Trump blocks Vet group on Tweeter

WTF's Avatar
  • WTF
  • 06-13-2017, 01:27 PM
Guest123018-4's Avatar
It is from msn thus a shill for the DNC.
Find some relevant news from a credible source.
Oh, and I DNGAF about twitter.
WTF's Avatar
  • WTF
  • 06-13-2017, 03:50 PM
Oh, and I DNGAF about twitter. Originally Posted by The2Dogs

Donald J Trump will have you thrown in jail if he hears any more blasphemy like that coming out your mouth!
goodman0422's Avatar
This group says it has 500k (supposed) veterans as members. There are over 22 million vets in the US.

I wonder if the "Army vet" I encountered a while back was a member. I asked him what his MOS was. He did not know what I was talking about.
Munchmasterman's Avatar
The best thing about a story like that is you have no problem telling it. If he doesn't know anything about MOSs then he probably doesn't hang out with veterans much. They're pretty good at dealing with posers.

trump only won by @ 70,000 to 80,000 votes ( the difference between totals of PA, MI, and WI-46 electoral votes)

This group says it has 500k (supposed) veterans as members. There are over 22 million vets in the US.

I wonder if the "Army vet" I encountered a while back was a member. I asked him what his MOS was. He did not know what I was talking about. Originally Posted by goodman0422
Guest123018-4's Avatar
But he did win.
SpeedRacerXXX's Avatar
This group says it has 500k (supposed) veterans as members. There are over 22 million vets in the US.

I wonder if the "Army vet" I encountered a while back was a member. I asked him what his MOS was. He did not know what I was talking about. Originally Posted by goodman0422
I can't remember what my MOS was. I do know I wasn't 11 bravo. I do remember "C-1-1" at Ft. Jackson, SC and 22nd FASCOM at Ft. Lee, VA. Selective memory I guess.
I can't remember what my MOS was. I do know I wasn't 11 bravo. I do remember "C-1-1" at Ft. Jackson, SC and 22nd FASCOM at Ft. Lee, VA. Selective memory I guess. Originally Posted by SpeedRacerXXX
Its hard to believe any who was in the military would not remember their Military Occupational Specialty
This group says it has 500k (supposed) veterans as members. There are over 22 million vets in the US.

I wonder if the "Army vet" I encountered a while back was a member. I asked him what his MOS was. He did not know what I was talking about. Originally Posted by goodman0422
Did you meet him in an HEB parking lot and did he claim to be a SeArgent Major ?
Its hard to believe any who was in the military would not remember their Military Occupational Specialty Originally Posted by gary5912
Do you think that seArgent shitburner would remember the MOS for " Permanent Latrine Orderly and Honey Pot Burner " ???? That " obesity " he says he has might " affect " his memory !
MT Pockets's Avatar
Did you meet him in an HEB parking lot and did he claim to be a SeArgent Major ? Originally Posted by Rey Lengua


Do you think that seArgent shitburner would remember the MOS for " Permanent Latrine Orderly and Honey Pot Burner " ???? That " obesity " he says he has might " affect " his memory ! Originally Posted by Rey Lengua
Dam! You are on a fucking manhunt for your snuggle buddy Luke. I hate to tell you but he is not coming back to you. Just find anoth "Bear" on GRINDR that reminds you of him.
SpeedRacerXXX's Avatar
Its hard to believe any who was in the military would not remember their Military Occupational Specialty Originally Posted by gary5912
Sorry that after about 45 years I can't remember the 3 digit code that was assigned to my specific job. If it's that important to you, you can try to figure it out. I was a computer programmer at Ft. Lee Virginia and did coding for programs that were used by reservists who fought wars on a computer during their summer duty. I could not care less what my MOS was way back then.
Sorry that after about 45 years I can't remember the 3 digit code that was assigned to my specific job. If it's that important to you, you can try to figure it out. I was a computer programmer at Ft. Lee Virginia and did coding for programs that were used by reservists who fought wars on a computer during their summer duty. I could not care less what my MOS was way back then. Originally Posted by SpeedRacerXXX
you cant remember 3 digits maybe you should see a doctor memory loss is usually the first sign of Alzheimer isn't it and just what is a C-1-1
[/COLOR]



Dam! You are on a fucking manhunt for your snuggle buddy Luke. I hate to tell you but he is not coming back to you. Just find anoth "Bear" on GRINDR that reminds you of him. Originally Posted by MT Pockets
Wrong AGAIN MT Fluffer ! LUBE was, and probably STILL IS, your " snuggle buddy " that YOU defended and WK'd for so strenuously here ! Has his " self-inflicted vacation " gotten him so upset that he doesn't NOW want to spend any time with YOU ? Maybe YOU need to go to the site that you suggested when YOU aren't trolling for trannies in the HEB parking lots like YOUR hero LUBE does ! YOU must really miss those " sessions " with YOUR hero LUBE the LIAR and picking his dingleberries off of his fat ass !
Sorry that after about 45 years I can't remember the 3 digit code that was assigned to my specific job. If it's that important to you, you can try to figure it out. I was a computer programmer at Ft. Lee Virginia and did coding for programs that were used by reservists who fought wars on a computer during their summer duty. (how do you fight wars on a computer during summer duty) I could not care less what my MOS was way back then. Originally Posted by SpeedRacerXXX
I know you think I'm a redneck hillbilly that doesn't know anything but what I do know is The U.S. Army used alphanumeric codes (such as 11B10, Light Weapons Infantryman) to identify the Military Occupational Specialty (job) each person held. The MOS that a person was qualified in was called the PMOS (primary MOS), while the DMOS (duty MOS) was the job they actually held at a given time.

Different MOS coding systems were used for enlisted, warrant officers and officers:
Enlisted codes consisted of five digits. The first three (such as 11B) indicated the position while the fourth and fifth indicated the relative level:
xxx10 - basic Infantryman (E1-E3) = 11B10
xxx20 - specialist (Specialist 4th Class, E-4) = 11B20 (Note: some SP5s were 20s,such as 63B20, 91B20, 94B20)
xxx30 - team leader, specialist (E-5) = 11B30 (A number of SP5 positions had "30" MOS codes, including 64C30).
xxx40 - noncommissioned officer (Sergeant E-5, Staff Sergeant E-6, Sergeant First Class E-7) = 11B40
xxx50 - senior noncommissioned officer (E-8, E-9) = 11B50 (or, as we shall see, 11B5M, first sergeant

So if you did what you say you did, data processor programmer there are 3 different codes 741B0 741C0 741D0
these are codes used during the Vietnam era