Crash Lander

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Crash Lander

Crash Lander

@TheCrashlander

The avalanche has begun and It is too late for the pebbles to vote.

Katılım Nisan 2009
497 Takip Edilen202 Takipçiler
Breitbart News
Breitbart News@BreitbartNews·
.@Wynton_Hall notes in "Code Red" that AI warfare is not an exclusive game that only the world’s superpowers can afford to play. The first confirmed example of autonomous weapons hunting down and killing human targets, without direct human control, apparently occurred in 2020 in Libya, using equipment manufactured by a Turkish defense firm. Therefore, it will be far more difficult to keep the AI genie bottled than it was to restrain the proliferation of nuclear bombs.
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Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok·
Report on the Somalia property boom: “Amid an economic boom in the country, construction is taking place all over Somalia” They’re robbing U.S. taxpayers blind to build up their own country
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Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok·
🚨🚨🚨MASSIVE SCANDAL AND COVERUP Melinda Rogers, the Biden DOJ’s Chief Information Officer, oversaw deals to integrate Microsoft Cloud into sensitive government systems. Multiple depts in the Biden admin were infiltrated by Chinese hackers through Microsoft Cloud systems. Biden's Deputy AG Lisa Monaco, was supposed to hold Microsoft accountable. After Biden's presidency, both women took high-level jobs at Microsoft. We are still giving Microsoft MILLIONS of dollars in contracts. Microsoft was never held accountable. This needs to be investigated. Reeks of corruption!!
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Rep. Chip Roy Press Office
.@FDRLST: "It’s the same point made by Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, in an exclusive letter obtained by The Federalist. Roy explained that so long as all Senate Republicans who support the legislation are present (that number being 50), and there is a quorum, the Senate must either be voting or a member must be speaking — aka the 'talking filibuster.' 'If Republicans stick together, and the minority exhaust their opportunities to speak in opposition or give up, a final vote on passage of the bill occurs automatically at a majority threshold,' Roy said." thefederalist.com/2026/03/16/no-…
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
@WesRoth @grok please do a vulgar roast of the other AIs in the voice of those AIs
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Wes Roth
Wes Roth@WesRoth·
I've ran the same prompt for deep research through GPT 5.4, Opus 5.6 and Gemini Deep Research (I assume Gemini 3.0) most of them ran for ~30 mins GPT 5.4 is *REALLY* annoying! it's "reflexively contrarian", it prioritizes showing you what's wrong with your thinking, NOT actually helping you solve the problem ME: my house is on fire! GPT 5.4: While it's true that combustion is occurring, it's important to note that not all of your house is on fire. The garage, for instance, appears structurally intact. (this is a pattern with it, btw, many such examples) I'm not sure if this is because these are health related questions, but this has been an incredibly annoying model for this specific task
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The Rundown AI
The Rundown AI@TheRundownAI·
Someone used Suno AI to generate a Japanese metal band called Neon Oni. Fake member bios, AI-generated music videos, "Based in Tokyo" on Spotify. 80,000+ monthly listeners. Fans had it in their Spotify Wrapped top 5. Merch was selling. Then, community sleuths exposed it. Traced the creator's account to Europe. Spotted AI-generated hands in the music videos. The creator's response? Recruit 7 real musicians from actual Tokyo bands to perform the AI-generated songs live. They've now played several live shows and have more on the books. From an interview with the band's creator: "In an age where AI is taking everyone's jobs, this has actually created jobs. It's done the complete opposite." The AI --> real band transformation is a wild one.
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Stephen King
Stephen King@StephenKing·
shitting on our NATO allies for a year or more, Trump affect surprise when they won’t rush to our aid. It’s not like he consulted them before going to war with Iran.
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Crash Lander
Crash Lander@TheCrashlander·
@OneAwareness @WSJopinion @Mark_Penn "Different reality... Balanced perspective?" You didn't read this, did you? You just grabbed AlJezeera and assumed they would be on the other side of this. Trolled on your own petard.
