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Be careful about bragging in public!
04/02/2003 | TMMT

Posted on 04/02/2003 7:46:57 AM PST by The Magical Mischief Tour

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To: Rytwyng
It's much easier and more dramatic to suggest and insinuate you were a CIA agent or assassin. Making cryptic like comments about that are hard to flush out and keeps peopel guessing!
41 posted on 04/02/2003 2:48:09 PM PST by HitmanLV
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To: HitmanNY
Better yet, hint that you were an assassin for an agency whose very existence is classified.
42 posted on 04/02/2003 2:51:05 PM PST by Poohbah (Crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of their women!)
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To: Poohbah
Indeed! These guys didn't even know how to lie well! Haha!
43 posted on 04/02/2003 2:52:31 PM PST by HitmanLV
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To: Manic_Episode
There was a mini-controversy about Jesse's service record up here in MN during his tenure as Kinda-Governor. If I recall, he went through SEAL training and was actually in a Navy FrogMan unit. Whatever that difference is.

It would be frustrating to be a Navy SEAL I'd guess. You secure this platform, or detonate that bridge, and your leader says ... "back to base". And you go .... "Well, we thought we'd go up the road and help those other guys ..." They never seem to get to join the fray with the land lubbers.

When the SEALS assaulted and secured those Oil Terminal platforms in the first days of the War, one of the jibba jabba boys asked a Marine Colonel about the what the SEALS do and he said "The harder thing is to find anything they DON'T want to do."

44 posted on 04/02/2003 2:54:12 PM PST by ArneFufkin
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Comment #45 Removed by Moderator

To: TIGHTEN

Gee, imagine..

I guess the biased press is supressing all the "poodle killings" going on under our noses..

Don't care what their shoes are like. It's a job and they aren't conscripts. If they can't manage to behave like civilized adults, then they shouldn't be running around with taxpayer financed cars and weapons. Get another job, but don't whine to me that your current one somehow justifies gross arrogance.

I am not buying.

Bad cops and irresponsible pit bull owners bring these things down on their own heads.

If you are going to posess something as deadly as police power or a pit bull in our society then you should be responsible for it.

I got a dog and I am responsible for it. It's a pet, not a penis extention and should be treated as such.

46 posted on 04/02/2003 2:57:47 PM PST by Jhoffa_ (Frodo sleeps with men...)
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To: L,TOWM
Yes...
47 posted on 04/02/2003 2:58:03 PM PST by Jhoffa_ (Frodo sleeps with men...)
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To: The Magical Mischief Tour
I was riding on the DC subway a couple of weeks ago and this older gentleman got on board and was standing in the aisles. He looked to be about 6'3" and solidly built. He had a weathered face, a steely look and high-n-tight red hair. He looked like Richard Widmark. He had on a Seal Team (don't remember number) sweatshirt and khaki pants and tan workboots. He just stood there on the train, minding his own business. I couldn't help but look at him. He had a presence about him that was unmistakable. I couldn't even tell whether he had been enlisted or officer, he was just so commanding. Those guys have a way about them. God bless them all for all the dirty work they have to do.
48 posted on 04/02/2003 2:59:43 PM PST by rabidralph (Very Soon, All Your Base Are Belong To Us)
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To: TIGHTEN
Yanking wolf tickets from loudmouths is virtuous in my book.

Well done!
49 posted on 04/02/2003 3:01:15 PM PST by wardaddy (G-d speed our fighters!)
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To: dead
The cop probably went home and fell sobbing into the arms of his wife, Morgan Fairchild.

Yeah, that's right. Morgan Fairchild.

"... whom I've seen naked!"

Yeah, that's the ticket!

50 posted on 04/02/2003 3:03:19 PM PST by Hoverbug (whadda ya mean, "we don't get parachutes"!?!)
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if the guy was in fact lying he is a jackass. But I'm sure he gets close enough to life/death situations.
51 posted on 04/02/2003 3:05:47 PM PST by KneelBeforeZod (Deus Lo Volt!)
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To: The Magical Mischief Tour
Here's an article on another officer pretending to be a SEAL. With only 10,000 SEALS since 1962, it's pretty stupid pretending to be one as it is such an exclusive group that it would be very easy to "out" an imposter. To an extent, there are people claiming to be in the Marine Corps as well and I ran into one personally at a party a few years back. It wasn't too hard to out him either, as when I asked him what his MOS was, he said "four years." Evidently he thought the term had to do with time of service!
Navy vets say officer isn't SEAL as claimed Police lieutenant says he's not listed because he was in classified unit

BY STEPHEN DYER
Beacon Journal staff writer

LAWRENCE TWP.: Become a U.S. Navy SEAL and you join one of the military's tightest fraternities.

