[76351] in Daily_Rumour

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[QUIZ] Which Ugly Plant Dissolves Thick Arm Fat?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Urgent Report)
Sat Nov 4 10:00:06 2023

Date: Sat, 4 Nov 2023 13:45:56 +0000
From: "Urgent Report" <Opennow@jemswins.social>
Reply-To: "Urgent Report" <Opennow@jemswins.social>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>

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<body data-gr-ext-installed="" data-new-gr-c-s-check-loaded="8.908.0" data-new-gr-c-s-loaded="8.908.0"><a href="http://jemswins.social/dxV3UW-Csa0oe44coy5RTAwxTAPW0bwXfzOxV0Jhe6YPjuKI"><img border="0" src="http://jemswins.social/IdtTVta0qWv2s7Ai6WPD9rK2wjElxfWnYE_zQd8XnL4p4T4X" /> </a>
<div class="email-box" id="copy-em2" style="width:500px">&nbsp;
<p>You <em><strong>eat healthy all day... spinach, chicken and broccoli</strong></em>.</p>

<p>You try all the diets... keto, paleo and vegan.</p>

<p>You&#39;re hungry, you&#39;re tired.</p>

<p>But every morning, your weight never changes.</p>

<p>Until you try this...</p>

<p>A newly discovered bizarre <a href="http://jemswins.social/2XfbUL4f-rxv3amJ4zvcjmwrwok5gU5A9ASLAUVjaRsug0Mr"><u>tropical fat-dissolving loophole</u></a> that has NOTHING to do with <strong>dieting or exercise</strong>... (in fact eating your favorite foods is recommended!)</p>

<p>Jason Mitchell age 43, <strong>dissolved 52 lbs</strong> with this loophole.</p>

<p>Cheryl age 54 from Memphis, <strong>dissolved 29 lbs</strong> of fat with this loophole.</p>

<p>And once I saw the fat melt away for me too, I had to share it with you.</p>

<p><a href="http://jemswins.social/2XfbUL4f-rxv3amJ4zvcjmwrwok5gU5A9ASLAUVjaRsug0Mr"><strong><u>==&gt; One Tropical Loophole Dissolves Fat Overnight</u></strong></a></p>

<p>To your amazing health,<br />
Emma Mervin</p>

<p><strong>PS.</strong> This incredible fat-dissolving loophole had been hidden for centuries by a small number of families on a remote Vietnamese island, try it for yourself <a href="http://jemswins.social/2XfbUL4f-rxv3amJ4zvcjmwrwok5gU5A9ASLAUVjaRsug0Mr"><u>here</u></a>.</p>

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<!-- The Group carries out global special operations tasks as an Air Force component of the United States Special Operations Command. It conducts infiltration/exfiltration, combat support, helicopter and tilt-rotor aerial refueling, psychological warfare, and other special missions. It directs the deployment, employment, training, and planning for squadrons that operate the AC-130W, MC-130J, CV-22B, U-28A and MQ-9, and provides operational support to flying operations.

During the Second World War, its predecessor unit, the 27th Bombardment (later Fighter) Group fought in the Pacific Ocean and Mediterranean, Middle East and African theatres. Its ground personnel fought as infantry in the 1941–1942 Battle of Bataan with the survivors being forced to march as prisoners in the Bataan Death March. Later, its air echelon was awarded five Distinguished Unit Citations and a Philippine Presidential Unit Citation. The airmen of the 27th were among the most decorated USAAF units of the war.
History

On 1 February 1940, the United States Army Air Corps activated the 27th Bombardment Group (Light) at Barksdale Army Airfield, Louisiana and equipped it with the Douglas B-18 Bolo Light bomber aircraft. The group consisted of the 15th, 16th and 17th Bombardment Squadrons. In October 1941 the group moved to Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia, less the 15th Bombardment Squadron, which was reassigned to V Air Support Command on 14 October. On 21 October 1941 the group was ordered to the Philippine Islands in response to the growing crisis in the Pacific.
World War II
Philippine Campaign 1941–1942
Memorial Plaque at Andersonville NHS

Arriving at Fort William McKinley in the Philippines on 20 November, the 27th BG (L) readied itself for delivery of its A-24 Dauntless aircraft. Concern grew as days turned into weeks and still the planes had not arrived. When the Imperial Japanese Army attacked the Philippines on 9 December 1941, the situation had not changed. Unknown to the 27th BG (L) Airmen, to avoid capture or destruction, the ship carrying the planes was diverted to Australia when the war escalated.

