Posted on 08/12/2023 1:10:47 PM PDT by DUMBGRUNT
"Never seen a tank jump off a cliff before. Guess the driver didn't understand the gravity of the situation."
(Excerpt) Read more at youtu.be ...
We don't need no STINKING Ground Guide!
This here is a T-90M the best in the Russian army.
That is NOT a cliff!
Hang on and watch this...
Here...hold my vodka..
Ive gotten them airborne.
Who ever did the voice over needs to learn better Englsh, can’t understand half of what he is saying.
—”Ive gotten them airborne.”
I have seen a few times where the body was clearly up but a sagging track may have been touching the ground.
I always use CC when possible. Not entirely accurate but sometimes it helps.
It’s called an escarpment.
More “Russia stupid Ukraine Einstein” gazzlight.
—”It’s called an escarpment.”
A sober crew with a functioning GROUND GIDE would not attempt the maneuver, no matter the terminology.
We didn’t call tankers DATs (dumb ass takers) for nothing.
One down. How many to go?
Suchomimus
USER CREATED
Sep 11th, 2021
Location: Taiwan
Source: https://socialblade.com/youtube/channel/UCXZs3e_VSlYgrUuTqm3GgVA
And another
A second verification of the YouTube "content creator" and where he is --
Location: Taiwan
Source: https://www.youtube.com/@suchomimus9921/about
Here is some other verification about this individual --
Source: https://graphtreon.com/creator/user?u=80032585
And another --
Source: https://tz.youtubers.me/suchomimus/youtuber-stats/en
Now, as there are so many YouTube channels making their reports, can any of use CONFIRM that we are seeing is in fact as it is reported?
"And it gives us a very nice boom at the end." And, "what's not to like about this video?" Exactly. Four replays of an explosion. And "if we zoom out, " except that we didn't zoom out because, whether wholly accurate or inaccurate, this video is a cut-and-paste for your entertainment.
What is somewhat verifiable is that Suchomimus is rather successful in posting monetized videos.
And all YouTube videos are always true.... < sarc >
Except, as an example, "Ukraine: These videos do not show a Russian tank running over a civilian in Kyiv"
Source: https://observers.france24.com/en/europe/20220301-video-debunked-russian-tank-crush-civilian-car-kyiv
Or.... "Fact Check: Old video of Russian military drill mishap shared as from Ukrainian battlefront As seen in the video, the tanks involved in the incident belong to Russia, but it didn't happen during the invasion of Ukraine. This footage is of an accident during a military drill in 2021."
Source: https://www.indiatoday.in/fact-check/story/fact-check-old-video-of-russian-military-drill-mishap-shared-as-from-ukrainian-battlefront-1918621-2022-02-27
It is fascinating how many YouTube videos are posted now from so many sources, and so few from Ukraine or Russia.
Remember journalists at the front line in Vietnam? I do. Or "embed" journalists in the Iraq and Afghanistan assaults. I do. And the "embedded" journalists from the Ukraine, or alternatively from Russia? I don't. But that guy in Taiwan. Wow!
The interesting part of this video is how the farmer is still maintaining his field within the front lines of the war
“ I have seen a few times where the body was clearly up but a sagging track may have been touching the ground.“.
Usually happens after age 55.
—”Remember journalists at the front line in Vietnam? I do.”
I had seen some, but never with my unit in over two years RVN?
Yes, using WhoIs is valid, but as with so much online, mostly real, or maybe not.
Not everyone wants to be located.
Most no longer list a location.
No one checks to verify WhoIs Data.
They must have a lot of tanks
—”Usually happens after age 55.”
Sometimes referred to as a Dunlap.
His belly dunlaped over his belt.
I do. Perhaps it's the skepticism deep within me. So many whois.com queries show "privacy protection" with some from Arizona, some from Iceland and some from Israel. My two sites have such "protection." But as to location, the nameserver information shows at least where a site is housed, if one is geeky enough.
I don't doxx, but when a website shows a PO Box and street address, it so often informs that a site is using a UPS or FedEx store as their place of business, and some use one of a number of "virtual" offices, so as to "present" as if in a location. Some are here, and some are in Europe. Same game though.
A reputable company has a snail mail address. Hiding an actual location is not in the best interest of a business that wants you to know WHO they are.
So my curiosity brings me to ask questions. And so oftne find answers. Best wishes.
IIRC a few years back Freerepublic.com listed name and address. Now not so much.
That said, there is no official mechanism to verify WhoIs data.
A relative has an online business and attempts to keep it separate from his brick/mortar site; lists in a city a couple hundred miles distant.
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