Awards
Your Editor Dr. Scott Neff - the Little
Guy
Six years old
Mother's
University Graduation
The Best
of the Best Presentations list 2011
"Pictures Never Seen Before-NEVER
FORGET"-911"
"Déjà Vu
©"
Love for all time-(When Your Hot
©)
Amazing Drug Lord Photos and Story
The
Muddied Shoes Blues
©
The Best
of the Best Presentations list 2010
American Rising
The Patriotic War
Strangers on my Flight
Fauna music and love
Ancient Hanging
Monastery
What Tiger should
have seen first!
Another Senior moment in Police Science History
Patriots in action
US Marine Corps Answering
Machine
Best Train vs. Tornado
Bud Light Clothing Drive
Commercial
Banned from the Super Bowl
Who packs your parachute?
Argentina
Frank the
Duck
Obama
Man Can
B-17
fighter pilots in World War II
Worlds Most
Expensive Catastrophes
Worlds largest spectacular entities
Enjoy fabulous and spectacular 3D Trick of the Eye Murals
View the largest and most terrifying holes in our Universe.
911Aerial
Surveillance Photos
View this amazing town with their more amazing road sign
A330 Air France photo with
passengers being sucked
out of the gaping hole in the plane
Homeland Security Warnings.
"When its was not your
time to die"
Your homeland security at work for you
Are you safer in a 1959 Chevy or 2009 Chevy
Barry
the Fishermen
Airplane
Disasters with Airline Humor
The Family Grizzly
knows but did you know?
Advice for InfoJustice Readers
One day since Obamacare
of March 21, 2010=
$12,405,962,943,990-US
National Debt
Eight
days since Obamacare=$12,703,125,187,720,18
45 days since Obamacare=$12,835,321,207,657.37
218 days since
Obamacare=$13,623,275,060,280.12
663 days since
Obamacare=$15,228,709,802,653
and climbing
910
days since Obamacare=$16,888,545,617,999
and climbing
exponentially
national debt
|
HAPPY SAINT
PATRICK'S DAY
For over one thousand years the Irish have celebrated this
day. Yet when it comes to the St. Patrick's Day Parade, this day, its
parade and its heritage are celebrated by all patriotic Americans. Heck,
maybe you did not know that the first St. Patrick's Day parade took place
not in Ireland, but "right cheer" in the
good only US
of
A. Back on March 17, 1762, Irish soldiers serving in the English
military marched through New York City. Along
with their music, the parade helped the soldiers to reconnect with their Irish
roots, as well as fellow Irishmen serving in the English army.
From 1762 through the early 1790's Irish patriotism among American immigrants
flourished, prompting the rise of so-called
"Irish Aid" societies, like the Friendly
Sons of Saint Patrick and the Hibernian
Society. Each group would hold annual
parades featuring bagpipes (which actually
first became popular in the Scottish and
British armies) and drums.
Finally, in 1848,
several New York Irish aid societies decided
to unite their parades to form one New York
City St. Patrick's Day Parade. Today, that
parade is the world 's oldest civilian
parade and the largest in the United States,
with over 150,000 participants. Each year, nearly three million people
line the one-and-a-half mile parade route to
watch the procession, which takes more than
five hours. Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia,
and Savannah also celebrate the day with parades including between 10,000 to
20,000 participants.
Further St. Patrick was one of the first successful
missionaries which has set faithful missionaries on a path of study to
learn how St. Patrick dealt with his trials and tribulations prior to setting
out on their own quest to bring the "word" to the people. Of course St.
Patrick is most famous for eliminating all the "snakes (evil ones)" from Ireland and much
much more. Patriots especially appreciate that the
value our founding father placed on St. Patrick. For on March 17, 1776, the day that British
forces under General
Sir William Howe evacuated
Boston during our
American Revolutionary War,
the password of the day at
General
George
Washington's
Continental Army encampment was
"Saint Patrick"! "And
you just can't make this kind of stuff up."
"Top of the morning to you all", and may all
folks have a
terrific, thought provoking, and happy, St. Patrick's day. |