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  • in reply to: General Discussion #223093
    snafu
    Participant

    ‘Mind the gap,’ he said, repeatedly, although he didn’t since it paid his bills and made him just a little bit famous. And now Phil Sayer has died.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-36052363

    in reply to: Recent Deaths Of People You May Have Heard Of… #1791895
    snafu
    Participant

    ‘Mind the gap,’ he said, repeatedly, although he didn’t since it paid his bills and made him just a little bit famous. And now Phil Sayer has died.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-36052363

    in reply to: General Discussion #223159
    snafu
    Participant

    Remember Blake’s 7? Remember the Welsh lead character of the first two series’, who decided to go and do something else and only reappeared in the last episode of series four? Gareth Thomas?

    He has died. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-36041534

    in reply to: Recent Deaths Of People You May Have Heard Of… #1791952
    snafu
    Participant

    Remember Blake’s 7? Remember the Welsh lead character of the first two series’, who decided to go and do something else and only reappeared in the last episode of series four? Gareth Thomas?

    He has died. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-36041534

    in reply to: General Discussion #223161
    snafu
    Participant

    No more rotten than most other organizations.

    Spies have been everywhere….I seem to recall something about a friend of the Queen, members of MI 5…;)

    Firstly I know that Britain has had (more than?) its fair share of spies, but not many recently (any?) and, I suppose, that was my point.
    And some of the cases listed were more in the good old capitalist fashion than for a political ideal.

    Sad that the U.S. admitted him, trained him as a sailor, commissioned him an officer…all leading to this.

    Stinks, doesn’t it. But he must have passed all the tests, jumped through all the hoops, impressed those who needed to be impressed; how many others were in the same situation and didn’t spy though…?

    Rather like that Islamic Army psychiatrist that killed the 13 soldiers in Texas…the Army sent him to medical school, made him an officer and he was still radicalized.

    Ho hum. Firstly I believe he was actually in the US army and, secondly, I thought it was his mental state and the reluctance of his fellow officers at Fort Hood to do anything about him that allowed him to brood. When he claimed he was harassed due to his religion little was done, and his trial became a farce with claims that he was given a poor performance evaluation yet his boss was forced to admit on the stand that he had given the shooter an outstanding grade in his last evaluation.
    But he did do it, he was not innocent and he has admitted being the killer.

    One might come to the conclusion that in its rush to be “diverse”, more care needs to be taken in the screening process.

    Bit difficult in a country where the vast majority are descended from immigrants – the Fort Hood gunman was an American, born in Virginia. What is your baseline, where does ‘diversity’ kick in – if your candidate is not of white European stock do you immediately start the screening process?

    Then again, we don’t hear enough about the success stories of foreign born military members. A recent Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was a Pole who immigrated to America at 16, was drafted as a private, liked the Army, so applied for Officer training…retired as a 4-star, so as usual, you can’t make too many generations. I literally bumped into him at the Pentagon, he was by himself, no aides or staff, he said “Hello”…seemed like a genuine nice guy.

    Indeed. Then again there was a country who, not so long ago, allowed someone not born within their borders to become their fuhrer and look how that ended up…;o)

    in reply to: American navy has a spy problem – article #1791953
    snafu
    Participant

    No more rotten than most other organizations.

    Spies have been everywhere….I seem to recall something about a friend of the Queen, members of MI 5…;)

    Firstly I know that Britain has had (more than?) its fair share of spies, but not many recently (any?) and, I suppose, that was my point.
    And some of the cases listed were more in the good old capitalist fashion than for a political ideal.

    Sad that the U.S. admitted him, trained him as a sailor, commissioned him an officer…all leading to this.

    Stinks, doesn’t it. But he must have passed all the tests, jumped through all the hoops, impressed those who needed to be impressed; how many others were in the same situation and didn’t spy though…?

    Rather like that Islamic Army psychiatrist that killed the 13 soldiers in Texas…the Army sent him to medical school, made him an officer and he was still radicalized.

