"What're you doing with that peanut butter son."
"What're you doing with that peanut butter son."
It was done all the time in Afghanistan. It makes things much easier to coordinate at night and helps with potential blue on blue issues.
Usually used to hold IR glowsticks for IFF purposes.
IR/normal glowsticks for id purposes while training. I always found it stupid, train as you fight, especially if the enemy has night vision capabilities you wouldnt be using dumb ass glowsticks on the LAVs. I honestly cant remember if they made us do that in afghanistan, all I remember is things exploding all the time…
He does fantastically well on the technoloy and pretty much everything else... i just prefer a bit more 'plosions instead of melodrama. :p
Its that book any good? I quite enjoyed Birmingham's time travel ones but there weren't quite enough action in it for me, iirc...
Assuming we were at war with them:
The Shilka and it's son, the Tunguska... there is very little else that could make my heart stop as a helo pilot, than seeing either of them of the battlefield.
My little old 2 cents here. I'm 55, way older than most of you, and I served in the military during the Cold War, as well as lived with it before and after. And yes, I definitely feel 55 most of the time. Get off my lawn!
When I was in 4th grade, I became a kickball legend. I was playing 2nd base, with runners on 1st and 2nd base, with no outs. Anyway, up comes the opposing team captain and he kicks a screaming line drive right to me (out #1). I catch the ball chest high, center mass. I pivot slightly to my right and notice the the…
Um, no. Enterprise retired last year. The Nimitz has the First Navy Jack.
I was thinking more of Dr. Weir. And if they name the first ship the Event Horizon? I'm staying home, thankyouverymuch.
I screwed up; I accidentally read it in the voices of: