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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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...so consistently? LOL!
"Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates issued a clear warning to the military and its industrial partners on Tuesday that expensive, new conventional weapons must prove their value to current conflicts, marked by insurgency and terrorism, if they hope for a place in future budgets." “Overall, the kinds of capabilities we will most likely need in the years ahead will often resemble the kinds of capabilities we need today,” he added." [i.e. The cold war is over, 2pid. Just like I said. LOL!] "Those comments are certain to alarm advocates of the newest generations of high-tech and high-cost weapons programs, in particular the Army’s Future Combat Systems and the Air Force’s F-22 advanced warplane. Both have come under the scrutiny of Pentagon budget officers questioning whether either would be required for missions similar to the current operations in Iraq or Afghanistan." "The defense secretary also criticized a budget process that he said results in the production of fewer, but more expensive, warships, warplanes and armored vehicles." [i.e. So we'll need more A-10s and AH-64 Apache Longbows, and larger quantities of less-expensive weaponry, kind of almost exactly like I've been saying all along, 2pid. The F-22 is an anachronism from the cold war.] "To be sure, the defense secretary is set to step down at the end of the Bush administration, and thus is not expected to be in a position to write his strategic view into any but the next budget. Thus, the services and industry may seek to push through the programs Mr. Gates said should be scrutinized." [i.e. There is no shortage of boneheads such as yourself. LOL!] "The military, he declared, “has ample and untapped combat power in our naval and air forces, with the capacity to defeat any — repeat, any — adversary who committed an act of aggression, whether in the Persian Gulf, on the Korean Peninsula or in the Straits of Taiwan. There is a risk — but a prudent and manageable one.” [i.e. That sounds exactly like the naval Force Projection scenario I was talking about, 2pid. Keep in 'mind' there is no carrier-based F-22.] http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/13/wa...rssnyt&emc=rss Shall I hold my breath and wait to see how you'll twist all of this in an attempt to make yourself look "right"? LMAO! Senior military people always seem to shoot your 'military expertise' down and support what I've said. Not bad for somebody who never served, eh, 2pid? As usual, people would be wise to take the opposite position from anything you advocate. If they want to look smart, that is. LOL! |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 15, 11:34*am, ScottW wrote:
On May 15, 7:47*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: ...so consistently? LOL! "Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates issued a clear warning to the military and its industrial partners on Tuesday that expensive, new conventional weapons must prove their value to current conflicts, marked by insurgency and terrorism, if they hope for a place in future budgets." “Overall, the kinds of capabilities we will most likely need in the years ahead will often resemble the kinds of capabilities we need today,” he added." [i.e. The cold war is over, 2pid. Just like I said. LOL!] "Those comments are certain to alarm advocates of the newest generations of high-tech and high-cost weapons programs, in particular the Army’s Future Combat Systems and the Air Force’s F-22 advanced warplane. Both have come under the scrutiny of Pentagon budget officers questioning whether either would be required for missions similar to the current operations in Iraq or Afghanistan." "The defense secretary also criticized a budget process that he said results in the production of fewer, but more expensive, warships, warplanes and armored vehicles." [i.e. So we'll need more A-10s and AH-64 Apache Longbows, and larger quantities of less-expensive weaponry, kind of almost exactly like I've been saying all along, 2pid. The F-22 is an anachronism from the cold war.] "To be sure, the defense secretary is set to step down at the end of the Bush administration, and thus is not expected to be in a position to write his strategic view into any but the next budget. Thus, the services and industry may seek to push through the programs Mr. Gates said should be scrutinized." [i.e. There is no shortage of boneheads such as yourself. LOL!] "The military, he declared, “has ample and untapped combat power in our naval and air forces, with the capacity to defeat any — repeat, any — adversary who committed an act of aggression, whether in the Persian Gulf, on the Korean Peninsula or in the Straits of Taiwan. There is a risk — but a prudent and manageable one.” * Nothing is static. *How long will the risk in the Gulf, the Taiwan Strait and the Korean Peninsula be "prudent and manageable"? Until our overstretched forces are out of Afghanistan and Iraq, 2pid. That's the reason there's any risk at all. Can't you read? LOL! Duh. How long will it take to make it prudent and manageable again should we let that apparently acceptable status slip away? It's "prudent and manageable" *now*, 2pid. There is no "again". Nothing has "slipped away". Duh. This is the debate on advanced weapons systems. No, it isn't. The debate is what type of weapons systems we need to invest in go up against current or projected