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Default Before everyone freaks out ....

On 2/4/16 1:19 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 1:09 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 12:59 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2016 10:58:46 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 09:26:55 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/4/2016 8:56 AM, True North wrote:

John H.
- show quoted text -
"So what. In 1965 I was making $72/month. But, my food, clothing
and shelter were all
free. And I didn't have to pay for ammo."

.....and you were grossly overpaid at that!



I distinctly remember paydays early in my Navy days on the first ship.
Every two weeks the crew lined up in and outside the mess decks to be
paid. When my turn came, I'd present my ID card and the dispersing
officer would hand me a small, manilla envelope with all $50 and some
change in it. We were paid in cash back then. Now-a-days everything
is direct deposit.



Cash was king back then. When I got married, my wife got a $95 check
- a 'class Q
allotment', I believe they called it. They took $50 from my pay and
added $45 to get
the $95 for her. That left me about $45, before taxes. I'd gotten
promoted before
getting married so my pay was up close to $90 by then. Of course, the
food and
lodging were no longer free!

What was comrats then? a buck a day? I do remember the old "off base"
guys paying a buck or so for lunch when I was in FT school. In those
days the chow was real good and it was certainly a bargain.
The only rule was "take all you want, eat all you take".


We got paid in cash when I worked for the Bigelow Boiler Company in New
Haven. Every Friday afternoon just before quitting time an armored truck
would roll into the factory yard and we'd line up to get our pay
envelopes. In '63 or '64, I recall. The office workers got paid in
checks every two weeks.



Sorry for chuckling Harry but your post strikes me as being funny.
The vets here are reminiscing about 1960's military pay in the Army,
Navy and Coast Guard and you offer your experience with the Bigelow
Boiler Company. LOL (sorry ... just hit my funny bone)


`
Well, you had to have some skills, aptitude and be trainable to be hired
by Bigelow. A couple of the guys I sort of knew in high school who
didn't go to college had no skills or aptitudes that were apparent, so
they joined the army. Chuckle, chuckle.

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Default Before everyone freaks out ....

On 2/4/2016 3:15 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 1:19 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 1:09 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 12:59 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2016 10:58:46 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 09:26:55 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/4/2016 8:56 AM, True North wrote:

John H.
- show quoted text -
"So what. In 1965 I was making $72/month. But, my food, clothing
and shelter were all
free. And I didn't have to pay for ammo."

.....and you were grossly overpaid at that!



I distinctly remember paydays early in my Navy days on the first
ship.
Every two weeks the crew lined up in and outside the mess decks to be
paid. When my turn came, I'd present my ID card and the dispersing
officer would hand me a small, manilla envelope with all $50 and some
change in it. We were paid in cash back then. Now-a-days
everything
is direct deposit.



Cash was king back then. When I got married, my wife got a $95 check
- a 'class Q
allotment', I believe they called it. They took $50 from my pay and
added $45 to get
the $95 for her. That left me about $45, before taxes. I'd gotten
promoted before
getting married so my pay was up close to $90 by then. Of course, the
food and
lodging were no longer free!

What was comrats then? a buck a day? I do remember the old "off base"
guys paying a buck or so for lunch when I was in FT school. In those
days the chow was real good and it was certainly a bargain.
The only rule was "take all you want, eat all you take".


We got paid in cash when I worked for the Bigelow Boiler Company in New
Haven. Every Friday afternoon just before quitting time an armored truck
would roll into the factory yard and we'd line up to get our pay
envelopes. In '63 or '64, I recall. The office workers got paid in
checks every two weeks.



Sorry for chuckling Harry but your post strikes me as being funny.
The vets here are reminiscing about 1960's military pay in the Army,
Navy and Coast Guard and you offer your experience with the Bigelow
Boiler Company. LOL (sorry ... just hit my funny bone)




`
Well, you had to have some skills, aptitude and be trainable to be hired
by Bigelow. A couple of the guys I sort of knew in high school who
didn't go to college had no skills or aptitudes that were apparent, so
they joined the army. Chuckle, chuckle.


It's really too bad that you have such a low opinion of military service
and the schools and training that it offers. People come from all walks
of life and many don't have the superior aptitude that you possess or
have the opportunity to acquire specific skills at a young age. But,
given your lack of experience and knowledge of the subject, it's
understandable. The reality is:

The military services have developed extremely efficient and effective
methods to teach and train people, developing skill sets that serve the
needs of the specific service. Many of these skill sets are
transferable to civilian occupations when the service member leaves
active duty. You might be amazed at the professionalism that exists in
these young servicemembers, especially in today's military, and the
level of responsibility that those people who you claim "had no skills
or aptitudes that were apparent" take on and acquire.

