank you
@follow_jonasАй бұрын
No advantage to Medicare Advantage. Traditional Medicare and supplemental coverage is best.
@SusanSalineАй бұрын
Thank you
@robintrigg3962Ай бұрын
I remember having doctors like this! Now they rush you through like cattle and run unnecessary tests to keep you in their systems and keep the money rolling through…sad 😢
@tvtravelshop53682 ай бұрын
Amazing video like
@SusanSalineАй бұрын
Thank you
@tvtravelshop53682 ай бұрын
very nice
@SEOBYROBIUL-g9e2 ай бұрын
Amazing music
@Wesley-pb7qk2 ай бұрын
Your borders are wide open!!!!!!
@kevinfitzsimons412 ай бұрын
The volume is extremely low on this video. Have it up to max to hear what’s being said
@SEOBYROBIUL-g9e2 ай бұрын
very very good ma,am🎉🎉
@SusanSaline2 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot
@Ed-ly5ko3 ай бұрын
In the US Army Special Forces in the 60's and 70's we all had to learn and use morse code. We used it extensively in Vietnam and training missions. Not sure if they still require it. I live near Fort Bragg and own a small portable multiband radio that you can receive signals from around the world. Could always receive morse code being practiced by SF students. But no longer. Morse code and AM radios are vital in national emergencies. I read that there is an effort to require car manufacturers to put AM radio back in cars.
@edwardb78113 ай бұрын
Good interview of an unsung hero.
@thomashawkinson70173 ай бұрын
Well done sir. WB8HND
@oceandmike3 ай бұрын
great video! thank you.
@dumpsterchicken62874 ай бұрын
My dad was a signalman on the USS Saint Paul during WW2. Besides standing on the deck with signal flags, he also used morse code. I have a set of his flags and his transmitter.
@davidkelly74594 ай бұрын
Awesome 👍
@ljosephdumas31134 ай бұрын
CQ CQ CQ DE N2LJD/4 N2LJD/4 N2LJD/4 K USCG Radioman 1980-83 (then lost my mind and went Officer Candidate School )
@johnbarleycorn6994 ай бұрын
once you memorize mores code .. you'll never forget it . . . you might slow in copy speed but you will not forget it it stays with you like a 2nd language
@halledwardb4 ай бұрын
Cool. My 16yr daughter is a general class Ham and uses morse code frequently. Cool.
@14goldmedals4 ай бұрын
Anyone else remember the POW’s that blinked “torture” while being made to say things were ok at the Hanoy Hilton video? And another that made holes in the front of his shirt discretely but could be read by a Morse Code trained person?
@ronaldschild1574 ай бұрын
I remember that second one from the film "Wag The Dog". The Woody Harrelson character was actually a murderer convicted by a military court but he was ginned up in the media as a P.O.W. of the fake war on Albania. It was a complicated plot, but not out to the realm of actually happening. Anyway, there was a picture of the character released with his shirt torn in various places and it spelled out "Courage Mom" in Morse code. I only ever remember that happening in this film. The first one was real; I remember the story being reported on when I was a first grader.
@14goldmedals2 ай бұрын
@@ronaldschild157 loved that movie even though I’d like to stand on DeNero’s neck. That is one of his movies that he didn’t do his mob guy thing like in 95% of his parts. Yes Woody’s shirt was a borrowed version of that jet pilot POW. Those men all had to be rock hard to come back from there. True heroes to look up to.
@Ahuntrgw20132 ай бұрын
Yes, sir! I do recall seeing part of that. That part (the pilot / prisoner) was played by Hal Holbrook, portraying the one-day US Senator Jeremiah Denton, if memory serves. 🤔
@14goldmedals2 ай бұрын
@@Ahuntrgw2013 Hal Holbrook you say…I’m an old movie buff and I’m going to have to find that one. Somehow I missed it and it missed me. I watch way too much Turner Classic TV lol.
@kamalakrsna4 ай бұрын
_. .. _._. . ..._ .. _.. . __
@Ahuntrgw20134 ай бұрын
Ah! “Ditty-boppers!!”
@jameslong99214 ай бұрын
Susan Saline Lipsky, so people surely must call you Salty Lips Susan yeah?
@SusanSaline2 ай бұрын
No just you my dear
@LarryGarcia-p3j4 ай бұрын
In Morse Code --. --- -.. -... .-.. . ... ...
