It's kinda concerning how little folks here know about the new law in Georgia... Georgia has massive protests because of this law; as it is styled after the similar Russian law that they use to suppress any non-Russia-aligned media-
yes, i was thinking of a certain expat Russian TH-camr who might be in danger if her Patreon-funded lifestyle caused her to be listed as a US foreign agent when she’s just some kid talking about her life in Georgia.
For context, Simo Häyhä was a Finnish sniper in 1939-1940 in the winter war with the Soviet Union. In less than 100 days, he confirmed more than 500 kills and they didn't count kills that couldn't be verified or that multiple snipers shot at. The only reason he quit was because he was injured by an exploding bullet that hit his jaw and basically put him in a coma for a week while lying in a pile of bodies because they thought he was gone. He averaged 5 kills per day during that 100 day period. Sometimes more, sometimes less. But the man is an absolute legend and considered to be the deadliest sniper in history. I say let the Finns have some fun and try to beat his records. We'll give them whatever they need without even needing the government to step in. 😃
Let's also remember that the guy was doing all that with iron sights because he thought a scope could give away his position. Imagine what he could do with a Barret at 1 mile out, if he was shooting today.
@omnipresentl1316 Simo also outlived the soviet union . Poetic justice my father almost named me simo in his honor but went with the Americanized name of his father toumas who fought in the winter war.
This guy's entire channel is just him having arguements with himself in the shower, then making a comedy of it online. And it's bloody brilliant, keep it coming bud!
In regards to not needing GPS: "The missile knows where it is at all times. It knows this because it knows where it isn't. By subtracting where it is from where it isn't, or where it isn't from where it is (whichever is greater), it obtains a difference, or deviation"
Points of information - 1) There's no way a Low Earth Orbit ASAT can threaten the GPS Constellation, or anything higher, like Geosynchronous Comsats, or the Missile Launch Detection Stuff - the transfer orbits required take hours, and can't be hidden, so there's plenty of warning, and a small velocity change on the target (Which is obvious from the trajectory of the attacker) will ensure a miss. We do it all the time ro avoid Space Junk. We're talking Orbital Mechanics, not TV here. 2) When the Lake Erie nailed that busted Recon Satellite, they weren't only aiming at the target, but selected what part of the target to hit. We're talking about something the size of a Cafeteria Refrigerator, zipping along at 17,000 Freedom Miles per Hour, with its closest approach being more than 100 miles. 3) I like the Finns. They kick Russian butt and scare the Swedes.
Plus, for point 1, there are several satellites and only one of these weapons up there, plus iirc built replacements sitting on the ground along with launch companies paid money specifically to always be ready to integrate and launch an emergency payload in 48 hours. Stuff also needs to be able to work without GPS anyway because radio jamming is a thing. At worst, some stuff would work less well.
I like how he totally glossed over that Estonia (NATO member and just across the bay from Finland) would get in on the action even before the Finns. Not only is uZZia trying to fuck with them, a lot of the redrawing was around one of our cities, Narva. The Battle of Narva and the Tannenberg lines probably have VERY bitter memories for those assholes in the east.
Add in, there's a reason shooting down satellites, even ones that belong to nations your at war with is a big no-no. That reason is "if you do it, so will I" and results in all orbital infrastructure being destroyed in short order.
And there is Larry Thorne AKA Lauri Törni, the Finn who took the phrase "Fuck Communism" and turned it into a lifestyle. See the song "Soldier of 3 Armies" for more!
Just so you know: the Georgian people are protesting that law and calling it the Russia Law due to its similarities to the way Putin nationalized the news
I think another issue they have with the law is that it may not cover media outlets propped up by the Georgia government that also take foreign influence investing.
It allows government mouthpieces to be funded by their despot of choice with no restrictions AFAIK, so double standards law, defs not about a free press or good journalism. It also effectively stopped their progress towards joining the EU.
I'm waiting for his Finland character to say," Sniper rifles check, ammo check, Putin's lapdogs check, beer & pretzels,,,,, BEER & PRETZELS,,,,,,,there's no party without beer & pretzels!" Poland say's did he just say article 5, calm down Poland that Vodka slurping bozo is just playing wack-a-mole against an octopus.
I heard the cockpit voice recorder, translated. Pilot: "We're having engine trouble. I'll land on the mountain." Voice 2: "Land on the mountain! What is it?" Pilot: "A high point of land caused by plate tectonics and volcanoes, but that's not important right now."
I imagine 35 dropping the news accidentally. Then utter silence from buff, f16, c130, ships, sams, everything. Then f22 just kinda has a building scream! Alarm bells in the us, Japan starts crying and incoherently babbling about boats, the uk is missing (you just hear running footsteps and a door closing), and russia acts like Russia and says it’s no big deal.
The Kid has enough stress, don't do that. Reassure the Kid it seems the Rooskie or "The Great China" are getting ready to unwrap their "FAFO" subscriptions.
As a Georgian I am happy about the cameo, I would like to hear your Georgian accent though. The law is very bad though, it is meant to silence everyone who isn't liked by the government. To put it simply, the only credible information source for the government, will be the government itself so if somebody does an independent study, the government can say: oh this is a foreign agent and so their info is flawed. They can run whatever narrative they want and you can't legally disprove them. This mimics Russian law which was passed in Russia back in 2012 so that's why it's called the Russian law. Georgian people will not tolerate this and there have been mass protests here for more than a month now and we all have immunity to tear gas already lol. P.S Can we have the kid for a couple of hours? please? I promise he'll have fun.
Support here from an American who's been following Georgia (the country) since those massive protests against this same law last year! Hopefully, it doesn't pass, after your president vetos it, again. 🙏🇬🇪🔥🫡🇪🇺
@Goodladsatan I've been on Twitter trying to share your struggles. We'll continue to support the fight for freedom from tyranny and oppression from the russian maniacs!
@@Gotenhanku Another one is, “If I had the choice to argue with you, or a brick, I’d chose the brick, because I could use it to beat myself unconscious rather than listen to the dumb sh*t you think is clever.”
