I met Lewis, at the Algonquin Club, in Boston. As a rule, I don't ask Veterans about war. But, he was a genuinely decent, and polite guy. As were all of the guys on the Medal of Honor tour.
@@sharonporter7132 I had spent the morning, reading the pamphlet on the tour, and the stories behind these men. Every single one of them were very exceptional human beings. Every single one of them put their life last, so that others might live. And, decades later, they still exemplified the traits you would expect to see from that rare sort of individual. Best, of the best.
It's amazing what these men accomplished when called upon. I really wonder if we will ever see the likes of these people again. Thank you for sending your post. Amazing, they were amazing.🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
@@Mr.SchitzengigglezIt's too bad really. Guys like him & his mates showed up & showed out exceptionally well to fight for a set of ideals they thought the country stood for only for their kids & grandkids to try turn the US into something very similar to what tiny mustache man wanted to do in Germany & there is nobody to stop it since the closest this crop of young men have gotten to any kind of fight is COD: Modern Warfare III.
I was stationed in Korea for a long time; the place I worked was built into... Hill 180; there was a plaque in the hill commemorating the battle. Col Lewis would periodically show up and give a speech; I never was able to attend one of his official events, but I met him out in the ville outside the base in the 1990s and shook his hand. LEGEND.
Hey Lewis, this isn't a comment about this video but just wanted you to know this. I suffer from PTSD, severe clinical depression, and GAD. That said, there are days the only thing that makes me smile are your videos, so thank you.
@drkwlf5836 read your comment, I thank you for your service and continued sacrifices made. I hope you are receiving the support you need and deserve. Please know I appreciate all you've done and send support and hugs from my little corner of the country (north Texas area), in hopes that it provides some sort of comfort. Peace to you.
@drkwlf5836 - I understand completely about PTSD, both personally & because my oldest has it from his time in the USMC. Prayers going up for you my friend!🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
I would like to pray for u Lord in the name of Jesus may your love and grace find him and may the demons that attack him leave right now may his body be drenched in your love God and be healed as u have a giant purpose for him may he know this and may he know and love u with all his heart and may he be so easily filled with ur joy he could see a rock and think of ur love God amen
My husband and I are both veterans, I was in the Army, my husband was a paratrooper. I remember in 2007, when I was 24and I COULD NOT WAIT for that uniform and boots!!!! Even though I was a single mom of two6 months into training. I couldn’t wait to fight for what was ours!!!! (I was also an adult when 9/11 happened. I left the military in 2012 because we had 4 kids and well…. Being a mother came first. My oldest daughter is now 24 and is also a veteran, medically discharged. It took some time but, now my son in law is army 😂😂😂 the army performed my tubal ligation in 2012 right before I was discharged. Lever it to the American government to f that up. In 2014 we had twins! We now have 5 boys and I highly encourage (demand) they join ROTC etc! I know for a fact 3 of our 5 boys will serve their country, hoping to be a part of American defense! Long post, literally don’t know why y’all needed all that info! My point is most Americans would willingly fight a war just because, patriotism ❤️
Please forgive my typos lol, I had to text fast, our first dog joined the family and that little butt face was tearing off my boot as I replied 😂😂 apologies 🥰
Okay this made me tear up at the end. I’m a very proud American, I adore our soldiers. My brother was 82nd airborne, my cousin a green beret, another cousin Air Force, another Navy. My grandfather was in Armored Division 2 under General Patton in France. Then there’s my husband who was army ordinance working on I.c.b.m Pershing missiles in Germany. He served during the Gulf War & saw the Berlin Wall fall. His father served in Vietnam in the 1st cavalry division of the Army. Both of his great-grandfathers were Army WWII. 😊 I really like this the fat electrician, do more!
Yeah.... the geneva convention was mostly due to us. And you know what? I'm sort of okay with that. As the fat electrician always says. Its never a war crime, the first time. You should watch Canadians change when they hear the word "war"
If I remember correctly, there is a meme about you Canadians. “When the sorry stops, the war crimes start.” Or something like that. For the record, it is perhaps for the best that so many countries want to F-around with us americans, because I know for a fact that if they Fed-around with you Canadians… well… you get the picture. The Canadian think tank will probably come up with a couple more pages for the Geneva Convention, typed in size 1 font just to save on paper. But us americans love you Canadians for it though.