adversaries, 2pid. What Gates is saying is that we aren't very likely to face the teeming red hordes that our military, to a large extent, is still built and trained to oppose. The military-industrial complex will *always* want to sell the latest, greatest (and most expensive) technology whether it is actually needed or not. Generals and admirals *always* want the latest and greatest (and most expensive) technology out there. I just *knew* you wouldn't "get it". LOL! Duh. Not do we need them to take out the Taliban. Which is the type of adversary we will likely face, 2pid. Smaller conflicts with insurgent-like behavior since they cannot compete with the military. Duh. As far as the procurement process being f'd up, *that happenned while you were in the military. I wasn't in the military when Truman or Eisenhower was President, 2pid. As far as really expensive (and largely irrelevent) military toys go, look to Reagan and bushie for your answer. Dum, de-dum dum DUM! |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 15, 12:15*pm, ScottW wrote:
On May 15, 9:48*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 11:34*am, ScottW wrote: On May 15, 7:47*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: ...so consistently? LOL! "Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates issued a clear warning to the military and its industrial partners on Tuesday that expensive, new conventional weapons must prove their value to current conflicts, marked by insurgency and terrorism, if they hope for a place in future budgets." “Overall, the kinds of capabilities we will most likely need in the years ahead will often resemble the kinds of capabilities we need today,” he added." [i.e. The cold war is over, 2pid. Just like I said. LOL!] "Those comments are certain to alarm advocates of the newest generations of high-tech and high-cost weapons programs, in particular the Army’s Future Combat Systems and the Air Force’s F-22 advanced warplane. Both have come under the scrutiny of Pentagon budget officers questioning whether either would be required for missions similar to the current operations in Iraq or Afghanistan." "The defense secretary also criticized a budget process that he said results in the production of fewer, but more expensive, warships, warplanes and armored vehicles." [i.e. So we'll need more A-10s and AH-64 Apache Longbows, and larger quantities of less-expensive weaponry, kind of almost exactly like I've been saying all along, 2pid. The F-22 is an anachronism from the cold war.] "To be sure, the defense secretary is set to step down at the end of the Bush administration, and thus is not expected to be in a position to write his strategic view into any but the next budget. Thus, the services and industry may seek to push through the programs Mr. Gates said should be scrutinized." [i.e. There is no shortage of boneheads such as yourself. LOL!] "The military, he declared, “has ample and untapped combat power in our naval and air forces, with the capacity to defeat any — repeat, any — adversary who committed an act of aggression, whether in the Persian Gulf, on the Korean Peninsula or in the Straits of Taiwan. There is a risk — but a prudent and manageable one.” * Nothing is static. *How long will the risk in the Gulf, the Taiwan Strait and the Korean Peninsula be "prudent and manageable"? Until our overstretched forces are out of Afghanistan and Iraq, 2pid. That's the reason there's any risk at all. Can't you read? LOL! BS, the forces that are in play in Afghanistan are hardly the forces that will be needed to operate in the Taiwan strait. * Um, 2pid, the fighting forces are *always* the smallest part of the deal. Think "logistics". If we're logistically tied up with a large effort elsewhere, it very much limits our abilities elsewhere. Duh. Further, if one of the three scenarios Gates mentioned played out, are you saying there would be no ground component? Duh. You're on crack. I'm not on crack, but apparently you think the chairman of the JCOS and the SEDEF are. Duh. How long will it take to make it prudent and manageable again should we let that apparently acceptable status slip away? It's "prudent and manageable" *now*, 2pid. There is no "again". Nothing has "slipped away". *It inevitably will if we stand pat. *Nothing is static. So how is fielding a larger amount of less-expensive weapons "standing pat"? Learn how to read: "The defense secretary also criticized a budget process that he said results in the production of fewer, but more expensive, warships, warplanes and armored vehicles." Duh. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 15, 2:15*pm, ScottW wrote:
On May 15, 10:59*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 12:15*pm, ScottW wrote: On May 15, 9:48*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 11:34*am, ScottW wrote: On May 15, 7:47*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: ...so consistently? LOL! "Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates issued a clear warning to the military and its industrial partners on Tuesday that expensive, new conventional weapons must prove their value to current conflicts, marked by insurgency and terrorism, if they hope for a place in future budgets." “Overall, the kinds of capabilities we will most likely need in the years ahead will often resemble the kinds of capabilities we need today,” he added." [i.e. The cold war is over, 2pid. Just like I said. LOL!] "Those comments are certain to alarm advocates of the newest generations of high-tech and high-cost weapons programs, in particular the Army’s Future Combat Systems and the Air Force’s F-22 advanced warplane. Both have come under the scrutiny of Pentagon budget officers questioning whether either would be required for missions similar to the current operations in Iraq or Afghanistan." "The defense secretary also criticized a budget process that he said results in the production of fewer, but more expensive, warships, warplanes and armored vehicles." [i.e. So we'll need more A-10s and AH-64 Apache Longbows, and larger quantities of less-expensive weaponry, kind of almost exactly like I've been saying all along, 2pid. The F-22 is an anachronism from the cold war.] "To be sure, the defense secretary is set to step down at the end of the Bush administration, and thus is not expected to be in a position to write his strategic view into any but the next budget. Thus, the services and industry may seek to push through the programs Mr. Gates said should be scrutinized." [i.e. There is no shortage of boneheads such as yourself. LOL!] "The military, he declared, “has ample and untapped combat power in our naval and air forces, with the capacity to defeat any — repeat, any — adversary who committed an act of aggression, whether in the Persian Gulf, on the Korean Peninsula or in the Straits of Taiwan. |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 15, 3:13*pm, ScottW wrote:
On May 15, 1:00*pm, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 2:15*pm, ScottW wrote: On May 15, 10:59*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 12:15*pm, ScottW wrote: On May 15, 9:48*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 11:34*am, ScottW wrote: On May 15, 7:47*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: ...so consistently? LOL! "Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates issued a clear warning to the military and its industrial partners on Tuesday that expensive, new conventional weapons must prove their value to current conflicts, marked by insurgency and terrorism, if they hope for a place in future budgets." “Overall, the kinds of capabilities we will most likely need in the years ahead will often resemble the kinds of capabilities we need today,” he added." [i.e. The cold war is over, 2pid. Just like I said. LOL!] "Those comments are certain to alarm advocates of the newest generations of high-tech and high-cost weapons programs, in particular the Army’s Future Combat Systems and the Air Force’s F-22 advanced warplane. Both have come under the scrutiny of Pentagon budget officers questioning whether either would be required for missions similar to the current operations in Iraq or Afghanistan." "The defense secretary also criticized a budget process that he said results in the production of fewer, but more expensive, warships, warplanes and armored vehicles." [i.e. So we'll need more A-10s and AH-64 Apache Longbows, and larger quantities of less-expensive weaponry, kind of almost exactly like I've been saying all along, 2pid. The F-22 is an anachronism from the cold war.] "To be sure, the defense secretary is set to step down at the end of the Bush administration, and thus is not expected to be in a position to write his strategic view into any but the next budget. Thus, the services and industry may seek to push through the programs Mr. Gates said should be scrutinized." [i.e. There is no shortage of boneheads such as yourself. LOL!] "The military, he declared, “has ample and untapped combat power in our naval and air forces, with the capacity to defeat any — repeat, any — adversary who committed an act of aggression, whether in the Persian Gulf, on the Korean Peninsula or in the Straits of Taiwan. There is a risk — but a prudent and manageable one.” * Nothing is static. *How long will the risk in the Gulf, the Taiwan Strait and the Korean Peninsula be "prudent and manageable"? Until our overstretched forces are out of Afghanistan and Iraq, 2pid. That's the reason there's any risk at all. Can't you read? LOL! BS, the forces that are in play in Afghanistan are hardly the forces that will be needed to operate in the Taiwan strait. * Um, 2pid, the fighting forces are *always* the smallest part of the deal. Think "logistics". If we're logistically tied up with a large effort elsewhere, it very much limits our abilities elsewhere. Duh. The battle for Taiwan won't last longer than 5 days. *If logistics come into play, you'll have already lost. We've already lost then, 2pid, as aircraft or naval forces cannot even get there without logistics. We'd have to divert from our main effort, which is Iraq. * BS, we have at most 1 or 2 carrier battle groups in the Persian gulf at any one time. Carrier Group 5 is based in Japan. You're 'thinking' all-Navy, 2pid. You also apparently aren't factoring in travel time for the Atlantic fleet, or from west-coast bases. An aircraft carrier carries about 85-90 aircraft of all types. Even if they were all F/A-18s that is at most 1080 aircraft if we had 12 carrier groups there. We won't have 12 there, and not all 85-90 are fighters. Do the math, imbecile. Three groups would be a maximum of 270 aircraft, minus patrol, anti- sub, helicopters and other types. And this against the Vast Chinese Armada you fear so much. LOL! You remain, as always, full of ****. Do the math, 2pid. As you say, I note the breakdown in your argument. Please, please, PLEASE try to grow a brain. Your stem is obviously overtaxed. If I am full of ****, I am in the company of the CJCS and the SECDEF. Considering we are talking about military matters, that's better company to be "full of ****" with than a know-nothing imbecile, wouldn't you agree? ;-) Lol LoL lOl LOL! |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Those comments are certain to alarm advocates of the newest generations of high-tech and high-cost weapons programs, in particular the Army’s Future Combat Systems and the Air Force’s F-22 advanced warplane. Both have come under the scrutiny of Pentagon budget officers questioning whether either would be required for missions similar to the current operations in Iraq or Afghanistan." "The defense secretary also criticized a budget process that he said results in the production of fewer, but more expensive, warships, warplanes and armored vehicles." [i.e. So we'll need more A-10s and AH-64 Apache Longbows, and larger quantities of less-expensive weaponry, kind of almost exactly like I've been saying all along, 2pid. The F-22 is an anachronism from the cold war.] "To be sure, the defense secretary is set to step down at the end of the Bush administration, and thus is not expected to be in a position to write his strategic view into any but the next budget. Thus, the services and industry may seek to push through the programs Mr. Gates said should be scrutinized." [i.e. There is no shortage of boneheads such as yourself. LOL!] "The military, he declared, “has ample and untapped combat power in our naval and air forces, with the capacity to defeat any — repeat, any — adversary who committed an act of aggression, whether in the Persian Gulf, on the Korean Peninsula or in the Straits of Taiwan. There is a risk — but a prudent and manageable one.” Nothing is static. How long will the risk in the Gulf, the Taiwan Strait and the Korean Peninsula be "prudent and manageable"? Until our overstretched forces are out of Afghanistan and Iraq, 2pid. That's the reason there's any risk at all. Can't you read? LOL! Duh. How long will it take to make it prudent and manageable again should we let that apparently acceptable status slip away? It's "prudent and manageable" *now*, 2pid. There is no "again". Nothing has "slipped away". Duh. This is the debate on advanced weapons systems. No, it isn't. The debate is what type of weapons systems we need to invest in go up against current or projected adversaries, 2pid. What Gates is saying is that we aren't very likely to face the teeming red hordes that our military, to a large extent, is still built and trained to oppose. The military-industrial complex will *always* want to sell the latest, greatest (and most expensive) technology whether it is actually needed or not. Generals and admirals *always* want the latest and greatest (and most expensive) technology out there. As long as the military is expected to be the vanguard of technology it will always be cheaper to buy the best first and cry once. The Navy Aviator's Creed states: "I am a United States Navy flyer: My countrymen built the best airplane in the world and entrusted it to me. They trained me to fly it. I will use it to the absolute limit of my power. With my fellow pilots, air crews, and deck crews, my plane and I will do anything necessary to carry out our tremendous responsibilities. I will always remember we are part of an unbeatable combat team - the United States Navy. When the going is fast and rough, I will not falter. I will be uncompromising in every blow I strike. I will be humble in victory. I am a United States Navy flyer. I have dedicated myself to my country, with its many millions of all races, colors, and creeds. They and their way of life are worthy of my greatest protective effort. I ask the help of God in making that effort great enough. " Now, there's nothing in there that says "the most cost effective airplane in the world". Airplanes per se are not expensive to build: even modern supersonic jets are a small percentage of their purchase price if costed on a labor and materials basis. Doctors and lawyers and CPAs and salespeople and retired firemen build airplanes in their garages every day. Aircraft workers make, at most, thirty bucks an hour, plus benefits and retirement costs, which is a trivial sum in the great scheme of things. Aeronautical engineers are very lucky to make much over sixty or seventy thousand a year. We could probably build jet fighters for a little more than a Cessna Citation goes for, if even that much, if we built them in quantities like the Russians did. The Russians built 35,000 MiG-21s at a cost to the State probably comparable to a good European sports car. You want to ask our aviators to strap one on? I'm not going to. |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 15, 8:44*pm, RapidRonnie wrote:
"Those comments are certain to alarm advocates of the newest generations of high-tech and high-cost weapons programs, in particular the Army’s Future Combat Systems and the Air Force’s F-22 advanced warplane. Both have come under the scrutiny of Pentagon budget officers questioning whether either would be required for missions similar to the current operations in Iraq or Afghanistan." "The defense secretary also criticized a budget process that he said results in the production of fewer, but more expensive, warships, warplanes and armored vehicles." [i.e. So we'll need more A-10s and AH-64 Apache Longbows, and larger quantities of less-expensive weaponry, kind of almost exactly like I've been saying all along, 2pid. The F-22 is an anachronism from the cold war.] "To be sure, the defense secretary is set to step down at the end of the Bush administration, and thus is not expected to be in a position to write his strategic view into any but the