From a Canadian… I’d think twice about fucking with Finland. Hell, don’t fuck with anybody who history revolves around being a Viking. The promise of Valhalla was incredibly strong and you don’t exactly want that coming back up
ehhh. also from Canada, and my family is from Finland. we aren't vikings. we aren't norse. common misconception. but I do agree they aren't to be messed with, we have a weird evolution where we are hard to off....speaking from my family's experience.
Hi, Finn here, and yeah, like resurrection said, we aren't vikings or norese... BUT, there are stories of Vikings steering clear of us because they thought we had legit magic, so y'know, still a flex.
On an unrelated note, don't fuck with Canada either, apparently. And not because of the US. Apparently, Canada's done some stuff that makes the US go: "WHAT THE ACTUAL F---..."?
I dont really understand the Aegis joke as I was Air defense. However, this dude was an NCO at the academy while i was a student there and a lot of his soldiers that were in his classes absolutely loved his humor. I would imagine aegis is pretty good at knowing where everyone is at all the time because their capabilities make patriot look like child's play.
But Patriot is produced at a ratio of 5 to 1 missiles compared to what is used in Aegis.... Oh, what is that? oh I see.... Mmmm... That is great. Patriot's missiles just got cleared for use of Arleigh Burkes. China? What about that missile gap?
The missile knows where it is at all times. It knows this because it knows where it isn't. By subtracting where it is from where it isn't, or where it isn't from where it is (whichever is greater), it obtains a difference or deviation. The guidance subsystem uses deviations to generate corrective commands to drive the missile from a position where it is to a position where it isn't. Arriving at a position that it wasn't, it now is. Consequently, the position where it is is now the position that it wasn't, and it follows that the position that it was is now the position that it isn't. In the event that the position that it is in is not the position that it wasn't, the system has acquired a variation, the variation being the difference between where the missile is and where it wasn't. If variation is considered to be a significant factor, it too may be corrected by the GEA. However, the missile must also know where it was. The missile guidance computer scenario works as follows: because a variation has modified some of the information the missile has obtained, it is not sure where it is. However, it is sure where it isn't, within reason, and it knows where it was. It now subtracts where it should be from where it wasn't, or vice versa. And by differentiating this from the algebraic sum of where it shouldn't be, and where it was, it is able to obtain the deviation and its variation, which is called error.
"I know Simo didnt have any kids but by sheer law of probability you gotta have at least a couple more of those in that country" was comedy GOLD!😂😂 4:00
We basically do that already. Jet catapults on aircraft carriers up until the new new one being built are steam powered. What is steam if not "super pressurized hot air" with moisture in it
Inertia guidance, check. No jamming/spoofing that tech. Gravity density mapping via SQUID, check. Been on our submarines for decades. There might be a third thing, but my fingers aren't authorized to type that sh*t.
As someone from Georgia the State, that voice and personality very accurate with us always waking up sounding like we choose violence in the morning after watching some Duke of Hazzard.
Georgia native as well. Can't say that is a familiar state of mind but I've also been away from home for the last 10 years. XD I know we can be fiesty though when a situation calls for it!
"The missile knows where it is all times. It knows this because it knows where it isnt. By subtrating where it is from where it isnt or where it isnt from where it is (whichever is greater) it obtains a difference or deviation" Thats a cult classic.
I mean, "Jet Gun" sounds like an anime superweapon. Probably a giant robot -- we've already seen Jet Jaguar, Jet Alone... I'm sure I'm forgetting at least one.
I mean gyro jet weapons are only a few leaps in design away from having a realistic version of a 40k bolter gun as is. You know what let’s do that let’s bring back gyro jet weapons this shouldn’t go off the rails that bad.😎
Fun fact! Poland is building an "Estern Shield" on the border with Belarus and Russia. It's been described in the Polish media as a "Korean DMZ in Poland". another fun fact is that people who made the actual Korean DMZ are involved in making of the "Estern Shield"
@@MikMoenI mean, the idea behind Maginot line was to funnel Germans into Belgium, where rest of the army could deal with them - I guess in this case it would be Królewiec and Belarus
That plane was basically a UFO. It was ridiculous! The ingenuity of humans is amazing. Sadly we're at our smartest shooting things or building porn networks.
For those wondering: There are many navigational techniques, many of which are centuries old, that don't require GPS and still be automated on a computer. GPS is just the easiest. There are so many things you can do with a sextant, a compass, and a clock. Also, if astronomers and astrophysicists can figure out there's an extra planet in the solar system because "the planets aren't moving quite right" (look up how we found Uranus), the US Military probably has the mathematical capability to accurately plot point A to point B on our well surveyed planet. Newton's Laws are wonderful and don't break down until you start reaching a fraction of the speed of light. Disclaimer: This is my wild ass guess from what science I know.
From what science I know it's quite plausible. I am a scientist, though my fields lend more to chemistry and wildlife management. (Just for credentials, though no one believes a self-proclaimed "expert" on this platform) Yeah, we've spotted several distant objects based on mapping the paths moved and finding that there are effects from gravity wells of objects we don't know about. We literally say "Huh, based on this movement there should be an x sized object right...there." As for sextant, compass, and clock, anyone trained in land navigation can fairly easily navigate the planet without GPS. We've been doing it on a large scale for centuries. Only question I have is how familiar are our militaries in it? I am certain it is taught, but I assume it is taught as an emergency thing if the hundred and one ways the military uses tech to do it all fail, so I imagine most soldiers are rusty. Maybe I am wrong. I learned it in the scouts. Ooh, and yes, Newton's laws work well for most things. Need to be a fairly high fraction of the speed of light to see any significant deterioration. They also don't accurately explain a lot of things on a quantum scale. We have 2 rules of physics, one for a macro scale, one on a micro scale. Both explain their perspective well but not the other. Many scientists wish to find the laws that unify these. (Incredibly simplified explanation)
@@mentaya11Can only speak for the Girl Scouts, but “back in my day” we were taught orienteering in Girl Scouts and even had competitions to see who could find all of the flags first. Nowadays, according to my sources, the Girl Scouts learn GPS. (Which just seems reckless. I’m sure the U.S. military’s GPS is better than what’s available to civilians, but the GPS available to Girl Scouts has a lot blank spots.) I’ve nothing against teaching GPS as a tool-just maybe teach it to girls as part of a broader skill set?
Man you are hitting it out of the ball park. You are the best thing on You Tube. Love the insider jokes for our guys running Aegis. I served in the silent service decades ago and will take those secrets to my grave.
So your telling me the US military looked at their childrend's Nerf guns and BB guns and thought... 'we could make those more lethal' That is some DIY Uncle vibes right there.
We actually tried this before. Look up U.S.S Vesuvius. It was an experimental ship that saw some shore bombardment missions during the Spanish American war.
The military industrial complex has no shame when it comes to lethalizing formerly benign tools, toys, activities, etc. Gotta love the creativity. 🤣🤣🤣 Waiting for Barbie & Ken! 😆😆
You should look into the Georgia law more. There is actually a lot protests because it is very similar to a Russian law. Also Georgian media laws make it where non-state owned media is very unprofitable. Warographics has a great video on it
Jokes aren’t always to be taken to literally and sometimes there is a small snippet of good in a bad law. Labeling financing in free democratic society with freedom of the press. Would be a good thing. Labeling financing for a small recently liberated country from totalitarianism with a huge totalitarian bully right next door, not so much.
@@longwlenguyen4214All while having a face only a mother could love; Can't beat asymmetry. (Jokes aside, it's quite interesting that the injury that ended his career as a sniper would stay with him till his death)
For those who are wondering about some of those alt to GPS things there are multiple options. Inertial navigation systems (forget the Apollo PGNCS, modern ones are smaller than a postage stamp), terrain recognition software, triangulation from known fixed broadcasting points(GPS but land based) etc. And I'm sure more that I don't know about.
@@ColoradoMedic Dude that happened ages ago. Fort Moore now. Which, admittedly. not bad in the slightest, Hal Moore deserves stuff being named after him.
@@kalashnikovdevil \\ does Fort Moore still produce Airborne, or is it Air Assault now? Was the "slam dunk" [swing landing trainer] replaced with "get to the choppa" drills? Getting to the choppa is important, especially if all your friends are leaving...
" Do maps, protractors, and compasses not work anymore?" Unfortunately I have experienced that attitude from junior officers and NCOs when the PLUGGER was feilded in the early 90's. Meanwhile I was plotting mortar fires on a MRE box because of skills I acquired from some highly proficient NCOs at my first unit. High angle hell!
I used to lead our tank road marches because I was the most proficient at mounted land nav, back in the day (pre-GPS). They always made me do it and I always thought, what will they do when I PCS? So, once in a while, I'd pretend to have engine problems and pull over to wait for maintenance. Then you'd see everyone else scrambling for their maps to figure out where they were. Never failed and they always ended up 'not headed in the correct direction'. 1 time my LT even called over the radio and informed me to trade places with another TC so I could continue the mission. Mind you, this was a test requirement (mounted land navigation), you had to pass, in BNCOC, so most of the tank commanders had been to this school. I betcha this still holds true to this day.
@@JosephHenry-l5e That wouldn't surprise me. In both cases. Land Navigation, whether mounted or dismounted, seems to be a skill that too many seem to forget the moment they leave basic. Seriously, some of these people, and I include more than a few sergeants in that (LTs are a given), could get lost in an open room with nothing in it.
@@jgkitarel I left the military over 20 years ago, I still know how to use land nav I learned and aced during pldc and bnoc. I make sure my son knows how to do it too.
@@gator8639 Yeah, that knowledge tends to stay with you. Aced it in PLDC (which was the last PLDC course run at Camp Jackson, South Korea), aced it in Basic, aced it... you get where I'm going. Never failed a land nav course in my life, and more than a few covered quite a bit of space. It just boggled me how many seemed to suck so badly at it, when that was considered a core skill and was tested every year. And this was after the refresher training to ensure that the skill was fresh in everyone's minds. Can't fix stupid, or even train it out of people, I guess. Haven't done it in over a decade, not since I left the Army after eleven years, and know that I would need to spend a bit of time to refamiliarize myself with it, but I still know how to use a map, compass, and protractor. Hell, my dad retired more than thirty years ago, and I bet he still remembers how to do it.
@@colbunkmust The idea itself was theoretically sound, it just didn't have enough spin once it left the barrel to maintain it's trajectory IIRC. Better propellants, and stabilizing fins to aid in that should go a long way.
@@Chokah The very nature of the "gyro" component was to induce stabilization through the spin of the propellant, so if you're using fin stabilization instead, then the design would be nothing like the gyrojet. Also, there are lots of ideas are theoretically sound that don't work in practice. Communism is theoretically sound, but that doesn't make me want to more to the DPRK.
probably caseless ammo with some sort of gas or fuel in a superheated combustion chamber, like an engine block, only it moves projectiles instead of pistons. Or maybe a super potato gun. what would be amazing is if they figured out how to use atmospheric gas to get the combustion, so all you would need would be power, like it sucks in the air around it and then compresses it till it goes off.
Jet guns... Well... I'm gonna tell him they're reinventing something The Gyrojet is a family of unique firearms developed in the 1960s named for the method of gyroscopically stabilizing its projectiles. Rather than inert bullets, Gyrojets fire small rockets called Microjets which have little recoil and do not require a heavy barrel or chamber to resist the pressure of the combustion gases. Velocity on leaving the tube was very low, but increased to around 1,250 feet per second (380 m/s) at 30 feet (9.1 m). The result is a very lightweight and transportable weapon. Long out of production, today they are a coveted collector's item with prices for even the most common model ranging above $1,000. They are rarely fired; ammunition, when available at all, can cost over $200 per round.
