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Everything posted by Clark Griswold
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I could go round and round arguing with you on your opinions on immigration (legal and illegal) and we would not change each other's minds, also I consider you a good faith arguer and non-shitposter so if that's your opinion fair enough. I would disagree (well just a little round and round) that immigration is a massive net positive for the USA; controlled, legal, meritocratic, diverse immigration at a rate that can be assimilated is a net positive, how much of a positive I think is overstated IMHO.
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So you're okay with the SW border situation? You believe the administration is correctly interpreting and enforcing the laws of the USA regarding immigration and employment enforcement?
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I’m guessing they want that old broke Soviet shit for the spare parts / ammo but that’s giving the benefit of the doubt generously But considering the customers of Soviet now Russian gear, which of these countries are gonna burn that bridge with Russia when they don’t really like us that much? Does she expect Cuba, Peru, Bolivia, Venezuela, etc..really to cozy up to the Yankees after they piss off the Russians #2dimensionalthinking Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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We don’t have to tell them to stop but we don’t have to supply and support them if we determine it’s not in our interest. Just as I think we should be concerned about the longer term of Ukraine we need to be concerned about what Russia will be after the conflict is ended. That’s not because I love the current brutal authoritarian regime of Russia but because it could get worse. If it gets to be an internal power struggle, civil war, instability… the successor to Putin could be this dude: https://news.yahoo.com/owner-wagner-mercenary-group-could-195500949.html Methinks a weakened but not delirious and crazily dangerous Russia should be our goal. I think the lesson of Iraq should give us pause about gleefully toppling and radically destabilizing authoritarian regimes, particularly ones with 7000 nukes plus a 6900 other WMD / advanced military capabilities. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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I don’t think that the facts matter at all, 90% of the media, entertainment industry, most of academia and the administrative state will just ignore it, obfuscate it or spin it. Nothing will come of it except he won’t run again, nothing will come of the substantive allegations of influence peddling against him, his son or any members of his family. They (the 10-20%) of this country caught between the committed partisan 40ish percent on the left / right of which I’m a part have zero faith that they have thru their representatives in the government will up channel enough disapproval to convince them to do something. They’re too scared of losing what they have in this life, being cancelled or just are not affected by it right now so they DGAF. But I’m not cynical not one bit. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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I'll agree with most on this thread that helping Ukraine has been a wise decision and continuing to help them is the best COA going forward at some point though there will come a point that it will not be in OUR interest to help them further considering the long game, namely the stabilization and recovery of Ukraine. We as their patron will need to say no more and let's conclude the hostilities like all conflicts end, in some kind of negotiations. We're not there yet but I think we can see an appropriate ending point in the next year. We may see that time before the Ukrainians do because their government and their relationship to their government is not the same as ours, I always keep in mind my admiration of the Ukranian people is different than the Ukranian government. That's all I want to say about that. All that said, where do we go from here as to what our enemies / competitors will have seen, learned and therefore will act on in the future? My suspicion is that the next map of Ukraine will look like this. Many countries will not recognize the territory taken by Russia but they will control them and incorporate them into the Russian Federation. My fear is that this will prove that aggression does to some extent work, albeit at a VERY high cost but if you are willing to pay for it you will get some of what you want. Territory, control of sea lanes, islands, etc.. you can get it if you will attack. With that in mind, besides making our allies into porcupines in these high tension areas of the work with healthy supplies of missiles, artillery, mines and next gen weapons (DE, tac drones, etc.) what should be our strategy/policy implications?
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I can and it will just confirm what we already know...
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This is pretty scary. The conditions are being set to escalate this into a much wider regional conflict. https://www.yahoo.com/news/russia-sets-ultimatum-formally-pull-184620634.html False flag border attack ala Nazi Germany on Poland followed by short notice impossible ultimatum, Belarus is the aggrieved party with Russia riding to save them and we’re off… They may bring a bit to their fight but probably not much, guessing they would be used to free up more Russian troops for offensive operations while they guard the bases and already secured areas Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Things you should listen to drunk while on BO
Clark Griswold replied to Clark Griswold's topic in Squadron Bar
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Meanwhile in Mexico... Light attack in action: https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/mexican-light-attack-plane-strafes-cartel-forces-after-arrest-of-el-chapos-son
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Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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On a new Russian offensive, British analysis: Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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I hope you're right and I'm wrong. I'm pessimistic about the war as I think they (Russians) have enough mobliks now and ammo to launch another offensive, really just to try to get Ukraine to negotiate and accept territorial concessions. Russia Seen as Preparing for Massive Winter Offensive in Ukraine, Including New Run on Kyiv | World Report | U.S. News (usnews.com) Another decent read on the Ukr / Rus war: Putin's War in Ukraine Is Brutal (It Looks Like the Crimean War) - 19FortyFive
