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#1
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![]() "Diverd4777" wrote in message ... I heard that in Afghanistan, all the troops ( on both sides taliban & northern front ) used motorola radios on the same frequency; - so maybe thats what they're talking about . . Only if you could believe Saddam would equip his cannon fodder with insecure radios so he could buy even more gold bathroom fixtures. Frank Dresser |
#2
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On Sun, 14 Sep 2003 20:04:18 -0500, Diverd4777 wrote
(in message ): Possibly some lazy reporter ( no byline on the article) from " WorldNetDaily" executing a " synthesis of News" ; making some stuff up to meet a deadline..! ( - who's gonna check his facts ?? ) tp://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=34575 For those who are prior-Army (the only branch I've spent decades in grin), there's a pretty sure sign that the article was a put-on. What was this Marine's name? Oh, yeah, "Corcoran", right? A standard, traditional military boot has a "smooth" toe of leather that goes up to the bootlaces. [This is excluding any real mention of leather/canvas boots.] The Airborne troops normally are known for a different boot, which has a leather band about an inch and a-half (I'm guessing at that distance) from the end of the toe-area and this front part of that boot as well as the back part have - for decades - been "spitshined". Although it's pronounced "CORK-rins" or"COCK-rins", the actual name of the boot (and the company which manufacturers it) is "Corcoran". Putting +Corcoran +boots on google comes up with over 17,000 hits. It looks to me that "WorldNutDaily" got "taken to the cleaners". Gray Shockley ----------------------- Who was a First Sergeant with the 5th Infantry Div (Mech), Charlie Company, 105th Military Intelligence Battalion (CEWI) CEWI=Combat Electronic Warfare and Intercept Which means electronics and language people (who run the jammers and direction finders) and aren't Mil Intel Super Spooks - these are people who wear uniforms every day. g |
#3
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A stalwart defender of liberalism. Always willing to find fault in any so
called conservative news sources, but willing to turn a blind eye when it comes to the insufficiency of the mainstream media to report with any degree of veracity. CF the postings on black crimes against whites and the virtual absence of these reports in the mainstream media. Dr. Artaud Gray Shockley wrote in : And that "WorldNet Daily" ("WorldNut Daily") article was just a mite bit short on any real references or on any information to verify the article. Gray Shockley ----------------------- DX-392 DX-398 RX-320 DX-399 CCradio w/RS Loop Torus Tuner (3-13 MHz) Select-A-Tenna ----------------------- Vicksburg, MS US |
#4
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Never use the term "mainstream media",
instead call them "corporate media". This really ****es reporters off when you refer to them as "corporate media". Why? B/c reporters like to think of themselves as journalist when in fact most news rooms today are merely an extension of the marketing department and nothing more. That's how the LA Times works! Journalists today are corporate hacks. The day of the independent journalist such as IF Stone is history. Where was the corporate media in the 1990s when Wall Street analyst, Enron, World Com, Quest, Sprint, Earthlink, Bank of America, and Global Crossing were all ripping investors off? Oh, did I leave anyone out? Tom Welch |
#5
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TW,
IKE had his "WARNING" about the "Military Industrial Complex". So Today we must exercise CAUTION when Reading/Listening/Viewing the 'Smoze' from the "Corporate Media Complex" 'The New World Order's Mis-Information Conspiracy'. ~ RHF .. .. = = = (Tom Welch) = = = wrote in message . com... Never use the term "mainstream media", instead call them "corporate media". This really ****es reporters off when you refer to them as "corporate media". Why? B/c reporters like to think of themselves as journalist when in fact most news rooms today are merely an extension of the marketing department and nothing more. That's how the LA Times works! Journalists today are corporate hacks. The day of the independent journalist such as IF Stone is history. Where was the corporate media in the 1990s when Wall Street analyst, Enron, World Com, Quest, Sprint, Earthlink, Bank of America, and Global Crossing were all ripping investors off? Oh, did I leave anyone out? Tom Welch |
#6
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On Thu, 18 Sep 2003 21:43:12 -0500, RHF wrote
(in message ) : IKE had his "WARNING" about the "Military Industrial Complex". So Today we must exercise CAUTION when Reading/Listening/Viewing the 'Smoze' from the "Corporate Media Complex" 'The New World Order's Mis-Information Conspiracy'. Oh, thank you, thank you. Now I know the many years I've wasted as part of the Military-Industrial complex. And it's all due to RHF (Really High Flyer) and his/her/its words like gems of wisdom. My life is now turned around and I will follow The Old World Order's Mis-Information Conspiracy from now on. K.O. "Texe" Marrs, RHF and TW: the holey trinity of truth, justice and the old world order way. Gray Shockley ---------------------- What a relief! |
#7
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![]() "Diverd4777" wrote in message ... I heard that in Afghanistan, all the troops ( on both sides taliban & northern front ) used motorola radios on the same frequency; - so maybe thats what they're talking about . . The Motorolas are more popular than I thought: "Soldiers have no confidence in the ICOM radios. The range was unsatisfactory. Everyone had a Motorola-type hand-held radio that had vastly better range and power performance. Soldiers purchased handsets and longer antennas for their ICOM radios." This is from: http://www.sftt.org/article06102003a.html Frank Dresser |
#8
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Gray Shockley wrote:
On Sun, 14 Sep 2003 14:55:04 -0500, Soliloquy wrote (in message ): (snip) and a short-wave radio When I first got to VietNam in 1968, I bought (at the 4th ID (M) PX) a Zenith TransOceanic". I wasn't pretentious enough to say I got "intel" on it but did listen to Hanoi Hannah and her male sidekick. When I lived in San Francisco one day I noticed a homeless man selling, among various knickknacks, a 1960s Zenith TO. I asked him about it and he said he bought it in America and took it to Nam, where it literally saw him through hell and high water. He said he hated to sell it but needed to eat. He was asking $20, and I didn't have the cash on me. When I went back the next day with a $20 bill, he was nowhere to be found. I always wondered if that TO ended up with somebody who would have cared for it as much as I would. |
#9
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Sending someone a scanner or shortwave radio might make you feel warm and
fuzzy inside, but unless the solider in question spoke the enemy's language, I think it would only be useful to hear what the BBC says s. I doubt Bin Laden or Saddam are rallying the troops in English any more than the hit-men attacking our troops daily. Since a scanner can only receive, it would not help the soldier tell anyone anything useful about anything, including the enemy. If this ill-begotten adventure were thought out sufficiently, we would have foreseen the mess we have now and would have equipped our men with reinforcements and proper equipment resupply. The ultimate shock and awe is a thermonuclear detonation. I guarantee, when someone detonates a nuke, it shocks and creates awe. It also removes guerillas. It also silences interference, and cleans the reportorial slate - liberal or conservative: it silences all arguments. It also incinerates biochemical agents. HINT HINT |
#10
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"Warpcore" wrote in message link.net...
Sending someone a scanner or shortwave radio might make you feel warm and fuzzy inside, but unless the solider in question spoke the enemy's language, I think it would only be useful to hear what the BBC says s. During those infrequent stretches when the soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines have a little free time, they might find Radio Farda or Radio Sawa fun to listen to. I think they're a hoot. http://www.radiofarda.com http://www.radiosawa.com |