GOVERNACIDE: Sometimes “disobeying orders” is the right thing to do

Thursday, April 16, 2026

FROM FACEBOOK

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As with anything on the BOOK of FACES, I have no idea if it is true.  If it isn’t, sorry to waste everyone’s time, attention, effort, and dikw (i.e., data, information, knowledge, wisdom).  If HOWEVER if it is true, them she should be awarded the MOH for being human in war and taking the “punishment” silently for just doing what is right.  I’ll never be in a position to make this happen but maybe DJT47, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, or the Congress will step up to the plate and acknowledge that sometimes “disobeying orders” is the right thing  to do.  If it was within my power, I’d correct this miscarriage of justice.  Then order it taught at West Point and all the military academies that we are the USA and we don’t tolerate “war crimes”.  Finally erect her statue at all three academies to drive home the point!

Sigh!  Sadly. 

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https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17dp21FweL/

May be an image of text that says 'J..S She saved 1,200 civilians from certain death, got court-martialed for it, then worked 45 years as a children's librarian-and no one knew until they found the list hidden in her recipe box.'

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Korea. Winter 1951.
 
Lieutenant Sarah Park sat in a cramped intelligence tent three miles from the front line, headphones pressed against her ears, listening to transmissions that were never meant for her.
 
She spoke Korean, Japanese, and Mandarin—languages her parents had insisted she learn growing up in Los Angeles, never imagining they would one day qualify her for military intelligence work. Her job was simple: intercept enemy communications, translate them, and pass them up the chain of command.
Most transmissions were routine. Troop movements. Supply requests. Tactical adjustments that mattered to generals planning operations but meant little to her personally.
 
Then, one February night, she heard something different.
 
Chinese artillery units coordinating a bombardment. Target coordinates. Timing. Eight days out.
She cross-referenced the coordinates on her map.
 
A village. Civilian. No military installations. No strategic value. Just homes where approximately 1,200 people—farmers, elderly residents, children—lived in the uncertain space between armies, hoping the war would pass them by.
 
Sarah wrote the report immediately. Typed it carefully. Delivered it to her commanding officer before dawn.
His response came quickly.
 
“Not our mission. We don’t evacuate enemy civilians.”
 
She tried to explain. These were not combatants. They were people who would die in eight days unless someone warned them.
 
He repeated himself, slower this time, as if she had misunderstood the first time.
 
“Not. Our. Mission.”
 
Sarah went back to her tent. She stared at the coordinates she had copied into her notebook. She thought about what eight days meant.
 
Then she made a decision she knew would cost her.
 
Every night after her shift ended, she walked three miles to that village.
 
Alone. Without authorization. Carrying maps she had drawn by hand showing routes to refugee camps south of the fighting.
 
The first night, villagers stared at her—an American soldier appearing in the dark, speaking Korean, warning them of an attack they had no reason to believe was coming.
 
She showed them the coordinates. Explained what she had heard. Told them they had seven days. Then six. Then five.
 
Slowly, they began to listen.
 
She helped families pack what they could carry. She convinced the village elder that this was not a trick, not propaganda—that she had no reason to lie and every reason to stay silent.
 
By the seventh day, carts were loaded. Children were bundled against the cold. The evacuation began in waves, families moving south toward safety while Sarah returned to base each morning and pretended nothing had changed.
 
On the eighth day, the shells came exactly as the intercepted transmission had promised.
 
The village was empty.
 
Every civilian—1,200 people—had made it out.
 
Sarah’s commanding officer found out three days later. Someone had seen her. Someone had reported the unauthorized absences. Someone had asked questions that led back to her.
 
She was court-martialed for leaving base without permission, for engaging with enemy civilians, for acting outside the scope of her orders.
 
A chaplain intervened—argued that her actions had been humanitarian, not treasonous. The charges were dropped, but the damage was done.
 
Her file was marked. No promotion. No commendation. No acknowledgment that she had saved over a thousand lives.
 
She came home in 1953 when the armistice was signed. She did not talk about the war. She did not seek recognition or try to clear her record.
 
She became a librarian in Seattle. Worked in the children’s section of the public library for forty-five years.
Kids knew her as Miss Sarah—the one who always knew which books to recommend, who remembered their names, who seemed to understand that sometimes the right story at the right time could change everything.
 
She retired quietly. She lived alone. She died in 2007 from cancer at the age of seventy-nine.
 
