USA Military - the finest in the world!

Bazza

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Oct 1, 2011
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New Smyrna Beach, Florida
A place to discuss our military prowess......

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More terrific footage of the Blue Angels laid down to Aerosmith's Sweet Emotion.

Footage comes c/o the Paul Crowder directed IMAX documentary The Blue Angels.

 
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I lived in Pensacola, FL for 14 years and that allowed me ample opportunities to see the Blue Angels, especially at the beach.
 
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US ARMY SGT. CODY LEGG was killed in action on June 4th, 2008, while serving a high value target mission for the US Army in Iraq. His mother, Buneva "Bunnie" Jacquay, carries on his legacy as his archivist and is also a trained peer mentor for military loss through an organization known as T.A.P.S: Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors. Ms. Jacquay reflects on her first time meeting Filmmaker Steven Grayhm and co-star Matt Dallas and how their film SHEEPDOG aims to honor her son's service and sacrifice.

SHEEPDOG in Select Theaters DECEMBER 2025 \ Nationwide January

 
To the woman at the airport who gently pulled her child closer when she saw my dog…

I noticed the pause.
The tightened grip.
The quiet question in your eyes.

You saw an 55-pound Blue Heeler — compact, powerful, steel-blue coat flecked with black, muscles coiled with purpose. He wore a tactical K9 vest, a military backpack resting beside him, his sharp eyes calm but constantly assessing. And fear made the decision for you.

I heard you whisper, “Is that dog safe?”

What you didn’t see was the life written into his posture.

His name is Ranger.

Ranger is a retired K9 who spent years working alongside U.S. service members, trained to detect threats in crowded, unpredictable environments just like this one. Airports. Terminals. Noise. Movement. Chaos. He learned to read danger before danger ever showed itself.

That intensity you noticed — the one that made him look tense or “on edge”?
It isn’t aggression.
It’s instinct refined by discipline.

And the scars beneath his coat?
They didn’t come from violence.
They came from duty — from standing his ground too close to an explosion while doing exactly what he was trained to do: protect people he would never meet.

You thought he was watching your child because he was dangerous.
He wasn’t.

He was doing what years of training taught him to do — scanning, observing, staying alert. Even in retirement, that instinct never truly fades. His body rests, but his mind still stands watch.

Ranger isn’t a threat.
He isn’t “just a dog.”
He’s a veteran.

He carried gear heavier than his own body. He worked long nights, loud terminals, and high-stress missions so others could walk freely and safely. He gave years of his life in service — without ever asking for recognition.

Now, all he wants is a quiet corner of the terminal, the familiar presence of his handler, and a place to stretch out until the next flight is called.

Next time, please don’t judge him by his size, his breed, or his intensity.
Ask his handler.
Look a little closer.

You might just meet a hero who walks on four legs —
and who still believes every human in that room is worth protecting.

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The best part of the event was the flyover, IMHO......

There were 8 planes in the flyover.

7 in formation and a trailing B1 showing off its afterburners.

The 7 in formation were: 1 B-1B, 2 F-15C, 2 F/A-18E, and 2 F-35C.

 
Just watched a segment with Fred on Finebaum. It was very good. If I can find it later I will post it.

Here's one from 4 years ago......

Fred Minnick was a photojournalist in Iraq before discovering his passion for bourbon. He tells TODAY's Craig Melvin how difficulty adjusting to civilian life led him to become a bourbon taste-testing expert who teaches others his four-point tasting method.

 

An American Airlines flight departing the Los Angeles International Airport turned into an emotional tribute when crew members surprised a veteran returning from his first trip back to Vietnam decades after surviving years as a prisoner of war.

U.S. Air Force veteran Bob Jeffrey and his wife, Jean, were aboard American Airlines Flight 2789 traveling from Los Angeles International Airport to Phoenix after visiting Vietnam for the first time since Jeffrey was released from captivity following the Vietnam War.

 

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Hiking Toward Healing, One Ruck at a Time​

Warrior Melvin Gatewood honors the fallen and manages his mental injuries in a unique physical way.

“Along the road of recovery, I was walking down the highway, and it got isolating,” said warrior Melvin Gatewood. “I wasn’t around any cars anymore, people weren’t blowing their horns, and those are times you find out why you are rucking when there is no encouragement, just you and your thoughts.”