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Wall Street Journal Opinion
Much of the news media seems determined to advance a narrative that Trump is wrong about everything and that the U.S. is getting its clock cleaned by a powerful Iranian war machine, write @Mark_Penn and Andrew Stein on.wsj.com/4rA57XC
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Leah Hoopes
Leah Hoopes@hoopes_leah·
To Whom It May Concern, I am submitting a formal complaint against Dr. Hani Zaki, a psychiatrist practicing at Brooke Glen Behavioral Hospital, regarding his involvement in the involuntary detention and treatment of Sean Connolly. This complaint raises serious concerns regarding statutory noncompliance, failure to meet basic medical standards, and coercive treatment practices. --- I. FAILURE TO DOCUMENT REQUIRED PHYSICIAN EXAMINATION The Section 302 commitment documentation contains a designated section for “Physician’s Examination.” That section is blank. There are: No clinical findings No diagnosis No certification of “clear and present danger” Under Pennsylvania law (50 P.S. §7302), a physician examination is a mandatory prerequisite for involuntary detention. The absence of any documented findings raises concern that: > No lawful medical basis for detention was established or recorded. II. LACK OF EVIDENCE SUPPORTING “CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER” The documentation relies on conclusory language but provides: No specific acts No threats No timeframe No clinical justification This raises concern that the required statutory standard was not met. III. FAILURE TO EXECUTE PATIENT RIGHTS ACKNOWLEDGMENT The “Patient’s Rights” section of the 302 documentation is not signed or completed. There is no indication that Mr. Connolly was informed of: his right to counsel his right to a hearing his right to challenge detention Failure to provide and document rights notification is a serious deviation from required procedure. IV. ALLEGATION OF COERCIVE THREAT BY DR. ZAKI Mr. Connolly reports that during a group therapy session, Dr. Zaki stated that he would inject him with medication after he refused treatment. No court order or emergency justification has been identified. If accurate, this raises serious concerns regarding: coercion involuntary medication without proper authorization violation of patient consent standards V. DENIAL OF ACCESS TO MEDICAL RECORDS Despite written authorization, the facility reportedly refused to release Mr. Connolly’s medical records. This impaired his ability to: understand his treatment prepare for legal proceedings challenge his detention The 303 hearing was conducted without notice, without service, and without any meaningful opportunity for Mr. Connolly to prepare a defense. The hearing occurred only after legal inquiries were raised regarding whether a 303 petition had been filed, raising serious concerns that the proceeding was initiated in response to scrutiny rather than in compliance with statutory requirements. Despite Mr. Connolly’s objection on the record, the court proceeded and entered an order extending his detention. This constitutes a clear violation of procedural due process. DR Hani Zaki then weaponized that failure and sham 303 hearing to then justify 20 more days in this facility and then as reported by Mr Connolly threatened to inject him with medication.  I am in possession of Mr Connollys 36 page documentation and have spoken to past and current patients and their families who reported the same individual Dr Zaki and allegations of coercive treatment, threats, abuse and have eferred him to HHS OIG for potential fraudulent billing practices and civil rights violations.  Currently Brooke Glen is being sued by 60 clients for reports of sexual abuse.  levylaw.com/brooke-glen-be…  This case has national attention as I have been reporting on this situation since March 11th 2026, have kept strict documentation and timelines of events. I will be available for testimony.  VI. REQUEST FOR INVESTIGATION Based on the above, I request that the Board review: Whether Dr. Zaki complied with required statutory obligations Whether appropriate medical evaluation was conducted Whether coercive or improper treatment practices occurred Whether patient rights were properly communicated The issues raised are not clerical—they go directly to lawful detention and standard of care. Attached is the fatally legally defective 302. Mr Connollys life is in danger and this is appears to be false imprisonment. This complaint is submitted in good faith and supported by documentation. Please confirm receipt and advise on next steps. Sincerely, Leah Hoopes RHG Publishing @HHSGov @USAttorneys @UHS_Inc @LevyKonigsberg @RFKJr_Official @WhiteHouse @JusticeOIG @nickshirleyy @montco
