"You wanna be the Mommy, or the Daddy?".Originally posted by Xprobe:Muahahahaahahahaahah (fell off chair)
Yeah, come get some loving from Encik
ROFLMAOOriginally posted by Gedanken:"You wanna be the Mommy, or the Daddy?".
Originally posted by Xprobe:Muahahahaahahahaahah (fell off chair)
Yeah, come get some loving from Encik
gong hei fa choi.Originally posted by sidestep1984:out of topic...but...I'm enlisted to the army!!!!!!
Yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!
*prances around*
sure sure....Originally posted by HENG@:gong hei fa choi.
*me expects an ang pow from sidestep1984*![]()
Pls la.... dun call him CPT Pandi........Originally posted by sidestep1984:sure sure....
hehehe
anxious...yeah...
scared...abit
motivated....hell yeah!!!...hehe...back to Capt Pandi....![]()
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erm....Originally posted by superworm99:...during service term field camp in Tekong, his section was halted and "taken POW" by a fighting patrol from another rival company, Bravo. Mr Ranger, sneaked out in the dark, made a small flank and used his bayonet to silenced e entire enemy patrol.
Hiz!Originally posted by sidestep1984:he is a legend....
yes he is...
like Peter Estrop
and lo yong poh
he is a legend in his own right...
too bad he passed out...sob sob...off to unit liao he as an RSM...Originally posted by mika14:Hiz!
What did Peter Estrop do to make him a legend?
He was a Coy 2IC in SISPEC back in 2000.
He was the fastest running the 5 k soc in FBO.Originally posted by mika14:Hiz!
What did Peter Estrop do to make him a legend?
He was a Coy 2IC in SISPEC back in 2000.
Erm. He was my RSM in 1998. Dun think he need to go for another RSM tour.Originally posted by sidestep1984:too bad he passed out...sob sob...off to unit liao he as an RSM...
frens told me he posted to 10sibOriginally posted by duajia:Erm. He was my RSM in 1998. Dun think he need to go for another RSM tour.
Peter Estrop posted to 10 SIB as Bde RSM ? He used to be the OC of Alpha Company in SISPEC right ? or was it Bravo ?Originally posted by sidestep1984:frens told me he posted to 10sib
dunno whether rsm or not arh...wat other posts can he hold since he used to be an rsm?Originally posted by Monaro_HSV:Peter Estrop posted to 10 SIB as Bde RSM ? He used to be the OC of Alpha Company in SISPEC right ? or was it Bravo ?
Bde Ops Warrent ? i remember last time in Selerang Camp, the Div Ops Warrent was also an OC in SISPEC, this indian guy with a Ranger tab and my fellow commanders said he was pretty nasty during SISPEC days..Originally posted by sidestep1984:dunno whether rsm or not arh...wat other posts can he hold since he used to be an rsm?
I think is Alpha Coy in SISPEC.Originally posted by Monaro_HSV:Peter Estrop posted to 10 SIB as Bde RSM ? He used to be the OC of Alpha Company in SISPEC right ? or was it Bravo ?
Unfortunately, the SAF has already made space for Pandiaraj and the other three men in its skeleton closet. Never mind - there's a group of us who have worked out a set of alternatives for Pandiaraj.Originally posted by esgnem:i just hope the army gives cpt pandiaraj a chance after his jail term..
Inappropriate comparison. The drowning case was a matter of violating regulations within a program. Abu Ghraib was a bunch of soldiers going out and doing their own thing entirely. Besides, the US is much bigger on civil rights, for both Americans and POWs alike, than Singapore is.Originally posted by Flashgalaxy:US Soldiers accused for abuses to detainees in Abu Ghraib prison where jailed much longer. Sgt Hu EnHuai was not a detainee he mearly fulfilling his NS liabilities and he paid the ultimate price... due to complacency by those with authorative responsibility, and lack of proper checks on what goes on behind the eyes of the public. It saddens me that this has to happen before improvements are made within the SAF.
We can do better...
If you've seen Australia's Channel Seven, they did a report on how their SAS trainees were reportedly tortured and abused during training.Now this is a fine line to tread between civil rights and the issue that conscription means the state has a greater responsibility towards the welfare of its recruits.Those who joined the SAS knew that it is not going to be a walk in the park, yet we cannot condone unauthorised practices, or else the slide towards a system where accountability is sacrificed on the altar of supposed military exigencies will arise.Originally posted by Gedanken:Inappropriate comparison. The drowning case was a matter of violating regulations within a program. Abu Ghraib was a bunch of soldiers going out and doing their own thing entirely. Besides, the US is much bigger on civil rights, for both Americans and POWs alike, than Singapore is.
Not that it makes it any less sad, but such a situation is not limited to the SAF. How many times have we seen disasters happening in transportation and construction worldwide before something sensible is done?