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"Duty and Honor" received extremely positive reviews from critics. Eric Goldman of IGN gave the episode a "great" 8 out of 10 and wrote, "Phillip may have a son with Irina! That was a hell of a thing for him (and us!) to learn, though by the end of the episode, he was unsure whether it was the truth. I feel like it was though...
Duty and Honor debuted at number four at the Hardcover Fiction category, as well as number seven on the Combined Print & E-Book Fiction [3] category of the New York Times bestseller list for the week of July 3, 2016. In addition, it debuted at number six at the USA Today Best Selling Books list for the week of June 23, 2016.
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "'Mutually Assured Destruction' is far from a bad episode of The Americans, but it feels like one that will be better appreciated as part of the whole season rather than as a standalone hour airing in the week between 'Duty and Honor' and whatever's coming next week."
The school's “Duty, Honor, Country,” motto first made its way into that mission statement in 1998. WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) — “Duty, Honor, Country” has been the motto of the U.S. Military ...
Where there is suffering, there is duty. Americans in need are not strangers; they are citizens—not problems but priorities. And all of us are diminished when any are hopeless.
Kayla Gattis never thought she'd join the army; she's a liberal who deplores war. She remembered the kids in high school who took their obsession with the military a little too far, their machismo and thirst for violence a constant source of annoyance for the now 24-year-old recruit.
The Americans is an American television drama series created by Joe Weisberg, which premiered on January 30, 2013, on the cable network FX. Set during the Cold War period in the 1980s, The Americans is the story of Elizabeth (Keri Russell) and Philip Jennings (Matthew Rhys), two Soviet KGB officers posing as U.S. citizens and a married couple. [1]
However, honor cultures were and are widely prevalent in Africa [14] and many other places. Randolph Roth, in his American Homicide (2009), states that the idea of a culture of honor is oversimplified. [15] He argues that the violence often committed by Southerners resulted from social tensions.