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  • #31
    Originally posted by Oerdin
    The Sad thing is the place was very poorly layed out and archetually it looks very boring. I mean it's like Saddam never had an idea of how to build a palace other then just to make everything three times larger then in a normal house. I'm vaguely reminded of one of those old documentaries which explores the palaces Hitler had constructed for himself and other members of the Nazi party because it seems all dictators don't have any new ideas about what makes a good home or what is the most efficient lay out for a public building.
    Typical fascist architecture.

    Will look forward to your updates.
    I'm consitently stupid- Japher
    I think that opinion in the United States is decidedly different from the rest of the world because we have a free press -- by free, I mean a virgorously presented right wing point of view on the air and available to all.- Ned

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    • #32
      Originally posted by Spiffor

      I think it would be useless, since it'll only open the thread to more useless spam. When Oerdin has something to add to this thread (basically, his Iraq blog), he will search for it on page 10, I'm sure.
      I see -- I just thought topping this would be the mods' way of showing appreciation for Oerdin's sense of duty.
      A lot of Republicans are not racist, but a lot of racists are Republican.

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      • #33
        Originally posted by Oerdin

        ---
        It is an interesting thought that I may have **** in the same pot as Saddam but the reality is I live in a guest house a block away from his palace so I doubt he ever stopped by. ---
        What stops you from walking over to the ruins and sit on his gold-plated "throne" ? Apart from army rules, off course.
        So get your Naomi Klein books and move it or I'll seriously bash your faces in! - Supercitizen to stupid students
        Be kind to the nerdiest guy in school. He will be your boss when you've grown up!

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        • #34
          Originally posted by Oerdin

          --- It was my first time taking part in a convoy opperation here in Iraq and the Army had filled our heads with dire warnings about the need for vigilence and the dangers of Improvised Explosive Device (I.E.D.) attacks. The result was my friends and I were very jumpy. The whole convoy arrived without incident but I still got edgy everytime an Iraqi car or truck tried to pass us on the road.
          In the first week of the actual war, some military analysts hired by Swedish TV news commented on the lack of military skills by Iraq. There was not a single report on I.E.D attacks at the stage of the war where it would had been most efficient.

          I wonder why they did not use them by then, but started to use it as a major strategy later?
          So get your Naomi Klein books and move it or I'll seriously bash your faces in! - Supercitizen to stupid students
          Be kind to the nerdiest guy in school. He will be your boss when you've grown up!

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          • #35
            What are your days like Oerdin? Apart from satisfying your primary body functions - like eating, sleeping, dumping, masturbating, mandatory PT and posting on 'Poly?

            I suppose you don't walk around the fence looking for targets to improve your marksman skills at?
            So get your Naomi Klein books and move it or I'll seriously bash your faces in! - Supercitizen to stupid students
            Be kind to the nerdiest guy in school. He will be your boss when you've grown up!

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            • #36
              So far we are still undergoing a unit hand over; meaning the out going unit is showing us what they've been doing for the last year, who the key communicators are, who the newspapermen are, who the policemen are, who the trouble makers are, etc...
              I spent much of today inventorying equipment so that it could be taken off of the old unit's books and put on my units books. It seems they lost a fair amount of equipment over the last year and they are now trying to pull a fast one by trying to get us to sign for equipment which isn't there. Luckily, we're on to them and now EVERYTHING will be layed out before we sign.
              Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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              • #37
                Originally posted by Oerdin
                So far we are still undergoing a unit hand over; meaning the out going unit is showing us what they've been doing for the last year, who the key communicators are, who the newspapermen are, who the policemen are, who the trouble makers are, etc...
                I spent much of today inventorying equipment so that it could be taken off of the old unit's books and put on my units books. It seems they lost a fair amount of equipment over the last year and they are now trying to pull a fast one by trying to get us to sign for equipment which isn't there. Luckily, we're on to them and now EVERYTHING will be layed out before we sign.
                Typical army BS. I am sure your unit will try to do the same thing to the next one.
                “It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see.”

                ― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man

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                • #38
                  Oerdin - Definitely will be reading. And about inventorizing, good! Make them sweat. They should be able to account for everything and if they lost some equipment due to a honest reason they have nothing to hide, right?

                  EDIT: By the way, MrFun, I agree. That's up to the Mods although. I'm very confident that we won't let this thread disappear should the Mods elect to not to top this one.
                  Who is Barinthus?

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                  • #39
                    Dogs, Chickens, and Coyotes. Oh my!

                    So I am now taking part in an age old game. You see immediately after the war freshly cooked food was a bit hard for a GI to find. Instead the army just kept giving people MREs which, while nutrious, are very bland and unappitizing especially since they'd been eatting MREs for the better part of two months.