Her niece came to clean out the apartment. She sorted through kitchen cabinets, looking for anything worth keeping.
 
In the back of a drawer, she found an old recipe box. Wooden. Worn. The kind that should have held her aunt’s favorite dishes on index cards.
 
She opened it.
 
No recipes.
 
Just one letter, written in Korean, and a small black-and-white photograph of children standing outside a schoolhouse.
 
The letter, dated 1976, read:
 
“You saved my family. My children grew up because you walked three miles every night when you did not have to. We have never forgotten. We will never forget.”
 
Tucked behind the letter was a single sheet of paper, folded carefully.
 
A list of names. All 1,200 people she had evacuated. Handwritten in her precise script.
 
She had kept it for fifty-four years. In a recipe box. Never mentioned. Never displayed.
 
Her niece tried to contact the Army. She wanted someone to know. She wanted her aunt’s record corrected.
 
The response was brief.
 
“We have no documentation of a court-martial for Lieutenant Sarah Park. Unauthorized actions are not part of official records.”
 
No record. No recognition. No acknowledgment that any of it had happened.
 
But the letter was real. The photograph was real. The list was real.
 
And somewhere, families existed who would not have existed without her.
 
Children who grew up. Grandchildren who were born. Lives that continued because one woman decided that “not our mission” was not an acceptable reason to let people die.
 
Sarah Park never got a statue. She never got a medal or a parade or a memorial plaque.
 
She got a recipe box with one letter and a list she kept private until the day she died.
 
But what she did still counted.
 
It counted to 1,200 people who lived instead of dying.
 
It counted to their children, and their children’s children, who inherited life as a gift they would never fully understand.
 
It counted in ways no military record could measure and no official history would ever document.
 
Sometimes heroism is loud and public and celebrated in real time.
 
Sometimes it is three miles walked alone in the dark, eight nights in a row, to warn people who had no reason to trust you.
 
Sometimes it is choosing to act when every authority tells you not to, knowing the cost will be your career and your record and your future.
 
Sometimes it is living forty-five years in quiet obscurity, recommending books to children, carrying the weight of what you did in a recipe box no one would open until you were gone.
 
Sarah Park did not need the world to remember.
 
She needed those 1,200 people to survive.
 
And they did.
 
And that, in the end, was enough.

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Dona Nobis Pacem 

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GUNS: Why the Japanese didn’t invade the USA?

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

LUDDITE sends in some blog fodder.

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Thanks for the blog fodder. So have you gotten your “urban yute dioscouragement device” yet? I getting my concealed carry here in VA in March. Classes are full until then! fj
———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Luddite
Date: Fri, Jan 11, 2013 at 9:24 PM
Subject: Fw: Guns

Someone sent this to me…thought you might find it interesting if you hadn’t seen it.

 

*You’re sound asleep when you hear a thump outside your bedroom.
Half-awake, and nearly paralyzed with fear,you hear muffled whispers.*

*At least two people have broken into your house and are moving your way.

With your heart pumping, you reach for your shotgun.

You rack a shell into the chamber, then inch toward the door and open it.

In the darkness, you make out two shadows.

One holds something that looks like a crowbar.

When the intruder brandishes it as if to strike, you raise the shotgun and fire.

The blast knocks both thugs to the floor.

One writhes and screams while the second man crawls to the front door and
lurches outside.

As you pick up the telephone to call police, you know you’re in trouble.

In most guns were outlawed years before, and the few that are privately owned are so stringently regulated as to make them useless..

Yours was never registered.

Police arrive and inform you that the second burglar has died.

They arrest you for First Degree Murder and Illegal Possession of a Firearm.

When you talk to your attorney, he tells you not to worry: authorities will probably plea the case down to manslaughter.

“What kind of sentence will I get?” you ask.

“Only ten-to-twelve years,” he replies, as if that’s nothing. *

*”Behave yourself, and you’ll be out in seven.”

The next day, the shooting is the lead story in the* *local newspaper.
You’re portrayed as an eccentric vigilante while the two men you shot are represented as choirboys.

Their friends and relatives can’t find an unkind word to say about them..

Buried deep down in the article, authorities acknowledge that both
“victims” have been arrested numerous times.

But the next day’s **headline** says it all:
“Lovable Rogue Son Didn’t Deserve to Die.”

The thieves have been transformed from career criminals into Robin Hood-type pranksters..

As the days wear on, the story takes wings.

The **national media** picks it up, then the **international media**.

The surviving burglar has become a folk hero.

