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What the Captain Means

It’s old, the sound quality isn’t great, but I found it funny, and I like watching the planes. NSFW for language. Written and recorded in Cam Ranh Bay, 1966, by Lt. Col. Joe Kent, Information Officer, 12th Tactical Fighter Wing. (update: I corrected the year.)

It’s old, the sound quality isn’t great, but I found it funny, and I like watching the planes. NSFW for language.

Written and recorded in Cam Ranh Bay, 1966, by Lt. Col. Joe Kent, Information Officer, 12th Tactical Fighter Wing.

(update: I corrected the year.)

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  1. Bob S.

    thanks. I needed a laugh this morning

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  2. Flugelman

    Ah, memories. I was at Cam Ranh in ’66, my first deployment with a VP squadron. We lived on the AF side and bussed over to the NAF every day to work. Subsuquent deployments were better as flight crew and barracks on the Navy side. Last deployment there was ’71.

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  3. ultimaratioregis

    The genesis of weaselspeak. Now it is official DoD policy.

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  4. Quartermaster

    URR, I think it was official speak even in the 60s. I can remember my “raving” (being a bit facetious here) about such things on rare occasion when we were in Germany in the late 60s (’66-’69).

    Weaselspeak has been around for quite awhile. I saw it in the Navy in the early 70s too. And I don’t mean the normal diplomaticspeak either.

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