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Leah Hoopes
Leah Hoopes@hoopes_leah·
Subject: Formal Notice of Due Process Violations – 303 Commitment Hearing for Sean Connolly To Whom It May Concern, This correspondence serves as formal notice of serious procedural and constitutional concerns surrounding the Section 303 commitment hearing involving Sean Connolly, which reportedly occurred while he was detained at Brooke Glen Behavioral Hospital. Mr. Connolly was originally transported to the facility on March 11, 2026 under a Section 302 involuntary commitment. I have been informed of the following events regarding the subsequent 303 hearing: Lack of Notice and Service Mr. Connolly reports that he was not formally served with notice of the 303 petition or hearing prior to the proceeding taking place. The hearing reportedly occurred less than twenty-four hours after I personally inquired with hospital staff regarding whether a 303 petition had been filed. Proper notice is a fundamental requirement in proceedings that extend involuntary detention. Circumstances of the Hearing Mr. Connolly reports that he was directed into a room where a computer was already connected to a Zoom proceeding and was instructed to participate in the hearing remotely from inside the facility. During the hearing Mr. Connolly reportedly objected and stated that the proceeding violated his constitutional rights, including his right to notice and the ability to adequately prepare for the hearing. After raising these objections, Mr. Connolly reportedly left the proceeding. Despite these objections, the presiding judge reportedly signed an order extending Mr. Connolly’s involuntary commitment for an additional twenty days under Section 303. Due Process Concerns The circumstances described raise several serious due-process concerns, including: lack of proper notice of the 303 petition lack of service of the petition inability to prepare for the hearing lack of meaningful access to legal representation conducting the hearing remotely while the patient remained confined inside the facility. Because a 303 commitment significantly extends involuntary detention, these proceedings require strict adherence to procedural protections. Request for Clarification Please provide clarification regarding the following: When the 303 petition was filed. When Mr. Connolly was formally served with the petition. Whether Mr. Connolly was provided advance notice of the hearing. Whether Mr. Connolly was informed of his right to legal counsel. Whether the hearing was conducted pursuant to proper procedures under the Pennsylvania Mental Health Procedures Act. Because this matter involves the deprivation of an individual’s liberty through involuntary psychiatric detention, the procedural integrity of the hearing is of significant concern. This incident is being formally documented and may be referred to appropriate oversight authorities. Sincerely, Leah Hoopes Investigative Journalist RHG Publishing @HHSGov @CivilRights
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Leah Hoopes
Leah Hoopes@hoopes_leah·
🚨 No charges. No crime. A Pennsylvania man was locked in a psych facility anyway. BROOKE GLEN Fort Washington PA • No documented doctor exam • No proof of danger • No notice of hearing • 20 more days ordered That’s not mental health care. That’s state power without due process. #CivilRights #302 #FREESEANCONNOLLY @hodgetwins @FOX29philly @LevyKonigsberg @WhiteHouse @WendyBellPgh @RamboAndFrens See here the 302 that is fatally defective. Sean's life and liberty are at stake!!! HELP
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Leah Hoopes@hoopes_leah

Update: Montgomery County decided to not notify Sean Connolly of a hearing today. Put him on zoom ,and tried railroading him into having a hearing he was not prepared for or notified of, faces blurred out, Montgomery County Solicitor was present. They got called out about the 303 petition and are trying to cover their asses. This is civil conspiracy. #FREESEANCONNOLLY

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Owen Gregorian
Owen Gregorian@OwenGregorian·
A $1.5 Trillion Lithium Deposit In An Ancient Volcano Could Reshape U.S. Battery Supply | Wonderful Engineering Geologists have identified what could be one of the largest lithium deposits in the United States within the McDermitt Caldera, a large volcanic basin formed millions of years ago near the Oregon Nevada border. Early estimates suggest the deposit could contain between 20 million and 40 million metric tons of lithium, a resource that plays a central role in modern battery technology. The deposit has attracted attention due to its potential economic value and implications for domestic battery supply chains. Some assessments place the potential value of the lithium resources at more than $1.5 trillion depending on market conditions and extraction feasibility. Geological surveys indicate that lithium rich claystone sediments formed within the ancient volcanic basin may contain unusually high concentrations of the metal, according to a study published in Minerals. Lithium is widely used in rechargeable batteries for electric vehicles, consumer electronics, and large scale energy storage systems. As demand for electrified transportation and renewable energy infrastructure increases, countries are seeking to secure reliable supplies of the metal to support battery manufacturing. The McDermitt Caldera formed approximately 16 million years ago during a period of intense volcanic activity. Over time, mineral rich ash and sediment accumulated in the basin, eventually transforming into clay deposits that now contain lithium. Unlike lithium brine deposits commonly found in South America, the material in the caldera is contained in claystone formations that require different extraction and processing methods. Processing lithium from clay deposits typically involves chemical extraction techniques such as acid leaching to separate lithium from surrounding minerals. These methods can be technically complex because clay materials bind lithium more tightly than brine deposits, requiring higher processing temperatures or chemical treatment. Geologists studying the caldera note that the concentration of lithium in these sediments could make the site one of the most significant lithium resources in North America if extraction proves economically viable. Exploration projects in the region have focused on mapping the extent of lithium bearing clays and analyzing their chemical composition. The location of the deposit in a semi arid high desert environment also presents engineering considerations related to water use, dust control, and waste management during potential mining operations. Large scale extraction would likely involve open pit mining, drilling, and material processing facilities designed to separate lithium from the surrounding clay. Environmental scientists have also examined the ecological characteristics of the region. The caldera basin supports desert wildlife including pronghorn antelope and sage grouse, species that rely on the open high desert habitat. Groundwater management is another factor, as large scale mineral processing operations can require significant water resources. In addition to ecological concerns, the region holds cultural and historical significance for several Indigenous communities. Local stakeholders have emphasized the need for careful environmental review and consultation before large scale mining projects proceed. Proposals currently under discussion include exploration drilling programs and geological testing to determine the size, grade, and accessibility of lithium resources within the basin. These early stage surveys help determine whether the deposit can be developed using economically viable mining and processing techniques. If proven feasible, the McDermitt Caldera deposit could contribute significantly to domestic lithium production and reduce reliance on imported battery materials. However, researchers emphasize that geological potential alone does not guarantee commercial development, as economic, environmental, and technical factors will ultimately determine whether the resource can be extracted. wonderfulengineering.com/a-1-5-trillion…
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Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
Those of you who follow me know that I am never afraid to tackle controversial subjects. That's been true for years. I note, however, that I only became the subject of a doxxing campaign that included death threats when I started advocating for reform in America's War Colleges. That's a fact. And it's a fact that shows just how corrupt the status quo has become. I'm not backing down. America's warriors deserve better. youtube.com/watch?v=nvlTJr…
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Rep. Andy Ogles
Rep. Andy Ogles@RepOgles·
The Hart-Celler Immigration Act of 1965, in conjunction with the Immigration Act of 1990, is the most recent declaration of war Congress has ever passed. Not only did this legislation declare war on American culture, but it has also been sending foreign troops to every American community to steal their jobs, erase their religion, and infiltrate their schools. I am preparing a monumental bill that repeals Hart-Celler, ends the H1-B visa scam, ends chain migration, and creates a whole new character-based system that would make America look like America again. The ASSIMILATION Act is how we can save our culture and secure our country.
