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The patch was worn by air force troops who participated in the raid on the prison camp in North Vietnam. The inscription "KITD/FOHS" refers to the fact that the air force support elements were not privy to much of the information about the raid; hence, "kept in the dark/fed only horse shit." This statement is also alluded to in the design of a pair of worried eyes peeking out from under a mushroom.
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This is the meaning behind the patch that Karen was trying to share with Gunz Up. I was able to trace it down through Google, Karen. It wouldn't load and the link wouldn't link from my email, so it's taken me a while to figure it out, but the two following links are good. I've added Vetshome.com to our links and this "patches history" part of it is great! Thanks! You're always a good one to be on watch-out for neat places on the web.
BTW: ARE YOU GETTING ANY CLOSER TO A TEST FOR US?
HERE ARE THE LINKS: PATCHES
AND VETSHOME.COM
1 comment:
Interesting, I always had an interest in military patches growing up, my father is a 1st Cav veteran that fought in 'Nam and he gave me one with a horses head, a black stripe that runs diagonally across it with a yellow back ground...
Said it meant: The horse head is for the horse they couldn't ride, the stripe for the river they couldn't cross...
I had actually collected a few growing up. Never heard of this one. Pretty cool.
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