next budget. Thus, the services and industry may seek to push through the programs Mr. Gates said should be scrutinized." [i.e. There is no shortage of boneheads such as yourself. LOL!] "The military, he declared, “has ample and untapped combat power in our naval and air forces, with the capacity to defeat any — repeat, any — adversary who committed an act of aggression, whether in the Persian Gulf, on the Korean Peninsula or in the Straits of Taiwan. There is a risk — but a prudent and manageable one.” * Nothing is static. *How long will the risk in the Gulf, the Taiwan Strait and the Korean Peninsula be "prudent and manageable"? Until our overstretched forces are out of Afghanistan and Iraq, 2pid. That's the reason there's any risk at all. Can't you read? LOL! Duh. How long will it take to make it prudent and manageable again should we let that apparently acceptable status slip away? It's "prudent and manageable" *now*, 2pid. There is no "again". Nothing has "slipped away". Duh. This is the debate on advanced weapons systems. No, it isn't. The debate is what type of weapons systems we need to invest in go up against current or projected adversaries, 2pid. What Gates is saying is that we aren't very likely to face the teeming red hordes that our military, to a large extent, is still built and trained to oppose. The military-industrial complex will *always* want to sell the latest, greatest (and most expensive) technology whether it is actually needed or not. Generals and admirals *always* want the latest and greatest (and most expensive) technology out there. *As long as the military is expected to be the vanguard of technology it will always be cheaper to buy the best first and cry once. *The Navy Aviator's Creed states: "I am a United States Navy flyer: My countrymen built the best airplane in the world and entrusted it to me. They trained me to fly it. I will use it to the absolute limit of my power. With my fellow pilots, air crews, and deck crews, my plane and I will do anything necessary to carry out our tremendous responsibilities. I will always remember we are part of an unbeatable combat team - the United States Navy. When the going is fast and rough, I will not falter. I will be uncompromising in every blow I strike. I will be humble in victory. I am a United States Navy flyer. I have dedicated myself to my country, with its many millions of all races, colors, and creeds. They and their way of life are worthy of my greatest protective effort. I ask the help of God in making that effort great enough. " *Now, there's nothing in there that says "the most cost effective airplane in the world". Airplanes per se are not expensive to build: even modern supersonic jets are a small percentage of their purchase price if costed on a labor and materials basis. Doctors and lawyers and CPAs and salespeople and retired firemen build airplanes in their garages every day. Aircraft workers make, at most, thirty bucks an hour, plus benefits and retirement costs, which is a trivial sum in the great scheme of things. Aeronautical engineers are very lucky to make much over sixty or seventy thousand a year. *We could probably build jet fighters for a little more than a Cessna Citation goes for, if even that much, if we built them in quantities like the Russians did. The Russians built 35,000 MiG-21s at a cost to the State probably comparable to a good European sports car. *You want to ask our aviators to strap one on? I'm not going to. 2pid is more worried about MiG-17s. Jingoism aside, you build the military to fight the battles it is anticipated that it will fight. F/ A-18s, F-15s, A-10s, F-16s, and so on, will do. We also have the F-35 coming on line at a far, far lower unit cost than the F-22 (which is not available to Naval Aviators anyway...). Using your model here, we should be ditching the M-16 in favor of a high-tech rifle replacement (after all, you're not going to ask a front-line infantry soldier to "strap one on", are you? They are 1960s technology.), spending tons to develop the replacement for the M-1 Abrams tank (ditto an armor soldier), new Combat Engineer vehicles, new nuclear ballistic missile subs, and on and on and on. Or does spending ridiculously massive amounts to fight the wars of bygone eras only apply to aircraft? It would make far more sense, and far less expensive, to develop an unmanned platform that was capable of firing AA missiles and could be controlled by joystick from Omaha. The only job of an air-superiority fighter is to allow freedom of movement for ground and naval forces, transport capability and rotary- wing aircraft at given times and places. That's it. |
#8
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 15, 8:44*pm, RapidRonnie wrote:
*The Navy Aviator's Creed states: BTW, here is the latest "Soldier's Creed": I am an American Soldier. I am a Warrior and a member of a team. I serve the people of the United States, and live the Army Values. I will always place the mission first. I will never accept defeat. I will never quit. I will never leave a fallen comrade. I am disciplined, physically and mentally tough, trained and proficient in my warrior tasks and drills. I always maintain my arms, my equipment and myself. I am an expert and I am a professional. I stand ready to deploy, engage, and destroy, the enemies of the United States of America in close combat. I am a guardian of freedom and the American way of life. I am an American Soldier. This is the type of stuff printed on little cards for new recruits and generally ignored until someone is studying for an NCO board. I'd imagine the Naval Aviator's Creed gets much the same treatment. |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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****R : "Using your model here, we should be ditching the M-16 in favor