@@KaoretheHalfDemonthing is canada is that aggressive honey badger taking on a king cobra for the fun of it then for shits and giggles it uses the cobra to strangle a guy minding his own business
The reason why did what he did is because in the United States, there is this real sense of brotherhood and camaraderie among our fighting men and women. It's been documented many, many times about U.S. soldiers or marines or seamen or airmen who would run across open ground during an active fire fight to drag a wounded battle buddy to safety so they could get patched up and get home alive.
My uncle was an early observer in Vietnam about the same time as Millet. I'll bet he knew him. And yes, they did things they weren't allowed to say and be where (we) weren't "allowed" to go, and he told me that he was taking a lot to his grave. He was a WPt grad, 5th degree black belt in Tae Kwan Do serving in Korea, a mountain climber in the 14000 club (✓all 14k ft peaks) and became a 5th grade elementary teacher in retirement. Those guys had to be amazing people.
I live in Maine not far from his hometown Mechanic Falls, it a nice little town and I know people that live there and they still talk about their hometown hero to this day.
First, I gotta say, . . . Mechanic Falls, Maine? I know that place! Second, keyboarding is/was typing and my dad made Master Sergeant in WWII because he took typing in High School. Contrary to the Fat Electrician hypothesis that it was considered a "girly" subject, it was considered necessary for anyone that would be continuing their education beyond High School. The Military knew anyone that took typing was a solid student.
Ya, they were probably thinking "where did this food come from" but at the same time, Germany could barely feed their troops, some of them went days without eating, so their first thought when that food dropped in was probably "I'm going to get to eat something today"
To be fair, my British friend, yes, we Americans, when provoked, are completely mental. 😂 Y'all across the pond have some certified badass gangsters as well, though. I recommend checking out TFE's video on Sir Douglas Bader. Absolute British badass during WWII. Cheers, mate!
@@barryfletcher7136 No, back then it was majority women, men were in trade classes. I took typing because I knew the keyboard was the future, so I got my skill in on typing in order to be more proficient at the keyboard.
@@barryfletcher7136 Yes, I'm not questioning your comment, just back then it was very few men who took the course, of course to back then a lot of men and women could play piano, so I could see how men could pick up typing pretty fast.
My great uncle (my grandmother's brother) got to stay out of the fighting in WWII because he knew how to type. She always told that story to us kids because it was a story to where if you had some unique skills in life, that it could get you a special job or out of fighting in the trenches. I took typing in High School in 1990 during my Junior year. We still had type writers and correction ribbon. IBM-compatible PCs were just coming on the market. I took a business computer class the next year in which we got to use them. And then I finally got a home PC during my Freshmen year on college.
I love these stories. I grew up in a military family. I have at least one family member in each main branch. My grandpa was in the Army. My dad is a Marine. I grew up listening to a lot of Marine stories.
Both of my brothers left college after 9-11 and requested Infantry. They were 101st infantry. Their mind set was very Nathan Jessep, pick up a weapon and man a post! My brothers thought I have to be the one, who’s going to do it?! Brad Grak, Jesse Levian, Mark Maryland?! It has to be me is the conclusion they came to.
This is the third RUclipsr I've watched react to Colonel Millet. And it gets better every time watching their reactions. If you haven't subscribed to TFE yet, I highly recommend it, if you enjoyed this.
TFE is earning a Masters degree in History and talks about the Founding Fathers frequently. I learned more about my own country’s early days from him than I did in any US history class I took. If history was taught like this (minus the swearing) in public schools we’d have kids waitlisting for it!
When you’re in the military, it’s like being on a football team, practicing all the time. You want to play. I was in the Marines, and volunteered to go. No Marine wants to sit on the bench. Semper Fi.
You can tell this guy isn’t in America. 10:10 Because every American just went, collectively, “I wouldn’t run, I’d definitely be the guy trying to shoot that fucking plane down.”
Could you please make a separate playlist for all of your FTE reactions? Your UK/European viewers will have a lot of misconceptions fixed by watching his videos. Plus I love all of your reactions to him and being able to watch all of them back to back easily would be great!
I met Col. Millet, he lived near by and spoke to my JROTC and he was halirious, and his stories would have to be toned down by Hollywood to seem believable lol🤣
You know, you might not believe it but you'd have done the same. You never know what you're made of until you're challenged. But when you've seen folks who take it to task to do the right thing, you recognize the glint in the eyes.
I totally agree with you Lewis! If the US Army was treating him badly I'm really surprised he just didn't just go back to the Canadians! He seemed to be fighting with them just fine!
