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Bad Form.

There seems to be some sort of content filter on this system.

It flagged my first post, about a Navy SeAL in need of a bone marrow transplant, as 'inappropriate'.

Well, we'll see how effective this new information technology deals with some asymmetrical interference if they don't fix that in a hurry...

Until this type of site matures, it should go without saying to even fairly regular bloggers to stay away from these content aggregation sites until their full intentions and ways of doing business are well abused and established. Never trust your published works or other content [exclusively] to a site like this.



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Pass it on.

As a grand first post here for TownHall, let's make it a begging request to help a Navy SeAL.

Justin, whose last name is not being disclosed at the request of the U.S. Department of Defense, is a Navy SEAL and former Spotswood resident who was recently diagnosed with leukemia. The Navy is turning to Justin's hometown community to help him find a bone marrow stem cell donor who could save his life.

Justin is fairly well-known in the area. At Spotswood High School, he was president of his class, salutatorian and an accomplished athlete, competing in track, football and wrestling. Justin was captain of the wrestling team and became the first wrestler from Spotswood to reach the second round of the New Jersey State Wrestling Tournament. He then became a state district champion at 160 pounds.

After high school, Justin attended the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis and became a Navy SEAL in 2002. He was deployed twice and served a seven-month combat tour during Operation Iraqi Freedom, before returning to spend the past two years assigned to a special boat team in Mississippi.

Now 27 and recently married, Justin was diagnosed June 2 with acute lymphocyte leukemia, a fast-growing cancer that destroys the platelets and red and white blood cells. Without appropriate treatment, patients often die within months of the onset of the illness. Chemotherapy and radiation are usually the first line of defense.


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"When he was told that there was only a

30 percent chance of recovery, he replied,

'That's good. There was only a 10 percent

chance of me becoming a SEAL,'"

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Visit  http://www.dodmarrow.org/  for more info on becoming a donor.




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