    Ho hum. Firstly I believe he was actually in the US army and, secondly, I thought it was his mental state and the reluctance of his fellow officers at Fort Hood to do anything about him that allowed him to brood. When he claimed he was harassed due to his religion little was done, and his trial became a farce with claims that he was given a poor performance evaluation yet his boss was forced to admit on the stand that he had given the shooter an outstanding grade in his last evaluation.
    But he did do it, he was not innocent and he has admitted being the killer.

    One might come to the conclusion that in its rush to be “diverse”, more care needs to be taken in the screening process.

    Bit difficult in a country where the vast majority are descended from immigrants – the Fort Hood gunman was an American, born in Virginia. What is your baseline, where does ‘diversity’ kick in – if your candidate is not of white European stock do you immediately start the screening process?

    Then again, we don’t hear enough about the success stories of foreign born military members. A recent Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was a Pole who immigrated to America at 16, was drafted as a private, liked the Army, so applied for Officer training…retired as a 4-star, so as usual, you can’t make too many generations. I literally bumped into him at the Pentagon, he was by himself, no aides or staff, he said “Hello”…seemed like a genuine nice guy.

    Indeed. Then again there was a country who, not so long ago, allowed someone not born within their borders to become their fuhrer and look how that ended up…;o)

    in reply to: Private collection of aviation equipment and memorabilia #886909
    snafu
    Participant

    Can someone enlighten me; what is the definition of a good home anyway?

    One where those in authority treat everyone nicely, the roof doesn’t leak and you get fed regularly…?

    Anyone know what the propeller may be from ?

    Let us start with an aeroplane and work upwards from there. ;o)

    (Bit disrespectful, as that picture shows, to have built the collection on the site of an unidentified German soldiers grave!)

    in reply to: General Discussion #223236
    snafu
    Participant

    Former husband of Lisa Minnelli and record producer David Gest has been found dead in a hotel in Canary Warf, London.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/david-gest-dead-us-entertainer-and-former-husband-of-liza-minnelli-found-dead-in-london-hotel-a6980786.html

    in reply to: Recent Deaths Of People You May Have Heard Of… #1792040
    snafu
    Participant

    Former husband of Lisa Minnelli and record producer David Gest has been found dead in a hotel in Canary Warf, London.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/david-gest-dead-us-entertainer-and-former-husband-of-liza-minnelli-found-dead-in-london-hotel-a6980786.html

    in reply to: General Discussion #223242
    snafu
    Participant

    Wonder if he is mentioned in the Panama papers?

    in reply to: Cheap Domestic Air Tickets #1792045
    snafu
    Participant

    Wonder if he is mentioned in the Panama papers?

    in reply to: Old museum exhibits that probably didn't survive #889557
    snafu
    Participant

    As a little aside to this topic I’ve just found out that the Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin (destroyed in WWII, but some exhibits survive in Poland) had a Fairey Battle on display. I’m guessing it was acquired in the battle of France, 1940, either from one of the repair trains that were captured or from an airfield; anyone got an idea of which one it was and where it was looted?

    I guess that exhibits lost due to bombing in wartime are not strictly part of this threads remit – even though I started it – but were any preserved aeroplanes lost in France, Belgium, Netherlands, Denmark, elsewhere in Germany, Poland and eastern Europe, not forgetting Britain (the Jutland Short 184, 8359, was reduced to a forward fuselage when the IWM was bombed in 1940 – anything destroyed?), etc?

    in reply to: Spitfire TP364 #890029
    snafu
    Participant

    Rather like Genesis fans disregarding anything after Peter Gabriels departure :highly_amused:

    So from Spitfire to skip again…?;o)

    in reply to: General Discussion #223256
    snafu
    Participant

    Howard Marks, former drug smuggler and scarecrow imitator who subsequently became an author and performer.

    http://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/apr/10/howard-marks-dies-aged-70

    in reply to: Recent Deaths Of People You May Have Heard Of… #1792068
    snafu
    Participant

    Howard Marks, former drug smuggler and scarecrow imitator who subsequently became an author and performer.

    http://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/apr/10/howard-marks-dies-aged-70

Viewing 15 posts - 1,636 through 1,650 (of 3,597 total)