1. #5176
    Thailand Expat AntRobertson's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mark45y View Post
    Lie number #1. Here is the link. https://www.dni.gov/index.php/newsro...ndrea-mitchell
    Lie number #2. An intelligence officer is interviewed because of his expertise and that does not diminish in the few days or months since he has been on active duty. Besides Comey sandbagged Hillary when he was working so you have no argument.

    Lie number #3. Yes Clapper and Comey both appeared on TV while serving and Comey leaked Trump documents to press through friend while serving. (source BBC)


    Finding #44: Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, now a CNN national security analyst, provided inconsistent testimony to the Committee about his contacts with the media, including CNN.
    Finding #42: The leaks prior to the classified Intelligence Community Assessment’s publication, particularly leaks occurring after the U.S. presidential election, correlate to specific language found in the Intelligence Community Assessment.
    Finding #16: The Intelligence Community Assessment judgments on Putin’s strategic intentions did not employ proper analytic tradecraft.
    Finding #40: Leaks of classified information regarding Russian intentions to sow discord in the U.S. presidential election began prior to election – November 8, 2016.
    Finding #41: Leaks of classified information alleging Russian intentions to help elect candidate Trump increased dramatically after the election day – November 8, 2016

    Don't know if marketwork is accurate. Read it and decide for yourself.

    https://themarketswork.com/author/jefcap64aol-com/
    The link you provided is about Clapper being interviewed about document leaks and their then effect on the intelligence community. That’s to say it’s not even an example of what you’re on about. You’re being specious, spurious and disingenuous. Again.

    It’s not just that you’re a troll (self-confessed at that), Mark. It’s also that you’re just not very good at it.

    Some people also say you’re uttely full ‘o shite and all your stories are just made up. Not me mind, but some
    people say that.

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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    I went to Mars with Elvis Presley.
    Some of us don't live in cold water flats and draw welfare. Mrs Nixon flew to visit an orphanage near Long Bien. We flew in UH-1 Hueys from our unit. This was one of the only times a President flew in a single engine aircraft.

    I escorted her to the orphanage. Mueller's Russian Interference investigation-nixon-jpg Mueller's Russian Interference investigation-nixon1-jpeg
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Mueller's Russian Interference investigation-nixon-jpg   Mueller's Russian Interference investigation-nixon1-jpeg  

  3. #5178
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Yes, and I went to Mars with Elvis.

    Mueller's Russian Interference investigation-mars-jpg

    Mueller's Russian Interference investigation-elvis-presley-jpg
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Mueller's Russian Interference investigation-mars-jpg   Mueller's Russian Interference investigation-elvis-presley-jpg  

  4. #5179
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    Quote Originally Posted by mark45y View Post
    Finding #44: Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, now a CNN national security analyst, provided inconsistent testimony to the Committee about his contacts with the media, including CNN.
    Garbage you plagiarized from the propaganda site the "daily caller"

  5. #5180
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    Quote Originally Posted by AntRobertson View Post
    Some people also say you’re uttely full ‘o shite and all your stories are just made up. Not me mind, but some people say that.
    I went to Mars with Elvis.

  6. #5181
    Thailand Expat AntRobertson's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mark45y
    I escorted her to the orphanage
    I was at the orphanage.

    Not an orphan. Just used to hang out there during downtime from Delta Force Spec Ops.

  7. #5182
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    Quote Originally Posted by AntRobertson View Post
    I was at the orphanage.

    Not an orphan. Just used to hang out there during downtime from Delta Force Spec Ops.
    I'm surprised we never bumped into each other. I was there every other week when I was in the SAS. (Don't tell anyone that, it's secret).

  8. #5183
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    I went to Mars with Elvis.
    That's so yesterday...I went to Elvis with Mars....

    Back to the OP.....I wonder how many interviews Mueller just asked for from the presidents staff to understand why trump isn't defending the US against obvious russian aggression.