Just think Harry. The bulk of the service members who operate and
maintain some of the most sophisticated equipment in the world ... like
aircraft, submarines, tanks, ships, and all the associated support
equipment that goes with them are people without a college degree and
had no experience doing what they do before they entered the military.
Yet, they are the backbone of a national defense system that assures
your right to complain and criticize them because they don't meet your
high standards.

Must make you have sleepless nights, eh?


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Default Before everyone freaks out ....

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 15:15:36 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:

A couple of the guys I sort of knew in high school who
didn't go to college had no skills or aptitudes that were apparent, so
they joined the army. Chuckle, chuckle.


I know people who got out of college with no skills or aptitude and
they ended up being an assistant manager in a retail outlet, a job a
clerk could get in less than 4 years and be paid the whole time.
(no laughing matter)
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Posts: 1,244
Default Before everyone freaks out ....

On 2/4/2016 1:19 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 1:09 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 12:59 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2016 10:58:46 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 09:26:55 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/4/2016 8:56 AM, True North wrote:

John H.
- show quoted text -
"So what. In 1965 I was making $72/month. But, my food, clothing
and shelter were all
free. And I didn't have to pay for ammo."

.....and you were grossly overpaid at that!



I distinctly remember paydays early in my Navy days on the first ship.
Every two weeks the crew lined up in and outside the mess decks to be
paid. When my turn came, I'd present my ID card and the dispersing
officer would hand me a small, manilla envelope with all $50 and some
change in it. We were paid in cash back then. Now-a-days everything
is direct deposit.



Cash was king back then. When I got married, my wife got a $95 check
- a 'class Q
allotment', I believe they called it. They took $50 from my pay and
added $45 to get
the $95 for her. That left me about $45, before taxes. I'd gotten
promoted before
getting married so my pay was up close to $90 by then. Of course, the
food and
lodging were no longer free!

What was comrats then? a buck a day? I do remember the old "off base"
guys paying a buck or so for lunch when I was in FT school. In those
days the chow was real good and it was certainly a bargain.
The only rule was "take all you want, eat all you take".


We got paid in cash when I worked for the Bigelow Boiler Company in New
Haven. Every Friday afternoon just before quitting time an armored truck
would roll into the factory yard and we'd line up to get our pay
envelopes. In '63 or '64, I recall. The office workers got paid in
checks every two weeks.



Sorry for chuckling Harry but your post strikes me as being funny.
The vets here are reminiscing about 1960's military pay in the Army,
Navy and Coast Guard and you offer your experience with the Bigelow
Boiler Company. LOL (sorry ... just hit my funny bone)


Harry's just trying to be one of the boys. I'm afraid it's a little too
late for that.
  #85   Report Post  
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Posts: 1,244
Default Before everyone freaks out ....

On 2/4/2016 3:15 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 1:19 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 1:09 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 12:59 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2016 10:58:46 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 09:26:55 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/4/2016 8:56 AM, True North wrote:

John H.
- show quoted text -
"So what. In 1965 I was making $72/month. But, my food, clothing
and shelter were all
free. And I didn't have to pay for ammo."

.....and you were grossly overpaid at that!



I distinctly remember paydays early in my Navy days on the first
ship.
Every two weeks the crew lined up in and outside the mess decks to be
paid. When my turn came, I'd present my ID card and the dispersing
officer would hand me a small, manilla envelope with all $50 and some
change in it. We were paid in cash back then. Now-a-days
everything
is direct deposit.



Cash was king back then. When I got married, my wife got a $95 check
- a 'class Q
allotment', I believe they called it. They took $50 from my pay and
added $45 to get
the $95 for her. That left me about $45, before taxes. I'd gotten
promoted before
getting married so my pay was up close to $90 by then. Of course, the
food and
lodging were no longer free!

What was comrats then? a buck a day? I do remember the old "off base"
guys paying a buck or so for lunch when I was in FT school. In those
days the chow was real good and it was certainly a bargain.
The only rule was "take all you want, eat all you take".


We got paid in cash when I worked for the Bigelow Boiler Company in New
Haven. Every Friday afternoon just before quitting time an armored truck
would roll into the factory yard and we'd line up to get our pay
envelopes. In '63 or '64, I recall. The office workers got paid in
checks every two weeks.