Lewis, I am a glad subscriber. Your content is good but your reactions make it better. You are fun to watch. Thank you Edit: The Fat Electrician knows that "keyboarding" is not a word. Anyone criticizing this needs to grow a sense of humor. Get a life while you grow up :)
There was a There was a lend lease program with Great Britain ,America would furnish equiptment for a fee instead of entering the War.After the war the Debts were forgivin and not collected
My cousin joined the army, but he really didn't want to go to Afghanistan. So he broke his arm on purpose and got a doctor's permission to leave the army. My father joined the army, became a combat engineer and went to fight in the Vietnam War. My cousin tried to be like my father, but he couldn't handle it.
He didnt just, idk pick a job that wasnt gonna be deployed? Lol i mean i dont really blame him tbh, i understand some Vets and civvies are gonna be mad. However, at that time we had enough volunteers that him doing that didnt even matter.
I met Lewis, at the Algonquin Club, in Boston.
As a rule, I don't ask Veterans about war.
But, he was a genuinely decent, and polite guy.
As were all of the guys on the Medal of Honor tour.
What an honor to meet him. Thanks for telling us about him. ❤❤❤🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
@@sharonporter7132 I had spent the morning, reading the pamphlet on the tour, and the stories behind these men.
Every single one of them were very exceptional human beings.
Every single one of them put their life last, so that others might live.
And, decades later, they still exemplified the traits you would expect to see from that rare sort of individual.
Best, of the best.
It's amazing what these men accomplished when called upon. I really wonder if we will ever see the likes of these people again. Thank you for sending your post. Amazing, they were amazing.🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
@@Mr.SchitzengigglezIt's too bad really. Guys like him & his mates showed up & showed out exceptionally well to fight for a set of ideals they thought the country stood for only for their kids & grandkids to try turn the US into something very similar to what tiny mustache man wanted to do in Germany & there is nobody to stop it since the closest this crop of young men have gotten to any kind of fight is COD: Modern Warfare III.
I was stationed in Korea for a long time; the place I worked was built into... Hill 180; there was a plaque in the hill commemorating the battle. Col Lewis would periodically show up and give a speech; I never was able to attend one of his official events, but I met him out in the ville outside the base in the 1990s and shook his hand. LEGEND.
welcome home and thank you for your service sir amazing story thanks for sharing
What a great story. Thanks to all of you for your sacrifice and service. God bless you.🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
Awesome 👍🏽😎
THIS is what Hollywood should be making movies about!
I love it when he puts the clips of the real people at the end of the video is it adds such a human touch
“This mustache isn’t going to sit on itself!”
😂😂😂😂😂😂
I almost choked on my water when he said that. 🤣🤣🤣
Best line I've heard in awhile.
That "womb broom" one was pretty damned good too, imo!😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@Americansareretarded Why are you here with a name such as yours?
Hey Lewis, this isn't a comment about this video but just wanted you to know this. I suffer from PTSD, severe clinical depression, and GAD. That said, there are days the only thing that makes me smile are your videos, so thank you.
I hope you can get help for the ptsd soon god bless
@drkwlf5836 read your comment, I thank you for your service and continued sacrifices made. I hope you are receiving the support you need and deserve. Please know I appreciate all you've done and send support and hugs from my little corner of the country (north Texas area), in hopes that it provides some sort of comfort. Peace to you.
@drkwlf5836 - I understand completely about PTSD, both personally & because my oldest has it from his time in the USMC.
Prayers going up for you my friend!🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
I would like to pray for u Lord in the name of Jesus may your love and grace find him and may the demons that attack him leave right now may his body be drenched in your love God and be healed as u have a giant purpose for him may he know this and may he know and love u with all his heart and may he be so easily filled with ur joy he could see a rock and think of ur love God amen
@huntergehrke4224 thank you
Yes, he was born with a mustache as a matter of fact. Why do you think Nic called it a womb broom? 😂 Just kidding
Mustcach ride
I will
Bryan!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
This was unbelievable - what an incredible story. Thrilled to see live footage of him, what a great American.
"I came here to do 3 things, kick ass, take names and chew bubblegum, and I'm all out of bubblegum." Captain Lewis Millet, total badass.
When you got men like Millet out there you realize the Nazi never stood a chance.
