Majestik Møøse
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Posts posted by Majestik Møøse
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9 hours ago, BashiChuni said:
US foreign policy a disaster post WWII
An interesting statement considering that WW2 happened.
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14 hours ago, M2 said:
The Russian C-141A....
Or the Herc…
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On 2/28/2024 at 3:12 PM, brabus said:
I don't get why you would go to the Army if you wanted FW. You have two other options that have far more FW and have far less bad deals.
Because you don’t have to go to college first.
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On 3/7/2024 at 8:17 PM, Clark Griswold said:
This article is 50% relevant (maybe)…
Weird way to say the Army can’t defend itself against quadcopters. They’ll respond the same way they always have, by shooting more Patriots at sky debris which will result in the death of friendly aircraft.
The lesson that the US Army should be taking from Ukraine is that a poorly equipped but motivated army can defend itself in flat, featureless territory against an army 5x the size if that larger force is unable wield air power to attack strategic centers of gravity.
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I know a guy that couldn’t enlist in the USAF because his ASVAB was too low. So he joined the Army and they made him a Tower Controller, then they sent him to flight school and he’s flying C-12s now. So there’s that.
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Low alt this time
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On 1/13/2024 at 11:58 AM, Danger41 said:
It’s weird how you shut the flood gates for a couple years and end up paying for it down the road.
But you don’t ever pay for it, because the nature of AF moves means no one will ever be held accountable for decisions that provide a short-term benefit with worse long-term outcomes. Big decisions on acquisitions and personnel don’t come home to roost until the people who devised and approved them are several assignments in the future. There’s no personal or institutional financial penalty because the budget always goes up and the bad decision makers always get a defense gig afterwards.
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Barksdale is 22,000 acres, mostly woods. A golf course is 100 acres. Something tells me this isn’t about space.
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If I were fighting an enemy that had gone all-in on high-end low volume $500M silver bullets with standoff weapons, I think I’d just pay some insurgent groups a couple $B to go start fires on the other 5 continents. The idea that we should only have assets that can fly west of Taiwan is ludicrous.
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1 hour ago, gearhog said:
Agree. Why is that? It would seem we are either unable to accurately assess the capabilities of our foes, or intentionally misrepresenting them for the sake of funding. Either way, not good.
Intel defaults to doom and gloom baseball cards. Some of them seem to get enjoyment from telling scary stories to the pilots.
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On 9/30/2023 at 4:04 AM, gearhog said:
It's been a little while. I know there's strong feelings on both sides of the debate, so I thought it best to step back for a bit, let things play out, then revisit the situation and check on the actual results of our efforts.
Anybody know what the total US funding for Ukraine is? I haven't been keeping up. Whatever it is, your paycheck federal withholdings have resulted in a net loss of ground in Ukraine since the beginning of the year.
Sort of makes one wonder how much actually winning a conflict would cost.
That’s a net gain of a 14x14 mile square for the world’s 4th largest military after a year of force on force conflict. It boggles the mind how wrong we were about their abilities before the war started.
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1 hour ago, Danger41 said:
Some people have really turned on Mattis, but I really respected his decision to resign when he didn’t agree with Trump’s policy decision.
Probably aided by Trump consistently disparaging POWs, WIA, and KIA as losers.
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Turn reversal at 6:45 was definitely fun
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On 9/6/2023 at 2:35 PM, Biff_T said:
Where does the aircraft commander sit in any us military helicopter?
…I’d guess the left but when pressed would doubt myself.
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Crossville, TN sure is getting taken for quite the ride.
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I should say - to be 100% truthy - I’ve worked with some great O-6s. But they were in the minority, and at some point almost all of them said something that made me think twice. Never let your guard down. The really good O-6s we’re the ones that shielded you from bullshit so you could remain of pure heart and mind and give them the best information possible.
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2 hours ago, brabus said:
The one thing I did note across all of those interactions is the GO was genuinely interested in my thoughts and appreciated my effort whether they went my direction or not. The O-6 level was pissed I would dare to speak.
Exactly the same experience.
Reminded me heavily of the board room scene from Margin Call (which by the way is an outstanding movie heavily inspired by the Lehman Brothers collapse): the big boss at the head of the table engaged directly with the analyst who’s telling him “there’s a big problem that’s going to tank us all”, while the middle managers in between just want him to be quiet because they all want to hide mistakes or don’t really know what’s going on. Or a little bit of both. “You’re talking to me, Mr. Sullivan.”
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On 8/1/2023 at 8:29 AM, HeloDude said:
The military leadership reported/testified time after time how things were getting so much better in Afghanistan, how the Afghans were making all the improvements, etc. They were either lying or severely misinformed by their own subordinate leaders—regardless, the military deserves a lot of the blame.
Bobs lie to their bosses about how things are going. The Russians did it leading up to the Ukraine invasion and I’ve seen it amongst our own O-6s+ in real time. The Full Bird Reset (where they fall in line with the orders of their superiors with the renewed loyalty of an E-1) is a real phenomenon and I swear they can’t see that they’re doing it. Policies, Guidance, Ways Forward, already decided COAs - written by a non-expert AO/staffer and approved with a nod from a 4-star - could be completely out to lunch but if there’s even a perception that an O-6+ is pushing back they’re done career-wise. Read about Xi’s Thoughts where everyone in the Chinese government is required to understand and think the same way as Xi…can anyone see echoes of that mentality in our own failed endeavors?
The good news is that we’re different, because that lockstep mentality doesn’t exist at most of the Capt-Maj aircrew level. There are enough of them that they can air their informed opinions and grievances when things aren’t looking quite right, but still remain relatively anonymous. And sometimes that trickles up, skipping echelons when the wise GOs wander down to the slums to get a feel for things. Which is their duty, IMO. Don’t ever lie to your boss.
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1 hour ago, HeloDude said:
Afghanistan
It was the military’s fault for never pushing back, first on regime change without economic investment and then on leaving based on an arbitrary timetable.
Edit: ok I just read the article, and from looking at the graphs the confidence increases greatly when your favorite politician is president.
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You could plop two of the same guy into the Air Force (or any other organization) and get completely different outcomes regarding performance, experience, and morale. Or you could have guys from wildly different backgrounds reach the same outcomes. The morale and personal outlook certainly varies by assignment and time, and sometimes you get far enough behind the morale power curve that staying in the Air Force is no longer worth it to either you or the organization. I think that’s all that @Standby was trying to say. Everyone, including the government, is glad for the work you did.
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Seriously, why would the USAF entertain the idea of spending $69B to develop a new A-10 when they could use a combo of Vipers, EXs, and F-35s to do the same thing? When the existing A-10 already 1). works and 2.) costs well under $2B/year to operate and upgrade.
If the answer is “because the senators want the airplane builders to have steady income,” ok I’ll buy that.
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Lockheed always gets their $69B annual revenue; don’t worry they will also plan and execute the war for us so we don’t need you guys
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On 7/8/2023 at 9:56 AM, General Chang said:
You need to throw your hat in the ring for big jobs like Exec, CAG, DS, stuff like that. We need more pilots willing to help move the ball forward in the office, not on the flightline. If you want to get promoted, that’s your ticket- stay where you are at & become an invaluable desk jockey.
Your troll game is slipping!
Guard fighter squadrons being reduced!?
in General Discussion
Posted
We’re gonna need about 3000 fighters, 690 tankers, and 69B pounds of fuel flowing nonstop, so in no reasonable world should we be trading working airplanes for fictional ones just yet