@LarryGarcia-p3j4 ай бұрын
I was a Signalman on Destroyers during the Vietnam War. I learned and used Mores Code in ALL types of weather. To this Day I remember the code.
@joewoodchuck38244 ай бұрын
Morse is still better than voice in terms of readability over distances and less than ideal atmospheric conditions. I'm from the morse era when it was still required in America. I think we were among the last to go code free. I had a real hard time with it because of my learning patterns. I've been licensed since 1991 and to this day I've never made a single CW contact because of it. I still support it's use though. My wife put me to shame by learning the entire Morse alphabet in 24 hours, where it took me months. Sigh.
@williamcordell55484 ай бұрын
Good simple way to transmit messages but it they get the frequency you better have a code lol but very effective saved our butts more than once . During many emergencies when radio signals spoken transmission weren't an option.
@billgund45324 ай бұрын
I was a Morse Code Intercept Operator in the Army Security Agency in the early 70's.
@danielcotts86734 ай бұрын
"Join the ASA. Sign your life away. You'll never see America again." 05G here.
@billgund45324 ай бұрын
@@danielcotts8673 05H20 baby! I actually enjoyed my service. 50+ years later I keep in touch with a few of my fellow dirty boppers!
@billgund45324 ай бұрын
@@danielcotts8673 05H20 ditty bopper. ASA ALL THE WAY!
@billgund45322 ай бұрын
@@danielcotts8673 Lived in Splinter City (WW II barracks) and went to school in Ditty City.
@danielcotts86732 ай бұрын
@@billgund4532 ...ate in Con-4 Mess Hall. Wore the LFCF patch aka Massachusetts Light & Power Company.
@digitalsolutionrobi4 ай бұрын
Your videos are very good so I hope your channel will be big one day
@SusanSaline2 ай бұрын
Thank You so much
@philbertniyongabo41464 ай бұрын
Its Good that the Lord helped you.
@regulus91815 ай бұрын
3:16 _’No TV down there, no real communications…’_ Initially there were. There were even french experts in place to ensure everything worked fine. Unfortunately the genocidaires went after them too, on top of seeking to exterminate the Tutsi population. That’s why telecommunications didn’t work anymore. They attacked simultaneously in multiple provinces (Rumonge, Bururi, Makamba, Cankuzo, Rutana, Bujumbura, Gitega), systematically killing all Tutsi people they could get their hands on. Sometimes they also killed Hutus who didn’t want to join them or whom they suspected might be Tutsi. Here’s how it went, as detailed in recent research: In Rumonge, the first victim was a teacher whose husband, also a teacher in Nkayamba, was named Simon. The militiamen mistook her for a Tutsi even though she was Hutu. Overnight they installed a roadblock very close to the courthouse while chanting slogans in the streets: “Mai Mulele!! Death to Micombero!! Long live Hutus!!” They killed a lot of people that night. According to news reports in the daily Flash-Infor, “all Tutsi civil servants in the province were killed: District commissioners, communal administrators, the prosecutor, assistant prosecutors, doctors, accountants; 40 people in all.” Among the victims were the district commissioner of Makamba, Isidore Zidona, the police chief in Rumonge, school principals, the prosecutor of Bururi, Jean Bikamba, and Thérence Rubati, a judge in Rumonge. Also murdered were doctors including Dr. Cyprien Simbiyara and other medical personnel and teachers. Other victims in Rumonge were the Bukemba commune administrator Etienne Njayobiri and the secretary of the Uprona party, Mr. Rungarunga. The militiamen also killed an Arab named Mohamed Amdan. They had allegedly asked him for gasoline to burn down homes but he had refused. This resulted in his execution together with the wife and two children of the administrator Damas Nyambere. Then the rebels attacked the police headquarters and the courthouse. They killed everyone who had taken refuge there. At the extreme south of the shoreline, Nyanza-Lac was also attacked on the same day of April 29th [1972]. Around 6:30 p.m., the rebels wielding machetes and wearing palm leaves on their heads came from Rwaba where they had spent their last sessions of the “magical immunization” ritual. Let us listen in this regard to the witness who was part of this movement: “It was Saturday April 29, 1972; we were around the Rwaba River. This is where I underwent the ritual of baptism by magic water. Around 6 p.m., we left this place to carry out attacks in the center of Nyanza-Lac. We started with three targets: The police station, the marketplace, and the residence of some French