of a high-tech rifle replacement (after all, you're not going to ask a front-line infantry soldier to "strap one on", are you? They are 1960s technology.), spending tons to develop the replacement for the M-1 Abrams tank (ditto an armor soldier), new Combat Engineer vehicles, new nuclear ballistic missile subs, and on and on and on." I'd definitely ditch the AR-15/M16 rifle (except for the specialized uses for which it had been developed) in favor of something more intrinsically reliable in dirty conditions and firing a more manstopping round than the inadequate .223, which is great for busting varmints smaller and less tough than feral cats but is illegal-and properly so-for deer in most states. The FN-FAL or variants thereof or any of several other designs would be FAR better, chambered for a cartridge of at least .243 ballistics. The 7.62x39 has a lot of things to recommend it. Reliability is one. Accuracy is not one, and neither is long range performance. Our troops deserve a battle rifle that is at least adequate to reliably and humanely dispatch feral cats ( a subject with which I have extensive first hand experience-I won't shoot them with less than a .243 or bigger) and is legal for whitetail deer on the reasonable basis of being able to reliably down them. The .223 (5.56) fails this criterion and in addition the M16 is not sufficiently reliable in dirty conditions either. Then again, it wasn't Eugene Stoner's brief to make it so: it was intended for Air Force ramp stormtroopers to guard nuclear armed alert bombers. -- Message posted using http://www.talkaboutaudio.com/group/rec.audio.opinion/ More information at http://www.talkaboutaudio.com/faq.html |
#10
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 16, 9:58*am, ScottW wrote:
On May 15, 7:52*pm, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 8:44*pm, RapidRonnie wrote: *The Navy Aviator's Creed states: BTW, here is the latest "Soldier's Creed": I am an American Soldier. I am a Warrior and a member of a team. I serve the people of the United States, and live the Army Values. I will always place the mission first. I will never accept defeat. I will never quit. *****r is 0 fer all the above. I am, was, or will be an American Soldier. 2pid is zero for all of the above. LOL! What an imbecile. |
#11
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 16, 8:34*am, "BretLudwig" wrote:
****R : "Using your model here, we should be ditching the M-16 in favor of a high-tech rifle replacement (after all, you're not going to ask a front-line infantry soldier to "strap one on", are you? They are 1960s technology.), spending tons to develop the replacement for the M-1 Abrams tank (ditto an armor soldier), new Combat Engineer vehicles, new nuclear ballistic missile subs, and on and on and on." *I'd definitely ditch the AR-15/M16 rifle (except for the specialized uses for which it had been developed) in favor of something more intrinsically reliable in dirty conditions and firing a more manstopping round than the inadequate .223 I wasn't surprised that 2pid was wrong. I'm about as not surprised that Bratzi is too... ;-) |
#12
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 17, 10:19*am, ScottW wrote:
On May 17, 5:22*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 16, 9:58*am, ScottW wrote: On May 15, 7:52*pm, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 8:44*pm, RapidRonnie wrote: *The Navy Aviator's Creed states: BTW, here is the latest "Soldier's Creed": I am an American Soldier. I am a Warrior and a member of a team. I serve the people of the United States, and live the Army Values. I will always place the mission first. I will never accept defeat. I will never quit. *****r is 0 fer all the above. I am, was, or will be an American Soldier. 2pid is zero for all of the above. LOL! Which of us quit? Neither of us, 2pid. You never served, I retired. What an imbecile. |
#13
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 17, 3:02*pm, ScottW wrote:
On May 17, 12:55*pm, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 17, 10:19*am, ScottW wrote: On May 17, 5:22*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 16, 9:58*am, ScottW wrote: On May 15, 7:52*pm, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 8:44*pm, RapidRonnie wrote: *The Navy Aviator's Creed states: BTW, here is the latest "Soldier's Creed": I am an American Soldier. I am a Warrior and a member of a team. I serve the people of the United States, and live the Army Values. I will always place the mission first. I will never accept defeat. I will never quit. *****r is 0 fer all the above. I am, was, or will be an American Soldier. 2pid is zero for all of the above. LOL! Which of us quit? Neither of us, 2pid. You never served, I retired. *So you quit on your own protest. *I see. Wrong again, service evader. Retiring has nothing to do with "quitting". No matter how stupid you are, even you must get this. Let me guess: you go to retirement parties and your office and accuse those who are retiring of "quitting". And without my having to guess: they don't have retirement parties at your office for people who never worked there. LMAO! What an imbecile. |
#14
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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" How can 2pid get things so wrong...
