Categories
EVIL MF Well I thought it was funny!

And to my not so great readers out there Grumpy

Categories
Well I thought it was funny!

And the Shysters can’t understand why some Folks hate them

Image

Categories
Well I thought it was funny!

You have to be kidding, right!?!

Categories
All About Guns Fieldcraft War Well I thought it was funny! You have to be kidding, right!?!

Marines called customer service for help in a firefight

Categories
Well I thought it was funny! Well I thought it was neat! You have to be kidding, right!?!

Good luck on getting that one!

Categories
Well I thought it was funny!

Dr Strangelove, one of my favorite movies!

Categories
Well I thought it was funny!

WOODY’S LAW WRITTEN BY WILL DABBS, MD

This is a nail puller. It is a great multi-function tool. My daughter and I made the tool-holding monkey years ago as a homeschool project.

 

There is way more to life than what we can touch and feel. Just about the time we think we’ve got our heads around it, something comes up that calls everything into question. It’s honestly a bit unsettling if you let yourself think about it unduly.

The human genome consists of some 3.2 billion base pairs. If you unwound the DNA in a single human cell, it would be roughly six feet long. If you stretched all the DNA in a single human out end to end, it would extend from the earth to the sun and back 360 times. Roughly 40% of human DNA is interchangeable with that of a cabbage.

When dogs poop, they most often orient themselves facing either north or south. We have no idea how or why they do that. The Global Positioning System is a network of 31 breathtakingly expensive satellites that are used to help mankind navigate anywhere on the globe. Military receivers are accurate to about 20 meters. The salmon does better than that, and its brain is roughly the size of an English pea.

Each water molecule consists of one oxygen and two hydrogen atoms. There are eight times as many atoms in a teaspoon of water as there are teaspoons of water in the Atlantic Ocean. If you took all the molecules in a teaspoon of water and set them to end to end, they would stretch from one end of our solar system and back five times.

 

It makes no difference how many screwdrivers you own and what sort.
They will all inexplicably transform into the opposite kind the moment
you desperately need one.

The multi-bit screwdriver is mankind’s answer to Woody’s Law.
I own several, but they are forever lost.

 

Our moms told us to wash our hands to get rid of germs. There are ten times as many bacteria in and on the human body as there are cells. No amount of scrubbing will ever change that.

Of all the manifest weirdness to be found in the fields of science, one timeless axiom eclipses them all. Forget the Einstein-Rosen Bridge or the fact that the inky black spot in the night sky never, ever stops; the most inexplicable aspect of human existence can be found in your typical tool bag. My dad’s name is Woody. He coined the term Woody’s Law. Here’s a typical example.

My dad needed a nail puller. A nail puller looks kind of like a pair of pliers. However, instead of serrated jaws, the nail puller has a pair of hardened steel wedges that come together at a horizontal sharp edge. It is designed to pull nails. However, that’s not really what you use it for. The nail puller is used to snip stuff. It’s like wire cutters but handier. A nail puller is great for tasks like snipping the ends off of zip ties.

My dad has a perfectly serviceable nail puller. He is also a pretty neat guy. I don’t mean neat like cool, though he is that as well. I mean, he’s tidy. By contrast, I am most definitely not. My parents assure me I’m not adopted. However, on a certain day, when Dad needed his nail puller, it was nowhere to be found. Dad tore through his tool bag and explored all the standard haunts to no avail. In frustration, he trekked over to Home Depot and bought a new one which he used and then deposited in his tool bag.

 

This may look like a tool bag. It’s not. This is actually
a portal to another dimension.

 

A few days later, he needed the nail puller again. This time he retired to his tool bag only to discover the old nail puller. The new nail puller was inexplicably gone. Mom and dad live alone. The kids and grandkids visit regularly, but we don’t rifle through Dad’s tools and rearrange his nail pullers. Dad postulates that his tool bag perhaps doubles as a portal to another dimension.

Distilled to its essence, Woody’s Law simply states that amidst a sea of tools, whatever specific implement you need will be either tucked away where it is hard to reach or actually gone. It doesn’t matter how recently you put it away or how certain you are of its last location. Tools seem to slip in and out of the physical universe with unsettling frequency. Don’t believe me?

There are two broad categories of screws in the world — Phillips and standard. The Phillips self-centering screw was invented and patented by a John P. Thompson in 1932. He is not to be confused with John T. Thompson, who was busy with his eponymous Thompson submachine gun at around the same time. Nobody wanted Mr. Thompson’s weird crosshead screw. He sold the rights to his invention to a businessman named Henry Frank Phillips, so here we are. I have no idea the history behind the other sort. Maybe it was invented by some guy named Standard. Regardless, Phillips and standard screwdrivers are not interchangeable.

It never fails, and it doesn’t matter how many screwdrivers you own. If you need a standard, then all you can find are Phillips. If you need a Phillips, then they are all inexplicably flathead. It doesn’t matter how recently you went through the tool bag. I can only assume these tools keep slipping into another dimension. That’s Woody’s Law.

Categories
Well I thought it was funny!

Blackface in the Military | Andrew Schulz | INFAMOUS

Categories
Allies Well I thought it was funny! You have to be kidding, right!?!

Why is it that I could see this happening?

It was just a matter of time. Local San Diego high school hired a new bus driver recently and he got on the wrong exit and ended up on MCRD.

Having just finished his first cycle as a Drill Instructor, Staff Sgt (Redacted), was pretty amped up. “I just love Making Marines, I lost my bearing a little, I guess” He entered that bus with the intensity of a freight train. One student tried to explain they were lost and obviously was greeted firmly with agreement. “No S*** You’re F****** Lost!!!!

