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Military/Defense News / Boeing Woes Also Infecting Military Aviation
« Last post by rangerrebew on Today at 04:58:24 pm »
Boeing Woes Also Infecting Military Aviation
By AFP Staff
May 9, 2024
Views: 1720

Public Domain
The failures at Boeing, by design in our opinion, have reached military aviation. The following memo from Boeing to the U.S. Army is being circulated.


Shoe writes, "In light of all the news about Boeing, defective parts, and whistleblowers dying, someone sent me this memo sent from Boeing to the Army, and it’s shocking. The Army just had another Apache crash two days ago on Fort Riley. We don’t know the cause of the crash, but we do know there have been AT LEAST two catastrophic tail rotor failures over the last two years. This memo says from 2019 to 2024 there have been defective tail rotor blades coming from the manufacturer. Over 4000 of them. These blades have been in use and installed fleet wide and are not reaching their expected service life of approximately 6600 hours. Many not even close to that at all. The Army and Boeing have been good about keeping this all hush hush. Are these crashes due to tail rotor blade failures? One was a 64E at Rucker in June 2022, the other was a 64D at Bliss November 2023. 3 of the 4 crew members were able to walk away, while the 4th will not fly again due to back issues. Because no one died, it’s easier to keep these incidents on the down low. In a perfect world, the whole fleet would be grounded until this was sorted out, but that’s never going to happen."

https://armedforces.press/boeing-woes-also-infecting-military-aviation/
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PJ Comix / VIDEO: Mike Johnson Discovers That He Is Flounder
« Last post by pjcomix on Today at 04:56:35 pm »
Quote
All his life Mike Johnson thought he was Mike Johnson. And then on May 8, 2024, in the middle of an interview with Politico, Mike Johnson suddenly discovered that he is really Flounder.


https://rumble.com/embed/v4rvq3k/?pub=7wvc3
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A couple of stories from a family member who works with a hospice organization (not a hospice in-patient facility):

* A hospice patient living in a skilled nursing facility (SNF) was given written permission by their doctor to have "one or two beers" a day, as they desired. The SNF asked the hospice organization to clarify what "a beer" is. While this was probably given the attitude of the hospice people was, "(S)He's dying. Who cares how many ounces 'a beer' is?"

* One of the requirements for hospice care (Medicare, and probably private insurance) is a good-faith diagnosis by the patient's PCP that the patient has less than 6 months of life remaining. Many patient at this family member's hospice die within 2 weeks; most die within the 6 months, but a few live longer, a few of those live for a year or more, and a few of those go off hospice, because their condition improved.

That's the question a PCP and hospice attending physician have to discern/balance - is the patient really in the process of dying, and if they are, how much does it matter if they get intoxicated (by whatever)?
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Chuck Mawhinney was a skilled shooter

He could only get 16 heads shots in 30 seconds, and they have the nerve to call him "skilled?"  Yeah, right. 000hehehehe
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The Legendary USMC Sniper Who Hit 16 Enemy Combatants in 30 Seconds on a Pitch-Black Night
By Damian Lucjan,

2024-03-04
In the realm of military achievements, certain service members earn accolades, garnering public admiration and commendations, with some even becoming the focal points of books or films. Chuck Mawhinney opted for a less conventional path. Serving as a sniper in the US Marine Corps during the Vietnam War, he crafted an extraordinary career for himself, deliberately concealing it from his family, friends and even his wife.

Mawhinney's narrative remained shrouded in secrecy until it was brought to light by another individual, prompting him to not only confirm the account, but inadvertently reshape public perceptions regarding snipers.

Chuck Mawhinney was a skilled shooter
 
Charles "Chuck" Mawhinney, born in 1949 in Lakeview, Oregon, spent his formative years honing his hunting prowess alongside his Marine father, inheriting invaluable skills that would profoundly influence his future. Electing to pursue a career as a sniper , he completed high school in 1967 and enlisted in the US Marine Corps. In a departure from convention, he brokered a distinctive arrangement: deferring his training until after the conclusion of deer hunting season.