people. When we arrived where the BCB bank stands today, our chief ordered us to take three directions: "Chez Daniel" where some civil servants were gathered, the police station, and where *the French telecommunication technicians* lived.” A witness who escaped the scene remembers it: “We were walking along the road. We saw people lined up from Rwaba running at a jog. They were repeating a song that said “Mchaka Mchaka Kill”. I thought they were soldiers on a military maneuver. They wore palm leaves on their heads and carried new machetes. It looked like a ritual. As they got closer they were chanting, Long Live Hutus!! Death to Tutsis!! They took a man from the restaurant and beheaded him. After seeing this, I fled through the bush. Once at some distance, I saw police commander Misigaro and I asked myself why he was there. He left shortly afterwards.” [Donatien Misigaro was the Hutu police chief who had sponsored the militiamen. He had all Tutsi police officers who served under his orders disarmed and executed that day!] The militiamen then massacred all the Tutsi civil servants gathered at "Daniel’s", including the administrator of Vugizo Frederic Niyonizigiye and the assistant district commissioner, Leonidas Basumbwa. However the first person killed was a Hutu named Kebumpa because he had refused to join the militiamen. Also targeted was a Hutu administrator from Nyanza-Lac, Thomas Sayumwe, reputed to be a “friend” of President Micombero. But he managed to escape death. The rebels went to look for him at home only to find out that he had already gone in hiding. Instead they killed his child who was still in bed. They also killed a Hutu agricultural engineer, called Dative. The police force included about 10 Tutsi officers. These were all executed at nightfall around 6:30 p.m. Their chief, Donatien Misigaro, had taken away their guns which he put in storage. Also killed was Commander Mbonihankuye who had travelled there to bring the monthly pay for the police station. Their weapons were then taken by the rebels. On Sunday 30, the massacres continued in Rumonge and Nyanza-Lac. In Rumonge, the rebels took people to the marketplace to be executed. Some people hid in the bush and others were hidden by Hutus who had not joined the [genocide] movement. A witness says that his [Hutu] father-in-law hid two Tutsi girls whose father was a police commander in Rumonge and who had been killed at the start. An old Hutu man named Manyuzi hid the two wives of a Tutsi man named Gapawa. Around Rumonge, the rebels massacred any Tutsi person they encountered. In Kigwena, because many young people from this locality were involved in the [genocide] movement, they seized a Peugeot truck from the friars at Kigwena Parish for transportation. The driver Epimaque moved the rebels on the Rumonge-Nyanza-Lac road under the supervision of Magenge. He was helped by Denis Mafungufungu with his own Peugeot while flying the green-red flag of the movement. Adolphe Nyandwi brought reinforcements from the rebels towards Bujumbura. But when they arrived at Kanyosha, they were forced to turn back. In Nyanza-Lac, the rebels killed Secretary Rukanka. He was a slender Hutu. He was a victim of his physique because in their understanding anyone that tall was Tutsi. They massacred indiscriminately Tutsi men, women and children as well as Hutus who looked like them. Let us listen to a witness who was a Mulelist [the genocide militia]: “We eliminated Tutsis: Tutsi men, women and children, as well as Hutus who resembled them in appearance or size”.
@RigelStudiosLasVegas5 ай бұрын
very interesting
@ghostdance565 ай бұрын
Does he mention the CIA assassinations of African leaders and orchestrated coups throughout Africa at that time?
@digitalsolutionrobi5 ай бұрын
nice video
@tammysheffler19665 ай бұрын
Thanks for having Mark on!!! Terrific interview with an A+++++ talent and all around great guy. Can't wait until I can see him again!! P.S. I, too, miss old Vegas - big corporations have ruined the great times from what it used to be. It's sad actually!!
@SusanSaline5 ай бұрын
@@tammysheffler1966 yes thanks for the feedback really appreciated
@digitalsolutionrobi5 ай бұрын
good video
@SusanSaline9 күн бұрын
Thank you
@SusanSaline5 ай бұрын
like, subscribe and share we truly appreciate your input and help
@robroy11745 ай бұрын
I've been staring and just happened to notice.......
@SusanSaline7 ай бұрын
Thank you
@SusanSaline7 ай бұрын
Awesome show
@Ali-uq3tc7 ай бұрын
Promo-SM
@michaelcavaretta47227 ай бұрын
Bravo 👏
@cvond8 ай бұрын
Pete is such a talented musician and comedian... and a great story teller!