Weekend Open Thread

| May 15, 2020

Peace Officers Memorial Day is today, May 15. This day is similar in concept to Memorial Day, but for law enforcement. Federal, state, and local peace officers who died or became disabled in the line of duty are remembered. Tomorrow is Armed Forces Day.  Enjoy your weekend.

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5th/77th FA

1st

Sparks

Field Artillery, you are spotting today my man.

Commissioner Wretched

Woo hoo! Two more to get the unique TAH WOT Double Ace!

Combat Historian

I was a tad late with my M16 plotting board…

26Limabeans

You have the server in your closet dont cha?

Combat Historian

Second

Sparks

2nd

A Proud Infidel®™️

THIRD and Honorary First once again.

((((OVER))))

Commissioner Wretched

If the KoB has made his claim to first (eight weeks in a row now!), that must mean it’s time for the weekly trivia silliness. Enjoy, my friends! DID YOU KNOW…? Did a low-level CBS executive substitute for Walter Cronkite on the evening news in the 1960s? By Commissioner Wretched There are a few certainties in life, you know. Taxes, for example. No matter how hard you try to avoid them, everybody has to pay taxes. Death, sad to say, is also a certainty. The only sure thing I can tell you about life is, nobody gets out of it alive. Human stupidity is another certainty. While it may not be you or me, somebody out there is eventually going to pull some boneheaded stunt that makes all of us look bad. It’s bound to happen sooner or later. And then there’s trivia. You knew I was coming around to that, didn’t you? Trivia too is certain. There will always be the minutiae of life, and there will always be jokers like me who gather it together and make it available to you. And I’ll do that for you right now. Did you know … … two countries in South America are landlocked? Only the nations of Paraguay and Bolivia have no coastline on either the Atlantic or Pacific Oceans. Well, Bolivia did have a coast, but it was lost to Chile during the War of the Pacific from 1879 to 1884. Bolivia thus has no direct access to the Pacific Ocean and must rely on Chile or Peru to get their goods out. As for Paraguay, don’t fret for them; they have the Paraguay River, which empties into the Parana River. It’s not great for shipping goods, what with waterfalls and all, but it’s something, at least. (See why it’s a good idea to be friendly?) … venomous snakes kill more than 100,000 people every year? (You’d think that by now people would avoid them, but no …) … in 1920, Babe Ruth (1895-1948) hit more home runs by himself than were hit by the other American League teams?… Read more »

David

80%…. and close to a 50% divorce rate. Someone’s less tan candid here.

5th/77th FA

BAM BAM BAM BAM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

FIRE MISSION COMPLETE!!!! ANOTHER FIRST ON THE TAH FRIDAY WEEKEND OPEN THREAD FOR THE KING OF BATTLE…..THE KING OF FIRST!!!!!!!!!!! Secure the guns. Clam chowder, crab legs, with all the trimmings, including beverages of your choice on the King of Battle.

“…Oh Bunny you so fine, you made it to number 9

Gun Bunny …Gun Bunny!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

A personal SALUTE to all of my Brothers and Sisters in the LEO Community, past and present.

Green Thumb

I wonder if the False Commander “Phony” Phil Monkress (CEO of All-Points Logistics) recognizes this day and suggests other bestow praise and admiration for himself based on his false and felonious Law Enforcement claims?

Ex-PH2

Have you called and asked him if he misses you?

Green Thumb

I do.

They get pissed and either deny any knowledge of his bullshit or hang up the phone.

A multi-million dollar company hanging up the phone on individuals asking about their integrity and reputation.

A Proud Infidel®™

I bet that the False Commander “Phony” Phil Monkress (CEO of All-Points Logistics) is out blowing winos behind bus stops for spare change again.

Green Thumb

As we speak….

penguinman000

He’s probably getting sued for fraud and unjust enrichment again. His last case was all the way back in 2018.

https://www.leagle.com/decision/infdco20180802677

A Proud Infidel®™

Sounds like he’s about as ethical as Psul who borrowed $50K from his own Momma and defaulted on it via bankruptcy.

Roh-Dog

Smdh. One of these days The Queen of Battle will best the King, until that day; have a great weekend y’all!
Still 0 for 5 on my turkey tags, I have been enjoying the season tho. Saw a scarlet tanager this morning! The chickadees have been taking a liking to my ranch sunflower seeds.

David

We have been flooded with cardinals and hummingbirds… the mockingbirds, crows, and vultures are a given. Couple of red-headed woodpeckers, too – thankfully on my neighbor’s tree.

11B-Mailclerk

In my old neighborhood, a very large woodpecker discovered a neighbor’s antenna mast, with some sort of microwave horn on it.

That dang bird thought it was a radio shock-jock
BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRT!

All frackkin day.

Graybeard

I learned that they do that when they are asserting territorial rights and warning off other woodpeckers.

Annoying booty calls.

11B-Mailclerk

Yup

That bird was the punk with the earthquake stereo in his car, and the loose buzzing license plate.

Skyjumper

“One of these days The Queen of Battle will best the King….”

Roh-Dog, I’m with you on that.
Having been a grunt myownself, never cared much about “The Queen Of Battle” moniker until I read this.

” References to the queen of battle (or battles) continue to appear in doctrinal literature from the time of the First World War until today, and one of the most popular theories on the selection of the queen as symbol of our branch lies in the queen’s dominance of a chessboard, where she enjoys much more freedom of movement and mobility than any other piece. Her position as the most powerful piece on the board is indeed analogous to the role of the Infantry on the battlefield, and – like our branch – it is she who may well determine the final outcome. The king, on the other hand, is a vulnerable figure, and must rely upon others to protect him.”

Take that, GunBunny!! 😉

Just kidding, 5th/77th FA . (smile)
Had the arty boys save our bacon a few times…always appreciated them.

Congrats on the WOT “first”, brother!
Keep this up much longer and I’ll have to take off my socks to count your “firsts”.

5th/77th FA

Brothers Sky and Roh-Dog. It takes a Legion! Or in more modern terms, A Combined Arms Army or Brigade Combat Team. We are only as strong as our weakest link. And together we form an unbroken chain to bring the dam dam down on the bad guys. Having our Brothers and Sisters in Blues and undress whites to get us there helps a lot too. A Maine Boy, Adelbert Ames, as an Artilleryman, used his skillz to help Col Henry Hunt’s guns stop the Confederates in a “we didn’t get the word the attack was called off” assault on Malvern Hill in ’62. He used his infantry to support the New York Light Artillery holding back Ewells Johnny Rebs 1 Jul ’63 late afternoon/early evening assault on Bartow’s Knoll until, by then Gnrl Henry Hunt of the Artillery Reserve, Army of the Potomac, gathered up enough guns to stop the attack on Cemetery Hill cold that night. The ring of steel that the gunners did at Bastogne saved the troops til Patton turned the entire 3rd Army around and marched to the sound of the guns. My Pappy was pulling lanyards on an 8 incher during that fight. My personal favorite is the gunners of the 1st Bn 21st FA at Fire Base Falcon that fired mission in support of LZ-X-Ray. Those gun bunnies fired more than 18K rounds over a 53 hour period protecting Hal Moore’s Sky Soldiers from the NVA. They melted out a number of tubes during that fire mission. Reading Joe Galloway’s reports of that fight in the local papers back in Nov of 65 was one of the reasons why I volunteered for the Artillery 3 days after I graduated high school. One of our Cadre in AIT was with them then and we had a visit from Moore right before graduation. I never pulled a lanyard to fire a shot in anger in this lifetime, but I’m sure I did in a former one. It is troops such as these, and the ones on this board that actually were “on a hill, over yonder,”… Read more »

rgr769

I learned most of my arty skills from my corporal FO in the Viet of the Nam. He taught me how to adjust fire be sound, something they don’t teach at Infantry School. After a month or so of time in the Bush, I became pretty proficient, what with having to shoot in our Delta Tangos every night for each new NDP. Of course, my FO was supervising every fire adjustment to make sure I didn’t make a mistake. Our only close call was when the FDC screwed up and almost blew us off a hilltop one night. You see, we were atop a mountain ridge and the arty guns were in a valley at a much lower elevation. The FDC neglected to calculate high angle, and the first HE shot out went about ten feet over our heads and hit a knoll about 75 yards outside my perimeter.