@@wanderingaceminecraftandmo8034 Helsinki alone has what is basically an underground city that can house up to 900k people. Also almost every church, supermarket and apartment building is by law required to have a Bomb shelter in it. Also Finns build Bridges with spots for mines so engineers can easily detonate and collapse them. Roads leading to east are built in such a manner that they make a funnel if you happen to cross the border AND some tunnels are built through bedrock so they can be blocked easily as well slowing an advance. Highways can be used as landing strips for aircraft. And so much more. Attacking Finland is like attacking a fortress the size of a nation
@@wanderingaceminecraftandmo8034 When everyone else prepared for nuclear war with just diplomacy, we Finns also made bomb shelters. Since nukes never stopped being a thing, we never stopped making bomb shelters.
We don't have sustainable Fusion Reactors yet, so they would end up being those battery-powered ones from the SEED timeline. And I am way too poor and sober to deal with the idea of geneticly engineered super humans right now.
Giant robots of any variety would have to be scaled down to be practical, which is a good thing. Gundams and suits like it are too bulky. Something like the Macross robots are already possible, though. Not with transforming, but scale. You could just scale up a boston dynamics robot with a cockpit and you're there. 40 foot maybe? Still big and intimidating without wrecking cities by walking, and it wouldn't sink into the ground too far.
@@crazyjoeshorts5256God it is so cool to see Macross/Robotech get some love on an HLC video. Wonder how hard it would be just to get the G and F configs working? The full Battleroid seems a little excessive and unnecessary for terrestrial combat, excluding the possibility by invasion from 40-foot tall extraterrestrial humanoids and the need to conduct infantry combat against.
@@barbatosmcmurderton4209no need. Fission works just fine. Just need a little more shielding. Anything smaller would run on diesel or LPG ICE or turbine electric w/ a small battery backup.
The US Navy is working on integrating PAC 3 onto its AEGIS destroyers and the missiles can be quad packed into its VLS... would love to hear your thoughts
I thought he was going to announce that in the spirit of the A10, and the AC130, that we were going to build another aircraft that only exists in order to make a gun fly.
When Finland asked for sniper rifles I was just waiting for Simo reference! As always you do NOT disappoint. A good day to you and yours and happy Memorial day!
The 27 of this month is the last Monday in the month of May. That is how it is determined when memorial day and weekend occur. We honor thos who fallen in the line of duty and those that have served and currently are. Hope that clears it up a bit.
@@Austin1723 Yes, the day itself is the last Monday of May, but the whole weekend is considered "Memorial Day Weekend" (and the Indy 500 race always takes place on the Sunday before Memorial Day)
Indeed. Like most sinister things, it only sounds good. But that breaks down when you realize that it'll be the government implementing this. A government that has a vested interest in labeling certain dissenters as "unpatriotic." If you trust any government to apply a law equally, then I got a bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.
and it's basically a copy of russia's same law, but Georgia is run by a russian oligarch so it's no surprise to people in that region, unfortunately for them. they're protesting like hell against it. they're a lot braver than the russian citizens that sit at home and pout
@@ame7165 The consequences for protesting in Georgia, admittedly, is a little less grave than for Russians. (Though recently it’s getting to those levels, so at this point who knows). I will say that there’s just a lot of Russians who have been brainwashed since birth and just believe whatever is spouted on Russian state tv which is *very* unfortunate. But yes, the *amazing* amount of people and especially younger generation who are fighting for their country is awesome.
The US has talked about making sure its warfighters can continue the fight in a GPS compromised environment for a couple of decades now. I feel confident that our defense industry accounts for that contingency in the design of our smart weapons.
Funny thing is, all they need to do is go lower tech. Map and compass, inertial navigation, astrolobe, radio navigation, the list goes on. That's ignoring any new methods they have probably developed.
They do. ALL US missile systems are REQUIRED to have backups in case GPS is unavailable for some reason. Knocking out the GPS network would be more of a problem for DoorDash than for the military.
I love everytime finland shows up and reminds everyone they produced the deadliest sniper in human history...by far my favorite person learning about when studying the world wars
I mean, I don't think anybody who works with US equipment would ever say it's perfect. They're always coming up with ways to make it better. But yes, our equipment *is* better than just about everything else on the planet.
@2:00 - I don't know about Aegis, but i do know that everything in the US Military that flies has an internal inertail navigation system, and the GPS is a SECONDARY system used to increase the precision of the INS unit. This includes GPS-guided bombs and missiles. Killing GPS sats is gonna fuck up commercial aviation for the entire world, but the only impact you'll notice for the US military will be that the CEP of a JDAM increases from 5' to 50'.
HLC- ‘Just felt like killing a satellite with a boat’ Kid- ‘Now a BOAT is getting more action than me?!’ Just a tip USAF if you don’t want the kid downing ALL of the Russian satellites, best to put another pad lock on the hanger 😂
Simo maybe too short in the family tree but Simo's Secret Sniper School sounds gangster enough to short the whole title using the sound of S as you blow on your pointy finger silence sign.
"It uses hyper pressurized hot air." Ah hell yeah let's go weaponize bending. Gotta start with Fire, fire of course so many destructive capabilities, maybe Air next Airbending is SO heckin OP and NO ONE RESPECTS IT (Gyatso and Yangchen out here showing why it's so dangerous love that for them). Then Earth we can just pull a Kyoshi and RAISE THE SEA FLOOR (this happened in her books via Avatar State GOD what a woman) then finally Water we can just pull a Katara and see about bloodbending some mfs.
For those curious about his Aegis reference their are GPS systems that work based off the sun, they can accurately measure the time it takes to reach them and essentially determine their position off of that.
It's kinda concerning how little folks here know about the new law in Georgia...
Georgia has massive protests because of this law; as it is styled after the similar Russian law that they use to suppress any non-Russia-aligned media-
That's on me I only read 2 articles on it my bad
@@habitual_linecrosser Yeah, this law is very much...not sweet.
