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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 9:14:09 PM   
thompsonx


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quote:

thompsonx: His job is firewatch and not welder so it would appear that you learned your military discipline from someone who had little. Inductive Fallacy.

WRONG. You argued that he abandoned his post. In order for him to do that, he'd have to leave the welder unattended.


No he abandoned his post by leaving his fire extinguisher unattended when he picked up the torch and started welding.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 9:17:31 PM   
thompsonx


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quote:

thompsonx: As for your squid daddy serving six tours in viet nam that is clearly misleading. If your squid daddy was a frog or a seal,as you claim, he would have been serving 6 month tours with no less than six months out of country between tours. This would mean he only did three years.

The only person being misleading is you, here's why.

A combat tour is a combat tour, regardless of how many months they did that combat tour. And no, they weren't always six months. Navy deployments range from three to nine months.


Squid seal tours were all six month tours. Look it up for fucks sake.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 9:19:49 PM   
thompsonx


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quote:

Marine deployments range from 6 months and up.


Wrong again...marine tours in viet nam were 13 months

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 9:23:40 PM   
thompsonx


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quote:

Every branch of the service gives their deployed service members the opportunity to extend their deployments. Did you get that? EXTEND their deployments. My dad loved being in the field, he was active, and enjoyed doing combat missions. He hated the shore duty/garrison arrangement. His heart was in the field. He wasn't satisfied with just doing the minimum tour, he talked about how he extended some of his deployments.


A standard squid seal platoon is 16 men they rotate in and out as a platoon.
Keep dancing young man

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:02:14 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

Back from Iraq for a short time?

You started this never-ending thread on May 5th.


"Remember, I'm going to reply to this thread after I come back from Iraq. Or, will I even wait that long? Here's something you'd "love" to hear:" -- herfacechair

I said that back in May. We came back towards the end of June, I came back to collarchat and replied to people shortly afterward. Notice how this thread jumps from May15/16 to June 22. Thanks for showing us that abstract reasoning isn't one of your strong points.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:03:16 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jeffff


quote:

ORIGINAL: herfacechair

I wasn't kidding when I said that I'll meet a poster here face to face.



By the cannon? After school?


Early in this thread, I told people that I was going to meet a collarchat poster. I also offered to have here come here to verify that I am who I said I am. She came to the base to pick me up. I showed her my LES, which had deployment related pays like hostile fire pay. Now you know for a fact that I’m in the military. After another Iraq Veteran came here to vouch for me, and now Aylee’s post, anybody that tries to insinuate that I’m a “poser,” or “not” the real thing is a liar.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:04:33 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: EbonyWood

quote:

ORIGINAL: herfacechair

I come on here once a day to reply to the drivel that people post in response to me. Then I leave and go somewhere else. I don't jump back in as another username to deal with you people's drivel on the other threads.


Reading Comprehension Fail + Stawman Argument

Completely refuted by your own comments about being aware of what is posted on all the other threads.

Can you type without lying? You keep tripping over them.

Reading Comprehension Fail + Stawman Argument


If anybody is lying, it's you. See the bolded red statement? I added that back into the quote. That statement would've prevented you from farting the above statement.

You claimed that I leave this thread, and post on the other threads under a different name. What my statement is saying is that after I post on this thread, I go somewhere else, OUTSIDE of collarchat. Pardon me for assuming that you were capable of understanding simple English. Either that, or you're going out of your way to pull shit out of your ass.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:05:33 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jeffff

I'll bet his lips move as he reads this.


That's a bet that you'd lose. I'm a speed reader, I read these posts with my eyes only.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:08:23 PM   
herfacechair


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thompsonx: Here is someone who disagrees with your assessment of asymetrical warfare

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymmetric_warfare


Are you fucking kidding me? A Wikipedia article? Wikipedia is NOT a credible, or valid source, and whoever wrote that article is slightly off target.