5th/77th FA

rgr769 that proud member of the E4 mafia prolly kicked somebody’s ass FIRST chance he had when he got to the FDC. Being a Soldier can be a dangerous profession. We had a butter bar set the fuse wrong during a fire for effect training mission in AIT, causing the round to explode in the tube of a 105mm when the lanyard was jerked. Killed the gunner, blew the legs off the assistant gunner, and the breech block took the head off the loader kneeling between the trails when it blew straight back. I was on the next gun in line watching for the fire signal when that happened. Thought that something didn’t look right when I fired our piece. Didn’t hear the screams til the last of the guns fired. I heard later that the butter bar suck started a 1911 not long afterwards.

26Limabeans

Been watching woodpeckers mate at the feeder.
They French kiss! Wrap their tongues around
each others, flap their wings and hump.

Yeah, this lock down has gone on way too long.

A Proud Infidel®™

Reminds me of this tale:

Two old trees, an Oak and a Maple had been growing next to each other for many decades. Over the course of one, they both noticed a sapling taking root and growing. The Oak said to the Maple “I bet you that’s a Son of a Birch” to which the Maple said, “NO, I bet you that’s a Son of a Beech” to which they argued for another five years. One day a Woodpecker landed in the Oak’s branches and the Oak asked him “Hey my friend, would you help my friend and I settle a bet?” The bird nodded yes. “See that young upstart over there? I think he’s a Son of a Birch while my friend thinks he’s a Son of a Beech, will you go over and see for us?” The Woodpecker went over there for a few, checked out the younger Tree and returned. The Oak asked “SO, is that a Son of a Birch or a Son of a Beech?” to which the Woodpecker licked his beak and replied “Neither, that’s the best little piece of Ash I ever stuck my pecker into!!!”

Thankyuhverymuch, don’t forget to tip the Veal and try the Waitress!!!

11B-Mailclerk

“Now there’s no more Oak Oppression, for they passed a noble law, and the Trees are all kept equal, by hatchet, axe, and saw.”

Ex-PH2

So, THAT’s what those two female red-bellied woodpeckers were gossiping about a few weeks ago? I figured as much.

A Proud Infidel®™

😀 XD

Fjardeson

Top 10?

The Other Whitey

Managed to add the tank’s antenna flag before she went into labor.

https://www.deviantart.com/yt45

5th/77th FA

Cool beaners TOW. I am honored that you chose to use a Cavalry Version of the Venerable St Andrews Cross (c 69 AD) Battle Flag of the Army of Northern Virginia. That design has been used by resistance fighters since St Andrew was crucified that way. That and in respect to the Scotch Heritage of Southerners were some of the reasons the design was used by the ANV Troops v the Original “Stars and Bars” FIRST National Confederate. I have the one that flew from my (step) son’s Bradley when he was in the Storm with C Troop (Company) 3/15th Inf 24th Mech. Most apropos since the Armored Cav (AKA Mobile Artillery) is generally a buncha rebels that inside on doing things their way. (Tanker boots, tanker cross draw shoulder holsters, ect ect)

I noticed, too, the addition of the hanging P-40 War Hawk (?) that wasn’t shown last week. Looking good! I see the PBY is still on the back burner. That design was back when proper long range or recon aircraft had the wings and motors properly attached…you know…before Big Navy f’ed up with that abomination that started using…for…reasons.

The Other Whitey

The PBY is long since done and hanging over my oldest girl’s bed. Same for my son’s P-40. I hope to wrap up my middle girl’s Hun over the next week or so, depending on newborn needs.

And I wish I could find it, but as a kid I saw a picture of a half-dozen Marines in Korea circa ‘51 holding a Rebel Flag on an improvised pole, M1s in hand and a “Don’t fuck with us” look on their faces. And every single one of them was black.

5th/77th FA

I’ve seen that pic and will try to find it somewhere. A quick Google Foo keeps hitting on the Marine General story about removing all things Confederate from Marine Bases. SCV National may be able to find it, we do a lot of research showing/documenting Black Confederates. Several very nice straightford books on that subject. That photo shopped picture of the punk dylan roof that murdered the good folks at the Church in Charleston caused more bad publicity for all things Confederate and lead to much more of the whole Heritage of War Memorials attacks.

