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When my comrade
...awakens this morning he wants me to show him some of scenic Oregon. I will show him around locally today. One thing he wants to see during his stay is Crater Lake which we will probably do tomorrow.
We talked from the time I picked him up at the airport until he turned in last night. We mostly talked about our time at Ft. Bragg...some of the jumps we made there...a little about the 1st Gulf war and our role in it...and his role in Iraq during the 2nd Gulf War. I was his Platoon Sgt. in the 1st Gulf War...when my career was ended...and he was a Platoon Sgt...when his career was ended...during his 2nd tour in Iraq in the 2nd Gulf War. Some of you asked if I would be taking him fishing and the answer is no. He owns a fish farm in the state he lives in so he really is not interested in fishing. |
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Pigshit.
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We are back from our little excursion. Had lunch at a floating seafood restaurant on the bay. Came home a little earlier than expected as he had the early stages of a migraine headache...something that he occasionally suffers with since the explosion that took his leg off. He is laying down now. If all is well in the morning we plan on going to Crater Lake and will spend the night there.
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Excellent details today. |
You sound gay. Hope you two slept on the same bed and got down on each other.
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Sounds like you will be getting laid again tonight!
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Anyway, maybe you should introduce him to gfy. |
Thanks man you are truly my hero.
:thumbsup |
I must ask...what is your comrade doing while you talk about him on gfy all day?
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You should take magic mushrooms next time, if you haven't already :)
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Show him the wild.
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I was at that floating seafood "restaurant" earlier today. I didn't see any disabled vets come in. http://i2.wp.com/fishermensseafoodma...ater.jpg?w=604 http://fishermensseafoodmarket.com/about Did he try the clam chowder? |
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comrade = communism
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By the mid-1920s, the form of address "Comrade" became so commonplace in Soviet Union that it was used indiscriminately in essentially the same way as terms like "Mister" and "Sir" are employed in English. That use persisted until the fall of the Soviet Union. Still, the original meaning partly re-surfaced in some contexts: criminals and suspects were only addressed as "Citizens" and not as "Comrades", and expressly refusing to address someone as "Comrade" would generally be perceived as a hostile act or, in Stalinist times, even as an accusation of being "Anti-Soviet". |
One time i went to mars and smoked alien weed it was purple!
True story. |
Shit, I forgot the lube again.
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