Army combat uniforms even come pretreated with it.
Army combat uniforms even come pretreated with it.
Calling bullshit, given you made an emotional argument with no backup.
This tl;dr does not do the article justice. Highly recommend everyone read the article.
This account is either a troll or a bot, deliberately spreading misinformation.
This account is either a troll or a bot, deliberately spreading misinformation.
In Japan, I have 7 bins plus cardboard. Burnables, nonburnables, plastic, paper, cans, pet bottles, glass bottles.
There’s no playing dumb about this from a retired COL. This is not some 3 year E-3 in the national guard. He knew what he was doing. Throw the book at him.
Something tells me you didn’t read my comment.
Unless we want snapchat and other apps to require photo ID, how would snapchat actually know who is a child and who is an adult? Why did the parents not know or care that the kid had snapchat downloaded?
Parents seriously need to be more aware of what kids are doing on their phones. Why the hell is a 12 year old on snapchat to begin with?
Correct me if I’m wrong, but I doubt snapchat requires photo ID in order to make an account. Besides requiring ID, it’s not clear to me how else snapchat would be able to know that she is a minor and that the perpetrator is a sex offender.
Reposting my comment from a duplicate thread:
This article mentions 330 vehicles and 13 containers. By US military terms, that is absolutely nothing. Nothing compared to the equipment we keep stored and maintained in other locations. I feel like the article makes this seem more significant than it is. This is not even a drop in the bucket, let alone enough to call stockpiling as the article does.
This article mentions 330 vehicles and 13 containers. By US military terms, that is absolutely nothing. Nothing compared to the equipment we keep stored and maintained in other locations. I feel like the article makes this seem more significant than it is. This is not even a drop in the bucket, let alone enough to call stockpiling as the article does.
The video is a 20 year army vet, now a military journalist. I am active duty Army. I am telling you, there is a process to relieve a soldier of liability in these situations. It is called a FLIPL. It is an investigation to determine if the soldier is at fault.
The link I sent you explains exactly the case you are talking about.
Edit: The whole video is probably too long to expect you to watch, but the key point is that the solution is a FLIPL to determine if the soldier is liable. This is a very common occurrence in the Army.
Soldiers don’t get charged for lost gear in this kind of situation. The military has procedures for relieving service members of liability for this type of loss of equipment. Think of how ineffective the military would be if soldiers had to worry about being liable for losing equipment outside of their control.
‘The Houthi leader vowed to continue the attacks until Israel lifts its blockade of Gaza, saying that “nothing – not all the threats, the missiles, the pressure – will change our position.”’
The Houthis say the strikes will never change their stance, but their stance doesn’t matter if they don’t have the military assets to attack commercial shipping.
Why are we updating a four month article as if it just happened? I’m noticing this happens fairly often on Lemmy.
This article was from September, and so far I haven’t heard any updates.
OP doesn’t seem to be saying not to use reddit content, they are saying don’t use Reddit as the content. Post all the content you want from over there, but we don’t need to drag out the breakup by constant bringing up everything we dislike about reddit. OP is saying to move on with life.
“He just keeps losing”
I dislike Musk as much as any of you, but why is this in World News?
I think that’s why they said between the maintenance cost and market price.