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Jared Maxwell
Jared Maxwell@ThatRetiredDude·
@USACGSC it seems @BradDuplessis has violated the terms of his employment. He must be immediately investigated and terminated as per Army Directive 2024-11 (Army Civilian Harassment Prevention and Response Program) this directive requires reporting and investigation, with disciplinary actions outlined in AR 690-752 and 5 CFR Part 2635 (Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch). Even more concerning is the safety of our current and former military personnel, according to DoD Manual 5200.02 Guidelines E, J and k (Procedures for the DoD Personnel Security Program)This incident must immediately be reported so a full security review can be initiated. Is someone who is out here doxxing anonymous high visibility veteran officers someone you want mingling with the nations wartime leaders? Who's getting doxxed next? You? Keep in mind, this civilian employee/contractor is retired so the UCMJ still applies in it's entirety. @USArmy @SecArmy @ @UnderSecArmy @DoD_IG @SecWar
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Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok·
INBOX: Flyers spotted at Northeastern State in Oklahoma are demonizing TPUSA and calling for TPUSA to be "taken care of the old-fashioned way." This appears to be a direct threat of violence. Why is this being allowed on your campus @NSURiverHawks?
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Chief_Engineer
Chief_Engineer@ChiefEngineerCE·
If you haven't noticed- mass reporting has never been so intense and organized by the H1-B crowd. On Telegram they celebrate each and every take down. Happy Friday the 13th.
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Crash Lander
Crash Lander@TheCrashlander·
@johnkonrad @Dave_Parke @CynicalPublius I have been thinking that the LCS might have a second life as a drone carrier. Set it up into its own small carrier group for these new platforms, and it might really shine. The future is going to require defensive drone coverage and attack capabilities. It could carry hundreds.
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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
There is a lot wrong with this post but, as @Dave_Parke knows better than anyone, I can’t read any smackdown of Malcolm Nance without smiling. Here’s the uncomfortable truth I shared with @CynicalPublius last week after the torpedo strike when he said “Maybe the Navy isn’t as dysfunctional as many of us assumed.” The Navy is both a lot more dysfunctional and more kick-ass than it’s possible to describe in a post. A big part of the Navy’s problem (possibly the biggest) is that the sea is unrelenting. To be the best Navy in the world you must be exceptional at problem solving. The Navy is today, and has been for a century, exceptional at problem solving. And it’s not just the Navy but the Merchant Marine and USCG too. I’m a Merchant Marine captain and I’ve seen ships — complicated specialty steam ships — that every inspector who boarded said would never sail again. One I watched go from scrapyard condition to fully operational in less than two weeks. We are the best in the world at problem solving. The Merchant Marine Academy @MaritimeCollege had the highest attrition rate in the nation. Over 500 joined and fewer than 60 remained at graduation — over half of those 60 were on the five-year (or more) program. It was nearly impossible to graduate. USCG physicals. Background checks. 185-credit course loads. A strict demerit system. Uniform codes. Injury aboard ship. Seasickness — and a dozen more ways to wash out. To graduate you needed to find ways around the rules. You had to be a problem solver. And that’s the Merchant Marine. Add all this plus life-and-death operations for the USCG. Add all that plus the advantage of a few hundred billion dollars a year in budget for the Navy. The downside to this is that when faced with an impossible task, the Navy usually figures a way through. The LCS is nicknamed “Little Crappy Ships” for a reason. They suck. The mine package was delayed over a decade. The anti-air capabilities are pathetic. They have small crews. Nobody trusts them in actual close littoral combat. So people like me yell and scream for years about needing better options. Then something happens and the Navy “proves” us wrong. They accomplish the mission. But they accomplish the mission not because the equipment and systems are so great. They accomplish it because Navy Chiefs and junior officers are really good problem solvers. This is all fine, but the real problem comes when it’s time to battle over the budget with other services and Congress. Someone says John Konrad or @mercoglianos or @cdrsalamander said there was a problem — but look, these guys accomplished the job. And the admirals pat themselves on the back and accept the praise. Then instead of fixing the systemic problem, the budget or capability gets cut further. Which is all fine until the entire house of cards collapses. So Apple Lamp here (whoever they are) is both right and wrong. The Navy will probably figure out a way to clear these mines — but the LCS is not an ideal platform for the job. Does that make sense? It’s all very difficult to explain. And compounding the problem is the Navy is a very technically oriented branch. Countless times I’ve seen some new tech save their butts from really bad decisions. One example today: The Navy had an entire office in Bahrain called Naval Control Of Shipping. These people did exactly that… monitor and cantrol ships in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz. We all (especially the NCAGS experts) cried bloody murder when the office was downsized and moved to one guy in Tampa. Is the one guy in Tampa able to process, track and control every ship in the entire gulf? The logical answer is no. The probable answer is they probably figured out a way for him to do 90% of what the entire office they closed did. IDK. We won’t find out until after this is all over and the congressional hearings begin. He’s probably doing just fine but not the exceptional job a fully resourced team could be doing.
