Do not feel obligated to follow me. Use your best judgment and do your due diligence in vetting. I'm not trying to stack followers. Just here to network and support where support is needed.
Clips from the Montana state specialist camp (top 3 in KO and FG, top 4 in Punt)
1) 4.98 hang 50+ yards punt
2) 3.81 hang 75 yard kickoff
3) 55 yard field goal
4) Holds for FG
Larry K. Allen, known as Larry Two Cans, former Command Sergeant Major in 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment and a badged operator of the British 22 SAS.
A Native American who gave a quarter century to US Army Special Operations, Allen built his career in the Ranger Regiment before earning one of the rarest distinctions an American soldier can hold.
Around 1988 to 1991 he was posted to 22 SAS on an exchange, and rather than ride a desk on attachment, he ran the UK Special Forces Selection on the same terms as any British hopeful and passed.
Badged into the Regiment, he served three years with the SAS before returning to the Rangers. He sits in very thin company, alongside names like Charlie Beckwith and Dick Meadows, as one of the few Americans ever to wear the sandy beret on merit.
A wounded combat veteran of Mogadishu among other fights, his career is the kind that reminds you how deep the bond between American and British special operations really runs.
160th SOAR MH-47 pilot Chief Warrant Officer 3 Jason Missenheim conducted his retirement flight on Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island this week.
Missenheim spent 9 years in the Marine Corps before joining the Army. He returned to where it all began for his final flight.
Today on June 18, President Trump will award the Medal of Honor to retired Recon Marine Major James Capers Jr. for his heroism during a 1967 ambush in Vietnam.
Major Capers was shot twice and suffered 17 shrapnel wounds and other injuries during the April 1967 ambush.
Not only did Capers lead his team to safety, but he twice tried to get out of the helicopter carrying the rest of his teammates so that it would be light enough to take off, and had to be pulled back inside by his men.
Major Capers is the first Black Marine to lead a reconnaissance company and to receive a battlefield commission.
The 1967 ambush began when hidden explosives detonated. Capers suffered shrapnel wounds to his abdomen and other parts of his body and a broken leg. Despite his wounds, he ordered a mortar strike on the team’s position to keep the enemy at bay.
Then, even after losing a significant amount of blood and being administered morphine, he led his team to a helicopter landing zone. When a helicopter landed, Capers refused to get on board unless the crew took the body of the team’s military working dog.
Capers was originally awarded the Bronze Star with “V” device for his heroism, which was upgraded to the Silver Star in 2010.
A US Navy Veteran is looking to expand their support system and connect with more friends:
@KillJoy1975
Let's come together and make a difference in their journey!