Captain Cave Texan

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Captain Cave Texan

Captain Cave Texan

@CaptainCaveTex

Navy Veteran, entrepreneur, USCG licensed master, beer connoisseur, intelligent building systems SME.

Maryland Katılım Ekim 2021
772 Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler
Geoffrey Sirois
Geoffrey Sirois@link2reality·
They got it covered. You’re not as smart as you think you are. You can remove excess nitrogen (algae food) from the water. I do it in my pond with rocks, bacteria and plants. Works great! I have fish (koi) and a whole bunch of frogs, no algae. You can also do it with filters. The unnatural way. Probably why they added them in the renovation. Thanks for playing the annoying liberal who for some reason hates making things look nice. 👍
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emily miller
emily miller@emilymiller·
EXCLUSIVE: I got inside Trump’s final waterproofing work at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. WATCH!
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Cosmic Static
Cosmic Static@ExploreEso·
@emilymiller The dark color will cause algae to grow much, much faster. (solar heat will up the water temp) Get ready for a green reflecting pool, Emily.
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Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer@Keir_Starmer·
Henry Nowak was kind, thoughtful and much-loved. His life was stolen from him, leaving his family and loved ones devastated. The bodycam footage is harrowing. It’s absolutely right that the IOPC is looking at this. There are serious questions for the police to answer.
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Unclean
Unclean@CoyoteUnclean·
@CaptainCaveTex No. I didn't. That's the whole joke. I got drunk in the O'club and passed out in my rack before 0100. THE BASTARDS MADE IT ALL UP.
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Unclean
Unclean@CoyoteUnclean·
When I was a 1st Lt deployed to Okinawa, my fellow Lts in the battalion got together one Sunday morning and put together an elaborate series of stories of various war crimes I had committed the night prior after midnight, when we'd broken from the Camp Hansen O'Club. Every bit of it was complete fucking fiction. So as the day progressed, every time I'd run into another one of them, they'd add to the story, BUT ALL THEIR STORIES INTERTWINED. By that evening, I had heard of all of these things of which I had NO memory, and was completely convinced that I was completely out of fucking control. They let me off the hook on Monday when we all went back to work. Legendary.
Junkyard-Tactical@Junkyardtactic

@CoyoteUnclean This reminds me of that time everybody was telling me stories of what I did that I have no recollection of and was horrified to hear about. Germany 1997

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Robin Duggan
Robin Duggan@RobinDuggan3·
Breaking: Contractors applied sealant. Maintenance occurred. A public asset was repaired. As someone in construction, I'm happy the leak got fixed. Now let's put the same energy into fixing healthcare, housing, insurance, addiction, mental health, and homelessness. The marble got a plan. The people got "hopefully." 😏🇺🇸
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Secretary Doug Burgum
Secretary Doug Burgum@SecretaryBurgum·
The Reflecting Pool is now 100% coated with American Flag Blue sealant! Another major milestone in restoring this landmark and ensuring it lasts for generations of Americans to celebrate our great history in our nation’s capital. 🇺🇸
Secretary Doug Burgum tweet media
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Captain Cave Texan
Captain Cave Texan@CaptainCaveTex·
@MAGACult2 I can't wait to see your pasty-white yank looking low-testosterone face streaming precious little tears.
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MAGA Cult Slayer🦅🇺🇸
James Talarico walks the walk and that’s what scares all the fake Christians. He’s the genuine article.
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Daniel Lee
Daniel Lee@siabaaLee·
You know what? @infantrydort did nothing wrong in '08. 06 - 09 was a shit time in Iraq where corps and above had no idea what they were doing. With unclear objectives, estimates, and assessments that were written to please the academics, col and above as well as the civilian morons back in DC. We were given impossible tasks and regularly accomplished them. To hindsight second guess the people on the ground dealing with their soup sandwich is beyond the pale. GTF out of here with ethics.
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CatholicMamaof10
CatholicMamaof10@eligilly10·
@Ron_WatkinsQ Okay, that is good news. Will he also audit the $$ we've sent to an Israeli Government that is obliterating Lebanon courtesy of our tax dollars?
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RON .D. WATKINS
RON .D. WATKINS@Ron_WatkinsQ·
BREAKING 🚨 Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth just stunned America by announcing $5.1 Billion in WASTE discovered by D.O.G.E: “We’re directing the termination of $5.1 Billion not million, in DoD Contracts. That’s with a B” THIS IS HUGE 🔥
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Captain Cave Texan
Captain Cave Texan@CaptainCaveTex·
Sandy Hook was a "gun free zone" working exactly as intended. The election was stolen, unless a drooling idiot who failed miserably at his two previous runs for president suddenly got 12 million more legit votes than obama. Jan 6 was a deep state false flag that was instigated to install said dribbler. If it weren't, then the guys dressed in black from head to toe wearing masks while breaking windows at the Capitol would have been arrested and not the grandmas who walked through doors held open by the USCP. You're very non curious for someone who thinks that she's somehow supperior to anyone.
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6ɪx✦
6ɪx✦@ok6ixx·
I got sick in Hiroshima. Like really sick, fever and everything. Probably ate something bad or just caught a bug. I went to a pharmacy looking for medicine. I was trying to explain my symptoms to the pharmacist with Google Translate, probably looking miserable. She asked if I'd seen a doctor. I said no, I'm just a tourist, I don't know how. She made a phone call, spoke fast Japanese, then told me to wait. Twenty minutes later, her colleague came to cover her shift, and she walked me to a clinic. Like personally escorted me there, three blocks away. At the clinic, she explained my situation to the receptionist. Waited with me until I was called in. The doctor spoke decent English, examined me, said it was just a virus, and prescribed some medicine. When I came out, the pharmacist was still there. She walked me back to a different pharmacy near the clinic, helped me get the prescription filled, explained how to take everything. I kept thanking her, apologizing for taking her time. She said "it's okay, my coworker can handle the shop." The whole thing took like two hours of her day. I tried to offer her money for her help. She looked almost offended and said "no, no, I just want you to feel better." Before she left, she wrote down her pharmacy's phone number and said "if medicine doesn't work, call here. We can help you." The medicine worked. I felt better in two days. I went back to her pharmacy before I left Hiroshima to thank her properly. Brought her a gift - some fancy cookies from the department store. She accepted them but only after I insisted like five times. She asked if I was feeling better, if I enjoyed Hiroshima despite being sick. I said yes, people like her made it memorable. She seemed embarrassed by the compliment, just smiled and said "please enjoy the rest of your trip to Japan."
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Captain Cave Texan
Captain Cave Texan@CaptainCaveTex·
While your IQ is probably above 70, which means you are not clinically retarded, you have chose to be willfully ignorant, which makes you a retard. Hope this helps. And if MAGA wer the problem, my backwards little state and Washingto DC would run like clockwork instead of being the dysfunctional little shitholes that they are. P.S. your daughter's ex may be an asshole, but the apple never falls far from the tree.
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Captain Cave Texan
Captain Cave Texan@CaptainCaveTex·
@infantrydort I was on a ship in Desert Storm / Shield, so I'm completely unqualified to speak, but let me give you my two cents worth anyways. They weren't there, so fuck them. I wasn't either, but if I we're, I'd probably still be breaking rocks for violating ROE. Or dead, most likely that.
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InfantryDort
InfantryDort@infantrydort·
This post struck something in me. This will probably be the last thing I say today. It’s weird seeing the history of one of my deployments so accurately documented. But it reminds me why my takes on war rub SO many people the wrong way; even veterans. It’s because I’m realizing the experience the boys and I had was exceedingly unique in GWOT. I forget this. We caught both surges in Iraq then Afghanistan back to back. Fighting at the height of the war in both countries. Fighting an enemy whose whole strategy was to blend in to the population. Sometimes shooting at us right next to civilians. After awhile, the haughty training we got on “ethics” kind of melted away. We didn’t target civilians. But we couldn’t 100% prevent them as collateral damage either. We got shot at. We shot back. If it was in a building? Oh well. Them or us. It became normal. So even after just a couple months in country, leveling buildings was as normal as breathing. What choice did we have? Us or them. Urban fighting is hell. It sucks. Our enemies knew how to manipulate the system. The boys and I just weren’t interested in letting them beat us on the field. So yes, we shot back. TLDR: I get why so many think my takes are heavy handed. They said the same thing about Operation Dragon Strike in Kandahar the following year. Kill or be killed though. Critics be damned. What I take issue with is the shear amount of people who are SO sure they’re right about us being war criminals. Even Desert Storm or Iraq invasion vets. Homies, I had those veterans in our formations. Multiple witnesses said the fighting in 08-11 was the worst they ever saw. So I get why they’re upset at us. But I don’t. It’s complicated.
Daniel Lee@siabaaLee