by "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" May 17, 2008 at 05:51 AM On May 16, 8:34=A0am, "BretLudwig" wrote: ****R : "Using your model here, we should be ditching the M-16 in favor of a high-tech rifle replacement (after all, you're not going to ask a front-line infantry soldier to "strap one on", are you? They are 1960s technology.), spending tons to develop the replacement for the M-1 Abrams tank (ditto an armor soldier), new Combat Engineer vehicles, new nuclear ballistic missile subs, and on and on and on." =A0I'd definitely ditch the AR-15/M16 rifle (except for the specialized us= es for which it had been developed) in favor of something more intrinsically reliable in dirty conditions and firing a more manstopping round than the inadequate .223 I wasn't surprised that 2pid was wrong. I'm about as not surprised that Bratzi is too... ;-)" Col. Jeff Cooper was probably the #1 small arms expert in the United States and neither he nor hundreds of other officers, NCOs and law enforcement professionals felt the M16/AR-15 weapons system was an appropriate selection for the tasks for which it was put by the United States Army and USMC. Eugene Stoner himself was not overly thrilled with the servicewide deployment of this rifle and said on many occasions he would have preferred many later designs replace it. I have owned several AR-15 rifles, Colt and other manufactuers', and fired many more others including M16A1, A2 and A4 variants owned by the military and (in the A1 case) legal Title II licensed private owners. It is a nice rifle to shoot and I would recommend it for civilian recreational use or for certain specialized LE/security and military uses. It is not sufficiently reliable in stock form when used and maintained by garden variety troops in the field over a wide range of conditions and it does not fire a battleworthy rifle cartridge. It is not capable of reliably stopping enraged or drugged combatants with one bullet under all conditions. It is a varmint round pure and simple. There are few things as fun as nailing squirrels in the head at moderate ranges with a .223 and cooking them tastily. I love squirrel stew and squirrel chow mein. But I won't even shoot feral cats, much less deer, with one. The minimum acceptable cartridge is one with at least 7mm bullet diameter and muzzle energy in the class with a .243, .308 or 7.62x39 round. This supposes a larger head diameter cartridge than the .223 and therefore rebarreling the M16/AR-15 is not quite an option. FN/FAL, Galil, or HK rifle systems are all far, far better choices as would be a lightened M14/M1A or other Garand derivatives. Moving NATO from ..308 to 7mm08 or .243 would be okay if a flatter shooting lighter recoiling round were needed. -- Message posted using http://www.talkaboutaudio.com/group/rec.audio.opinion/ More information at http://www.talkaboutaudio.com/faq.html |
#15
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 17, 6:30*pm, "BretLudwig" wrote:
" How can 2pid get things so wrong... by "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" May I wasn't surprised that 2pid was wrong. I'm about as not surprised that Bratzi is too... ;-)" *Col. Jeff Cooper was probably the #1 small arms expert in the United States and neither he nor hundreds of other officers, NCOs and law enforcement professionals felt the M16/AR-15 weapons system was an appropriate selection for the tasks for which it was put by the United States Army and USMC. *Eugene Stoner himself was not overly thrilled with the servicewide deployment of this rifle and said on many occasions he would have preferred many later designs replace it. *I have owned several AR-15 rifles, Colt and other manufactuers', and fired many more others including M16A1, A2 and A4 variants owned by the military and (in the A1 case) legal Title II licensed private owners. It is a nice rifle to shoot and I would recommend it for civilian recreational use or for certain specialized LE/security and military uses. It is not sufficiently reliable in stock form when used and maintained by garden variety troops in the field over a wide range of conditions and it does not fire a battleworthy rifle cartridge. It is not capable of reliably stopping enraged or drugged combatants with one bullet under all conditions. It is a varmint round pure and simple. Not true. It is very reliable when properly maintained. You are bringing up tales from the initial fielding in the late 1950s/early 1960s. when the military told the soldiers it was a "self-cleaning" weapon. Colt had also modified the receiver design. Your 'expertise' with feral cats does not translate very well, Bratzi. Here, these guys also seem to have some expertise with law enforcement and feral animals: "A well maintained AR is one of the most reliable gas-operated weapons available for police use." "When used within reasonable limits, say 200 yards, the .223/5.56mm round strikes a hard blow on a human target. The late gun guru Jeff Cooper called the round a “poodle shooter,” but I have to respectfully disagree with the Colonel on this one. As a Deputy Sheriff in Wyoming, I shot a number of 60 to 200 pound critters with 55 grain FMJ loads and few traveled more than a couple of steps before going down." [i.e. Go check out at what range most military firefights occur, Bratzi. It isn't, BTW, at 600 meters. At that range and beyond there are other