We may need to rewrite our history books.As we know Belichick is all about the team, not one person is put in front of another he even connected it to this documentary saying “The Navy, Army, Air Force and Marines made one heck of a team in World War II.”
Or when he goes off on the meteorologists for screwing up the D-day weather forecasts.Wait for the episode where he goes into a 45-minute discussion about the use of the trebuchet in military history.
Technically speaking it was the U.S. Army Air Force until 1947, but functionally during the war it was a separate service whose commanding general reported directly to the Army Chief of Staff, so the perception is understandable and similar to how the Marines are thought of as an autonomous branch and not as part of the U.S. Navy.I always thought the Air Force didn't exist until 1947, but when Bill Belichick says this:
We may need to rewrite our history books.
I laughed hard at this."The Germans excel in all three phases of the game *snort*. Air, ground, and sea. *lip smack*."
"Bill, do you..."
"We're on to Berlin".
[on Pearl Harbor] "Well, sure. Last time, you know, they came to our place...we got beat, absolutely. They did some things, saw some things in our defense..."Always good to win a divisional game, especially on the road.
I just hope we can be competitive this time[on Pearl Harbor] "Well, sure. Last time, you know, they came to our place...we got beat, absolutely. They did some things, saw some things in our defense..."
.... are they really making a movie about the last two years of Brady's life? How will they know what life is like in the year 2156 when President of the Universe Brady finally decides to abandon his nutrition and fitness regimen?It started off with Malcolm Butler getting a movie made about his life, then came Brady getting one made about the last two years of his.
Just to clarify, although the Marine Corps is within the Department of the Navy, it is not part of the Navy. It is a separate and distinct military service.Technically speaking it was the U.S. Army Air Force until 1947, but functionally during the war it was a separate service whose commanding general reported directly to the Army Chief of Staff, so the perception is understandable and similar to how the Marines are thought of as an autonomous branch and not as part of the U.S. Navy.
Reporter: Bradley's been listed on the injury report every week as "questionable, infantry" since the beginning of the war, why is that?Bradley: I do this job because I've been trained to. You do it because... you love it!
BB: I love it! God help me, I do love it so. I love it more than my life.
I just snorted out a mouthful of coffee at work reading this ... ok, now back to decoding Cozybear hacks."The Germans claim you've been stealing their signals"
"Enigma, EggNog, Enema, I don't really care about any of that stuff . . ."