moonshot925

Yeah, those details are widely known, and easily googlable. You haven’t established your bona fides by telling us something many of us already knew, and anyone at all could have easily found. Keep trying…

Morgan Freeman. Get it right. :rolleyes:

Before you drone on about something else you learned in watching the first five minutes of Wargames back in the 1980s, isn’t discussing operational procedure something that say, an actual Air Force officer in a Strategic Missile Wing in the 1980s would be very wary of shooting his mouth off about? Publicly known information or not, he’d take his security clearance and it’s ramifications very seriously, no?

I look forward to hearing of your escapades when you won that CMoH in your SEAL team days. Or perhaps when you undertook that secret mission to rescue American MIAs from a Vietnamese POW camp in the mid ‘80s and blew up that snotty Asian officer guy with your explosive tipped arrow. You not expendable Rambo.

The movie Wargames was liberal fantasy.

It was really bad and the representation of the crew dogs at the beginning, talking about dope and such, a Hollywood slam on all the good missilers defending our country.

We carried Smith & Wesson Model 15 revolvers to protect classified material, not to shoot our crew partners.

None of this is classified.

Wargames? With Matthew Broderick and Whats-her-face, (the chiquita that made me feel like a dirty old man thirty fucking years ago? Mondo Pervo).

I don’t recall anybody in that movie saying anything about dope. Whatever planet that movie took place on, dope didn’t exist.

You’ve slipped up. They were issued specifically for firing wildly in the air in celebration, after vaporising godless commies.

It’s a rather grating British pronunciation, I’m afraid. They do seem to love mispronouncing foreign words.

I’m so proud.

Not sure what I can say about moonshot that hasn’t already been said, except that it doesn’t really matter to me whether his military record is real or imagined. What matters is that he’s demonstrated so much ignorance of basic history and politics in his brief tenure here that I can safely assume that any future posts will likewise be worth ignoring.

Watch it again.

At 1:56

DMCCC: So, that was like sinsemilia, right?

MCCC: Sinsemilla. This grass made Thai stick taste like oregano. Lay you out flat, man.

We went through rigorous psychological testing and training to make sure we were mentally capable of 1) staying underground for 24hrs at a time and 2) turning the keys if ever necessary. Pot heads never became missilers.

Also, those are Titan II missiles in their silos, not Minutemen.

Ally Sheedy, who I thought was awfully hot at the time too. But I was entitled to, you degenerate!

I have absolutely no idea what airmen who worked in a missile silo did or did not do, nor what they carried or did not carry. What I do know is that I had an intelligence job in the USAF, worked in a SCIF, had Top Secret codeword clearance, and yet NO ONE, except the security police not allowed inside the facility in non-emergency situations, carried a firearm. And we had nothing but classified material in there.

Again, I know nothing about missile bases and their procedures, and maybe some general in that chain of command had a hard-on for arming his people, but in my experience the only airmen and airwomen regularly armed were police. My experience is, for the most part, limited to a little podunk RAF Intel base and a nearby larger fighter base which was usually visited because they had much better and a greater range of services.

But googling it wouldn’t capture the… romance(!?) described here.

“Greetings, Airman Man Shit! Shall we play a game?”

“No! And I’ve told you over and over, it’s Moonshot!”

“Oh… affirmative! So sorry! Error in… memory banks!” <digitized giggles>

Moonshot925, are you the author of this book? 'Cause that text looks awfully familiar.

Most of that is accurate, but the blast doors covering the silos were 110 tons, not 80 tons.

It was published by the National Park Service; you’d think they’d get their facts straight.

But more to the point: are you saying that’s the first time you’ve ever seen that text?

If it’s wrong, why are you plagiarizing it?

I didn’t plagiarize anything. This is common knowledge to missilers.

I’m sure it is. I’m less sure that by sheer coincidence your post includes a dozen virtually identical phrasings to the book.

If you shoot a calf on the moon, would you be guilty of both mopery and dopery?