weapons and tactics the infantry would use. I'd imagine the same can be said for law enforcement.] http://www.policeone.com/police-prod...062-M16-myths/ *There are few things as fun as nailing squirrels in the head at moderate ranges with a .223 and cooking them tastily. I love squirrel stew and squirrel chow mein. But I won't even shoot feral cats, much less deer, with one. Oh, you're in the mistaken "one shot, one kill" frame of reference. Military firefights occur most often in very close quarters with massed fire. A squad is nine people, Bratzi. Have nine people shoot a deer at close quarters with an M-16 on automatic and tell me the results. Not everybody is a friendless neo-Nazi like you are. ;-) Also, see above. LOL! *The minimum acceptable cartridge is one with at least 7mm bullet diameter and muzzle energy in the class with a .243, .308 or 7.62x39 round. According to who? Based on what? NATO had been toying with the idea of a *smaller* caliber bullet along the lines of 4.5-4.8mm. What do they know that you don't? LOL! This supposes a larger head diameter cartridge than the .223 and therefore rebarreling the M16/AR-15 is not quite an option. *FN/FAL, Galil, or HK rifle systems are all far, far better choices as would be a lightened M14/M1A or other Garand derivatives. Moving NATO from .308 to 7mm08 or .243 would be okay if a flatter shooting lighter recoiling round were needed. You clearly have no idea what you're talking about. You and 2pid are peas in a pod: no real-world expertise, and lots of pretending. |
#16
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 18, 8:15*pm, ScottW wrote:
On May 17, 1:32*pm, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 17, 3:02*pm, ScottW wrote: On May 17, 12:55*pm, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 17, 10:19*am, ScottW wrote: On May 17, 5:22*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 16, 9:58*am, ScottW wrote: On May 15, 7:52*pm, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On May 15, 8:44*pm, RapidRonnie wrote: *The Navy Aviator's Creed states: BTW, here is the latest "Soldier's Creed": I am an American Soldier. I am a Warrior and a member of a team. I serve the people of the United States, and live the Army Values. I will always place the mission first. I will never accept defeat. I will never quit. *****r is 0 fer all the above. I am, was, or will be an American Soldier. 2pid is zero for all of the above. LOL! Which of us quit? Neither of us, 2pid. You never served, I retired. *So you quit on your own protest. *I see. Wrong again, service evader. Retiring has nothing to do with "quitting". No matter how stupid you are, even you must get this. *It has nothing to do with protesting either. Not entirely, no. There were, as I've said, many reasons that went into my decision (which was *my* decision. You see, 2pid, you never had that decision to make because you entirely deeked serving like the selfish little coward that you are. LOL!). I knew you were full of crap on that, nice to see you finally admit it. I owe you nothing, 2pid. No matter how much you rant and rave, I owe you absolutely nothing. And you have no leg to stand on regarding criticizing my choice to retire when I did. You apparently couldn't pass the entrance exams. That is the only possible reason, given your demeanor, that you weren't able to serve beyond the 22 years that I did. OTOH, 2pid, you owe me my nice life-long pension with health benefits. Your tax dollars at work, 2pid. Doesn't that just burn you? The government says I've done my part and they allowed me to retire honorably with full benefits and a chestful of medals and you want to weep and wail that I haven't done my part and that I deserve no benefits. You lose, 2pid. I win. ;-) I gave most of my reasons for retiring (which, no matter how hard you try to say otherwise, is not "quitting"). You have latched on to one small aspect and locked your jaws around it like a chew toy for the brainless little puppy dog that you are. Yap yap yap. On one hand, you rant against those without firm "ideals". OTOH, you rant against those that do. Make up your 'mind', 2pid. Bark bark bark. You have proven yourself a dimwit, and you continue to do so. Why do you persist? You only look (even more) stupid. So tell me, 2pid: is someone who leaves your employer through retirement (IOW, after fully paying their "dues" to your employer) a "quitter"? Is your buddy Clyde a "quitter" for choosing to retire? Those are "yes" or "no" questions, 2pid. I thought I'd spell that out for you before you stupidly veered off onto another one of your inane side topics. Duh. What an imbecile. |
#17
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Shhhh! said: You have proven yourself a dimwit, and you continue to do so. Why do you persist? You only look (even more) stupid. Scottie imagines himself to be the harsh taskmaster who doles out pain and punishment. Do you see it differently? |
#18
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On May 18, 9:06*pm, George M. Middius
wrote: Shhhh! said: You have proven yourself a dimwit, and you continue to do so. Why do you persist? You only look (even more) stupid. Scottie imagines himself to be the harsh taskmaster who doles out pain and punishment. Do you see it differently? Well, I am getting a lot of laugh lines in my face... |
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