@@habitual_linecrosserdon’t worry fam. American history looks like business compared to the mess back home
yes, i was thinking of a certain expat Russian TH-camr who might be in danger if her Patreon-funded lifestyle caused her to be listed as a US foreign agent when she’s just some kid talking about her life in Georgia.
The way it was presented by HLC it sounds nice like personally if that law that you described worked as if it was described, I would be very happy.
“Why don’t you wish life to your President”.
THAT Was the clap back heard around the world.
If only America could actually say it to Israel, It'd be more documented than the Will Smith slap.
And on that mountaintop
i still cant help but laught at all the Eli Kopter memes out there...
@@crustybomb115one of my country info channel fell for it live
@@jhonsilveralpha makes me wonder, how many countries fell for that meme and took it 100% seriously? either way im laughing my ass off about it
Aw man, love a White Death reference.
Like a real life Rambo, but short and with a higher body count.
It bothers me that everyone seems to ignore that "on;y 259" of his kills with a subgun in close combat were counted.
An estimated 500 confirmed kills and another estimated 400 unconfirmed (conservatively estimated of course)
@@crimsonmaelstrom573with active service of 3 months. Dude was beyond a legend.
@@joelsmemes4140 he was also beyond a level of tweaking that anyone else may ever know lol
Here's the thing I have to ask though, what's stopping Finland from bringing another one into the modern world?
For context, Simo Häyhä was a Finnish sniper in 1939-1940 in the winter war with the Soviet Union. In less than 100 days, he confirmed more than 500 kills and they didn't count kills that couldn't be verified or that multiple snipers shot at. The only reason he quit was because he was injured by an exploding bullet that hit his jaw and basically put him in a coma for a week while lying in a pile of bodies because they thought he was gone. He averaged 5 kills per day during that 100 day period. Sometimes more, sometimes less. But the man is an absolute legend and considered to be the deadliest sniper in history. I say let the Finns have some fun and try to beat his records. We'll give them whatever they need without even needing the government to step in. 😃
Maybe not give them meth though? That one guy had too much fun.
@@colewest7096hey man it was the 40s, we gave that shit to everyone from soldiers to housewives
@@colewest7096 No meth?! Fine, but I'm going to be whining in comms for the whole... NON-trip.
Let's also remember that the guy was doing all that with iron sights because he thought a scope could give away his position. Imagine what he could do with a Barret at 1 mile out, if he was shooting today.
And, he used iron sights
Simo didn't have any kids, but he DID teach after the war...
I didn’t know that and I’m so glad I do now
Because Russias fucked
This is my new favorite thing
@omnipresentl1316 Simo also outlived the soviet union . Poetic justice my father almost named me simo in his honor but went with the Americanized name of his father toumas who fought in the winter war.
And I'm sure he has some nieces, nephews or maybe some distant cousins still around.
Oh damn thats cool@@thomashaapalainen4108
This guy's entire channel is just him having arguements with himself in the shower, then making a comedy of it online.
And it's bloody brilliant, keep it coming bud!
Anyone else would call it schizophrenia but when you slap on funny countries it becomes entertainment!
In regards to not needing GPS:
"The missile knows where it is at all times. It knows this because it knows where it isn't. By subtracting where it is from where it isn't, or where it isn't from where it is (whichever is greater), it obtains a difference, or deviation"
Discworld logic in a nutshell. "im not over there, hence by process of elimination, i'm right here!"
If this was accurate there would be a black suv outside your house right now. Shut up about capabilities, true or false.
that weapon introduction still make me lol
The narrator wasn't wrong but he was being mealy mouthed about it when he could've just said that "the missile is counting it's steps"
'Tis called: "Basic Algebra"
Points of information -
1) There's no way a Low Earth Orbit ASAT can threaten the GPS Constellation, or anything higher, like Geosynchronous Comsats, or the Missile Launch Detection Stuff - the transfer orbits required take hours, and can't be hidden, so there's plenty of warning, and a small velocity change on the target (Which is obvious from the trajectory of the attacker) will ensure a miss. We do it all the time ro avoid Space Junk. We're talking Orbital Mechanics, not TV here.
2) When the Lake Erie nailed that busted Recon Satellite, they weren't only aiming at the target, but selected what part of the target to hit. We're talking about something the size of a Cafeteria Refrigerator, zipping along at 17,000 Freedom Miles per Hour, with its closest approach being more than 100 miles.
3) I like the Finns. They kick Russian butt and scare the Swedes.
Plus, for point 1, there are several satellites and only one of these weapons up there, plus iirc built replacements sitting on the ground along with launch companies paid money specifically to always be ready to integrate and launch an emergency payload in 48 hours. Stuff also needs to be able to work without GPS anyway because radio jamming is a thing. At worst, some stuff would work less well.
I like how he totally glossed over that Estonia (NATO member and just across the bay from Finland) would get in on the action even before the Finns.
Not only is uZZia trying to fuck with them, a lot of the redrawing was around one of our cities, Narva.
The Battle of Narva and the Tannenberg lines probably have VERY bitter memories for those assholes in the east.
@@rohesilmnelohe Shit I should probably check on Arthur then, I didn't even hear about this till this vid tbh.
Add in, there's a reason shooting down satellites, even ones that belong to nations your at war with is a big no-no. That reason is "if you do it, so will I" and results in all orbital infrastructure being destroyed in short order.
And there is Larry Thorne AKA Lauri Törni, the Finn who took the phrase "Fuck Communism" and turned it into a lifestyle.
See the song "Soldier of 3 Armies" for more!
Just so you know: the Georgian people are protesting that law and calling it the Russia Law due to its similarities to the way Putin nationalized the news
Isn't it sweet that no foreign country will ever influence that beautiful country again? Except for Russia of course.
I think another issue they have with the law is that it may not cover media outlets propped up by the Georgia government that also take foreign influence investing.