Keep us updated on this and the progress of that precious little girl.

The Other Whitey

I never cared much for the Rebel Flag kerfuffle. If it’s the Stars & Bars (Confederate national flag), yeah, I would probably have a problem with that outside of a museum or re-enactment context. But not a Rebel Flag.

Why not? Because Americans have been rebels since 1775. That rebellious spirit made this nation. And besides, with the bullshit that was the Fugitive Slave Act, an argument could well be made that Union soldiers were rebels against big-money slaveholding interests, or that American liberty was rebelling against the Old World institution of slavery. I know, the War was vastly more complicated than that, with nobility and douchery on both sides, but the haters like to make it a black & white “South – slavery – bad” thing, so those arguments turn theirs rather nicely on its head. Then bring up Brigadier General Stand Watie and the Cherokee Rifles if you really want to see their heads spin!

11B-Mailclerk

Wait! The Noble Natives owned -slaves-?

Yup.

(Proggy kernel panic)

The Other Whitey

For another example, the Comanche had a long-standing practice of enslaving captives. They just didn’t call them slaves. They still did the scut work and were the property of the man who captured them. Pretty sure that checks all the “slave” boxes. And God help the “adopted captive” who tried to get away.

5th/77th FA

The FIRST Black Africans brought to the Virginia Colony were owned by…wait for it…a Black African. The African Slave trade always was the purview of the Arabs, selling same to the Portuguese, Dutch, and English. These Africans were taken captive by other Africans in various wars and raids amongst the African Tribes. The American Slave trade and ships were financed and built in New England and by New York business interest. Not a single African was brought into this Country by a ship flying any type of “Confederate Flag.” The institution was already rapidly dying a natural death leading up to the War and would have very shortly passed into the dustbin of History. All politics aside, less than 2% of the Confederate Soldiers owned slaves and did not consider themselves to be fighting to preserve it. Emancipation Proclamation freed no one in itself and Lincoln’s Master Plan was to ship them back to the Colony in Liberia. The EP did cause massive amounts of desertions ON BOTH SIDES when it was announced then passed and it led to the draft riots and the murder of Blacks in Noo Yawk City, among other places. The Carpetbaggers and Scalawags that took over the abandoned or overtaxed plantations after the war certainly took advantage of the sharecropper labor that was readily available.

Again, somewhere in the neighborhood of 1 million Americans died because of Kongress Kritters that would destroy the Country to maintain their grip on power. Our do nothing politicians of today are of the same ilk.

11B-Mailclerk

Oh come on. The South continued to import black folk during the blockade. The southern newspapers have the sale Announcements.

Slavery wasn’t “dying”. It was so much a part of the southern economy that it was a key item the the Confederate constitution.

One of the biggest arguments of the antebellum period was -expanding- slavery into the territories.

C’mon man. Own it. Simple reading of newspapers of the era shows I am right.

5th/77th FA

Very very few documented cases of importation into the South during the blockade, other, more highly demanded goods were on those ships. Importation into the US was outlawed in 1808 and, again, not many ships dared to cross the line of the British Man-O-War Ships that were fighting the international Slave Trade. Getting caught meant, punishment up to hanging, confiscation of the ship, and the releasing of the human cargo back to the whites in Africa as indentured servants.

Yes the slave auctions still were in business for the domestic slave trade and yes some of the territorial expansions were over whether a state would be slave or free. “Bleeding Kansas” is the most glaring example with it being proposed free, while the Nebraska Territory would allow slaves. One reason why NE wasn’t admitted til after the War. In many Northern States, Illinois Ohio and Indiana in particular, among others, it was against state law, for a long time, for blacks to even be allowed, free or slave, henceforth the underground railroad being a secret path most of the way to Canada. One reason for that was to keep the labor rates from being depressed. And that discrimination crossed onto other nationalities too.

Own It? Nope, my folks from back then didn’t own nobody. Human bondage is one of the worst terrors that mankind has dealt to one another. Our people were indentured from Ireland and Scotland for the most part and made their living as farmers and mechanics. Here’s a little linky with some more history that is a very interesting factual read;

https://www.abbevilleinstitute.org/review/slavery-in-the-confederate-constitution/

rgr769

What most folks consider to be the Confederate flag is not the National flag of the CSA. It is the Confederate battle flag, then known as “the starry cross.” There were three slightly different CSA national flags that most today would not recognize.