Sorry for chuckling Harry but your post strikes me as being funny.
The vets here are reminiscing about 1960's military pay in the Army,
Navy and Coast Guard and you offer your experience with the Bigelow
Boiler Company. LOL (sorry ... just hit my funny bone)


`
Well, you had to have some skills, aptitude and be trainable to be hired
by Bigelow. A couple of the guys I sort of knew in high school who
didn't go to college had no skills or aptitudes that were apparent, so
they joined the army. Chuckle, chuckle.


So exactly what skills were required to crawl through a little hole with
a bucket and scrub brush in hand, in order to clean the inside of a boiler?


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Default Before everyone freaks out ....

On 2/4/2016 4:46 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 3:15 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 1:19 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 1:09 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 12:59 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2016 10:58:46 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 09:26:55 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/4/2016 8:56 AM, True North wrote:

John H.
- show quoted text -
"So what. In 1965 I was making $72/month. But, my food, clothing
and shelter were all
free. And I didn't have to pay for ammo."

.....and you were grossly overpaid at that!



I distinctly remember paydays early in my Navy days on the first
ship.
Every two weeks the crew lined up in and outside the mess decks
to be
paid. When my turn came, I'd present my ID card and the dispersing
officer would hand me a small, manilla envelope with all $50 and
some
change in it. We were paid in cash back then. Now-a-days
everything
is direct deposit.



Cash was king back then. When I got married, my wife got a $95 check
- a 'class Q
allotment', I believe they called it. They took $50 from my pay and
added $45 to get
the $95 for her. That left me about $45, before taxes. I'd gotten
promoted before
getting married so my pay was up close to $90 by then. Of course, the
food and
lodging were no longer free!

What was comrats then? a buck a day? I do remember the old "off base"
guys paying a buck or so for lunch when I was in FT school. In those
days the chow was real good and it was certainly a bargain.
The only rule was "take all you want, eat all you take".


We got paid in cash when I worked for the Bigelow Boiler Company in New
Haven. Every Friday afternoon just before quitting time an armored
truck
would roll into the factory yard and we'd line up to get our pay
envelopes. In '63 or '64, I recall. The office workers got paid in
checks every two weeks.


Sorry for chuckling Harry but your post strikes me as being funny.
The vets here are reminiscing about 1960's military pay in the Army,
Navy and Coast Guard and you offer your experience with the Bigelow
Boiler Company. LOL (sorry ... just hit my funny bone)




`
Well, you had to have some skills, aptitude and be trainable to be hired
by Bigelow. A couple of the guys I sort of knew in high school who
didn't go to college had no skills or aptitudes that were apparent, so
they joined the army. Chuckle, chuckle.


It's really too bad that you have such a low opinion of military service
and the schools and training that it offers. People come from all walks
of life and many don't have the superior aptitude that you possess or
have the opportunity to acquire specific skills at a young age. But,
given your lack of experience and knowledge of the subject, it's
understandable. The reality is:

The military services have developed extremely efficient and effective
methods to teach and train people, developing skill sets that serve the
needs of the specific service. Many of these skill sets are
transferable to civilian occupations when the service member leaves
active duty. You might be amazed at the professionalism that exists in
these young servicemembers, especially in today's military, and the
level of responsibility that those people who you claim "had no skills
or aptitudes that were apparent" take on and acquire.

Just think Harry. The bulk of the service members who operate and
maintain some of the most sophisticated equipment in the world ... like
aircraft, submarines, tanks, ships, and all the associated support
equipment that goes with them are people without a college degree and
had no experience doing what they do before they entered the military.
Yet, they are the backbone of a national defense system that assures
your right to complain and criticize them because they don't meet your
high standards.

Must make you have sleepless nights, eh?


As long as he has his CPAP machine attached to his nose, he sleeps like
a baby. He's completely unaware that he's being played for a fool.
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Posts: 2,215
Default Before everyone freaks out ....

On Thursday, February 4, 2016 at 4:46:58 PM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 3:15 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 1:19 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 1:09 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 12:59 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2016 10:58:46 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 09:26:55 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/4/2016 8:56 AM, True North wrote:

John H.
- show quoted text -
"So what. In 1965 I was making $72/month. But, my food, clothing
and shelter were all
free. And I didn't have to pay for ammo."

.....and you were grossly overpaid at that!