It allows government mouthpieces to be funded by their despot of choice with no restrictions AFAIK, so double standards law, defs not about a free press or good journalism.
It also effectively stopped their progress towards joining the EU.
@@Icemann89 Yup 😂 The most powerful people in government are quite literally funded by Russia or highly influenced by them.
It did sound very similar.
3:47 You should give Finland a catchphrase that goes something like "I'm going to need a sniper rifle, lots of sniper rifles . . ."
Or the classic, "Someone get this man a sniper rifle!"
@@Cap.W.61i need SCOTLAND saying that, it hits perfectly w the accent
I'm waiting for his Finland character to say," Sniper rifles check, ammo check, Putin's lapdogs check, beer & pretzels,,,,, BEER & PRETZELS,,,,,,,there's no party without beer & pretzels!" Poland say's did he just say article 5, calm down Poland that Vodka slurping bozo is just playing wack-a-mole against an octopus.
@@DRAONWEEDNah, it would, beer, vodka (we love our hard liquors) and potato chips here in Finland, for fun stroll in the woods with sniper rifle.
@@pyorre2441 Still, a party isn't a party without refreshments, No offense intended to you about the vodka comment.
I heard the cockpit voice recorder, translated.
Pilot: "We're having engine trouble. I'll land on the mountain."
Voice 2: "Land on the mountain! What is it?"
Pilot: "A high point of land caused by plate tectonics and volcanoes, but that's not important right now."
Nice "Airplane" reference 😂😂😂
“Surely you can’t be serious?”
“I am serious. And don’t call me Shirley.”
Was the pilot on instruments?
How... how did I KNOW an "Airplane!" reference was coming?!
Iran misunderstood how Mount Rushmore was made....
No, I think they understood it pretty very well. I just think the dude wanted to claim his spot before anyone else did.😂😂
@@kineticstarthough he did it kinda backwards, cause the likeness will be washed off whenever the next rain season starts
That's f*king gold right there! 😉🤣
Hah! Nice one. 🤣💀
Damn, gonna hand out ointment with that burn
Please tell the kid about the delta dart! Served for 30 years as a US interceptor. Retired before a single air to air kill!
I imagine 35 dropping the news accidentally. Then utter silence from buff, f16, c130, ships, sams, everything. Then f22 just kinda has a building scream! Alarm bells in the us, Japan starts crying and incoherently babbling about boats, the uk is missing (you just hear running footsteps and a door closing), and russia acts like Russia and says it’s no big deal.
Jokes on you, the kid reads these comments for hlc
The Kid has enough stress, don't do that. Reassure the Kid it seems the Rooskie or "The Great China" are getting ready to unwrap their "FAFO" subscriptions.
@@elliottpeterson5021 next thing you know SR71 is stunned after being intercepted
Shh! There’s a reason why we don’t talk about him around the kid!
As a Georgian I am happy about the cameo, I would like to hear your Georgian accent though. The law is very bad though, it is meant to silence everyone who isn't liked by the government. To put it simply, the only credible information source for the government, will be the government itself so if somebody does an independent study, the government can say: oh this is a foreign agent and so their info is flawed. They can run whatever narrative they want and you can't legally disprove them. This mimics Russian law which was passed in Russia back in 2012 so that's why it's called the Russian law. Georgian people will not tolerate this and there have been mass protests here for more than a month now and we all have immunity to tear gas already lol. P.S Can we have the kid for a couple of hours? please? I promise he'll have fun.
Support here from an American who's been following Georgia (the country) since those massive protests against this same law last year!
Hopefully, it doesn't pass, after your president vetos it, again.
🙏🇬🇪🔥🫡🇪🇺
@@rffromusa8319 Thank you! Your and Your country’s support means a lot! Glory to Georgia and God bless America! 🇬🇪 🇺🇸
Support from Austria as well! We hope you guys can sort this out. 🇦🇹🇪🇺🇬🇪
@@andrefasching1332 Thank you! I’m sure we will!🇦🇹 🇬🇪
@Goodladsatan I've been on Twitter trying to share your struggles. We'll continue to support the fight for freedom from tyranny and oppression from the russian maniacs!
"Come back neva." You definitely play Borderlands 3, no doubt.
A man of culture.
Ole Crazy Earl. Don’t leave cars around him…
FINE COM BACK NEVA
WHERE ARE YA SCRAPPY?!
"Going into a battle of wits completely unarmed" Jesus Christ....
Had a coworker tell me this one time... I told him I wasn't scared of a squirt gun.
That’s taken from Shakespeare if memory serves.
Another good one is "Between you and me ones of us is smarter than you."
@@Gotenhanku Another one is,
“If I had the choice to argue with you, or a brick, I’d chose the brick, because I could use it to beat myself unconscious rather than listen to the dumb sh*t you think is clever.”
Imagine the other not being completely unarmed...
That would definitely impair the success.
From a Canadian… I’d think twice about fucking with Finland. Hell, don’t fuck with anybody who history revolves around being a Viking. The promise of Valhalla was incredibly strong and you don’t exactly want that coming back up
ehhh. also from Canada, and my family is from Finland. we aren't vikings. we aren't norse. common misconception. but I do agree they aren't to be messed with, we have a weird evolution where we are hard to off....speaking from my family's experience.
Hi, Finn here, and yeah, like resurrection said, we aren't vikings or norese... BUT, there are stories of Vikings steering clear of us because they thought we had legit magic, so y'know, still a flex.
Finns weren't vikings.
They were the freaky forest wizards the norsemen stayed the hell away from.
On an unrelated note, don't fuck with Canada either, apparently. And not because of the US.
Apparently, Canada's done some stuff that makes the US go: "WHAT THE ACTUAL F---..."?
@AnonEcho98 shhhhhh! Don't tell them!!! Don't listen OP! we DO have legit magic.
I dont really understand the Aegis joke as I was Air defense. However, this dude was an NCO at the academy while i was a student there and a lot of his soldiers that were in his classes absolutely loved his humor. I would imagine aegis is pretty good at knowing where everyone is at all the time because their capabilities make patriot look like child's play.