                    To help fix this problem a few Psyopers went out and bought four hens, a roaster, and a Turkey. The idea was they'd raise chicks eat the Turkey and have the odd fresh egg. For a while all was well and the boys got to have a few meals of fresh chicken then, mysteriously, the Turkey disappeared. They thought the Turkey had just escaped until a few days later when one of the hens and then the roaster disappeared.

                    After that everyone thought other soldiers were raiding the hen house and stealing the chickend until one of the soldiers went out back one night and found a coyote tring to break into the chicken coupe. That was six months ago and now that I'm here I've found out that dispite the addition of five more hens the company's chicken flock is down to it's last two birds because no one can figure out how to keep the damn coyotes away from them.

                    So any way I was asleep last night at around 2am when I'm awaken by the sound of an M-16 rifle being fired on burst in the back yard. It appears one of the soldiers, we'll call him Joe, has been staying up late waiting in ambush for a Coyote to come raid the chicken coupe. After 6 months of off and on trying Joe finally got his first kill last night but the problem is he saw not one but three coyotes and now we've decided we will not rest until both of the surviving canine chicken thieves have been put to rest.

                    Tonight we're rotating watch and we're taking bets to see who will bag the coyotes. I expected to pull guard duty while in Iraq but I never thought I'd be guarding chickens from a couple of coyotes.

                    Any way the chow hall now has losts of fresh food so I'm inclined to just forget about the chickens, however, several of the others are saying it's a point of honor that we must hunt down the muruading carnivores. Since it took 6 months to get the first coyote I suspect it will take a bit of time to kill the rest of the pack but I guess time will tell.
                    Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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                    • #40
                      I also thought I'd take the time to better discribe my living conditions. I'm living in a four bedroom, four bath (only two showers) house which was originally designed to be a guest house for VIPs visiting Saddam's Palace in Tikrit. The house is located directly next to a medium sized lake (the lake is about 2 miles around) and the back porch is literally right in the water with a small boat launch and everything. On the sides of the house Saddam kept large grassy areas which have now been turned into vehicle parking (though I'm going to be planting an herb/vegitable garden on part of it). The big problem is that Iraqis seem to have no idea about grading land so as to channel run of water and as a result everytime it rains the house becomes flood with rain water because there is high ground on three sides and a lake on the fourth side. I'd like to install so French drains so the water can be channeled around the house instead of flowing through the house but we'll wait and see if the Army coughs up with the cash to fix this problem before the next rain.

                      As long as we're talking about water I'd like to bring up another observation. Arabs seem to have no idea how to install plumbing because the toilets clog up with the slightest amount of toilet paper. To top it off there is no sewer system in Tikrit (they simply dump the raw sewage into the Tigris river from a thousand nasty little pipes which run out of each house); the house I live in is to far from the river to simply dump it there so instead the front patio is really just a covering for an unlined brick sump where all of the raw sewage is stored until it can be pumped out and disposed of. Not a problem right? Wrong, it's been rather hot lately and so the smell of raw sewage has become quite noticable.

                      If Saddam was spring with so much cash that he had to build hundreds of marble lined buildings then why couldn't he at least put in a modern sewer system to service his palace? I think that more then anything shows just how close this country is to being 3rd world.
                      Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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                      • #41
                        The only other news is that we've adopted a stray dog which looks to be no more then a few months old. We've named him Roscoe and he's a little brown and white mutt who seems very eager to please and he's willing to eat just about everything in sight. One of the guys in the unit feed Roscoe a bunch of people food yesterday so the dog spent most of today with the runs. I'm going to look into buying some bog food from Petco.com and see if that doesn't agree with his system a bit more. Hopefully, once he's feeling better I will be able to train him to follow simple commands in English such as "sit", "lay down", "come here", etc...
                        Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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                        • #42
                          Originally posted by Chemical Ollie
                          What are your days like Oerdin? Apart from satisfying your primary body functions - like eating, sleeping, dumping, masturbating, mandatory PT and posting on 'Poly?

                          I suppose you don't walk around the fence looking for targets to improve your marksman skills at?
                          First off sorry about the posts being entirely unedited but I have to sign into a computer and then I only get 15 minutes to use it so that means I'm typing like made and the results aren't always that well organized. I plan on editing and rewriting everything once I have my own blog up so it should make a better story then.

                          CO: So far I haven't started really doing my job but normally I wake up at 6am, do PT, eat chow, then I go to work. Like I said so far it's been alot of paper work but soon I'll be settling in and trying to design Psyop products and signing contracts with Iraqi companies in order to get them to distribute them.
                          Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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                          • #43
                            I love the coyote story Oerdin. Definately something to go into the memoirs.
                            Today, you are the waves of the Pacific, pushing ever eastward. You are the sequoias rising from the Sierra Nevada, defiant and enduring.

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                            • #44
                              Very interesting! Good luck too, with the um... coyotes, sewage and Roscoe.

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                              • #45
                                Those terrorist coyotes!

                                (subscribe, of course)
                                "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master" - Commissioner Pravin Lal.

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