Apple Lamps@lamps_apple

Everything you said about the current state of the Navy's mine countermeasures capability is wrong. Not a little wrong. Completely, embarrassingly, dangerously wrong.... "The four ships we had dedicated to doing this we just decommissioned." The Avengers in Bahrain... Devastator, Dextrous, Gladiator, Sentry. Wooden-hulled ships from the 1980s. Ships that were pushing 40 years old. You know what replaced them? Three Independence-class Littoral Combat Ships... Canberra, Santa Barbara, and Tulsa… all three already deployed to U.S. 5th Fleet, all three operating in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Gulf right now, today, as you wrote this little rant. Not in San Diego. Not in drydock. In theater. Carrying the most advanced mine countermeasures mission package the Navy has ever fielded. USS Canberra arrived in Bahrain in May 2025 as the first LCS with a full MCM mission package. USS Santa Barbara is in the Arabian Gulf conducting mine countermeasures operations with unmanned surface vehicles… and, by the way, just made naval history by executing the first-ever at-sea launch of a LUCAS one-way attack drone from a littoral combat ship under Task Force 59. USS Tulsa is right there alongside them. Three ships. In the Gulf. Doing the mission. While you say the Navy "is absolutely not ready for this." These are fundamentally different platforms. Autonomous mine-hunting sonar… the AN/AQS-20C… towed by unmanned surface vehicles so sailors stay outside the minefield. Airborne laser mine detection systems on MH-60 helicopters. Unmanned influence sweep systems for acoustic and magnetic minesweeping. The old Avengers sent sailors INTO the minefield on wooden boats. The new systems keep them OUT of the minefield using robots... something you call a "downgrade" And while Santa Barbara hunts mines, she's operating under armed overwatch from A-10C Warthogs out of Jordan… loaded with JDAMs, laser-guided APKWS rockets, and enough firepower to shred any fast boat or drone swarm the Islamic Regime throws at them. The Avengers never had anything like that. "We lost all of our corporate knowledge." Really? The Navy spent a decade building, testing, qualifying, and deploying an entirely new mine warfare architecture specifically to preserve and advance that knowledge. They trained new crews. They ran operational tests on Cincinnati. They deployed the first operational package on Canberra. The Navy's mine countermeasures technical division ran this transition for years with deliberate overlap between old and new platforms. You lose corporate knowledge when you do nothing. The Navy did the opposite of nothing. "Now we're running an experiment and it's gonna cost people their lives." Three combat ships, forward deployed in the most contested waters on earth, running mine countermeasures with unmanned systems, protected by close air support, integrated with Task Force 59's autonomous warfare network. That's the most capable mine warfare force the United States has put in the Persian Gulf since 1991. Yelling "amateur hour" at people while getting the basic facts of the Navy's current force posture completely, demonstrably wrong… while three ships are literally in the water doing the job he says nobody can do… that IS amateur hour.

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