SHORAD here….. I got the joke.
But Patriot is produced at a ratio of 5 to 1 missiles compared to what is used in Aegis.... Oh, what is that? oh I see.... Mmmm... That is great. Patriot's missiles just got cleared for use of Arleigh Burkes.
China? What about that missile gap?
@@Krojack You were diagnosed with SHORAD? What are the symptoms?
Former SPY Tech here haha AEGIS sees all at all times.
The missile knows where it is at all times. It knows this because it knows where it isn't. By subtracting where it is from where it isn't, or where it isn't from where it is (whichever is greater), it obtains a difference or deviation. The guidance subsystem uses deviations to generate corrective commands to drive the missile from a position where it is to a position where it isn't. Arriving at a position that it wasn't, it now is. Consequently, the position where it is is now the position that it wasn't, and it follows that the position that it was is now the position that it isn't. In the event that the position that it is in is not the position that it wasn't, the system has acquired a variation, the variation being the difference between where the missile is and where it wasn't. If variation is considered to be a significant factor, it too may be corrected by the GEA. However, the missile must also know where it was. The missile guidance computer scenario works as follows: because a variation has modified some of the information the missile has obtained, it is not sure where it is. However, it is sure where it isn't, within reason, and it knows where it was. It now subtracts where it should be from where it wasn't, or vice versa. And by differentiating this from the algebraic sum of where it shouldn't be, and where it was, it is able to obtain the deviation and its variation, which is called error.
"I know Simo didnt have any kids but by sheer law of probability you gotta have at least a couple more of those in that country" was comedy GOLD!😂😂 4:00
Finland: He's got a point.
*White death by sabaton start playing*
We have plenty of hunters, hunting with rifles, hunting small and fast targets, in The Forest...
I mean... Finland is pretty famous for its unkillable ice demons that they called soldiers back in the 30s and 40s.
Launching jets off an aircraft carrier with a Gauss cannon (a gun that shoots jets!) legitimately sounds like something we would build.
Wiki EMALS.
We basically do that already. Jet catapults on aircraft carriers up until the new new one being built are steam powered. What is steam if not "super pressurized hot air" with moisture in it
Aegis existing is why I know alien sightings are bogus
ima need an explanation, what?
Inertia guidance, check. No jamming/spoofing that tech.
Gravity density mapping via SQUID, check. Been on our submarines for decades.
There might be a third thing, but my fingers aren't authorized to type that sh*t.
@@pirobot668beta TLDR; weve had eyes in the sky watching in 4k for many years, if there were aliens, theyd be intercepted
@@pirobot668beta But now we know, there is a third thing.
@@aethertech that is to be expected that they leave something out, but did they leave out 1, 2 or 15 other things is the real question.
Raisi getting stoned to death by a mountain.
God may take his time getting around to it, but he has some sense of irony.
Let he who is without sin...
@@Kebutorexactly why I was not the one who threw the mountain
I think he just works on his own timeline, remember that Turkish MP that dropped dead immediately after threatening Israel?
@@BenSuzuki Well, the first stone has been casted, now everyone can. That's how it's worded anyways.
As someone from Georgia the State, that voice and personality very accurate with us always waking up sounding like we choose violence in the morning after watching some Duke of Hazzard.
Isn't it crazy earl from the borderlands series?
Georgia native as well. Can't say that is a familiar state of mind but I've also been away from home for the last 10 years. XD I know we can be fiesty though when a situation calls for it!
@@5amm0n79 sounds like it, "come back never" pretty much sealed it to me
His voice reminded me of the Vulture riders from StarCraft.
As a local Florida Man I know Georgia Man can be hostile and I'm a 5 ft Python sure it ain't our fault.
"The missile knows where it is all times. It knows this because it knows where it isnt. By subtrating where it is from where it isnt or where it isnt from where it is (whichever is greater) it obtains a difference or deviation"
Thats a cult classic.
Not to be outdone by Mount Rushmore, Iran also put a president's face on the side of a mountain.
I… was NOT prepared for that. That’s fucked up but also hilarious.
HLC a day keeps the BS AWAY yeah
And boredom too
put it on a shirt
It's the reason I'm subscribed to HLC, Fundiam, MandatoryFunDay, Fat Electrician, Brandon Herrera, and UnSub. Podcast
Funny because even HLC admitted his bad on the incorrect take regarding the new Georgian law.
HLC per 2 days at 1 pm ET
"Jet Gun."
-HL said calmly while holding a bazooka
I mean, "Jet Gun" sounds like an anime superweapon. Probably a giant robot -- we've already seen Jet Jaguar, Jet Alone... I'm sure I'm forgetting at least one.
Sounded like the gyro jet from the 70s
@@firehawkdelta It also sounds like a wonder weapon you'd use in a zombie apocalypse while dealing with shitty public transportation
Bolters brothers. Bolters brothers.
*BOLTERS, BROTHERS!*
I mean gyro jet weapons are only a few leaps in design away from having a realistic version of a 40k bolter gun as is. You know what let’s do that let’s bring back gyro jet weapons this shouldn’t go off the rails that bad.😎
Fun fact!
Poland is building an "Estern Shield" on the border with Belarus and Russia. It's been described in the Polish media as a "Korean DMZ in Poland". another fun fact is that people who made the actual Korean DMZ are involved in making of the "Estern Shield"
Maginot Line Part 2: Polish Boogaloo?
This in combination with the baltics who are building a bunker system on the border with Russia to fend of any invasions.
*"This speed bump has teeth."*
Go crazy, Poland! WOOOOOO!!!!
@@MikMoenI mean, the idea behind Maginot line was to funnel Germans into Belgium, where rest of the army could deal with them - I guess in this case it would be Królewiec and Belarus
"Sorry I can't explain more, I don't feel like going to Jail" sounds like someone just recently did their yearly OPSEC training lol
Ah, the White Death. I’m over the moon about that legend being mentioned in one of these shorts. Bless you sir.