My husband and I are both veterans, I was in the Army, my husband was a paratrooper. I remember in 2007, when I was 24and I COULD NOT WAIT for that uniform and boots!!!! Even though I was a single mom of two6 months into training. I couldn’t wait to fight for what was ours!!!! (I was also an adult when 9/11 happened. I left the military in 2012 because we had 4 kids and well…. Being a mother came first. My oldest daughter is now 24 and is also a veteran, medically discharged. It took some time but, now my son in law is army 😂😂😂 the army performed my tubal ligation in 2012 right before I was discharged. Lever it to the American government to f that up. In 2014 we had twins! We now have 5 boys and I highly encourage (demand) they join ROTC etc! I know for a fact 3 of our 5 boys will serve their country, hoping to be a part of American defense! Long post, literally don’t know why y’all needed all that info! My point is most Americans would willingly fight a war just because, patriotism ❤️
❤ God bless you!
Please forgive my typos lol, I had to text fast, our first dog joined the family and that little butt face was tearing off my boot as I replied 😂😂 apologies 🥰
@@hiheeledsneakers you’re too kind 🥰
HOME OF THE FREE...BECAUSE OF THE BRAVE.. GOD BLESS THIS MAN!!!❤
Okay this made me tear up at the end. I’m a very proud American, I adore our soldiers. My brother was 82nd airborne, my cousin a green beret, another cousin Air Force, another Navy. My grandfather was in Armored Division 2 under General Patton in France. Then there’s my husband who was army ordinance working on I.c.b.m Pershing missiles in Germany. He served during the Gulf War & saw the Berlin Wall fall. His father served in Vietnam in the 1st cavalry division of the Army. Both of his great-grandfathers were Army WWII. 😊 I really like this the fat electrician, do more!
What a beautiful story thanks for sharing
This man was the closest America ever got to having a real life Captain America.
Dude is the absolute epitome of masculinity. He is the example men should be looking to.
Yes .
Somewhere a soy boy and a feminist are shrieking😂😂😂
LOL! "That mustache isn't gonna sit on itself". 🤣😎👍
Absolutely enjoyed this, as a Army Veteran with 20 years of service and served in Operation Desert Storm
I’ve seen that video several times and am still in awe of that womb broom.
What an American hero….They DonT make many like that anymore
Yeah.... the geneva convention was mostly due to us. And you know what? I'm sort of okay with that. As the fat electrician always says. Its never a war crime, the first time. You should watch Canadians change when they hear the word "war"
Canadians can be very scary when they want to be.
If I remember correctly, there is a meme about you Canadians. “When the sorry stops, the war crimes start.” Or something like that.
For the record, it is perhaps for the best that so many countries want to F-around with us americans, because I know for a fact that if they Fed-around with you Canadians… well… you get the picture. The Canadian think tank will probably come up with a couple more pages for the Geneva Convention, typed in size 1 font just to save on paper. But us americans love you Canadians for it though.
In the words of the fat electrician its never a war crime the first time
Unless ur talking about canada then the war crimes just blend together
@@KaoretheHalfDemonthing is canada is that aggressive honey badger taking on a king cobra for the fun of it then for shits and giggles it uses the cobra to strangle a guy minding his own business
Probably the parts of the population with Viking blood.
Oh man. The end when he tears up, I started tearing up. What a wholesome badass
The reason why did what he did is because in the United States, there is this real sense of brotherhood and camaraderie among our fighting men and women. It's been documented many, many times about U.S. soldiers or marines or seamen or airmen who would run across open ground during an active fire fight to drag a wounded battle buddy to safety so they could get patched up and get home alive.
My uncle was an early observer in Vietnam about the same time as Millet. I'll bet he knew him. And yes, they did things they weren't allowed to say and be where (we) weren't "allowed" to go, and he told me that he was taking a lot to his grave. He was a WPt grad, 5th degree black belt in Tae Kwan Do serving in Korea, a mountain climber in the 14000 club (✓all 14k ft peaks) and became a 5th grade elementary teacher in retirement. Those guys had to be amazing people.
No one can be both brave and fearless.
My favourite thing about your TFE videos is that you always include his merch at the end. Love how you always stay till the very end.
I love the reactions to this man’s videos. He cracks me up
I live in Maine not far from his hometown Mechanic Falls, it a nice little town and I know people that live there and they still talk about their hometown hero to this day.
I think it's hilarious that you think you can just say "I'm not fighting for you anymore" and just leave.. lol. good luck with that...
Yo, this guy and another guy came into my 8th Grade American history class. They were awesome
Well as Scotland said on an HLC short....
I didn't know you could export valor. 😂
First, I gotta say, . . .
Mechanic Falls, Maine? I know that place!
Second, keyboarding is/was typing and my dad made Master Sergeant in WWII because he took typing in High School.