  9. #5184
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    I'm surprised we never bumped into each other.
    I’m not, it was an open secret that those USO Mars missions with Elvis took up a lot of time.

    That’s why I went Spec Ops instead. But I can’t talk about that.

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    Quote Originally Posted by bsnub View Post
    Garbage you plagiarized from the propaganda site the "daily caller"
    I remember you guys saying I should post the story and not the link so here goes.
    DIRECTOR JAMES R. CLAPPER INTERVIEW WITH

    ANDREA MITCHELL, NBC NEWS CHIEF FOREIGN AFFAIRS CORRESPONDENT

    LIBERTY CROSSING, TYSONS CORNER, VA

    JUNE 8, 2013

    1 P.M. EDT

    Andrea Mitchell, NBC News Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent: Director Clapper thank you very much for letting us come out here and interview you on the subject of all these leaks and how it has affected American intelligence gathering. Does the Intelligence Community feel besieged by the fact that these Top Secret documents are getting out?

    James R. Clapper, Director of National Intelligence: Well I think we are very, very concerned about it. For me it is literally, not figuratively, literally, gut-wrenching to see this happen, because of the huge, grave damage it does to our intelligence capabilities. And of course, for me, this is a key tool for preserving and protecting the nation's safety and security. So, every one of us in the Intelligence Community most particularly the great men and women of NSA, are very – are profoundly affected by this.

    Ms. Mitchell: How has it hurt American intelligence?

    Director Clapper: Well, while we’re having this debate, this discussion, and all this media explosion, which, of course, supports transparency -- which is a great thing in this country, but that same transparency has a double edged sword -- and that our adversaries, whether nation-state adversaries or nefarious groups – benefit from that transparency. So as we speak, they’re going to school and learning how we do this. And so, that's why it potentially has -- can render great damage to our intelligence capabilities.

    Ms Mitchell: At the same time, when Americans woke up and learned because of these leaks that every single telephone call made in the United States, as well as elsewhere, but every call made by these telephone companies that they collect is archived, the numbers, just the numbers and the duration of these calls, people were astounded by that. They had no idea. They felt invaded.

    Director Clapper: I understand that. But first let me say that I and everyone in the Intelligence Community who are also citizens, who also care very deeply about our privacy and civil liberties, I certainly do. So let me say that at the outset. I think a lot of what people are reading and seeing in the media is hyperbole. A metaphor I think might be helpful for people to understand this is to think of a huge library with literally millions of volumes of books in it, an electronic library. Seventy of those books are on bookcases in the United States, meaning that the bulk of the world’s infrastructure, communications infrastructure, is in the United States. There are no limitations on the customers who can use this library. Many of millions of innocent people, doing millions of innocent things, use this library, but there are also nefarious people who use it -- terrorists, drug cartels, human traffickers, criminals also take advantage of the same technology. So the task for us in the interest of preserving security and preserving civil liberties and privacy, is to be as precise as we possibly can be. When we go in that library and look for the books that we need to open up and actually read, you think of them, and by the way, all these books are arranged randomly, they are not arranged by subject or topic matters, and they are constantly changing. And so when we go into this library first we have to have a library card, the people that actually do this work, which connotes their training and certification and recertification. So when we pull out a book, based on its essentially electronic Dewey Decimal System, which is zeros and ones, we have to be very precise about which books we are picking out, and if it is one that belongs or was put in there by an American citizen or a U.S. person, we are under strict court supervision, and have to get strict, have to get permission to actually look at that. So the notion that we’re trolling through everyone’s emails and voyeuristically reading them, or listening to everyone’s phone calls is on its face absurd. We couldn’t do it even if we wanted to, and I assure you, we don’t want to.

    Ms. Mitchell: Why do you need every telephone number? Why is it such a broad vacuum cleaner approach?

    Director Clapper: Well, you have to start someplace. If and over the years this program has operated we have refined it and tried to make it ever more precise and more disciplined as to which things we take out of the library. But you have to be in the chamber in order to be able to pick and choose those things that we need in the interest of protecting the country, and gleaning information on terrorists who are plotting to kill Americans, to destroy our economy, and destroy our way of life.