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Interested in guesses from this audience… War in Ukraine, how much longer do you think it will go before an armistice or a negotiation to a permanent settlement? My opinion it will last most of next year, past the summer. Russia is garnering forces, buying weapons, learning/adapting some. NOT a statement of support but my assessment. Ukraine is also, the war and likely final line of control will remain east of the Dneiper River. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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link to APC thread: Congratulations to First Officer Pettit - Airline Pilot Central Forums (airlinepilotforums.com)
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Air Force is hiring for civilian T-6 IPs
Clark Griswold replied to Arkbird's topic in General Discussion
Gotcha Concur with over manning in useless positions in staff positions with pilots and no disagreement on A1 not selling the assignment because they insanely believe they are not going to get the same / a bit more MILPERS in the next FY that they have been getting in the previous recent FYs. Yeah there's some risk taken but not an inordinate amount for the reward (filling critical manning) then you take risk, if you don't get the MILPERS you thought you were going to get, reprioritize as you spent some early and don't fund something else. Multiyear MPA tours are possible and can / should be advertised to attract volunteers and done so that the member could make plans to keep mama bear and cubs happy. I'm just ranting and not disagreeing that it won't scale, I'm just ranting because the AF again is confronted with a problem and just looks for ways and rules to keep itself from solving it. -
Air Force is hiring for civilian T-6 IPs
Clark Griswold replied to Arkbird's topic in General Discussion
Did not know that. Quite possible Get out your check book AF and you can fix this 1 - Hire for 2 year contracts ER / other aviation colleges grads for two year contracts or 750 training sorties. Incentivize timely production. 100k student loan repayment upon completion and with housing provided, pay per flight hour avg FO pay at an LCC. 2 - Offer 2-3 year MPA tours with 50k bonus per year as long TDYs to Guard and Reserve 3 - Recruit Army WO pilots You have the money in MILPERS, stop being miserly, if you wanna catch fish sometimes you just need more/better bait Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk -
Air Force is hiring for civilian T-6 IPs
Clark Griswold replied to Arkbird's topic in General Discussion
How is the AF not able to do this? The Army has DACs (dept of the army civilians) flying aircraft as instructors and just regular crew stateside for years Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk -
Yup saw that, more bullshit proving to me “they” believe we’re serfs and they will just give us what they think we should get not what was paid for or agreed to After reading that and hearing about what TVA did the next hot trend is for every house to be wired for self generated power Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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German Govt Wants to Remote Control Home Heat, Electric Car Charge (breitbart.com) And lemme guess, there would be special accounts that would not be subject to the same rationing when power gets scarce?
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F-35 Down in Ft. Worth // Pilot Ejected
Clark Griswold replied to mp5g's topic in General Discussion
That assumes they (the USMC) will be doing the same mission sets as they did in the past, with the development of long-range precision fires, persistent ISR and other systems (small drones, loitering munitions, etc...) I doubt the future will look like the past, similar but also significantly different. USMC also doubtful of the big amphibious landings too now: The questionable future of amphibious assault (brookings.edu) I think they should have their own air fleet but it's crazy to think in a major conventional fight that they will be own their own for weeks at a time. Methinks it's not crazy for them to be a self-contained deterrence force against certain adversaries and to put down small wars / limited contingency ops (NEO being a great example) requiring a certain amount of conventional combined arms power to execute successfully. I suggested the Sea Gripen earlier as it is a pretty good example of what I think is the right level of capability & affordability, probably not enough to conduct Forcible Entry style operations but enough to respond and repel aggression at the edges and corners of our areas of interest. That type of system based on a more capable boat (angle deck, ski jump, amphib well) but smaller than a nuke CVN, should have been the solution methinks. -
At some point, the people (not just Republicans) who don't want an open border, knowingly abused asylum system, ignored migration laws and non-enforcement of deportation orders will have to publicly admit that the other side is not a partner in a rule of law, egalitarian democratic republic. Whether to continue to take the continuing humiliation and contemptuous abuse will be that which determines the fate of the republic. When do you think they will stop? When they get 10 million, 20 million or 40 million new voters, clients for the welfare state and people willing to work for less than you will? At some point you have to stand up to Biff or you will do his homework forever.
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F-35 Down in Ft. Worth // Pilot Ejected
Clark Griswold replied to mp5g's topic in General Discussion
The Sea Gripen Just vaporware now but digital engineering and preliminary work has already been done. Not a crazy concept to take a plane designed to hit the road at the 690 fpm and stop inside of a 1500' and modify for carrier ops. Reduce signature where you can (air intakes, weapons carriage, etc...) and leverage the good EW capes already in the Gripen weapons system. Brazil, India and other allies have looked at a Sea Gripen but the USMC should have taken the lead and methinks they would have gotten others to get off the fence also. Like the F-20, the Allies will get confident when/if we buy it. https://www.asianmilitaryreview.com/2017/02/gripen-m-for-indian-navy/ My point on the Gripen would be relevant about 15 years ago but the horse has left the barn but i rant away anyway... Anyway dueling opinions on the Lightning Carriers for pot stirring: https://www.businessinsider.com/us-lightning-carriers-more-capable-than-chinese-carriers-admiral-says-2022-11 https://warontherocks.com/2021/10/lightning-carriers-emerge-as-asias-new-capital-ships-strategic-investments-with-varied-operational-value/ My two cents, yes to smaller carriers, maybe to B model 35s, no to believing anything is gonna change from the acquisition path we are on. -
The only logical choice for Boeing to develop:
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https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/a-reality-check-on-the-army-picking-v-280-valor-over-sb1-defiant Worth a read Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk