Yes, I refer to our healthcare system, a.k.a.sickcare because in America sickness is profitable and health is not, and healthcare profiteering that would be the envy of pirates and warlords everywhere is the norm. One of the more remarkable characteristics of American life is our passive acceptance of systems that are so obviously completely insane. The shackles of this new serfdom are invisible, but no less destructive for being invisible. He started with the Department as a cadet in December 2002. Senior Trooper Matthew Schoenadel is a ten year veteran of the Maryland State Police. The baby was transported to Western Maryland Health System by ambulance. The infant began to breathe and soon regained color in his face. He immediately turned the baby on his stomach to clear the baby’s airway. S/TPR Schoenadel arrived on the scene and found the baby with his eyes rolled back in his head, pale and not breathing. from a woman who said her grandson was not breathing. In October 2014, Senior Trooper Matthew Schoenadel performed life saving measures on an infant along I-68 in Cumberland after the barrack received a call at 7:40 a.m. Police believe the individual parked a car under the bridge and then climbed a nearby bank to gain access to the road deck. The individual looked away from the bridge for a brief moment when S/TPR Schoenadel was able to take quick action and place the individual in protective custody. S/TPR Schoenadel engaged the individual in conversation and explained that he was there to help. The individual was obviously distraught and very upset. S/TPR Schoenadel immediately activated his emergency equipment on his marked patrol car to block lane one and protect the individual from being struck by traffic. Yesterday morning around 11:30 a.m., S/TPR Schoenadel arrived on the scene to find an individual standing along lane one, staring over the Clarysville Bridge. Last October, he saved the life of a baby on the side of the road. Senior Trooper Matthew Schoenadel saved the life of an individual who may have been contemplating a jump over the Clarysville Bridge on westbound I-68 in Frostburg yesterday morning. This time it included the Space Force Hymn.(Frostburg, MD) A Maryland State Trooper assigned to the Cumberland Barrack strikes again, saving yet another life along I-68 in Western Maryland. The Medley was also played at the July 4th, 2020 Second Salute to America event (that took place at the South Lawn of the White House).
![un armed forces medley un armed forces medley](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/11/ef/e5/11efe55874f77c76aa4e7b804d572408.jpg)
The Medley was performed at the 2019 Salute to America event, an Independence Day event at the National Mall.
![un armed forces medley un armed forces medley](https://c8.alamy.com/comp/PAEFND/chief-warrant-officer-3-russell-j-houser-leads-the-82nd-airborne-division-band-in-the-armed-forces-medley-at-the-us-central-command-change-of-command-ceremony-at-macdill-air-force-base-fla-march-30-2016-defense-secretary-ash-carter-officiated-the-change-of-command-ceremony-which-attracted-more-than-1000-attendees-including-joint-chiefs-of-staff-chairman-us-marine-gen-joseph-f-dunford-central-commands-component-commanders-community-leaders-and-senior-coalition-representatives-us-air-force-photo-by-senior-airman-ned-t-johnston-PAEFND.jpg)
Since then the Medley has become a common fixture in many band and orchestra concerts within the United States as a way to honor the active servicemen and women, reservists and veterans of the Armed Forces and the National Guard Bureau. The more recent six part Medley was first performed in public during the first National Memorial Day Concert in 1990 on the west lawn of the United States Capitol Building in the national capital, Washington, D.C., aired as in today by the PBS network and played for the first time by the National Symphony Orchestra, backed by a civil chorus and military choirs from the United States Armed Forces. Commercially released in 1972, the medley was used extensively during the 1975/6 USA bicentennial celebrations and became known as a song in its own right, with the later addition of Semper Paratus ('Always Ready'), for the Coast Guard. Marines !", and titled the work 'Armed Forces Medley'. He drew from only 4 services and ended his work with a characteristic grand finale "Army. In other circumstances, the medley is to be played in reverse order of precedence, starting with The Army Goes Rolling Along.ĭerric Johnson was the creator of the first medley of US armed forces songs. The medley is usually played in increasing order of precedence: The Armed Forces Medley, also known as the Armed Forces Salute is today recognized as a collection of the official marchpasts/songs of the 6 services of the United States Armed Forces: Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard, and as of 2020 the Space Force. The United States Marine Drum and Bugle Corps performing the Armed Forces Medley at the Friends of the National World War II Memorial.