Contrary to the Fat Electrician hypothesis that it was considered a "girly" subject, it was considered necessary for anyone that would be continuing their education beyond High School. The Military knew anyone that took typing was a solid student.
Ya, they were probably thinking "where did this food come from" but at the same time, Germany could barely feed their troops, some of them went days without eating, so their first thought when that food dropped in was probably "I'm going to get to eat something today"
To be fair, my British friend, yes, we Americans, when provoked, are completely mental. 😂 Y'all across the pond have some certified badass gangsters as well, though. I recommend checking out TFE's video on Sir Douglas Bader. Absolute British badass during WWII. Cheers, mate!
!!!! Proud of my Ranger brother! My hats to all our military!
The Army > needed < company clerks, and few American men learned how to type in high school.
I graduated in 1991 and one of my classes was typing. Half the class were guys.
@@seacradev5400 Would that have been true in 1938?
@@barryfletcher7136 No, back then it was majority women, men were in trade classes. I took typing because I knew the keyboard was the future, so I got my skill in on typing in order to be more proficient at the keyboard.
@@seacradev5400 That is what I wrote.
@@barryfletcher7136 Yes, I'm not questioning your comment, just back then it was very few men who took the course, of course to back then a lot of men and women could play piano, so I could see how men could pick up typing pretty fast.
F*cking LOVED THIS ONE!! I subscribed awhile ago and I absolutely love your reactions!!
My great uncle (my grandmother's brother) got to stay out of the fighting in WWII because he knew how to type. She always told that story to us kids because it was a story to where if you had some unique skills in life, that it could get you a special job or out of fighting in the trenches. I took typing in High School in 1990 during my Junior year. We still had type writers and correction ribbon. IBM-compatible PCs were just coming on the market. I took a business computer class the next year in which we got to use them. And then I finally got a home PC during my Freshmen year on college.
Great video, Lewis. Loved this reaction and the history.
I love these stories. I grew up in a military family. I have at least one family member in each main branch. My grandpa was in the Army. My dad is a Marine. I grew up listening to a lot of Marine stories.
Thank you for your videos. I still suffer from ptsd from the wars in the sand box and for some reason these calm me and help. Keep it up brother.
I absolutely love hearing about these guys. They amaze me!
God bless everyone man that served in that war. And every man that didn't get a gum home.
I've known about millet for decades. I've never understood why they've never made a movie about this man.
Wow. The choices brave men make
That’s the American spirit bruv. 🇺🇸 🇬🇧
"that mustache isn't going to sit on itself now is it?" 😂😂😂😂
Both of my brothers left college after 9-11 and requested Infantry. They were 101st infantry. Their mind set was very Nathan Jessep, pick up a weapon and man a post! My brothers thought I have to be the one, who’s going to do it?! Brad Grak, Jesse Levian, Mark Maryland?! It has to be me is the conclusion they came to.
Lewis it’s not that these guys in these kind of stories “want to die” they’re simply not afraid to live
This is the third RUclipsr I've watched react to Colonel Millet. And it gets better every time watching their reactions. If you haven't subscribed to TFE yet, I highly recommend it, if you enjoyed this.
TFE is earning a Masters degree in History and talks about the Founding Fathers frequently. I learned more about my own country’s early days from him than I did in any US history class I took. If history was taught like this (minus the swearing) in public schools we’d have kids waitlisting for it!
"Fix bayonets" is something you NEVER want to hear your commanding officer say.....
These men fealt fear. Thats what makes them brave. You cannot be brave without fear.
Same way that you can’t have live without free will
Love*
I feel like Maka Albarn from Soul Eater said it best: "People need fear in order to survive. We experience it so we can grow stronger."
That was great man!
Found your channel through these Fat Electrician reviews. Already knew about him, but love watching your reactions
Now we know where the inspiration for Jessie Ventura's "I ain't got time to bleed" line came from.
When you’re in the military, it’s like being on a football team, practicing all the time. You want to play. I was in the Marines, and volunteered to go. No Marine wants to sit on the bench.
Semper Fi.
You can tell this guy isn’t in America. 10:10 Because every American just went, collectively, “I wouldn’t run, I’d definitely be the guy trying to shoot that fucking plane down.”
💯👍🏼 much love to all the RUclips family Albuquerque New Mexico in the house🎉
No matter what you hear about America, remember those men and women who back them are everywhere.😎
Such a good video I loved it tysm Lewis ❤
Hi Louis, just wanted to leave a comment to help the channel.
