We had access to a BK at one of the FOBs I frequented in Iraq and although I've never been a huge fast food fan, that stuff was so good. It's a huge morale booster. I'm sure that sounds simplistic as fuck, but you really come to appreciate the little things when you're deployed.
memes
Community rules
1. Be civil
No trolling, bigotry or other insulting / annoying behaviour
2. No politics
This is non-politics community. For political memes please go to [email protected]
3. No recent reposts
Check for reposts when posting a meme, you can only repost after 1 month
4. No bots
No bots without the express approval of the mods or the admins
5. No Spam/Ads
No advertisements or spam. This is an instance rule and the only way to live.
Sister communities
- [email protected] : Star Trek memes, chat and shitposts
- [email protected] : Lemmy Shitposts, anything and everything goes.
- [email protected] : Linux themed memes
- [email protected] : for those who love comic stories.
Reminds me of that story of the US navy in WW2 having a ship dedicated to producing icecream for morale purposes.
I hope it patrolled the seas blaring that classic icecream truck music...
It's too bad they cut that scene from The Hunt for Red October.
Its highly memeable but this is the true answer.
The Psychological benefits of even a very short mental vacation from being deployed are hard to quantify but very real on top of the morale boost.
I knew a guy who served in Afghanistan and he said after a particularly long and brutal time in the field an ice cold can of coke made him cry.
During my conscription (finnish military), there was a kiosk sized civilian-staffed kitchen at the corner of the small recreational building of the base, where you could buy junk food during off-hours.
God, fried chicken tenders with some crappy fries have never tasted so good...
I'm not a big fan of BK, but I imagine going to the BK joint would be a semblance of normalcy.
Everyone is a fan of BK when all you've had for weeks on end is MREs and field rations. I ate like 15 burgers the first time we had BK in iraq.
I lived in Korea at a time when there were scant few western food options outside of Seoul.
So a Burger King came to town, and we were taking expensive taxis across town to get our hands on a damn hamburger that was roughly twice as expensive as it would be in the states. We went daily, sometimes twice for the first couple weeks.
I was not in the military and was living a good life, but sometimes eating soup and rice at every meal can wear on your soul to the point where you'd murder a hooker turned good on the street in broad daylight for so much as a frozen gas station burrito.
Don't even get me started on how excited I was to once find a six pack of Dr. Pepper on the black market.
It doesn't surprise me at all that they'd bring burgers to a war zone.
Makes a lot of sense to me. Full disclosure I like Burger King.
For real though especially if you're somewhere cold - a warm burger that tastes like home could be a huge help.
Also a cinnabon. And a coffee shop called green bean. And a pizza shop. And much more. Sometimes DFACs 1 and 4 gets old.
This is serious. If the USAF sets up shop anywhere we plan on having a presence for a while, there will be some amenities. Even if the base is bombed on a regular basis.
Do they have airmen staffing them? Or do they hire locals? Or import civvies?
TCNs, or third country nationals. People from neither the US or locals.
From my understanding the reason why is the almighty dollar. They don't get paid nearly as much as our troops and contractors, but still a lot more than they would make at home. There is quite a bit of info about it if you do a quick search.
"I'll take a half-caf nonfat bombachino please"
It makes sense. A military is only as good as its logistics, and the US’ forward bases are the tips of very long spears, dependant on a lot of logistics. So you need to have the means to have a continuous pipeline of supplies to each outpost. In peacetime, you keep that open by supplying the troops with burgers, tacos, XBox games or whatever; if the shit does hit the fan, all that capacity can be diverted from tortillas and patties to ammunition, drones, amphibious landing craft or whatever, at short notice.
Knowing the US military Logistics, that won't be a diversion; it'll be an addition. A friendly reminder that we deployed Fucking ice cream barges, barges with the singular purpose of making ice cream, to the South Pacific during WW2.
Supposedly a Japanese POW saw the barges, and knew at that moment that the war was lost, as the US could afford to supply servicemembers with ice cream, while Japan was facing widespread rationing and food shortages at home. (But I can't find any confirmation of this story)
Can't wait for the Tankies to start flooding in with their mental gymnastics. Either that or they'll just call you "evil liberal" lol.
Ah, yes, us army is cool and awesome, not a weapon of global imperialism at all.
I agree with you but one has to acknowledge the proficiency of the US Army. The sheer amount of equipment they have coupled to the good training and 1st class logistics makes it a force the Russian army would not be able to recon with.
Shit the Afghanistan war cost them $300 million per DAY for 20 years. No one else can do imperialism as good as the US Army.
Why would a Canadian say that?
There are lots of tankies in the West. I interpreted the use of the Canadian flag in the comic to just indicate that it was one of those over-enthusiastic tankaboos rather than an actual Russian defending their own military strength. It could have just as easily been a US or Euro flag to get the point across. I don't think it's a commentary on Canadians specifically.
Yeah America fucking knows logistics. I worked at a non profit and our warehouse where we would store donations would become quite the mess during garage sale season. We had a squad of US Army Reserve logistical something or another who basically work in warehouses volunteer for the day so I went ahead and gave them the task of organizing and cleaning up the warehouse, a task I thought would take them a few hours. I go on my 30min lunch break and I come back to 5 dudes standing around and a warehouse so clean and organized that you could eat off the floor.
As they say, organization is half the battle.
The other half is violence.
In summary, the battle is won by the most organized violence.
Unironically so.
Logistics has always been the US military's best weapon.
Missed opportunity for "Weapons of ass destruction"
I'm 15 years old again, apparently...
Weapons of gas production
"The line between disorder and order lies in ~~logistics~~ Burger King."
Unleash the Murder King and the Taco Hell!
Libs would have you believe that America isn't a monarchy.
This should legitimately scare every other military force, considering conflict with the US. Logistics, possibly better than fueling a convoy to Kiev.
That's a weapon of mass addition
No, it's destruction. Just ask my toilet.
Ohh shit, is this the modern day ice cream barge?
Military-Industrial-Junk Food complex
The individual in the foreground appears to be quality assurance for new restaurants before opening to the public.