• wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    You know, as a member of the SSBN force, occasionally during thermonuclear launch exercises I take a moment to regret the death of humanity and the biosphere. People like you, on the other hand, are what steels my resolve to flip the switch with gusto. I hope you know that I’ll be thinking of you, should I receive the order to commence procedures to launch.

    • very smart Idiot@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      You sound like a fragile personality. You might be in the wrong occupation.

      Or you might be talking bullshit. Because I doubt that you would have internet on a submarine.

      • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Shipmate, I am a Navigation Electronic Technician First Class Petty Officer, fully qualified in both submarines and in my rating. I have been on five strategic alert deterrent patrols over the last three years. I’ve been through fires, flooding, and steam line ruptures. When we set condition 1SQ for Strategic Launch during WSRT, I was the one at the consoles conducting the procedures to do so. I’ve been a helmsman, planesman, Strategic Navigation Technician, and Quartermaster of the Watch.

        Of course I wouldn’t have internet while submerged or at sea. Have you ever heard of in-port periods?

        Fragile personality or not, I’m the sailor at the switch. What have you done with your life, shipmate?

        • prole@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Don’t let the troll get to you… I’ve had someone on here a week or so ago tell me I was lying about my expertise. It’s almost like they’re all taking lessons from the same people.

          • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Thanks. And yeah, they’re probably just trying the tried and true War Thunder and Discord method. Or they’re not taking lessons from the same people, they are the same people. Who knows?

        • very smart Idiot@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          I still think you are lying. Or you are incredibly stupid. Because your identity and your job should be kept secret. My grandparents were military engineers in the Soviet Union. Do you think anyone knew that? Of course not, because they were instructed to not talk about it. As should you, in case you are the real deal. I myself have followed the path of my father, currently studying to become a chemist in Munich. One ore year to go.

          • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Shipmate, if you look in my post history I literally did an AMA about my profession about a month ago, and a Machinists Mate Chief even jumped in to contribute. I haven’t disclosed any ships movement, naval nuclear propulsion information or even controlled unclassified information. I keep my personal electronic devices physically far, far away from any work device, and we never cross the streams, as the saying goes.

            • very smart Idiot@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              It’s still something that I wouldn’t tell people on the internet.

              Especially if you have family. The Chinese, the Russians, the Israelis,… you just elevated the chances that they know about you. And now they also know that you are the sharing kind. A little bit bragging.

              Don’t make yourself a target. Not the smartest thing to do.

              • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Sister’s in the marine corps and so is her husband. They can take care of themselves.

                I’ll take your advice into consideration. Still, you have again reminded me why I don’t feel the burden of my duty too much. The existence of such organizations only hardens my resolve to flip the switch when the time comes.

                • very smart Idiot@sh.itjust.works
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                  1 year ago

                  Sister’s in the marine corps and so is her husband. They can take care of themselves.

                  Against Russian agents with Nowitschock or North Koreans using poison as well? I doubt that.

                  I’ll take your advice into consideration. Still, you have again reminded me why I don’t feel the burden of my duty too much. The existence of such organizations only hardens my resolve to flip the switch when the time comes.

                  You are a troll. Cannot take you and your persona serious anymore. There is not a single soldier this irrational on this world.

                  • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    A troll? Interesting. I’ll let my chief and division know. I’d invite you to visit NSB Kings Bay sometime, but you’d get denied at the front gate, let alone the marines at Checkpoint Charlie and the waterfront gate. And I’m a sailor, not a soldier. Soldiers are Army only.

          • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            And for the record, best of luck in your studies. I hold no personal animosity, and a great deal of professional respect, for my counterparts in other militaries. We all have a job to do. If that means one of us has to shoot torpedoes at the other, we’ll cross that bridge when the time comes. I do think, however, that you should never underestimate the willingness of the US to go to great lengths to do what it thinks is necessary.

            • very smart Idiot@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              And for the record, best of luck in your studies. I hold no personal animosity, and a great deal of professional respect, for my counterparts in other militaries.

              I do not hold any grudge towards you as well.

              We all have a job to do. If that means one of us has to shoot torpedoes at the other, we’ll cross that bridge when the time comes. I do think, however, that you should never underestimate the willingness of the US to go to great lengths to do what it thinks is necessary.

              Wars are fought in many levels. And the Ukraine war has already been lost. A financial Desaster to the west. No military power will change that.

              Current surveys indicate republicans to be in power next year. And in Europe we also see a shifting in opinion in Schweden, France and Germany towards parties that roan further right and are against weapon deliveries into Ukraine. Quite contrary, they are pro Russia in many ways.

              And I don’t judge. But if this development further continues, then all the money wasted on military support is gone. And Russia wins. In a world filled with intercontinental missiles, a war is won politically and economically.

              So no matter how wiling and ready the US is, military power cannot rival with economical and political strategies.

              • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Financial? Perhaps. Demographically, however, I believe Russia and Europe have entered a terminal demographic decline, only accelerated in Russia’s case by the war. America, on the other hand, has not lost any soldiers or any significant resources and has increased the industrial capacity of the military-industrial complex. Strategically, from a cold, hard, pragmatic point of view, that counts as a win for my superiors, in the long term. Financial ups and downs are temporary and manageable. Demographic collapses are not.

                • very smart Idiot@sh.itjust.works
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                  1 year ago

                  Financial? Perhaps. Demographically, however, I believe Russia and Europe have entered a terminal demographic decline, only accelerated in Russia’s case by the war.

                  Due to immense migration, demographic change is a thing of the past now. France, Germany and other western European countries no longer face this problem. On the other side it comes with new problems, as failed integration has become a huge problem.

                  And considering Russia, the country has one big ass infantry. And in the Ukraine war, Russia has yet to call for total mobilisation. And the west, even with the help of the US did not yet manage to deliver enough ammunition and weaponry to push back the Russian forces. For me that’s an indicator that Russia is more capable of actual war than the West.

                  Especially the US had many military missions in the past decades and most of them failed. Afghanistan is just one of the many failed attempts of military control. The US military has shown not to be capable to win wars, but only maintain them.

                  America, on the other hand, has not lost any soldiers or any significant resources and has increased the industrial capacity of the military-industrial complex.

                  Well and so did the Russians. The west has more specialised and modern weapons, it these have now proven to be too complicate to be produced in sufficient masses. Russia using old tech with easier produced weaponry has shown to be much more resilient than expected. Making use of the oldschool Propeller for bombs instead of high tech laser measured ignition timers, has proven to be just as effective. The US military has been scammed in many ways by weapon manufacturers into buying over complicated tech for simple applications.

                  Strategically, from a cold, hard, pragmatic point of view, that counts as a win for my superiors, in the long term.

                  If your superiors were involved in the last decades military operations of the US, then their word shouldn’t be taken too serious. Afghanistan is just the latest failure of along series of failures. And currently it seems, like the US will fail in Ukraine as well, even before sending troops.

                  Financial ups and downs are temporary and manageable.

                  Financial ups and downs can cripple a country’s economy so immensely, that they change a country’s direction for years later.

                  There is no military without tax payers. And in a broken economy, there are not many willing tax payers.

                  Demographic collapses are not.

                  It can be corrected with migration, even though migration poses its own new problems.

                  • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    In Afghanistan, Korea, Vietnam and Iraq, we crippled ourselves trying to protect civilians and establish a local government while fighting an “insurgency”. With Russia, per instruction, we will emphatically not be doing so. A war with Russia will be a concerted effort to fundamentally destroy and erase the current power structure and completely demilitarize the country, as we did in WWII. With thermonuclear weapons, if necessary. The unclassified nuclear doctrine is available for your perusal online.