Life Follows Fiction – IOTW Report

Life Follows Fiction

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Remember Cassidy Boon? She wrote a parody story about waking up being revived by a lifeguard after she almost drowned hitting her head on a diving platform. She’s suing the lifeguard for raping her, “aquatic rape,” because he physically grabbed her with his hairy body, without her consent.

Well, she was mocking feminists. She had no idea she could have been mocking muslims as well.

Woman Drowns After Father Stops Rescuers

A 20-year-old is left to die in Dubai because her “Asian” father thought “strange men” touching her would bring her dishonour, police say.

ht/ Jason Chisel – NewChisel.com

14 Comments on Life Follows Fiction

  1. There was a story about a year ago of a woman who said it should be illegal for men to masturbate while thinking about her (as she assumed they did) since that was a form of rape. I never did hear if it was just a hoax making fun of feminists, or if it was legit. Sadly, there’s no way to tell anymore. If anyone remembers and knows if it was true or not, I’d appreciate knowing.

  2. In the early eighties I was Catapult #1 Captain onboard USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69). At one point we were preparing to sail to conduct carrier qualifications off the Virginia Capes, and Ike was to be hosting the very first females to ever be allowed to serve on a US carrier flight deck It was a very big deal. VS-41 was the S-3 RAG squadron that was coming aboard for quals, and their female line crew was coming with them.

    Our Air Boss called for a Departmental Muster on the flight deck a few days before these females were to arrive. He told us in no uncertain terms, that if one of these women were to be walking toward a spinning propeller, and one of us tackled her in time to save her life, but “touched her tits doing it” we could plan on spending at least 30 days in the brig, subsisting on “cake and wine” (bread and water to you civilians) along with any other punishment short of flaying that he could arrange. He and the Command were not kidding.

    Good thing none of those girls decided to take one last stroll through a propeller arc, because she would have been seagull food before anyone tried to stop her.

    True story.

  3. Oh well… thinning the herd. [rimshot]

    Recently, southern Iran was having heat indices in the 150-167 range, due to heating of the Persian Gulf waters raising the humidity levels to 100%. Well, women in their full draped garb were passing out, and no one dared remove their beekeeper outfits in public to revive them.

  4. The big mistake of the West is to believe women of Islam are helpless victims of an unjust Sharia. Not so, they are just a adherent to the Koran and as vicious as the males. If you need proof, just read about the ISIS females.

  5. What kind of father would allow his daughter to drown without trying to save her? I was in the Persian gulf in 1974 aboard the USS Kitty Hawk CV-63 at the request of the Shah of Iran, we put on an airshow for him showing him our capabilities. And if you’ve never been to the Persian Gulf it is the hottest place I’ve ever been (as well as the most miserable) in my life. I was a plane captain and worked on the flight deck amidst the choreographed insanity of full flight ops both day and night. Night flight ops in pitch black darkness with only red lights on deck takes it to a higher level of insanity as you have to be aware of where everything is especially the props on the E-2 Hawkeyes when they were spinning. Props turning in the dark are invisible and very dangerous, I learned early on to give them very wide berth whenever I was close to one. The surface temperature was probably at least 110-120 plus degrees and with all the black non skid on the deck and jets turning here and there being prepared to launch and retrieve, it was unbearably hot. We all had on long sleeved jerseys (mine was red), helmets with goggles and ear protection mufflers, gloves etc. the whole nine yards for protection. And since I was a plane captain I had a 100 lbs. of tie down chains carried on my back whenever the planes were being retrieved so I could secure and tie down my F-4 Phantom to the padeyes on the deck as soon as it landed. During flight ops the deck temperature was probably at least 150 degrees plus and there was no escape from the heat. We also had to mandatorily take salt tablets given out by our Chief every time we were on deck to prevent dehydration and drank massive amounts of water, kool aid (strawberry, bug juice) just to stay hydrated. You wouldn’t believe how hard and much you could sweat under these conditions. Our shop had a refrigerator full of water, pop etc. and a whole bunch of pineapples one time that someone had liberated in Hawaii. There is a reason young men do this because as I got older I wouldn’t probably couldn’t or wouldn’t want to do this and for me it was the adventure of a lifetime. I can fully sympathize for what the current generation of men and women are undergoing in that lousy miserable part of the world because I’ve been there under similar circumstances.

  6. The Top Gun hangar used in that movie was at NAS Miramar, Ca. just North of San Diego and was directly across the tarmac and flight line from where my hangar for VF-114 was. When the Navy got their first of their F-14’s in 1973 we would stand on the flight line and watch the F-14’s undergo all their initial training. It was awesome seeing what they could do compared to a F-4 Phantom which I think are still great planes.

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