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wildman

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Everything posted by wildman

  1. I don't think Bo is trying to rush the process. It's more instead of Schools offering 200+ scholarships to fill 20 spots on their roster. Plus the kids having offers from 7+ schools to go to. It'd make it kids getting 1-3 offers and schools offering to 30 kids. So It would slow it down as coaches would do more evaluation before offering. Plus the kids wouldn't be contacted as much and there for could concentrate more on school and the team they are currently on. Plus the coaches of schools wouldn't be wasting their time contacting a kid that they want trying to get them to decommit. They would just move onto the next target on their list.
  2. ok but whats the mph on the wind in there?
  3. the thing that puzzles me is that Bowe is still alive. All of the ones taken from the Taliban that I know of were killed shortly after being captured. So unless there is some stories that I don't know about, there would be something more to why he's still alive.
  4. I agree if it was done by a student and not an adult cops are not needed, detention would be enough. But the real question is, did anyone show up for the inspection? lol
  5. In the military this already exist. If the marine lives on base all guns have to be kept in the arms section of each unit. If you want to go shooting or hunting. You just have to check it out by signing your name, date and time. Then same thing when you return it. Since he had them, i'd bet he either lives off base, just bought them or stole them.
  6. ok this doesn't sound good for those of us that can't watch
  7. Ok Knapp, Here is a question that has always perplexed me. Since it is so clear to you that these stories are made up etc. Why do devout Athiests convert to a belief in God after exploring scientific explanation of things etc. Clearly there are conversions that go both ways. Why? (Please excuse any perceived "negative" tone, it was just a question) I always thought Athiest believed in god just that Jesus hasn't walked on earth. Or am I wrong in this? Atheist: "a-" meaning without; and "theos" meaning god. Atheist literally translates to "without god". Now Jews believe in god, but that Jesus hasn't walked the earth. Agnostics believe one cannot know with certainty that a god does or doesn't exist thanks for clearing that up
  8. Ok Knapp, Here is a question that has always perplexed me. Since it is so clear to you that these stories are made up etc. Why do devout Athiests convert to a belief in God after exploring scientific explanation of things etc. Clearly there are conversions that go both ways. Why? (Please excuse any perceived "negative" tone, it was just a question) I always thought Athiest believed in god just that Jesus hasn't walked on earth. Or am I wrong in this?
  9. I've always been told i have a really warped belief when it comes to this stuff. So i'll do my best to try and explain it in writing. I was raised baptist going to multiple churches in Alabama when I was younger and Nebraska when we moved. I've always been taught God is why everyone is here and he put each of us here for a reason. As I've gotten older and gone through school, started researching things myself. Plus having the privilege to experience other cultures and their beliefs. Has caused my own beliefs to drastically change. The way I feel is that God not necessarily the god of Christians is why we are all here. Through the big bang and evolution is how she/he did it. The reason I feel this way is because science has shown a lot of evidence in support of big bang and evolution. Where as religions it's based on faith and beliefs with very little if any evidence. Now the reason I still lean towards religion. Is because through out my life I've witnessed things that according to people and science shouldn't be possible. I've heard voices in my car telling me how to avoid a vehicle accident, that i probably wouldn't of survived. That has happened to me twice. Which has lead me to be interested in the paranormal research. With that I go in everywhere being a skeptic trying to find a logical reason for the experiences and not a paranormal one. Sometimes I succeed and other times I end up with evidence of possible life after death. But something I have learned about most of the religions out there. Is they are generally a good thing. They provide hope, faith and a sense of belonging. For some people sadly that is the only place they experience that in their life. Plus most religions provide a path of how to respectfully treat others in order to make earth the best it can.
  10. If there is absolutely nothing that can be done. The people refuse to help themselves. Then at that point it's time to walk away and let them deal with the consequences. I'd still feel bad for what happened in that situation, but would show no sympathy as they did it to themselves.
  11. It wouldn't surprise me if that's true. But then again, something bad for America could come out of the Africa troubles. Something bad for America could come out of the Syria war. Something bad for America could come from anywhere. The answer can't be to put troops everywhere and keep them there forever. We have to bring them home sometime, right? Yes troops need to come home. They deserve to be with their families, friends and loved ones. In my opinion even more so then others. But we also need to keep troops in areas we occupy to keep those individuals there safe as well. I know if when I was in Iraq and we just did a massive pull out. If that area went to hell in a civil war or insurgents taking over. I'd feel very bad for the Iraqi people cause we caused that. So when we bring the troops home. We need to make sure the area can support and protect itself.
  12. The reason I asked was I served 2 tours in Iraq. I can't say it was the same everywhere. But my first trip was September 03 - July 04 with a engineer unit in Baghdad. My unit was helping rebuild the city, so I get to see and experience a lot of the city and the locals. For the most part they treated us well. Some treated us like rock stars always chanting and cheering when we come by. Would tell us of unusual cars or people in the area that they didn't know. After checking them out, most were false leads others we got intel. My second trip I was with a EOD unit located mainly in Mosul from September 05 - February 06. There we obviously were called out to take care of ied's and help keep people safe. I wasn't able to get out and see the area or meet the locals as much. So I don't know if their opinions changed or if it was just the Baghdad area I was in. But I'd say if anything at one time, earlier in the war we were welcomed and wanted. Very interesting perspective. I supported the Iraq war also but feel differently about it now than the Afghan war. To me, I have no regrets for going in and getting rid of Saddam. The guy was a piece of crap that tortured and killed his own people for his own power and his two sons were even worse. I feel sorry for any of the innocent locals who were hurt or killed in the process. I don't like it that we injured Americans and lost American lives doing it. It would be interesting to see (impossible) how Iraq would have been different without outside influences like Iran. I do to. I feel bad for how the Iraqi's were treated by Saddam and his boys. The stories i hear about them from the locals is to me reason enough for going into Iraq. But also the stories I heard from American troops that were in Desert Storm make me cringe about what happened before and after we went in. I to don't ever want to see American troops in harms way. But sadly it's a necessary evil that we must endure to keep the freedom we cherish and sometimes take for granted.
  13. "Majority of Afghan people?" meh. That's tricky, so so tricky. Josh Shahryar, an American based journalist, is claiming this based on election results. An election that one in six Afghans showed up for and his interpretation of those results. Abdullah Abdullah, a Tajik with stronger ties to the West and a history with the Northern Alliance recieved the most votes (45%) in the first round so I guess Shahryar is taking that as popular support for "us there helping them." So Abdullah won 45% of the votes in an election in which roughly 16% of Afghans voted...and we're even going out on a limb assuming that a vote for Abdullah = support for continued US presence but making that assumption and running some crappy math we get just under 8% of Afghans supporting "us there helping them". The things is, the south eastern provinces where the Taliban has its base, Kandahar, Helmand and the like - had very very low turnout. 5% of Kandahar. 3% of Helmand, 3% of Zabul, 3% of Urozgan. Compare those numbers to the north with Balkh province (Mazar-e-Sharif) and Takhar province at around 30% and Kondoz at 59% turnout. So really, what Shahryar means to say is that some literate and cosmopolitan Afghans, especially non-Pashtuns and those from northern Afghanistan seem to support a candidate who may be receptive to a deal that may provide for a limited American presence in the future. Well no sh#t Sherlock. Those people have always liked us...ok...liked us more than their southern Pashtun neighbors. They were never the "bad guys". The election was by no means a strong endorsement of OEF-as usual. Those are all good points. But the places that have a strong taliban presence. Probably didn't vote because of the taliban presence. So unless we go in and get rid of the taliban presence. No way to really say if they are in support of us or not. But the current evidence shows they either don't support us or are afraid to. They probably didn't vote for the same reason they don't join the ANA/ANP and for the same reason many of them support the Taliban and similar groups. They're Pashtuns who see the Kabul government as a bunch of religiously lost and morally/economically corrupt Northern non-Pashtuns propped up by an army of Westerners. They don't view the elections or the government as legitimate. Couple that with illiteracy and their unfamiliarity with the democractic process and you get low turnout. I think that the Taliban is as much a Pashtun-nationalist group as it is a religious "insurgent" group and that the chance of a bunch of Americans and Brits rolling into Kandahar and "ridding" the local Pashtuns of the Taliban is right around 0% and an Army of Tajiks doing it is only slightly better. oh I agree with you on why they didn't vote. I was just stating their is a very small probability, that their support of the taliban and not us is fear. Even though I see it as a probability, it wouldn't be one i'd be willing to bet on.
  14. "Majority of Afghan people?" meh. That's tricky, so so tricky. Josh Shahryar, an American based journalist, is claiming this based on election results. An election that one in six Afghans showed up for and his interpretation of those results. Abdullah Abdullah, a Tajik with stronger ties to the West and a history with the Northern Alliance recieved the most votes (45%) in the first round so I guess Shahryar is taking that as popular support for "us there helping them." So Abdullah won 45% of the votes in an election in which roughly 16% of Afghans voted...and we're even going out on a limb assuming that a vote for Abdullah = support for continued US presence but making that assumption and running some crappy math we get just under 8% of Afghans supporting "us there helping them". The things is, the south eastern provinces where the Taliban has its base, Kandahar, Helmand and the like - had very very low turnout. 5% of Kandahar. 3% of Helmand, 3% of Zabul, 3% of Urozgan. Compare those numbers to the north with Balkh province (Mazar-e-Sharif) and Takhar province at around 30% and Kondoz at 59% turnout. So really, what Shahryar means to say is that some literate and cosmopolitan Afghans, especially non-Pashtuns and those from northern Afghanistan seem to support a candidate who may be receptive to a deal that may provide for a limited American presence in the future. Well no sh#t Sherlock. Those people have always liked us...ok...liked us more than their southern Pashtun neighbors. They were never the "bad guys". The election was by no means a strong endorsement of OEF-as usual. Those are all good points. But the places that have a strong taliban presence. Probably didn't vote because of the taliban presence. So unless we go in and get rid of the taliban presence. No way to really say if they are in support of us or not. But the current evidence shows they either don't support us or are afraid to.
  15. The reason I asked was I served 2 tours in Iraq. I can't say it was the same everywhere. But my first trip was September 03 - July 04 with a engineer unit in Baghdad. My unit was helping rebuild the city, so I get to see and experience a lot of the city and the locals. For the most part they treated us well. Some treated us like rock stars always chanting and cheering when we come by. Would tell us of unusual cars or people in the area that they didn't know. After checking them out, most were false leads others we got intel. My second trip I was with a EOD unit located mainly in Mosul from September 05 - February 06. There we obviously were called out to take care of ied's and help keep people safe. I wasn't able to get out and see the area or meet the locals as much. So I don't know if their opinions changed or if it was just the Baghdad area I was in. But I'd say if anything at one time, earlier in the war we were welcomed and wanted.
  16. I agree we've been there to long now and need to bring our troops home. But out of curiosity, what did you mean by totally different than the Iraq War?
  17. This I agree with. But sadly don't think racism will ever go away. Hatred will always be taught down to the lower generations in certain groups. Plus with stereotypes being said and joked about, and how they supposedly exist for a reason. Not to mention how news is reported and skewed depending on race or ethnicity. Pretty much means racism is a never ending thing, but I do hope I'm wrong.
  18. I would love to see the tournament in Omaha every year. Plus think it would be smart as it's the home of the college world series. Which could be a huge recruiting tool for the coaches. But the issue with it hosted here every year is the equality to every team. The Big 10 keeps everything even and fair for all teams, which I think is great. Because of that I don't see it ever being in one location every year.
  19. A friend of mines kid use to do that. Till one of our friends explained to him that started with gay men in the state pen to advertise they are available. I've never seen someone pull their pants up and find a belt that fast in my life lol.
  20. Wish I wouldn't of gotten out of the military. Currently wish I would of drove passed that Chinese restaurant for lunch.
  21. There is a town or village in Germany with my last name. When I was there I tried finding it, mainly so I can walk around telling people I'm their king. But I couldn't ever find where it was located.
  22. this drives me insane. Or when someone asks hey what is your phone number. As you start to give it. They constantly interrupt you just to repeat it. Then will say it again after getting the entire number to make sure they have it all correct.
  23. my boss who thinks she needs to wake up and go to work. I hate it when she does that. When my boss says no one is allowed more than 2 consecutive weeks of vacation. Yet every year her and one of her biggest kiss asses at work take 4 consecutive weeks of vacation. Insurance agents that are suppose to take courses on how annuity products work. Yet have no clue about any of it. Police officers that pull over others for talking on their phone, yet do it themselves. Then give a bs answer of well were trained professionals. Calling into a business for help/support. The other line is answered by someone in India that can barely speak or understand English. People coming from other countries that talk about how great their country is. Then how America should adapt and conform to how their old country was. If it was so great move back. Now I'm not racist or feel people shouldn't be proud of who they are where they came from. But don't move some where for a better life, then put it down based on where you just left. People that replace the number zero with the letter o when giving a value, phone number Parents that refuse to discipline their child as they see it being cruel. Yet bitch, moan and complain on facebook about how their child won't listen to them.
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