Right foot, left foot, right foot, left foot, one foot in front of the other, repeat for mile after mile. Rucking started as a training exercise for Melvin when he served in the Army. These days, rucking — hiking or marching with a weighted vest or backpack — has become far more than a march to benefit his physical health. And on the highway to a healthier life, he’s not alone. Warriors Doing Hard Things, presented by Mojo, highlights amazing warrior stories of courage and resilience.

 

The reason America doesn't have the resolve to fight Nazis again is that we are starting to normalize the same things the Nazis stood for. We have met the enemy, and he is us.


1. Powerful, often exclusionary, populist nationalism centered on cult of a redemptive, “infallible”leader who never admits mistakes.
2. Political power derived from questioning reality, endorsing myth and rage, and promoting lies.
3. Fixation with perceived national decline, humiliation, or victimhood.
4. White Replacement “Theory” used to show that democratic ideals of freedom and equality are a threat.Oppose any initiatives or institutions that are racially, ethnically, or religiously harmonious.
5. Disdain for human rights while seeking purity and cleansing for those they define as part of the nation.
6. Identification of “enemies”/scapegoats as a unifying cause. Imprison and/or murder opposition and minoritygroup leaders.
7. Supremacy of the military and embrace of paramilitarism in an uneasy, but effectivecollaboration with traditional elites. Fascists arm people and justify and glorify violence as “redemptive”.
8. Rampant sexism.
9. Control of mass media and undermining “truth”.
10. Obsession with national security, crime and punishment, and fostering a sense of the nation under attack.
11. Religion and government are intertwined.
12. Corporate power is protected and labor power is suppressed.
13. Disdain for intellectuals and the arts not aligned with the fascist narrative.
14. Rampant cronyism and corruption. Loyalty to the leader is paramount and often more important than competence.
15. Fraudulent elections and creation of a one-party state.
16. Often seeking to expand territory through armed conflict.
 
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Palmer Luckey quotation:
Americans are so over war, they probably couldn’t be convinced even to fight the Nazis again:

“We burned all of the credibility built up during WWII — we burned most of it in Vietnam, and the rest of it in the Middle East.”

“You will not convince Americans to fight another war, even if it is just.”

“I don’t think the kids coming out of modern schools are ready to go die — look at the kids on the beaches in Normandy on D-Day. Do you think that we have a few million of those?”

We burned up all the credibility when all the guys who skipped out on Vietnam got invited back with open arms and the ones who went to war came home in caskets.

I'm not arguing the point of whether Carter was right or wrong to attempt to put Vietnam in the rearview mirror as much as possible. That's a separate discussion, and there are compelling reasons why he did it, but that's not my central point.

My ex-FIL in his 2003 obsession with Iraq War 2 really thought that the way Dubya could win the war was an overwhelming draft of soldiers to end it. I was active duty at the time and pointed out two things to him that he didn't want to hear: 1) the military doesn't want a draft because all you get is problems; 2) once amnesty was given the draft evaders in Vietnam, the marker was laid down. He lost his mind, stuck in his 1965 mentality that life was as simple as "you get drafted and go or you go to jail."

Plus....I'll admit I'm not as detailed on WW2 history as you are, but the way I learned it in class, we were (for the most part) trying to stay out of "the Big One" until the attack on Pearl Harbor. With the exception of the 9/11 attacks, pretty much every military venture we've made post-WW2 - Korea, Vietnam, Gulf 1 and 2 and some minor things - were more cases of us just doing whatever as opposed to reacting to an attack.
 
Some went to Vietnam and served gallantly
Some went to Vietnam and served poorly
Some evaided the draft legally
Some evaded the draft illegally (fake bone spurs etc)

Except for the boomers that lived through Vietnam and the draft, its hard to understand completely what most went through.
 
Some went to Vietnam and served gallantly
Some went to Vietnam and served poorly
Some evaided the draft legally
Some evaded the draft illegally (fake bone spurs etc)

Except for the boomers that lived through Vietnam and the draft, its hard to understand completely what most went through.


Yes and no.

To add onto what I’m saying, this country has run nine guys for President and VP that were of prime age in Vietnam.

The three guys who went to the war all lost: Gore, Kerry, McCain.

The draft dodger (Clinton), deferments guys (Trump, Biden, Cheney) and the rich guys hiding in the Guard (Quayle, W) all won.

On top of which the draft dodger beat a decorated Navy pilot from the popular war in 1992.
 
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I'm not sure if the original thread should have been on NSNP or if yall should start a new thread for this line of discussion. Either way, yall really hijacked the original thread.
 
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