The carrier USS Harry S Truman is in the eastern Mediterranean Sea and thousands of miles from Orlando, Florida. But the Islamic terrorist murders of 49 individuals and the wounding of 52 more has ticked off the 5,000 sailors about the vessel. They had a lot to say of the terrorist attack.
"What we're doing here is about stopping that ideology from spreading around the world," Truman pilot Paolo Singh said. "The more we can keep that from happening, the more I'm willing to keep on doing it." Singh has flown about150 missions and isn't about to allow a world religion (aka freaking cult) to stand in the way of his mission. Truman fighter pilots have dropped over 1,500 bombs on ISIS targets, mostly empty buildings, and a few viable targets, and they say ISIS-held territory has been rolled back like the rim of a Tim Horton's coffee cup lid in February. (Canadians will get that.)
Speaking to the Orlando attack, the Admiral of the Truman Carrier Group, Bret Batchelder said, "I would offer that we keep in mind that the fight that we're fighting here is against people like that," referring to the orthodox version of the religion of peace. "That makes it a fairly just cause," he added in understatement.
Seaman 5th Class Harmon Q. Glunk, an F/A 18 Hornet afterburner soot cleaner spoke like a true sailor: "I'm as miffed as heck and we on the Harry S Truman aren't going to take it anymore. I want we should go into jihadist territory and bomb the feces out of them."
Danielle Outland from Walnut Creek, California spoke to Fox News. "We work hard every day, we stay dedicated, we stay strong. Times get tough some times. But you just realize the bigger picture is what we're doing for the people back home."
She was referring to killing Islamic terrorists who would be happy to kill us first.
The issue of gun control never came up as the carrier bounced and rolled along a churned up sea, but over 100 lunches did.
Tweet
"What we're doing here is about stopping that ideology from spreading around the world," Truman pilot Paolo Singh said. "The more we can keep that from happening, the more I'm willing to keep on doing it." Singh has flown about150 missions and isn't about to allow a world religion (aka freaking cult) to stand in the way of his mission. Truman fighter pilots have dropped over 1,500 bombs on ISIS targets, mostly empty buildings, and a few viable targets, and they say ISIS-held territory has been rolled back like the rim of a Tim Horton's coffee cup lid in February. (Canadians will get that.)
Speaking to the Orlando attack, the Admiral of the Truman Carrier Group, Bret Batchelder said, "I would offer that we keep in mind that the fight that we're fighting here is against people like that," referring to the orthodox version of the religion of peace. "That makes it a fairly just cause," he added in understatement.
Seaman 5th Class Harmon Q. Glunk, an F/A 18 Hornet afterburner soot cleaner spoke like a true sailor: "I'm as miffed as heck and we on the Harry S Truman aren't going to take it anymore. I want we should go into jihadist territory and bomb the feces out of them."
Danielle Outland from Walnut Creek, California spoke to Fox News. "We work hard every day, we stay dedicated, we stay strong. Times get tough some times. But you just realize the bigger picture is what we're doing for the people back home."
She was referring to killing Islamic terrorists who would be happy to kill us first.
The issue of gun control never came up as the carrier bounced and rolled along a churned up sea, but over 100 lunches did.
Tweet
No comments:
Post a Comment