Some classes of SEAL trainees have had a dropout rate as high as 90 percent during the 17 weeks of rigorous training. Since 1962, fewer than 10,000 men have completed the course that even has claimed some lives.

For the graduates, being a member of one of the world's elite fighting forces becomes their essence.

That's why when people falsely claim to be SEALs -- as some allege a Lawrence Township police officer is doing -- former SEALs like Ron Relf take it personally.

``A lot of our teammates have given their lives to serve with honor and integrity,'' said Relf, 49, a retired Denver police officer now living near Philadelphia. ``These (fakes) are trading in on the good reputation of the guys we knew.''

False claims have become an epidemic of sorts, according to SEALs and their devoted followers. So much so that a group has formed a ``SEAL fraud squad'' at on the Internet.

The organization meticulously maintains a database of SEALs dating back to the group's earliest days. The mission -- catching fakes -- lacks the danger of a classified incursion, but members attack with the same signature SEAL ferocity.

``Ever since the Roman Empire, we've had fake veterans,'' said Steven Waterman, a former Navy photographer who administers the Web site. ``But with the Internet, it's easier to catch them.''

Navy spokesman Lt. Douglas Spencer said ``something pops up every day'' about falsified military records.

The SEAL group has caught university professors, school superintendents, police officers, customs agents and medical doctors lying about their past.

Officer targeted

Their latest target is one of northern Stark County's most respected police officers: retired Lawrence Township Lt. William Chevrier, who since 1982 has told people he was a SEAL. He has worn the SEAL trident insignia pin on his police uniform. His SEAL claim was so well known, it was one of those things people around town just knew about him. ``It's just understood,'' explained Northwest Schools Superintendent Dennis Lambes.

Chevrier, 58, is a resource officer in the district and is working to obtain a grant so that an officer can be stationed permanently at the buildings.

But Waterman says he has no record of Chevrier ever being a SEAL. Neither do naval special forces officials.

``He's not in our database,'' said Chief Petty Officer Todd Willebrand. ``We've got a list of everyone who's ever gone through SEAL training. We've never had the database be wrong.''

Chevrier counters that when he was in SEAL Team 1 between 1962 and 1966, it was a deeply classified outfit.

``I didn't exist,'' he said.

He said that's why he left the Navy in 1966 -- he couldn't be promoted because of his classified status.

Willebrand said whether a person is a SEAL is not classified.

Chevrier said he has heard questions about his military record for about six months.

``So I didn't turn up in a database,'' he said. ``I know what I know. That's all I can say.''

As for the ``fraud squad,'' it's not always right, Chevrier said.

``They're out to get people running around saying things,'' he said. ``I've run into two or three (legitimate SEALs) who said it happened to them.''

Chevrier declined to produce a copy of his military discharge papers to the Akron Beacon Journal. He said it won't say on the records that he was a SEAL because of his classified status.

Spencer said it could take as long as two weeks to confirm Chevrier's military service.

Willebrand said most fake SEALs claim they were part of a secret, classified class that doesn't appear on any records.

``This `secret class' had about 20,000 graduates,'' he said. ``That's a pretty big class.''

Reason for claims

Willebrand said people who falsely claim to be SEALs use it to advance themselves. Some even use it to threaten people.

For example, they warn, ``I'm a SEAL and can kill you with one finger,'' he said.

``It's an epidemic,'' Willebrand said. ``A lot of them use it to pick up girls or get promoted in jobs.''

One admitted fake SEAL -- William T. McCabe, 45, of Mount Vernon -- said he started bragging over a couple of beers with friends, though he said he hasn't made the claim for more than a year. He said he had worked with some SEALs while he was stationed near their training base at Coronado, Calif.