Your attorney says the thief is preparing to sue you, and he’ll probably win.

The **media** publishes reports that your home has been burglarized several times in the past and that you’ve been critical of local police for their
lack of effort in apprehending the suspects.

After the last break-in, you told your neighbor that you would be prepared next time.

The District Attorney uses this to allege that you were lying in wait for the burglars.

A few months later, you go to trial.

The charges haven’t been reduced, as your lawyer had so confidently predicted.

When you take the stand, your anger at the injustice of it all works against you..

Prosecutors paint a picture of you as a mean, vengeful man.

It doesn’t take long for the jury to convict you of all charges.

The judge sentences you to life in prison.

This case really happened.

On August 22, 1999, Tony Martin of Emneth, Norfolk , England , killed one
burglar and wounded a second.

In April, 2000, he was convicted and is now serving a life term…

How did it become a crime to defend one’s own life in the once great British Empire ?

**It started with the Pistols Act of 1903. **

This seemingly reasonable law forbade selling pistols to minors or felons and established that handgun sales were to be made only to those who had a
license.

The **Firearms Act of 1920** expanded licensing to include not only handguns but all firearms except shotguns..

**Later laws passed in 1953 and 1967** outlawed the carrying of any weapon by private citizens and mandated the registration of all shotguns.

Momentum for total handgun confiscation began in earnest after the Hungerfordmass shooting in 1987.

Michael Ryan, a mentally disturbed man with a Kalashnikov rifle, walked down the streets shooting everyone he saw.

When the smoke cleared, 17 people were dead.

The British public, already de-sensitized by eighty years of “gun control”, demanded even tougher restrictions.
(The **seizure of all privately owned handguns was the objective** even though Ryan used a rifle.)

Nine years later, at Dunblane , Scotland , Thomas Hamilton used a semi-automatic weapon to murder 16 children and a teacher at a public school.

For many years, the media had portrayed all gun owners as mentally unstable, or worse, criminals.
Now the **press** had a real kook with which to beat up law-abiding gun owners.
Day after day, week after week, the **media** gave up all pretense of objectivity and demanded a total ban on all handguns.

**The Dunblane Inquiry**, a few months later, sealed the fate of the few sidearms still owned by private citizens.

**During the years in which the British government incrementally took away most gun rights, the notion that a citizen had the right to armed
self-defense came to be seen as vigilantism.

Authorities refused to grant gun licenses to people who were threatened, claiming that self-defense was no longer considered a reason to own a gun.**
Citizens who shot burglars or robbers or rapists were charged while the real criminals were released.

Indeed, after the Martin shooting, a police spokesman was quoted as saying, “We cannot have people take the law into their own hands.”

All of Martin’s neighbors had been robbed numerous times, and several elderly people were severely injured in beatings by young thugs who had no fear of the consequences.
Martin himself, a collector of antiques, had seen most of his collection trashed or stolen by burglars.

When the Dunblane Inquiry ended, citizens who owned handguns were given three months to turn them over to local authorities.

Being good British subjects, most people obeyed the law. The few who didn’t were visited by police and threatened with ten-year prison sentences if they didn’t comply.

Police later bragged that they’d taken nearly 200,000 handguns from private citizens.

How did the authorities know who had handguns? The guns had been registered and licensed. Kind of like cars. Sound familiar?

WAKE UP AMERICA ; THIS IS WHY OUR FOUNDING FATHERS PUT THE SECOND AMENDMENT IN OUR CONSTITUTION.

“…It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set brush fires in people’s minds..”
–Samuel Adams

**If you think this is important, please forward to everyone you know.

You had better wake up, because Obama is doing this very same thing, over here, if he can get it done
And there are stupid people in congress and on the street that will go right along with him.
The UN Small Arms Treaty that Hilary is negotiating would take away our 2nd Amendment rights.
Remember the Japanese didn’t invade the USA is because they knew that Most of the citizens were armed.

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(1) I’d heard this story before as have most NRA and GOA members. What do you expect from England? huevos muchos pequeño

(2) It’s incomprehensible that the Japanese didn’t invade because Americans had guns. The multi-thousand supply line when they could barely get enough oil to fee themselves or their soldiers is the most plausible reason. Look at what happened to Patton in WW2 when the supply lines were stretched to far. Like the Nazi’s in Russia during the winter. 

(3) My question is: “Is this the issue that will get Luddite, a non-gun owner, off the couch into the streets?

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