I distinctly remember paydays early in my Navy days on the first
ship.
Every two weeks the crew lined up in and outside the mess decks to be
paid. When my turn came, I'd present my ID card and the dispersing
officer would hand me a small, manilla envelope with all $50 and some
change in it. We were paid in cash back then. Now-a-days
everything
is direct deposit.



Cash was king back then. When I got married, my wife got a $95 check
- a 'class Q
allotment', I believe they called it. They took $50 from my pay and
added $45 to get
the $95 for her. That left me about $45, before taxes. I'd gotten
promoted before
getting married so my pay was up close to $90 by then. Of course, the
food and
lodging were no longer free!

What was comrats then? a buck a day? I do remember the old "off base"
guys paying a buck or so for lunch when I was in FT school. In those
days the chow was real good and it was certainly a bargain.
The only rule was "take all you want, eat all you take".


We got paid in cash when I worked for the Bigelow Boiler Company in New
Haven. Every Friday afternoon just before quitting time an armored truck
would roll into the factory yard and we'd line up to get our pay
envelopes. In '63 or '64, I recall. The office workers got paid in
checks every two weeks.


Sorry for chuckling Harry but your post strikes me as being funny.
The vets here are reminiscing about 1960's military pay in the Army,
Navy and Coast Guard and you offer your experience with the Bigelow
Boiler Company. LOL (sorry ... just hit my funny bone)




`
Well, you had to have some skills, aptitude and be trainable to be hired
by Bigelow. A couple of the guys I sort of knew in high school who
didn't go to college had no skills or aptitudes that were apparent, so
they joined the army. Chuckle, chuckle.


It's really too bad that you have such a low opinion of military service
and the schools and training that it offers. People come from all walks
of life and many don't have the superior aptitude that you possess or
have the opportunity to acquire specific skills at a young age. But,
given your lack of experience and knowledge of the subject, it's
understandable. The reality is:

The military services have developed extremely efficient and effective
methods to teach and train people, developing skill sets that serve the
needs of the specific service. Many of these skill sets are
transferable to civilian occupations when the service member leaves
active duty. You might be amazed at the professionalism that exists in
these young servicemembers, especially in today's military, and the
level of responsibility that those people who you claim "had no skills
or aptitudes that were apparent" take on and acquire.

Just think Harry. The bulk of the service members who operate and
maintain some of the most sophisticated equipment in the world ... like
aircraft, submarines, tanks, ships, and all the associated support
equipment that goes with them are people without a college degree and
had no experience doing what they do before they entered the military.
Yet, they are the backbone of a national defense system that assures
your right to complain and criticize them because they don't meet your
high standards.

Must make you have sleepless nights, eh?


The last paragraph was dead-on and priceless. Thanks for taking the time to explain that to him. He'll puff and blow, but he knows you're right.
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Default Before everyone freaks out ....

wrote:
On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 15:15:36 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:

A couple of the guys I sort of knew in high school who
didn't go to college had no skills or aptitudes that were apparent, so
they joined the army. Chuckle, chuckle.


I know people who got out of college with no skills or aptitude and
they ended up being an assistant manager in a retail outlet, a job a
clerk could get in less than 4 years and be paid the whole time.
(no laughing matter)


My nephew and his wife, both have college business degrees. Both manage a
retail store. His brother, with no college also manages a successful chain
of stores. Let's see, head of Microsoft. Safe college, no degree, worth
$50 billion. Harry, multiple liberal arts degrees. Twice bankrupt. Maybe
should have learned something useful.

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Posts: 210
Default Before everyone freaks out ....

Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 3:15 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 1:19 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 1:09 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 12:59 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2016 10:58:46 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 09:26:55 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"

wrote:

On 2/4/2016 8:56 AM, True North wrote:

John H.
- show quoted text -
"So what. In 1965 I was making $72/month. But, my food, clothing
and shelter were all
free. And I didn't have to pay for ammo."

.....and you were grossly overpaid at that!



I distinctly remember paydays early in my Navy days on the first
ship.
Every two weeks the crew lined up in and outside the mess decks
to be
paid. When my turn came, I'd present my ID card and the dispersing
officer would hand me a small, manilla envelope with all $50 and
some
change in it. We were paid in cash back then. Now-a-days
everything
is direct deposit.



Cash was king back then. When I got married, my wife got a $95 check
- a 'class Q
allotment', I believe they called it. They took $50 from my pay and
added $45 to get
the $95 for her. That left me about $45, before taxes. I'd gotten
promoted before
getting married so my pay was up close to $90 by then. Of course,
the
food and
lodging were no longer free!

What was comrats then? a buck a day? I do remember the old "off base"
guys paying a buck or so for lunch when I was in FT school. In those
days the chow was real good and it was certainly a bargain.
The only rule was "take all you want, eat all you take".


We got paid in cash when I worked for the Bigelow Boiler Company in
New
Haven. Every Friday afternoon just before quitting time an armored
truck
would roll into the factory yard and we'd line up to get our pay
envelopes. In '63 or '64, I recall. The office workers got paid in
checks every two weeks.


Sorry for chuckling Harry but your post strikes me as being funny.
The vets here are reminiscing about 1960's military pay in the Army,
Navy and Coast Guard and you offer your experience with the Bigelow
Boiler Company. LOL (sorry ... just hit my funny bone)




`
Well, you had to have some skills, aptitude and be trainable to be hired
by Bigelow. A couple of the guys I sort of knew in high school who
didn't go to college had no skills or aptitudes that were apparent, so
they joined the army. Chuckle, chuckle.


It's really too bad that you have such a low opinion of military service
and the schools and training that it offers. People come from all walks
of life and many don't have the superior aptitude that you possess or
have the opportunity to acquire specific skills at a young age. But,
given your lack of experience and knowledge of the subject, it's
understandable. The reality is:

The military services have developed extremely efficient and effective
methods to teach and train people, developing skill sets that serve
the needs of the specific service. Many of these skill sets are
transferable to civilian occupations when the service member leaves
active duty. You might be amazed at the professionalism that exists
in these young servicemembers, especially in today's military, and the
level of responsibility that those people who you claim "had no skills
or aptitudes that were apparent" take on and acquire.

Just think Harry. The bulk of the service members who operate and
maintain some of the most sophisticated equipment in the world ...
like aircraft, submarines, tanks, ships, and all the associated
support equipment that goes with them are people without a college
degree and had no experience doing what they do before they entered
the military. Yet, they are the backbone of a national defense system
that assures your right to complain and criticize them because they
don't meet your high standards.

Must make you have sleepless nights, eh?




He doesn't pay taxes and sleeps well. Harry is a narcissistic scumbag
and a liar on a level even Hillary would disapprove.

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Default Before everyone freaks out ....

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 15:15:36 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:

On 2/4/16 1:19 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/4/2016 1:09 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/4/16 12:59 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2016 10:58:46 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 09:26:55 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/4/2016 8:56 AM, True North wrote:

John H.
- show quoted text -
"So what. In 1965 I was making $72/month. But, my food, clothing
and shelter were all
free. And I didn't have to pay for ammo."

.....and you were grossly overpaid at that!



I distinctly remember paydays early in my Navy days on the first ship.
Every two weeks the crew lined up in and outside the mess decks to be
paid. When my turn came, I'd present my ID card and the dispersing
officer would hand me a small, manilla envelope with all $50 and some
change in it. We were paid in cash back then. Now-a-days everything
is direct deposit.



Cash was king back then. When I got married, my wife got a $95 check
- a 'class Q
allotment', I believe they called it. They took $50 from my pay and
added $45 to get
the $95 for her. That left me about $45, before taxes. I'd gotten
promoted before
getting married so my pay was up close to $90 by then. Of course, the
food and
lodging were no longer free!

What was comrats then? a buck a day? I do remember the old "off base"
guys paying a buck or so for lunch when I was in FT school. In those
days the chow was real good and it was certainly a bargain.
The only rule was "take all you want, eat all you take".


We got paid in cash when I worked for the Bigelow Boiler Company in New
Haven. Every Friday afternoon just before quitting time an armored truck
would roll into the factory yard and we'd line up to get our pay
envelopes. In '63 or '64, I recall. The office workers got paid in
checks every two weeks.



Sorry for chuckling Harry but your post strikes me as being funny.
The vets here are reminiscing about 1960's military pay in the Army,
Navy and Coast Guard and you offer your experience with the Bigelow
Boiler Company. LOL (sorry ... just hit my funny bone)


`
Well, you had to have some skills, aptitude and be trainable to be hired
by Bigelow. A couple of the guys I sort of knew in high school who
didn't go to college had no skills or aptitudes that were apparent, so
they joined the army. Chuckle, chuckle.


Maybe they had plenty of skills and no money. You comment if someone posts something
you find insensitive, but they you show your total lack of sensitivity. What an
assholish comment.

Not everyone's daddy can be the biggest boat dealer in the entire northeast United
States.

Maybe you should stick to stories about your 'Vietnam service'.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!
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