The Other Whitey

Exactly. The Starry Cross/Southern Cross/Rebel Flag is and always has been a symbol of American fighting spirit, often in defiance of unfavorable odds. It was flown by Americans at Shanghai, the Marne, and dozens of barely-remembered islands across the Pacific. It was flown by destroyers and subchasers, and by GIs in France and Italy. It was promptly hoisted by the Marines who stormed Shuri Castle on Okinawa, defied Red Chinese assaults in Korea, and decorated vehicles and boats in Vietnam. It led the charge into Iraq in two wars and let the Taliban know who was guarding dozens of outposts across Afghanistan. What does it represent? American troops, that’s what.

rgr769

Wholeheartedly agree. The fact that some yahoo’s like the biker gangs, the Klan, and some American Nazi groups use it doesn’t detract from its military history.

11B-Mailclerk

And the folks who claim “history” who fly one not square kinda punk themselves.

All the authentic antiques I have seen are square, or nearly so, at least those not shot to ribbons. Even most of those battle flag remnants show signs of a 45 degree cross, indicating “square”.

rgr769

All the Confederate battle flags were square. Thus, all those we used in re-enacting were likewise.

The Other Whitey

Strictly speaking, the ANV flag was square. The same design on a rectangular flag is the CS naval jack.

Toxic Deplorable Racist SAH B Woodman

Try using DuckDuckGo instead of anything Gaggle related. May get better (unbiased) results.

AW1Ed

Had a peek at DDG- no joy.

Yes, I do read the comments and lend a hand where I can.

Jeff LPH 3, 63-66

14th

Thunderstixx

Gazillionth…..
The first video played on MTV should have been this version !!!
I just love these guys !!!!!

Thunderstixx

Dammit…
This one !!!

Thunderstixx

Third time’s a charm….
ARRRRRGGGGHHHH !!!!

Thunderstixx

Well, we’ll go for this one….

Thunderstixx

DOOOOOOMMMMMEEEEEDDDDD !!!!!!

OWB

It may be real this time, stixx…

David

What a great set of…pipes.
Keep yer 72 virgins, 2 or 3 of that vintage will kill ya or cure ya. By the way, that was recorded at Bad Tolz. Real familiar name!

A Proud Infidel®™️

Furschingbarkerflapenflugenscheiss!!!

The Other Whitey

Polka Metal, eh? Not bad, not bad.

May I also offer some Metalachi?

https://youtu.be/BPDdceqhRJ0

SFC D

Dammit TOW, ya beat me to it! They blast Metalachi at Tucson Sugar Skulls games (indoor football).

26Limabeans

Love the lobster claw hat.

Thunderstixx

That is great too !!!
I’m used to listening to all the Mariachi bands coming out of all the Austin Low Riders.
Truly another classic version of a classic original !!!!

Eggs

I like their renditions of “Careless Whisper” w/ Dave Koz and “Sweet Child O’ Mine” w/Miche Braden.

Eggs

That’d be the Post Modern Jukebox crew. I find Hayseed Dixie amusing as well.

ChipNASA

I’m here fuckers.
5th/77th FA continues his reign of terror.
My 4-peat is a long distant memory.
Cheers bitches.
86 here in PRofMD, enjoying it some.
Been to the chiropractor twice this week and there is definite hope that the shingles in my bilateral leg pain will disappear in the coming week or two or three if I can go back and get adjustments to correct the nerve bundle inflammation.
Crossing my fingers.
Hope the rest of your well

5th/77th FA

Good to hear from you Chipster and the news of your improvements. We’ve had concerns. We will have to ask Claw for an official ruling, but this would make a fine # nine. Whether or not I can get to an unprecedented double ACE of FIRST remains to be seen.

No matter what happens, The King of Battle, will always be listed in the Coveted Book of FIRST as The FIRST ACE of FIRSTs and the FIRST to achieve ACE and 8s.

Fresh peaches will start shipping out from Georgia NLT FIRST thing Monday.

Graybeard

Hang in there brother. You’ll beat those shingles like 5th/77th beats his F5 key.

LC

Well, shit. It doesn’t happen often, but I think the Trump administration did something right for a change. While “Operation Warp Speed” was first mentioned a while ago, the management team was finally revealed, and includes Moncef Slaoui, formerly of GSK, as Chief Scientist and GEN Gustave Perna as COO. That seems like a good match, and far better than my initial fears that this would be another Kushner initiative.

https://www.politico.com/news/2020/05/15/trump-coronavirus-vaccine-development-team-260678

I think they’ll manage to balance the risk from shortening the otherwise incompressible human trials with the need for fast development, and while it’s not mentioned if they’re working with the Gates foundation on their mass production facilities, it at least has a lot in common with that on the logistical side. This is a strategic capability that’ll help the country, and the world, not just now, but as these types of outbreaks become more common.

AW1Ed

Who are you and what have you done with LC?
*grin*

Sapper3307

FIRST!
Change my mind, and I will drink.

Ex-PH2

Here’s the latest I could find on Elon Musk threatening to take Tesla out of California. I hope if he does so that he picks a state that needs jobs.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2020-05-11/elon-musk-threatens-to-take-tesla-factory-out-of-california-video

A Proud Infidel®™

He’s made the threat, now it’s deeds, not words!

Graybeard

FIRST in the hearts and minds of my grandkids – the two youngest cuties currently playing in my livingroom while their mother washes clothes here.

Still safe and healthy out in the GB compound.
Yellow Squash making – getting some big ones too. Took the first batch to the local homeless mission. We’ll have plenty in a day or two.
The rains have sure helped.

Beans coming along nicely – I ought to be full of them later this summer.

Tomatoes starting, still a week or two out from the first ones being ripe.

Okra growing & corn looking to tassel soon.

Hope y’all have a great weekend.

Ex-PH2

And it took until today to finally get weather that matches the season on the calendar.

That’s okay, I know it won’t last long. We’ll have snow before Hallowe’en this year, instead of on Hallowe’en. No wonder no one wants to do trick or treating any more in the Great Frozen North.

AW1Ed

Green Thumb

“Turd” Bolling (Ambassador Worldwide Protection Agency) offers a class in Weapons of Mass Destruction!

I love it.

If that is not your fancy, there are many more!

Sign up today!

http://www.awpa1.com/training.php

A Proud Infidel®™

I’ll take “Intro to Chemical Weapons” for naaaaah, total bullshit, Alex!

Sapper3307

Survival Spanish $69.95, I could have used that on CQ/SDNCO.

11B-Mailclerk

“Conversational drunk” is more useful.

HMCS(FMF) ret
Ex-PH2

Yeah, I found that on another website, and there is more to it than what is in that article. I’ve got something coming up for it tomorrow. But calling it a “lockdown” was the reportere’s idea, not Dr. Phillips’.

CavScoutCoastie

Long time no comment. I’m still around fortunately still employed in the Savannah area. For some reason I’ve been reading a lot of early history of the Pacific in WW2, especially the Philippines. For unknown stories, I recommend They Call It Pacific. Author was a journalist when Japan came through. He reports about the start from December 8th until he escaped from Corrigidor shortly after McArthur left. He talked to everyone from fleeing civilians and enlisted men to both American and Japanese generals. This was back when journalists still knew what country they were from.
Another is Guerrilla Wife. Written by the wife of a mining engineer who joined the Philippine resistance. They lived in the jungle for years. This is as much a survival story as anything. Both fascinating books telling stories from the worm’s eye view.

5th/77th FA

Welcome Home CSC. Wondered where you got off to. I’ll check those out, been wanting to get deeper into the Pacific side, had an uncle that did some of the island hopping, Army. Thanks.

Combat Historian

For history of the early Pacific War that is truly unknown or forgotten here in the U.S., check out Bruce Gamble’s book on the Japanese invasion of Rabaul in January 1942. The understrength Australian brigade of 1500 troops garrisoning Rabaul known as Lark Force was destroyed, and only about 350 men escaped after Australia staged its own mini-Dunkirk to rescue as many survivors as they could. Except for about a hundred officer POWs who were shipped off to prison camps in Japan, the remaining 1000-plus Aussies were killed in the initial battle, died in the interior of New Britain, or killed when the prison ship they were on was unknowingly sunk by a U.S. submarine in July 1942. This tale of woe rivals the tragedy of Bataan and Corregidor that happened a few months later…

https://books.google.com/books/about/Invasion_Rabaul.html?id=aDeDAwAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=kp_read_button

David

Check out “The Unknowns”, about the guys who first brought the Unknown Soldier back to the US after WWI. Lot of fruit salad on their chests, and not I-was-there. DSCs and MoHs galore. By Patrick O’Donnell.

marinedad61

I miss the weekly outing of fresh Stolen Valor phonies…
the initial responses, comebacks, and backlash,
and the resultant unraveling of their tales.. for ALL to see.

After all, the government offices may have slowed down this year,
but the phonies haven’t slowed down at all.

marinedad61

Anything brewing on any new phonies?
Old Phony Medal of Honor Fake Vietnam Veteran FRANK DUX
(Bloodsport, Jean Claude Van Damme movie)
is making the rounds on Facebook. Again.
https://militaryphony.com/2017/03/19/frank-william-dux-cold-case-getting-warmer/

A Proud Infidel®™

SOMETIMES you just gotta go full Ron Swanson, EXCEPT when it comes to coming across and Ex-Monster (*OOPS*, Ex-Wife) and if that were to happen to me I would summon Satan to take her to the corner of Hell where she belongs, to which “Old Scratch” would reply “*NOOOOO*, too evil…” and I’d be stuck with the damned thing yet again…

Cameron

The Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (Chinese: 台灣積體電路製造股份有限公司) or TSMC based in the Hsinchu Science Park, Hsinchu, Taiwan has been given the green light to construct a $12 billion plant in Arizona to compete with (as well as restrict the sell of) the People’s Republic of China’s Huawei. Looks like Taiwan may be seeing a new place in the world.

https://www.dailywire.com/news/trump-delivers-blow-to-china-with-announcement-that-taiwan-chip-maker-building-12-billion-u-s-plant

Combat Historian

It’s about time. Buying a Huawei product means paying the chicoms to hack and surveil you and ultimately sabotaging your own country…

All critical manufacturing needs to be brought home to the USA, and sharing the manufacturing load and working with our friends and allies like Free China Taiwan and ROK is the way to go. The diseased murdering chicoms can go screw…

Cameron

Amen Combat Historian.

Ex-PH2

Looks like Taiwan may be seeing a new place in the world. – article.

Oh, I do hope so!

NHSparky

Tornado watch at Casa de Sparky Western Annex last night?

Fuck 2020. For reals.

A Proud Infidel®™️

Has anyone heard any more about President Trump’s new deal with a Taiwanese computer chip manufacturer? It’s said that they’re going to build a plant in Arizona, the deal alone is a huge loogie in the face to COMMUNIST China!

Combat Historian

The biggest fattest loogie in the face of the chicoms would be if a newly re-elected President Trump flies to Free Taiwan on an official state visit, hold up the hand of ROC President Tsai Ing Wen in a victory handshake, and announce that the USA has reestablished full diplomatic ties with Free China Taiwan, agreed to a mutual security assistance treaty for the defense of Taiwan, and a free trade pact with Taiwan as the USA simultaneously revokes MFN trade status with the murdering chicoms. How’s that for a big fat FUCK YOU to the diseased chicom murderers of Peking…?

ArmyATC

Just saw this. A three part mini-series premiering on Memorial Day. It could be interesting.

https://play.history.com/shows/grant

HMCS(FMF) ret

DAMN! Busting it off in their ass!

FAKE NEWS IS NOT ESSENTIAL!

11B-Mailclerk

What if, instead, they just reported factual information in a neutral way?

A profession of reporting, not commentary.

Nah.

11B-Mailclerk

Oh snap! That was supposed to be in the Memory Hole.

The Founders dealt with endemic -Smallpox-, 30% fatal (best case), yet they didn’t put a pandemic exception in either the Constitution or the Bill of Rights.

Weird.

11B-Mailclerk

God bless ’em. The good ole boys of NASCAR are back!