Could you please make a separate playlist for all of your FTE reactions? Your UK/European viewers will have a lot of misconceptions fixed by watching his videos. Plus I love all of your reactions to him and being able to watch all of them back to back easily would be great!
Hey, Lewis, from North Las Vegas,Nevada USA! Happy New Year!🎉
What a Beast.
Thanks ❤️ Much Love! #Michigan
Great video! It's funny that i was born here but learn about American history from a British guy 🤣
I met Col. Millet, he lived near by and spoke to my JROTC and he was halirious, and his stories would have to be toned down by Hollywood to seem believable lol🤣
I too, truly enjoyed this video!!
They say mosquitoes don’t bite lewis purely out of respect lol he’s the most interesting man in the world lol
Col. Millet had it right. Those of us that are free, are free because of those that fought so that we could be free.❤
I'm so happy that you found The Fat Electrican. His channel is amazing!
My father is a 20 year vet in the 101st airborne devesion "Vietnam vet" went to war at the age of 19
I have already watched every Fat Electrician video but I adore reliving them through your eyes.
Some people have "main character status" it's wild what dedication can do.
You know, you might not believe it but you'd have done the same. You never know what you're made of until you're challenged. But when you've seen folks who take it to task to do the right thing, you recognize the glint in the eyes.
Soldiers know they aren’t fighting for the bureaucrats who create stupid rules, they fight for the people
I totally agree with you Lewis! If the US Army was treating him badly I'm really surprised he just didn't just go back to the Canadians! He seemed to be fighting with them just fine!
this guy went all Achievement Hunter IRL
Lewis, I am a glad subscriber. Your content is good but your reactions make it better. You are fun to watch. Thank you
Edit: The Fat Electrician knows that "keyboarding" is not a word. Anyone criticizing this needs to grow a sense of humor. Get a life while you grow up :)
Keyboarding IS a real word. Look it up.
Mechanic Falls is only 20 minutes away!!!!!!
this video was good. you’re the man dude.
The "they want to die" mentality is strong on those guys waayyy back then because they're that good. Nowadays it's a very rare commodity if not at all
When you hear about guys like this, it makes you wonder what the hell am I doing. He embodies what a man should be.
he embodies what a soldier should be
There's men and boys in this world. Doing the right thing when the time comes allows you to be a man
He deserted his post to join the Canadian army.
My dad said he didn't realize it wasn't like the movies, these people are trying to kill me until he started getting shot at. He served in Vietnam.
As a Mainer.....we are built different
Cool As Brave as One of yesterday’s heroes,keep on keeping on.
He was born December 15th, huh?
Me too.
Me too march 7th
@@christianlong-lo3jm ...what?
@@BionicDance jk
@@BionicDance sorry for the confusion I didn't want to be left out
@@christianlong-lo3jm Oh, well, I can't fault you for that! 🙃
There is only a frogs hair difference between brave and crazy case in point!
Louis millet is the living proof of “find a job you love doing and youll never work a day in your life”
I love how you 15 minutes in and L3wg is just done with this guy he’s just like really you just want to die at this point
Some are born Warriors...
Could you imagine if he had a Klingon Bat'leth?!
I would say best yet , but you've had so many good ones it leaves me scratching my head
With great mustache comes great responsibility.
Louis is called "Typing class" 😅 I grew up in 70s . In the 40s my grandmother took "Shorthand class" . Totally different nowadays
It was called Keyboarding when I was in school, and presumably when TFE was as well.
There was a
There was a lend lease program with Great Britain ,America would furnish equiptment for a fee instead of entering the War.After the war the Debts were forgivin and not collected
Actually Britain just finished paying off the ww2 equipment back in 2006
-Russia Enters Chat
Lets goooo! Greeting from the crazyland itself Florida 😂
America,Dude.😊
My cousin joined the army, but he really didn't want to go to Afghanistan. So he broke his arm on purpose and got a doctor's permission to leave the army. My father joined the army, became a combat engineer and went to fight in the Vietnam War. My cousin tried to be like my father, but he couldn't handle it.
I legit broke my leg in training and they sent me home. I didn't WANT to leave...
He didnt just, idk pick a job that wasnt gonna be deployed? Lol i mean i dont really blame him tbh, i understand some Vets and civvies are gonna be mad. However, at that time we had enough volunteers that him doing that didnt even matter.
I'm with you, bro! I be somewhere enjoying a couple of boos! hahaha.