``I felt awful about'' telling the story, he said yesterday. ``I want to correct everything I did. I felt horrible about it. I just admired what they did so much. I hang my head in shame.''

Waterman said McCabe's apology was admirable.

``Now he can get on with his life,'' he said.

Those who work with Chevrier in Stark County said whether he is a SEAL doesn't really affect his job performance.

``He's a great cop. If your child is missing, he's the first guy I'd go to,'' said Massillon Municipal Judge Edward J. Elum, himself a Navy veteran. ``We'd share war stories together. He never told me he was a SEAL.''

Elum said Chevrier also never claimed it on the witness stand.

Lawrence Township recently rehired Chevrier to conduct part-time investigative work. Trustee Marvin Hardgrove expressed concern when he learned about the discrepancy between Chevrier's claim and the Navy's records.

``I'll take a look at it,'' he said.

Chevrier's supervisor, Police Chief Charles ``Chip'' McCullough, however, said the SEAL claim doesn't matter.

``Whether he was or wasn't a SEAL is immaterial,'' he said. ``It's not a job requirement.''

Former SEAL Steve Nash, 61, of California, said there's another problem with fakers: They can cost taxpayers money.

``There are a lot of phonies taking advantage of the (Veterans Administration) system,'' he said. ``A lot of taxpayer money is being spent on people who don't deserve it. If the rest of the military had the system we do, we could save taxpayers a bunch of money and get treatment for guys who deserve it.''

Relf said some fakers go to the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C., and pass themselves off as SEALs. Some even adopt the names of dead SEAL team members.

He has a simple response.

``At some point, we'll have contact with those guys,'' Relf said calmly. ``And it won't be a good day for them.''


52 posted on 04/02/2003 3:06:21 PM PST by SamAdams76 (California wine beats French wine in blind taste tests. Boycott French wine.)
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To: Rytwyng
Hi. I'm Phil Bucklew. Straight to Wall I go.
53 posted on 04/02/2003 3:10:04 PM PST by ArneFufkin
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To: Rytwyng
I looked around that website. LOL - I noticed they have Billy Boy Clinton listed in their hall of shame because he commented that he "could have been" a seal! What a phoney. He isn't fit to shovel their sh1t.
54 posted on 04/02/2003 3:26:23 PM PST by RedWhiteBlue
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To: wardaddy
very few claim to have been the true REMFs they were.

"REMF", if I recall correctly, is an acromym for Rear Echelon Mother F***er. I'm not sure this is entirely a fair term. Military personnel go where they're ordered to go, do what they're told to do. If they get sent to the front and have a chance to be heroes, so be it -- but if they get assigned behind the lines and do their duty without ever hearing a single shot fired in anger, they're still serving honorably.

I recall reading that, of those who served in WW 2, only about 1/3 actually saw combat. There were twice as many supply, support, technical specialists, etc, as there were actual fighting men. Which reminds me of the old adage, "Amateurs talk tactics, professionals talk supply!"

55 posted on 04/02/2003 3:43:27 PM PST by Rytwyng
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To: HitmanNY
It's much easier and more dramatic to suggest and insinuate you were a CIA agent or assassin.

No real agent or assassin would ever be so foolish as to talk about it. People who make such claims can be a priori dismissed as fakes.

56 posted on 04/02/2003 3:46:03 PM PST by Rytwyng
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To: Rytwyng
Oh, I agree, but at least you can't get busted like these cops.
57 posted on 04/02/2003 3:48:23 PM PST by HitmanLV
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To: Jhoffa_
Poodles deserve to die.
Just kidding, seriously, just kidding.

Whatever you say. You're the king, and I'm crap, hence you are the king of crap.

Ugh.
58 posted on 04/02/2003 3:52:19 PM PST by TIGHTEN
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To: HitmanNY
Oh, I agree, but at least you can't get busted like these cops.

Then again, maybe you can. And heaven help you if you do -- it's not hard to imagine how REAL intelligence personnel could make life utter hell for a poser. This concept is humorously explored in the otherwise-ridiculous movie, "True Lies".

59 posted on 04/02/2003 3:53:22 PM PST by Rytwyng
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To: Stand_Up
I like it. May I swipe it and pass it along to some people who need thier ass kicked?
60 posted on 04/02/2003 4:01:04 PM PST by Doomonyou
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