That WIKIPEDIA article is WRONG. I'm an infantryman, fighting wars is our profession. Your WIKIPEDIA article misses the target on what constitutes asymmetrical warfare. You do realize that anybody could edit a Wikipedia article, do you? I guess not. I know what constitutes asymmetrical warfare, and what doesn't. THIS is what you should read:

Unrestricted Warfare, by Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui:


http://www.c4i.org/unrestricted.pdf

What they wrote scratches the surface of the type of war that we're fighting. There's a big difference between what they describe, and what your Wikipedia article talks about.

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

From the cite
Representative list of asymmetric wars
Below is a representative list of interstate asymmetric wars fought between 1816 and 1945:[9]

Franco-Spanish War, First Anglo-Burmese War, Second Russo-Persian War, War of the Cakes, First Anglo-Afghan War, Uruguayan Dispute, Austro-Sardinian War, First Schleswig-Holstein War, Second Anglo-Burmese War, Anglo-Persian War, Italo-Roman War, Two Sicilies, Franco-Mexican War, Second Schleswig-Holstein War, Anglo-Abyssinian War, Anglo-Egyptian War, Tonkin War, Franco-Siamese War, Second Italo-Ethiopian War, Second Boer War, Sino-Russian War, Tripolitanian War, Franco-Turkish War, Polish Revolution, Italo-Ethiopian War, Sino-Japanese War, German-Polish Confrontation of World War II, German-Danish Confrontation of World War II, German-Norwegian Confrontation of World War II, German-Belgian Confrontation of World War II, German-Dutch Confrontation of World War II, Italo-Greek Confrontation of World War II, German-Yugoslav Confrontation of World War II


Every single one of those wars fall under the symmetrical warfare category, NOT asymmetrical warfare. In every single one of those conflicts, the combatants were recognizable, and their tactics, even if it were unorthodox, were recognizable as war tactics. Using frontiers warfare in North America during the Revolutionary War, or fighting tribes in Africa, didn't constitute asymmetrical warfare. That was a simple case of two different tactics being used... Frontiers Warfare in North America versus fighting in the open field in Europe. Fighting as African tribes against Europeans fighting open plain warfare. American Indians fighting as they do against other tribes when they fight the Europeans, and later the Americans. Going from conventional to guerrilla... that's happened throughout history, these are conventional tactics. Again, you knew who the hostile was, and even if their fighting tactics weren't like yours, you recognized it as a fighting tactic. That's conventional warfare.

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

And this

The use of terrain in asymmetric warfare
Terrain can be used as a force multiplier by the smaller force and as a force inhibitor against the larger force. Such terrain is called difficult terrain.

The contour of the land is an aid to the army; sizing up opponents to determine victory, assessing dangers and distance. "Those who do battle without knowing these will lose." ― Sun Tzu, The Art of War


That's not using terrain in an asymmetrical warfare sense, but in a conventional sense. Whenever you're doing field problems, or conducting combat operations, you always consider the terrain. Whenever we're doing defensive operations, we do our best to make the land work best for us, and against the enemy. This includes emplacing mines and other types of obstacles to funnel the enemy, scatter the enemy, or stop them so that we could mass fires on them.

Using the contours of the land is a no brainer, that's not something that's out of the ordinary. You always use the land to hide from the enemy. You don't skyline yourself by walking on top of a hill when you could hide yourself by walking behind it. You travel within the forest, and walk around forest clearings so that you stay in the forest. Using terrain to your advantage is a SYMMETRICAL warfare tactic. It's a CONVENTIONAL tactic.


quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

The guerrillas must move amongst the people as a fish swims in the sea. ― Mao Zedong.


Not shit! Moving without being detected, all combatant elements must do that so that they don't draw enemy fire! Again, that's conventional warfare.

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

A good example of this type of strategy is the Battle of Thermopylae, where the narrow terrain of the valley was used to alter the odds by funneling the Persian forces, who were numerically superior, to a point where they could not use their size as an advantage.


Like I said in my previous post, this was a common strategy that we'd still use today against another conventional force. You either funnel the enemy into the kill zone, you could divert them to where they'd end up in an ambush, or subject to mortar, artillery, and automatic fire, or you set the terrain up to scatter them, or halt their movement. These are conventional HENCE symmetrical warfare tactics.