The period from 2006 to 2009 in Iraq was a strategic and operational mess. Higher headquarters and civilian leadership in DC often had unclear or shifting objectives, and assessments were frequently written to satisfy whatever narrative the academics, colonels and above, or political masters wanted to hear that quarter. We were handed impossible tasks and regularly accomplished them anyway. To hindsight second-guess the people on the ground who were actually dealing with that soup sandwich is beyond the pale. @infantrydort recently shared one such account on X: a detailed first-person description of a 2008 firefight near Sadr City, in which his small element was attacked from multiple directions during a dust storm, took sniper fire and mortar rounds, called for artillery and air support on the buildings the fire was coming from, and held their ground. @HicksCBER, a retired military academic responded by implying the officer had never thought through the implications of calling for fire in an urban setting and didn't know anything worth knowing. The veteran's reply was raw and unfiltered, the kind of response you get from a man who actually carried the weight of those decisions. Both reactions make sense. This post is about the context that was missing from that exchange. Fights matching that pattern occurred across eastern Baghdad and the surrounding belt in April 2008. On April 17 and 18, a heavy dust storm engulfed the city. Mahdi Army gunmen used the cover to attack coalition front lines and checkpoints. Iraqi units at police stations and positions came under pressure, with some companies deserting or being overrun before American forces reinforced. Fighting continued through the night and into the next day while aviation and drones were grounded by the storm. Official reports recorded 17 Iraqi soldiers and 22 militiamen killed in that span, along with civilian casualties. A second wave hit around April 27 and 28 during another dust storm. Mahdi Army fighters again attacked blockades and positions around Sadr City and in eastern and northeastern Baghdad. In one documented clash, a large group assaulted a joint Iraqi and US checkpoint in northeastern Baghdad with small-arms fire. Twenty-two Mahdi Army fighters were killed in that single engagement. Additional fighting in eastern Baghdad that same period left another 16 militants dead. Broader reporting from the same days noted that most of the roughly 41 Mahdi fighters killed in recent clashes had been attacking checkpoints and patrols while using the sandstorm to offset the lack of air cover. US and Iraqi forces responded with ground counterattacks, armor support where available, and fires into urban areas. These actions were part of the militia response that followed Prime Minister Maliki's launch of Operation Charge of the Knights in Basra in late March 2008. The Iraqi government was moving against Jaish al-Mahdi strongholds and criminal networks in the south. Tehran enabled pushback through its proxy networks, producing coordinated pressure in both the south and the Baghdad belt. Dust storms became a recurring tactical factor that allowed militia groups to mass against checkpoints, bridges, and canal crossings while degrading Coalition ISR and aviation. The consistent pattern across these fights included use of captured equipment, indirect fire, and deliberate operation in dense urban terrain where civilian presence complicated targeting. That was terrain the enemy chose precisely because it created that complication. That last point is the one the armchair critics consistently miss. Michael's charge, that the officer never thought through the implications of calling for fire in an urban setting, gets the causality backwards. The enemy engineered that dilemma deliberately. They amassed in dense neighborhoods, used civilians as tactical cover, and timed attacks to dust storms that grounded air assets and degraded ISR. The choice was not between a clean option and a messy one. It was between accepting friendly casualties and accepting the risk of civilian harm inside an urban environment the enemy had deliberately occupied. That is not an ethical failure. That is the enemy's strategy, successfully imposed. At higher levels the picture remained muddled. The Surge had produced tactical gains, but the broader strategy was shifting toward transition with unclear and sometimes competing priorities between Washington, MNF-I, and an increasingly assertive Iraqi government. Assessments often emphasized metrics that looked good in briefings rather than the harder ground truth small units were facing. The result was the same soup sandwich across sectors: adaptive enemies executing a recognizable pattern while ground forces handled the immediate friction with limited resources and guidance. Iranian Qods Force facilitation of weapons, training, and direction gave militia groups the capacity to sustain these surges and impose real friction on Coalition and Iraqi forces. Small units on the ground were dealing with the effects of that proxy system in real time, without the luxury of the strategic clarity their critics now claim to possess. The veteran's raw response, that he didn't stop for an ethics huddle, that he would level an entire neighborhood to protect one of his men, will strike some as troubling. It shouldn't. Not caring in the moment is not the same as not carrying the weight afterward. The men who executed these missions lived with the uncertainty about who was truly in the fight versus caught in the middle. Some of that weight is spiritual. Every person involved still bore the image of God, even when the necessities of the moment did not allow for perfect distinctions. That burden is real, and it is one reason why honest processing of what actually happened matters more than lectures from people who were never in it. This is where detached ethics criticism falls short. Comments that reduce these decisions to individual moral failures ignore both the documented pattern and the enemy's deliberate tactics. When small elements faced coordinated assaults on checkpoints and key terrain during dust storms, with effective enemy fires and civilians in the same dense areas, the immediate requirement was to break contact, protect their people, and hold ground. Reducing that to an ethical lapse from a safe distance isn't serious moral reasoning. It's the projection of classroom standards onto conditions the classroom cannot replicate. The men who did this work in 2006 to 2009 do not need to be turned into case studies for someone else's virtue. They need the space to describe the actual pattern of fights they faced: small units accomplishing impossible tasks inside a strategically confused war against adaptive, Iranian-enabled proxies, without being second-guessed by people operating from safety and hindsight. The ground truth of that period deserves more respect than armchair ethics. Respect to the men who carried it.

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