    Ms. Mitchell: Can you give me any examples where it has actually prevented a terror plot?

    Director Clapper: Well, two cases that come to mind, which are a little dated, but I think in the interest of this discourse, should be shared with the American people, they both occurred in 2009, one was the aborted plot to bomb the subway in New York City in the fall of 2009. And this all started with a communication from Pakistan to a U.S. person in Colorado. And that led to the identification of a cell in New York City who was bent on a major explosion, bombing of the New York City subway. And a cell was rolled up and in their apartment we found backpacks with bombs. A second example, also occurring in 2009, involved one of those involved, the perpetrators of the Mumbai bombing in India, David Headly. And we aborted a plot against a Danish news publisher based on the same kind of information. So those are two specific cases of uncovering plots through this mechanism that prevented terrorist attacks.

    Ms Mitchell: Now Americans might say, “Yes, but terrorists succeeded in Boston at the marathon. Terrorists have succeeded elsewhere and not been thwarted despite all this information gathered by the NSA?”

    Director Clapper: Right, Well, that's true and I find it a little ironic that several weeks ago after the Boston bombings, we were accused of not being sufficiently intrusive. We failed to determine the exact tipping point when the brothers self-radicalized. And then it was, we weren’t intrusive enough. I don’t mean to be a smart guy here, it’s just emblematic of the serious debate that goes on in this country between the two poles of security, and civil liberties and privacy. And what we must, and I thought the President spoke really articulately about this yesterday in California. And he is exactly on the money. The challenge for us is navigating between these two poles. It’s not a balance, it’s not an either or. There has to be that balance so that we protect our country and also protect civil liberties and privacy.

    Ms Mitchell: What the President said in part was that you can’t have 100% security and then you have100% privacy and zero inconvenience. We're going to have to make some choices as a society. There are accidents. NBC was told by one of your predecessors, Dennis Blair, that in fact, one digit was inaccurately inputted back in 2009 and it was a completely innocent person whose telephone conversations were actually eavesdropped.

    Director Clapper: Right, there is no question, and I certainly wouldn’t want to leave the impression that this process as complex and voluminous as it is, is perfect. Certainly it isn’t. What we do try to do though is when errors are detected, and understand most of this is done through a computer process, it is not being done directly through human eyes and ears, but the computer processes are directed by humans and when we discover errors, which in all cases I am familiar with were innocent and unintended, they are immediately corrected and any of the ill begotten information is destroyed. And this is all done in response to court oversight and court direction.

    Ms. Mitchell: There are people on the Hill who support your work strongly, Senator Feinstein among others, who say, “Can it be narrowed? Should we take another look at this and in fact, ask the FISA Court” -- the intelligence court last December during reauthorization debate -- “can you report back to the American people, periodically” and the court said, “No.” The court operates without ex parte’ and without any countervailing arguments doesn’t it? Should that be a cause of concern to Americans? Tell us why it should be in your view?

    Director Clapper: Well certainly it should be a cause of concern to Americans, it is a cause of concern to us. And if we find ways, and we have found ways where we can refine these processes and limit the exposure to American’s private communications, we will do that. In fact, Senator Feinstein has tasked us to look at such an innovation, specifically the NSA, and we owe her an answer in about a month. There are also, of course, people very, very concerned about civil liberties and privacy among whom for example, is Senator Wyden, whom I have great respect for. And he is passionate about civil liberties and privacy and he is averse to, and this gets to the second part of your question, averse to so-called secret law. Well, this gets to the issue of how openly these things are discussed. Because while transparency is good for our system, others less idealy motivated are taking advantage of that. Our perspective, from the Intelligence Community perspective, preserve and protect the secrecy because by exposing the tactics, techniques and procedures we use, our adversaries go to school on that and they make it even harder for us.

    Ms. Mitchell: Senator Wyden made quite a lot out of your exchange with him last March during the hearings. Can you explain what you meant when you said there was not data collection on millions of Americans?

    Director Clapper: First, as I said, I have great respect for Senator Wyden. I thought though in retrospect I was asked when are you going to start--stop beating your wife kind of question which is, meaning not answerable necessarily, by a simple yes or no. So I responded in what I thought was the most truthful or least most untruthful manner, by saying, “No.” And again, going back to my metaphor, what I was thinking of is looking at the Dewey Decimal numbers of those books in the metaphorical library. To me collection of U.S. Persons data would mean taking the books off the shelf, opening it up and reading it.

    Ms. Mitchell: Taking the content.

    Director Clapper: Exactly, that's what I meant. Now…

    Ms. Mitchell: You did not mean archiving the telephone numbers?

    Director Clapper: No.

    Ms. Mitchell: Let me ask you about the content.

    Director Clapper: This has to do of course, somewhat of a semantic perhaps some would say too cute by half, but there are honest differences on the semantics when someone says “collection” to me, that has a specific meaning, which may have a different meaning to him.

    Ms Mitchell: Well, what do you say also, I should ask you what do you say to the other senators who are not on the committees? Not on the intelligence committees who have been invited in to read before these laws are reauthorized, and now are criticizing. Is there enough information available to the rest of the United States Senate and the rest of the members of Congress who are not expert when they go in before they vote?

    Director Clapper: Well…

    Ms. Mitchell: Do they know what they are voting on?

    Director Clapper: I trust so. Obviously our primary two interlocutors are two intelligence oversight committees, both in the House and in the Senate. And so they are used to operating in a classified environment. Their staffs are, so that is primarily with whom we will do business. But on a piece of legislation say in this case the FISA Amendment Act, we provided detailed briefings and papers on this to explain the law, to explain the process it was governing. Now, I can’t comment on whether senators and representatives were all able to avail themselves, but that material was made available and certainly if any member whether on the intelligence committee, the Judiciary Committee or any other committee would, who had asked for a specific briefing or follow up questions we certainly would respond, would have responded.

    Ms. Mitchell: There were slides and details about the other programs. Programs on Internet providers. It has been referred to as “Prism” but technically it is 702 programs and according to The Washington Post report on that, it was a disgruntled intelligence officer who provided that Top Secret information to The Guardian and The Washington Post. How do you feel about that?

    Director Clapper: Well, I think we all feel profoundly offended by that. This is someone who for whatever reason, has chosen to violate a sacred trust for this country. So we all look upon it no matter what his or her motivation may have been, the damage that these revelations incur are huge. And so I hope we are able to track down whoever is doing this because it is extremely damaging to, and it affects the safety and security of this country.

    Ms. Mitchell: Can I assume from that, can I infer that there has been a referral to track down the leak?

    Director Clapper: Absolutely. NSA has filed a crimes report on this already.

    Ms. Mitchell: And some people would regard this person, he or she, as a whistleblower and a hero for letting the American public know that their emails are being tapped into and that their privacy is being invaded.

    Director Clapper: There are legitimate outlets for anyone within the Intelligence Community who feels that some law is being violated, for reporting fraud, waste and abuse, and there are legitimate mechanisms for reporting that both within the Executive and in the Congress without damaging national security. And for whatever reason, a person or persons doing this chose not to use those legitimate outlets.

    Ms. Mitchell: How do these programs work? Some of the Internet providers deny that they are cooperating so they seem to not be knowing.

    Director Clapper: The Internet, the service providers – I’ll speak generically – are doing this, but it is done under a court order and under legally mandated, legislatively mandated procedures. And it’s, these are very precise, they’re not indefinite and they have to be renewed and the court has to approve them.

    Ms. Mitchell: The President and you and the others in this Top Secret world are saying, “Trust us. We have your best interest. We’re not invading your privacy. We’re going after bad guys. We’re not going after your personal lives.” What happens when you’re gone, when this President or others in our government are gone? There could be another White House that breaks the law. There could be another DNI who does really bad things. We listened during the Watergate years to those tapes where the President of the United Staes saying, “Fire bomb the Brookings Institution.” You know, what do you say to the American people about the next regime who has all these secrets? Do they live forever somewhere in a computer?

    Director Clapper: No they don’t live forever. That's a valid concern, I think. People come and go, Presidents come and go. Administrations come and go. DNIs will come and go. But what is, I think, important about our system is our system of laws, our checks and balances. You know, I think the Founding Fathers would actually be pretty impressed with how what they wrote, and the organizing principles for the country are still valid and are still used even to regulate a technology that they never foresaw. So that’s timeless, those are part of our institutions. Are there people that will abuse these institutions? Yes, but we have a system that sooner or later, mostly sooner these days, those misdeeds are found out.

    Ms Mitchell: And the data that are collected, do they live forever?

    Director Clapper: No they do not. We…there are strict retention period limits, which are overseen first by me, and the Attorney General, by the court system, and by the Congress, to ensure that the data collected is not held in perpetuity.

    Ms. Mitchell: Now there’s been another leak, in the last couple days. This one is another Top Secret order, ordering -- from the President – ordering senior intelligence officials to draw up a list of potential overseas targets for cyber attack. How do you deal with a situation where there is a leak a day it seems of Top Secret information?

    Director Clapper: Well, it’s hard to deal with. It is again as in the case of this Presidential Directive an egregious violation of a sacred trust. That anyone who would have access to this would choose on his or her own, to violate that trust and disseminate this to the media. I would be surprised if anyone else were surprised if we weren’t at least thinking about our behavior in the cyber domain. And so what this does is lay out a conceptual framework to include some definitions, for how we think about that.

    Ms Mitchell: At a time when we’re telling the Chinese you have invaded our businesses and our weapons systems, and you have to take responsibility for what’s coming from your territory, don’t these leaks undercut our arguments?

    Director Clapper: Well they, perhaps, I think there is an understanding among nation states that we are going to monitor each others behavior. We do it. Other major nationstates do it as well. But I also think that there are limits, and just how aggressive that is and that’s the reason for, I think, discussion among certainly industrialized nations for rules of the road for how we behave in cyber land.

    Ms. Mitchell: We were told, NBC News reported that Senator John McCain during the campaign, had written a letter, a draft letter to the Taiwanese leader congratulating the new Taiwanese leader. And it was in the computer of his campaign. It hadn’t been sent yet and he got a call from the Chinese government complaining about a letter that he had sent, that had not yet been sent to Taiwan, of course, China’s acknowledged rival or enemy. How did that happen?

    Director Clapper: Well, it happens because of the technology and the global nature of the Internet, and the connectivity that we all benefit from. But there are also downsides and this is a case in point. To me, what this illustrates is the importance of improved cyber security. A whole other subject. And also, the vulnerability that we all have when we use media of any form that is publically accessible.

    Ms. Mitchell: I know what you’re basically, your job is to stop the bad guys. To stop terrorist attacks.

    Director Clapper: Right.

    Ms. Mitchell: And how much is that compromised by the current atmosphere of suspicion and criticism, and the feeling that the American public may not be supporting the effort in the future, and in the past has been very supportive?

    Director Clapper: Well that's of great concern. That's of great concern to me, and all the Intelligence Community leadership that we cannot function without the support of the American people. We are, ourselves, part of the American people. And the vast majority of people in the Intelligence Community, whether military or civilian, take this as a point of honor, point of duty, of service to the country. They’re not in it for the money, certainly, and they’re not in it for the glorification. And so if people don’t feel that way and don't trust the Intelligence Community to do the right thing, well that is a serious concern. And it is a serious personal concern of mine.

    Ms. Mitchell: Do you know how many people had access to the Top Secret documents that were leaked to The Washington Post and The Guardian? Are we talking a handful? Hundreds?

    Director Clapper: Well, I’d rather not go into that because that could kind of could impact the investigation that's going on. So I'd rather not answer that.

    Ms. Mitchell: And are new procedures being put in to try to protect against this flow of leaks?

    Director Clapper: Well, we’ve…we’re constantly trying to institute new procedures. I’m in the process of attempting to institute some practices and policies that will try to stem the hemorrhaging of leaks, the leaking that we’ve had in recent years. But this is a tough problem because when it boils down to it, we operate -- even though we have clearances and we have SCIFs and secure areas -- when it all boils down to it, it is all about personal trust. And we’ve had violations of that personal trust in the past and we will continue to have them, and all we can do is learn lessons from when we find out what caused a revelation like this and make improvements and go on.

    Ms. Mitchell: You know, a lot of this has to do with technology. Both the people’s adaptation to it and the fear of it. We saw it in the Boston Marathon case how the number of cameras that were out there – security cameras - private and government really did help. New York City is another instance. We get used to things like Homeland, a television series that apparently the President himself watches, with amazing technology. Is that the world we have to get used to?

    Director Clapper: Well, I think it is and I think that you know, the pace of technology change, which by the way, poses a problem from both policy and a legal standpoint to keep up with rapid changes in technology, which is becoming ever more pervasive in our society. And you spoke of the surveillance cameras in Boston, which were crucial to tracking down the perpetrators, the two brothers. But at the same time, you know when you are on the Beltway and you have a radar gun that’s looking at you and if you are under the speed limit you know you’re not bothered. Photo cameras that take pictures of license plates and you get something in the mail saying you violated the speed limit. So those are all emblematic of today’s society. The same providers who helped analyze our behavior, our purchasing behavior – well all of this is both an upside and a downside of this burgeoning technology.

    Ms. Mitchell: Finally, your message to those who say, ACLU and others, we feel invaded, we don’t know when you are looking at us or listening in on our conversations, and what is the real benefit? Why should we give up so much privacy? Can it be done better?

    Director Clapper: We’re trying to minimize those invasions of privacy and keep them to an absolute minimum and only focus on those targets that really do pose a threat and to not invade anyone’s privacy, communications, telephone calls, emails if they are not involved in plotting against the United States. And so, as we, as the technologies changes that we were just talking about, we have to adapt as well to both provide that security and also ensure civil liberties and privacy.

    Ms. Mitchell: Thank you very much Director Clapper.

    Director Clapper: Thank you for having me.

    Published in Speeches & Interviews 2013


  11. #5186
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    ^ Fuck off you shit bird.


  12. #5187
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    I went to Mars with Elvis.
    You chavs are really jealous aren't you. There are about 80 guys at the VFW I belong to in Thailand. They have a copy of everyone's DD-214 so everyone knows where you've been. No BS. I had wondered at the time if I should go to Canada or Vietnam after I was drafted. After reading you guys I realize I made the right decision. I have little or no respect for you, mocking me when for the most part what I did in Vietnam saved lives. You all except for foot ball fighting have probably never been in a life threatening situation and don't know how you would react or if you are a coward. You can insults me as much as you like. If I offend you? sorry bout that.

  13. #5188
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    Quote Originally Posted by bsnub View Post
    ^ Fuck off you shit bird.
    Wrong again eh? Typical intelligent repartee . 555

  14. #5189
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    Quote Originally Posted by mark45y View Post
    You chavs are really jealous aren't you. There are about 80 guys at the VFW I belong to in Thailand. They have a copy of everyone's DD-214 so everyone knows where you've been. No BS. I had wondered at the time if I should go to Canada or Vietnam after I was drafted. After reading you guys I realize I made the right decision. I have little or no respect for you, mocking me when for the most part what I did in Vietnam saved lives. You all except for foot ball fighting have probably never been in a life threatening situation and don't know how you would react or if you are a coward. You can insults me as much as you like. If I offend you? sorry bout that.
    Cool story bro, that’s awesome. Now then... would you like a medal or the chest to pin it on? Presuming you have room next to the Medal of Honor of course.

    Ps. There are 82 members of my ex Spec Ops Club And they all agree with me.

  15. #5190
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mark45y View Post
    You chavs are really jealous aren't you. There are about 80 guys at the VFW I belong to in Thailand.
    I think VFW is a euphemism for Darby and Joan Club.

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    Quote Originally Posted by mark45y View Post
    Wrong again eh? Typical intelligent repartee . 555
    You have been humiliated from the start. You are the epitome of idiocy. You are getting destroyed yet you are clearly to stupid to see it.

  17. #5192
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    Quote Originally Posted by bsnub View Post
    You have been humiliated from the start. You are the epitome of idiocy. You are getting destroyed yet you are clearly to stupid to see it.
    I don't think he realises how dangerous it was going to Mars with Elvis. I frequently had to stop him opening the door to go for burgers, he was a drug crazed fiend.

  18. #5193
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    I don't think he realises how dangerous it was going to Mars with Elvis.

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    Quote Originally Posted by bsnub View Post
    You have been humiliated from the start. You are the epitome of idiocy. You are getting destroyed yet you are clearly to stupid to see it.
    You said intelligence officers did not get interviewed on TV. I proved you wrong and even posted one entire interview. Posting on a Thai expat site is clearly too much of an intellectual challenge for you. The only reason the argument started is you trying to make a mountain out of a molehill because I embarrassed you a few times. Maybe we can wrap it up. You said intelligence officers don't do TV interviews and I proved they did and posted one entire interview. You are wrong end of story.

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    Quote Originally Posted by AntRobertson View Post
    Cool story bro, that’s awesome. Now then... would you like a medal or the chest to pin it on? Presuming you have room next to the Medal of Honor of course.

    Ps. There are 82 members of my ex Spec Ops Club And they all agree with me.
    Sure I got medals. I was in a combat zone and got wounded. More important than that I found 3 hospitals here in Thailand that will direct bill Foreign Medical Program (Vet health care). Before I was paying for the care and then they would reimburse me. Getting checks in the mail here in Thailand for 300,000 baht can be scary.

    I don't know what spec ops is. I do know that rarely do soldiers mock other soldiers. My VFW gets along well with British Royal Legion and we help them when requested. You are an odd example of a British vet if that's what special ops is.

    Now I'm happy. I spend 20 minutes a year at Immigration and that went fine this year and news about the direct bill made things easier for my wife to take care of the financial hospital stuff. My pension yearly information came and I sent it back and they got it. So even though my relationship with America has been up and down this year it was fine.
    Last edited by mark45y; 18-07-2018 at 07:45 PM.

  21. #5196
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    I think VFW is a euphemism for Darby and Joan Club.
    It's Veterans of Foreign Wars. We help Thai kids with HIV/AIDS and disabilities among other things.

  22. #5197
    Thailand Expat AntRobertson's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mark45y
    Sure I got medals. I was in a combat zone and got wounded.
    Quote Originally Posted by mark45y
    In the Army I was a reference person at the daily staff briefings USARV Long Binh and traveled frequently to U-Tapao to coordinate search and rescue efforts. I was in country 1968 and 1969. Not a Rambo type. They took anyone with a masters and put them in administrative work when possible.
    We took a vote and 81 of my Spec Ops Club think you’re full of shit.

    Not me though. I abstained.

    Quote Originally Posted by mark45y
    I don't know what spec ops is
    Special Operations, Delta Force Division. Anyone who was in the military knows that.

    Oh and thanks for the unsolicited details of your medical history and immigration wait times but the reason I hadn’t made inquiries previously myself is because, you know, I don’t care.

  23. #5198
    Hangin' Around cyrille's Avatar
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    He really is odd, isn't he.

  24. #5199
    Thailand Expat AntRobertson's Avatar
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    Very.

  25. #5200
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cyrille View Post
    He really is odd, isn't he.
    If he starts going into detail about his colostomy bag, I'm off.

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