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

For a detailed description of the advantages for the weaker force in the use of built-up areas when engaging in asymmetric warfare, see the article on urban warfare.


This is another example of conventional warfare. Urban warfare is the predominant form of warfare in Iraq.

Throughout that article, the author focused on one definition, a weaker force going against a stronger force. This happens in both, symmetrical warfare and asymmetrical warfare. In the article's examples, however, they all involve both sides using military tactics. Military tactics that are traditional military tactics.

Asymmetrical warfare, on the other hand, involves the use of tactics that people won't see as military tactics. Asymmetrical warfare is a change in paradigm, one that people don't always see in the beginning. The two Chinese generals scratch the surface of asymmetrical warfare up as it applies to the 21st Century:

"Whether it be the intrusions of hackers, a major explosion at the World Trade Center, or a bombing attack by Bin Laden, all of these greatly exceed the frequency bandwiths understood by the American military....This is because
they have never taken into consideration and have even refused to consider means that are contrary to tradition and to select measures of operation other than military means" Col. Qiao Lian and Col. Wang Xiangsui, Unrestricted Warfare, 1999.

In the book Unrestricted Warfare, these two Colonels interchange the U.S. military with the United States and the West.

Do you see the bolded red statement? That's the CRUX of our argument on asymmetrical warfare. The article gives examples of "asymmetrical warfare like" aspects of those wars. This is where a weaker force wisely doesn't confront the larger force head on. Asymmetrical warfare like isn't asymmetrical warfare. When I'm arguing asymmetrical warfare, I'm arguing the bolded red statement above, as well as the quote that I show above... THAT's what's applicable to what I'm talking about. Means other than tradition, operations other than military means. Your article falls short on that.


thompsonx: It seems that you only open your mouth to change feet

You advance a Wikipedia article in your argument against someone that's in a profession that fights wars, and you're insinuating that I "have" my "foot" in my mouth? Serious? You're one of the very few guys that I've debated over the years who'd be able to shoot his foot by attempting to commit suicide.

If that went over your head, this analogy might explain it better:


Your referencing a Wikipedia article in a debate with an infantryman is like you referencing a quack doctor's journals in a debate against a doctor.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:11:47 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx


quote:

ORIGINAL: Aylee

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

No I just like pointing out phonies


I am making an appearance to say that I have met HFC, he is human, and he is in the military. Infantry and all.


Strawman Argument

Do you also vouch for all that he has posted?

Strawman Argument


You claimed that I was a phony. Aylee posted that she has met me, and that she has verified that I'm in the military. Were you wrong with your statements that I was a "phony?" YES [ ] NO [ ]

Copy and paste that question, put an "X" in the appropriate box, and don't give me anything else, like your bullshit.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:14:27 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

quote:

thompsonx: Wearing ppe (safety glasses) to weld is a sure sign that someone has no clue what they are doing.


Negative. Whether he wore the PPE or the welder's helmet didn't influence the fact that my dad was able to weld. If you were a veteran, you'd also remember numerous instances of people trying to cut corners.


thompsonx: If you try to weld with safety glasses on and not the proper shade of lense in your goggles you go blind.

Wrong. I know of allot of people that did fire watch with just clear goggles, they were right up on the welder. Their eye sights were still good. Not all welding jobs produce enough lights and sparks to make someone want to turn away from the sparks. Allot of times, you could look at the sparks without any protection, and not go blind, or get hit by a spark.

thompsonx: You said your squid daddy's job was firewatch...he abandoned his job as firewatch and took the job of the certified welder who was contracted to do the job. Your squid daddy had his job and the welder had his job but your squid daddy chose to stop doing his job which means he abandoned his post and took the post of the welder. Repeat Point

My dad was both, with the welder and he had a fire extinguisher with him. He didn't abandon his post, he stayed at his post and did the welder's job. There's no marking on the floor, ahem, deck, for the firewatch to stand in. They usually select where they stand, or sit, when watching the welder. The only thing that matters is that they're within distance of the welder and his job. My dad met both requirements. Again, had a fire started, my dad would've turned the torch off and activated the fire extinguisher.

thompsonx: Spin that how you choose but those facts are the facts as stated by you.

Not spin, but facts. You, having never experienced a fire watch for a welder, are trying to tell me that my dad abandoned his post. That's spin. But no matter how you try to look at this, my dad didn't abandon his post.

Piece of advice, I used to be in the Navy. Quit trying to bullshit me about how the Navy does things.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:17:13 PM   
herfacechair


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thompsonx: Please make up your mind. Was your squid daddy a welder or a squid frog/seal? They really are two seperate mos. Strawman Argument

You do realize that many MOS's/ratings supplied the SEAL community, do you? SEAL wasn't it's own job specialty, it received sailors from other ratings. You had radarmen (sp) (later Operations Specialists), gunnersmates (sp), boatswainsmates (sp) and so on. Also, in the Navy, if someone was doing a welding job in your AO, you provided a body to do a firewatch on them. So you could have a deck seaman, a mess management specialist, a quartermaster, or a personelman doing the firewatch. On ships carrying marines? You could have marines doing the firewatch. On ships carrying SEALS? You could have a SEAL doing a firewatch.

Thanks for continuing to show us that you don't know what you're talking about when it comes to things military because, ahem, you never served.


thompsonx: If your squid daddy used safety glasses the weld puddle would be so bright he would not be able to see where the sparks were falling...if he wore welding goggles then the tint would be so dark as to prevent him from seeing where the sparks landed.

I've seen people weld, the vast majority of the welding jobs I've seen didn't produce enough sparks to blind me. I saw where every spark landed, or where they were going. So my dad, with his safety goggles, wouldn't have had a problem doing what he did. For my dad to take the torch from the man, it would've had to be a small welding job. He said this was the only time he did it. A small weld job wouldn't produce the sparks, and the intensity, that you talk about.

thomsonx: Both cases render him incapable of doing his assigned task of firewatch which you say he abandoned to do the welding he was not assigned to do. REPEAT POINT

WRONG. The job only took 2 to 3 minutes. As I said above, he would've seen the sparks, and what they were doing. Had any of the sparks started a fire, he would've turned the torch off and put the fire out. Also, WHERE, in MY posts, do I specifically say that my dad abandoned his firewatch? Quote me saying those exact words. He didn't abandon the firewatch, he still had it.

thompsonx: Like I said your squid daddy's lack of discipline seems to run in the family.

Non of what you describe constitutes lack of discipline. A lack of discipline would've been my dad leaving the welder by himself. If anything, it takes considerable discipline to do two jobs at once, which is what my dad did. Your posts gives you away as someone that lakes discipline.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:18:27 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

quote:

WRONG. You argued that he abandoned his post. In order for him to do that, he'd have to leave the welder unattended.


REPEAT POINT
No he abandoned his post by leaving his fire extinguisher unattended when he picked up the torch and started welding.
REPEAT POINT


WRONG. You don't need to have the fire extinguisher in your hands the whole time when doing the fire watch. You just need it within reach. My dad had it within his reach the whole time, 2 to 3 minutes, when he was doing the welding. He didn't leave his post.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:20:08 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

Squid seal tours were all six month tours. Look it up for fucks sake.


I know the facts dumbass. Six months is a traditional length for a navy deployment. That's the information that you're going to get if you read a Navy related website. However, in reality, they weren't all 6 months in length. I stand by what I said, Navy deployments ranged from 3 to 9 months. The website you read may have said that SEAL tours were 6 months, but that's not what happened all the time.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:21:25 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

quote:

Marine deployments range from 6 months and up.


Wrong again...marine tours in viet nam were 13 months


WHERE, in what you quoted, do I say that Marine VIETNAM deployments were 6 months? The Fleet Marine Force deployed as long as the Amphibious Readiness Groups that carried them deployed. If those Amphibious ships deployed for 6 months, then the marines on them deployed for 6 months. If those ships deployed for 9 months, the Marines on them deployed for 9 months.

Obviously, 13 months is included in the 6 months and up category.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:24:08 PM   
herfacechair


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quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

quote:

Every branch of the service gives their deployed service members the opportunity to extend their deployments. Did you get that? EXTEND their deployments. My dad loved being in the field, he was active, and enjoyed doing combat missions. He hated the shore duty/garrison arrangement. His heart was in the field. He wasn't satisfied with just doing the minimum tour, he talked about how he extended some of his deployments.


A standard squid seal platoon is 16 men they rotate in and out as a platoon.
Keep dancing young man


When the oncoming SEAL platoon ends up losing a man or two due to injury, one option they had available to them was to get a relief. They could get them from the rear, or they could get a volunteer from those that they're relieving. The Navy works that way. This happened allot, as my dad and his friends told me that SEALs liked to pick fights in bars or other gathering areas during down times.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/23/2010 10:35:34 PM   
EbonyWood


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quote:

ORIGINAL: herfacechair

quote:

ORIGINAL: EbonyWood

quote:

ORIGINAL: herfacechair

I come on here once a day to reply to the drivel that people post in response to me. Then I leave and go somewhere else. I don't jump back in as another username to deal with you people's drivel on the other threads.




Completely refuted by your own comments about being aware of what is posted on all the other threads.

Can you type without lying? You keep tripping over them.



If anybody is lying, it's you. See the bolded red statement? I added that back into the quote. That statement would've prevented you from farting the above statement.

You claimed that I leave this thread, and post on the other threads under a different name. What my statement is saying is that after I post on this thread, I go somewhere else, OUTSIDE of collarchat. Pardon me for assuming that you were capable of understanding simple English. Either that, or you're going out of your way to pull shit out of your ass.



Do you ever get anything right? The comprehension issue is yours.
 
I said your awareness of other threads demonstrates that your claim that you only respond in this thread then leave, proves that you are lying. It's a simple and irrefutable concept son, try and keep up.
 
And no, you're not pardoned for your incorrect assumptions. If you want to argue against a proposition that isn't even mine (which you also did in the previous post and I couldn't even be bothered to waste time on), go ahead, but basically you're proving that you lack the ability to attribute correctly.
 
At this point all you're offering is a counter argument to an argument you've constructed yourself. Enjoy that while I get on with life.
 
If you need something to do, because basically I just think you have a sociopathic need to vent, I also disagree with every line of War and Peace, the bible, and the entire works of Marcel Proust. Please counter this claim, line by line of each book, cite examples supporting your argument, and get back to me.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/24/2010 9:02:24 AM   
pahunkboy


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Would anyone like some ear plugs?

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/24/2010 9:38:54 AM   
thompsonx


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quote:

ORIGINAL: herfacechair

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jeffff


quote:

ORIGINAL: herfacechair

I wasn't kidding when I said that I'll meet a poster here face to face.



By the cannon? After school?


Early in this thread, I told people that I was going to meet a collarchat poster. I also offered to have here come here to verify that I am who I said I am. She came to the base to pick me up. I showed her my LES, which had deployment related pays like hostile fire pay. Now you know for a fact that I’m in the military. After another Iraq Veteran came here to vouch for me, and now Aylee’s post, anybody that tries to insinuate that I’m a “poser,” or “not” the real thing is a liar.



I am sure that everyone here is convinced of your validity now that your g/f has vouched for you.

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RE: Back from Iraq for a short time, ready to answer yo... - 7/24/2010 9:40:49 AM   
thompsonx


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quote:

ORIGINAL: herfacechair

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

quote:

Every branch of the service gives their deployed service members the opportunity to extend their deployments. Did you get that? EXTEND their deployments. My dad loved being in the field, he was active, and enjoyed doing combat missions. He hated the shore duty/garrison arrangement. His heart was in the field. He wasn't satisfied with just doing the minimum tour, he talked about how he extended some of his deployments.


A standard squid seal platoon is 16 men they rotate in and out as a platoon.
Keep dancing young man


When the oncoming SEAL platoon ends up losing a man or two due to injury, one option they had available to them was to get a relief. They could get them from the rear, or they could get a volunteer from those that they're relieving. The Navy works that way. This happened allot, as my dad and his friends told me that SEALs liked to pick fights in bars or other gathering areas during down times.




Yeah right

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