But now you’re found, and you belong to ME!” An onslaught of beratement continued for another 15 minutes continued until another Drill Instructor, who had been sitting outside the bus listening and laughing finally felt the children had enough, walked in and dismissed the Drill Instructor.

The Command SgtMaj received a concerned phone call from the High School Principal later that afternoon. The tone quickly shifted when the SgtMaj had heard enough. After several apologies from the principal, the school has sent out a memo to angry parents. “The incident in question was part of a planned recruiting trial” The memo went on to explain, the students were given a unique opportunity to experience boot camp and should be thankful for such a honored experience.

Hot cocoa and warm blankets were passed out at the school, all children expected to have a full recovery. Local recruiters report several students called the next day interested and have begun plans for a joint operation to reroute more buses to the gate.

Outside The Wire

Podcast for Combat veterans

Categories
Born again Cynic! The Green Machine Well I thought it was funny! You have to be kidding, right!?!

Are veterans bad for the economy? Experts say yes

America's Most Trusted Military News
Republicans and Democrats agree, debt crisis is vet’s fault
Another lifetime transportation device for some freeloader
WASHINGTON — Military veterans make up only 6.4% of the United States population, according to Census Bureau data, but these freeloaders cost the American taxpayer billions, a fact that brings Republicans and Democrats together.
It is no coincidence that the national debt ceiling has become a contentious issue for usually rational and cooperative legislators. But one silver lining in the fight is the unifying effect that paying for veterans has when they’re no longer actively fighting wars or offering useful photo opportunities. Legislators, budget analysts, and journalists agree, America’s veterans, especially disabled ones, are “a gigantic pain in the ass.”
“When you think about it, the VA budget is about $119 billion but we only have about 19 million veterans,” stated Washington Post journalist Aimes Poorly. “So, that amounts to what? Like, ten billion dollars per veteran?”
“I don’t know about you,” Poorly continued. “But I don’t want my tax dollars to make billionaires out of cripples and shell-shocked kids who can’t contribute to society. They need to pull themselves up by their combat bootstraps. Do you think my parents paid for four years of finding my truth at Wellesley or my Eurosummer with a bunch of government handouts? No! My dad is a simple plastic surgeon. He had to perform a lot of extra elective surgeries to pay for all that. These crybaby vets could have chosen Spain over Nangarhar or Ramadi if they had a little vision. Dude, the raves in Ibiza are nuts.”
No two ways about it: America’s veterans are thieves
Recently, the Washington Post brilliantly used an opinion article to explore this very topic — highlighting the unfortunate fact that advanced medical research and care means more service members survive severe and life-threatening injuries than in previous generations. This huge downside of science has led to a surplus of greedy veterans for the American people to support with benefits like healthcare, free or reduced college costs, life insurance, and career training. It was a thought-provoking exercise in brilliance that really made people think.
Willow Sparks, an unemployed crystals expert, weighed in.
“So, like, here I am $80,000 in debt to student loans, with a Ph.D. in cosmic philosophy, and I find it pretty insulting that all you have to do is serve in the Army, get injured and bam — free healthcare and free college,” Sparks said. “Like, what gives?”
Though she never served in the military, Sparks considers identifying as a wounded veteran as a means of securing the money to pay back student loans. Alternatively, she may move to “this micro-swap commune in the Yucatan and just default.”
ENOUGH ALREADY!!!!
Congressional Representatives share concerns about biased treatment in favor of veterans. In late April, a bill introduced would have cut the VA budget by 22%. Florida representative and off-hours Joker impersonator, Representative Matt Gaetz, believes it was a step in the right direction.
“Plain and simple, the Veterans’ Administration is a drain on the economy. I mean, there’s the medical care for people that had nothing more productive to do than go to Afghanistan and get cancer from standing around burn pits while I was chasing hotties and partying balls during college and law school. But that’s before you even get into non-medical services like the GI Bill, home loans, job and skills training, and legal services for veterans. I sure would like some of that sweet government cash. It’s not like I don’t have my own bills to pay.”
Gaetz then laughed maniacally and disappeared into a puff of smoke.
Reached between a “speaking and sensing session” at a Brooklyn-based indigenous weaving cooperative, traditional Gaetz opponent Representative Anastasia Ocasio-Cortez joined him, “The VA is just an extension of a military that exists solely to turn otherwise future workers in support of state production into killer automatons who generally vote Republican. I can’t support that any more than I support recruiting them in the first place. It’s an issue of consistency.”
These people are smarter than you. Don’t ask questions.
While experts seem unified in support of slashing funds to the VA, no one could say exactly how this would improve the economy in the long or short term. Yet, many remain optimistic that if the VA budget is reduced, those pesky veterans will die off faster.
Despite expert opinion to the contrary, one group of Americans seemed opposed to slashing veterans’ funding and, if history is a guide, their opinion will be what wins the day.
Art Popp, a spokesman for The American Military Industrial Complex explained, “Look, the creation of veterans is just good business. Someone has to fire the Tomahawk. Drones don’t exactly fly themselves. Well, they sorta do. Anyway…whatever, ships and planes need someone to move them. Then there’s the infantry. Those guys wandering around finding IEDs are great for the prosthetics guys. And let’s be honest, most of these mouthbreathers can’t do anything else. Crippled vets are just the price of doing business and providing value to the patriotic American shareholder.”
Gray Sea Liu is a former Naval Officer, current smart-ass.