Upon graduating from the Scout Sniper School at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton in April 1968, Mawhinney swiftly found himself deployed to Vietnam .

https://www.newsbreak.com/news/3356022687091-the-legendary-usmc-sniper-who-hit-16-enemy-combatants-in-30-seconds-on-a-pitch-black-night?_f=app_share&s=i0&pd=0I26643b&lang=en_US&send_time=1715279564&trans_data=%7B%22platform%22%3A0%2C%22cv%22%3A%2224.19.0.27%22%2C%22languages%22%3A%22en%22%7D
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US Navy’s submarine fleet is too small. Here’s how selling some may help.
On the surface, it might not make sense to give three to Australia, but there’s a logic to the deal
By Megan Eckstein
 May 9, 05:45 AM
 
This is the first story of a two-part series on how the U.S. submarine force is participating in the trilateral AUKUS alliance. Click here to read the second story.

ABOARD THE SUBMARINE DELAWARE OFF FLORIDA’S COAST — The attack submarine Delaware silently pulled away from the pier at Port Everglades, past the pleasure craft and the cargo ships, and then sank beneath the waves.


The U.S. Navy’s Virginia-class submarine was showing off for VIPs on board, performing “angles and dangles” — diving sharply and listening for anything not safely stowed to go tumbling — piping simulated targets into its combat system, and taking simulated torpedo shots at the imaginary surface ships.

Though the April 4 demonstration is a far cry from the complex training Delaware’s crew will conduct later this year ahead of the boat’s deployment to U.S. European Command’s theater, leaders said any at-sea opportunity benefits the crew.

But the need for at-sea time butts up against a problematic reality for the Navy: It has 49 attack submarines, despite a formal requirement for 66.

https://www.defensenews.com/naval/2024/05/09/us-navys-submarine-fleet-is-too-small-heres-how-selling-some-may-help/
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Will they be programmed to wipe the *sses of troops after they take a dump?  That might be too much brain work for people who depend on drones so heavily. *****rollingeyes*****
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Drones could guide every bit of an Army division’s firepower, 101st CO says
From mortars to missiles, the airborne unit is rethinking the use of uncrewed systems in the kill chain.
SAM SKOVE | MAY 9, 2024 03:38 PM ET
ARMY DRONES
   
U.S. Army units could someday align every level of their indirect weapons—from mortars to missiles—with some form of unmanned aerial system, or UAS, the 101st Airborne Division commander said.

“You could see those small UAS tied to the employment of mortars, and you could see those medium UASs tied to artillery, and those larger UAS could be tied to air-launch effects and other higher-order precision munitions,” Maj. Gen. Brett Sylvia said at a media roundtable Thursday.

The 101st is experimenting with different forms of tech as part of Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George’s “transforming-in-contact” initiative, which seeks to rapidly evaluate new technology by fielding it directly to select units.

As part of the tests, the 101st’s second brigade has been designated as the Army’s first Mobile Brigade Combat Team, Sylvia said. The brigade now uses a variety of new technologies, including using the Army’s Android-based ATAK mission planning software at multiple echelons of command. One “landing spot” for testing new technologies is the brigade’s new Multi-Functional Reconnaissance Company, Sylvia said.

https://www.defenseone.com/technology/2024/05/drones-could-guide-every-bit-army-divisions-firepower-101st-co-says/396452/?oref=d1-homepage-top-story
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×#$! little brat. My grandfather nearly died in WWI. This kid deserves severe punishment.
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Hamas invaded Israel and did horrific things because they thought LIEden would pressure Israel into weak reaction.

Hamas doubled down by fighting because they thought LIEden would pressure Israel into stopping short of bring decisive.

Now Hamas has gone all-in, thinking LIEden has crippled Israel.

Hamas was right about LIEden; Hamas has been wrong about Israel, and will learn the hard way how crip[pled Israel is.

* Some Israeli soldiers may die as a result of LIEden's move, as LIEden and his minions intended.

* Some civilians prevented by Hamas from evacuating will die, as LIEden and his minions intended and for which LIEden and his minions will condemn Israel.

* Many Hamas fighters, including many leaders, probably, will die, something LIEden and his minions did not forsee.
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