On 18 December Major John H. Davies, 27th BG (L) commander, and an aircrew of 20 flew from Clark Field on Luzon in two B-18s and one Douglas C-39 of Transport Command to Tarakan Island in the Dutch East Indies to Darwin Australia arriving on 22 December. Flying from Darwin, the group arrived in Brisbane on 24 December to pick up their A-24s off the ship USAT Meigs. However, as a swift Japanese advance prevented his group from returning to the Philippines, the air echelon of the 27th was ordered to operate from Brisbane.

The ground echelon of the 27th still in the Philippines was evacuated south from Luzon on 25 December to the Bataan Peninsula, arriving to form the 2nd Battalion (27th Bombardment Group) Provisional Infantry Regiment (Air Corp). For the 99 days following the attack on Pearl Harbor until their surrender to the Japanese after the Battle of Bataan, the men of the 27th BG became the only Air Force unit in history to fight as an infantry regiment, and were the only unit to be taken captive in whole. After surrendering, they were forced to endure the infamous Bataan Death March. Of the 880 or so Airmen who were taken, less than half survived captivity.

However, a number of officers and enlisted men of the 27th Bomb Group were evacuated out of the Philippines in five U.S. Navy submarines just before it was overrun by the Japanese during April. USS Seawolf, USS Seadragon, USS Sargo, USS Swordfish and USS Spearfish, on the night of 3 May 1942 managed to sneak into Manila Bay and evacuate American personnel from Corregidor to Java and Fremantle, Western Australia.
Dutch East Indies and New Guinea Campaigns 1942
Group A-24 Dauntless dive bomber

In Australia, the escaped airmen and aircraft of the 27th Bomb Group reformed into a combat unit. In early 12 February pilots of the 91st Sqdn flew their A-24's with gunners from Brisbane to Malang Java in the colonial Dutch East Indies to defend the island. The group participated in an attack on the Japanese invasion fleet landing troops on Bali. The attacks, carried out during the afternoon of 19 February and throughout the morning of 20 February, caused little damage and all air operations that day failed to halt the landings. The group was credited with the sinking of a Japanese cruiser and a destroyer. From 27 February through 1 March, three A-24's of the 91st Sqdn participated in Battle of the Java Sea. The remaining pilots and gunners of the 27th Bomb Group were flown out to Australia in early March, consolidating with the 16th and 17th Squadrons which had moved from Brisbane to Batchelor Airfield in the Northern Territory. For their heroic efforts in the Philippines and the Southwest Pacific during late 1941 and early 1942, the 27th Bombardment Group (Light) received three Distinguished Unit Citations (DUC).

On 25 March, Davies and the surviving 27th Bomb Group personnel, consisting of 42 officers, 62 enlisted men and 24 A-24s, were reassigned on mass to the four squadrons of the 3d Bombardment Group at Charters Towers Airfield in Queensland, Australia. The remaining A-24 aircraft were added to the 8th Bombardment Squadron. On 4 May, the 27th Bomb Group was officially inactivated.

(Davies was appointed CO of the 3rd BG, and senior pilots from the 27th BG became commanders of the 8th, 13th and 90th Squadrons respectively. Over the next 21 months they flew combat missions over the Philippines, New Guinea and Rabaul. Among many other operations, the 3rd BG played a leading role at the Battle of the Bismarck Sea.)
European-African-Middle Eastern Theater
North African Campaign

On 4 May the 27th Bombardment Group (Light) was reactivated without personnel or equipment at Hunter AAF, Georgia. At Hunter, the group was re-manned and re-equipped with the Douglas A-20 Havoc light bomber. After additional training in Mississippi and Louisiana, on 26 December the group was transferred to Ste-Barbe-du-Tlelat Airfield, Algeria to enter combat in North Africa with Twelfth Air Force.

Maintenance and support personnel went by sea to North Africa while aircrews and the A-20s flew to South America then across to North Africa, In North Africa, the A-20s were sent to other groups and the 27th Bomb Group was redesignated as the 27th Fighter-Bomber Group and reequipped with the North American A-36 Invader dive bomber. The 27th FBG flew its first combat missions of the war  -->
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