I was blown away when I learned that the SR-71 navigated by stars - during the day! And maintained accuracy of 100-200 feet while "surveilling".
I guess once the sky goes black, you don't really care about some stars being brighter than others... 😂
Sometimes, this country scares me in a good way.
That is *wild*.
That plane was basically a UFO. It was ridiculous! The ingenuity of humans is amazing. Sadly we're at our smartest shooting things or building porn networks.
@@evilras Sadly?
No matter how my day is going, you can turn it around, raise hell, praise Dale
For those wondering: There are many navigational techniques, many of which are centuries old, that don't require GPS and still be automated on a computer. GPS is just the easiest. There are so many things you can do with a sextant, a compass, and a clock.
Also, if astronomers and astrophysicists can figure out there's an extra planet in the solar system because "the planets aren't moving quite right" (look up how we found Uranus), the US Military probably has the mathematical capability to accurately plot point A to point B on our well surveyed planet. Newton's Laws are wonderful and don't break down until you start reaching a fraction of the speed of light.
Disclaimer: This is my wild ass guess from what science I know.
From what science I know it's quite plausible. I am a scientist, though my fields lend more to chemistry and wildlife management. (Just for credentials, though no one believes a self-proclaimed "expert" on this platform) Yeah, we've spotted several distant objects based on mapping the paths moved and finding that there are effects from gravity wells of objects we don't know about. We literally say "Huh, based on this movement there should be an x sized object right...there."
As for sextant, compass, and clock, anyone trained in land navigation can fairly easily navigate the planet without GPS. We've been doing it on a large scale for centuries. Only question I have is how familiar are our militaries in it? I am certain it is taught, but I assume it is taught as an emergency thing if the hundred and one ways the military uses tech to do it all fail, so I imagine most soldiers are rusty. Maybe I am wrong. I learned it in the scouts.
Ooh, and yes, Newton's laws work well for most things. Need to be a fairly high fraction of the speed of light to see any significant deterioration. They also don't accurately explain a lot of things on a quantum scale. We have 2 rules of physics, one for a macro scale, one on a micro scale. Both explain their perspective well but not the other. Many scientists wish to find the laws that unify these. (Incredibly simplified explanation)
@@mentaya11well said. Stating expertise is fine, so long as the actual arguments are the focus. Ie, you’re not arguing from authority.
After the nasa dart mission it was pretty obvious to me that if the us wants something big to hit you, something big is going to hit you.
“Oh no, GPS is out? Lemme just reactivate the LORAN system real quick”
@@mentaya11Can only speak for the Girl Scouts, but “back in my day” we were taught orienteering in Girl Scouts and even had competitions to see who could find all of the flags first. Nowadays, according to my sources, the Girl Scouts learn GPS. (Which just seems reckless. I’m sure the U.S. military’s GPS is better than what’s available to civilians, but the GPS available to Girl Scouts has a lot blank spots.) I’ve nothing against teaching GPS as a tool-just maybe teach it to girls as part of a broader skill set?
Man you are hitting it out of the ball park. You are the best thing on You Tube. Love the insider jokes for our guys running Aegis. I served in the silent service decades ago and will take those secrets to my grave.
As an American, I love how you don't hold back on American exceptionalism!
Hell, I'm loving ALL your stuff!
So your telling me the US military looked at their childrend's Nerf guns and BB guns and thought... 'we could make those more lethal'
That is some DIY Uncle vibes right there.
Lethal airguns were already a thing, this just dials the concept up to 11.
Who says it isnt nerf that military contractor doing that
We actually tried this before. Look up U.S.S Vesuvius. It was an experimental ship that saw some shore bombardment missions during the Spanish American war.
lethal airguns have been a thing for over a century.
the first repeating rifle ever trialed by a major military power was an air rifle.
The military industrial complex has no shame when it comes to lethalizing formerly benign tools, toys, activities, etc. Gotta love the creativity. 🤣🤣🤣
Waiting for Barbie & Ken! 😆😆
You should look into the Georgia law more. There is actually a lot protests because it is very similar to a Russian law. Also Georgian media laws make it where non-state owned media is very unprofitable. Warographics has a great video on it
Jokes aren’t always to be taken to literally and sometimes there is a small snippet of good in a bad law. Labeling financing in free democratic society with freedom of the press. Would be a good thing. Labeling financing for a small recently liberated country from totalitarianism with a huge totalitarian bully right next door, not so much.
Simo sends his regards
**Sabaton's 'White Death' intensifies**
And went on to outlived the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc by 12 years after it collapsed.
@@longwlenguyen4214All while having a face only a mother could love; Can't beat asymmetry. (Jokes aside, it's quite interesting that the injury that ended his career as a sniper would stay with him till his death)
poland joins the battle *THE WINGED HASSARS ARRIVED*
Finland: "I need some sniper rifles"
America: "Sure, bud. What optics do you want on 'em?"
Finland: "Just the sniper rifles."
For those who are wondering about some of those alt to GPS things there are multiple options. Inertial navigation systems (forget the Apollo PGNCS, modern ones are smaller than a postage stamp), terrain recognition software, triangulation from known fixed broadcasting points(GPS but land based) etc. And I'm sure more that I don't know about.
“Fine. Come back NEVAH.”
Being from Georgia (the state) I felt that in my soul. We are full. Stop coming here.
Mind if I come and go at least?
\\ Did Benning get renamed by the woke mafia, too?
That's what happens when your entire state is known as an airport/coke factory.
@@ColoradoMedic Dude that happened ages ago. Fort Moore now.
Which, admittedly. not bad in the slightest, Hal Moore deserves stuff being named after him.
@@kalashnikovdevil \\ does Fort Moore still produce Airborne, or is it Air Assault now? Was the "slam dunk" [swing landing trainer] replaced with "get to the choppa" drills? Getting to the choppa is important, especially if all your friends are leaving...
" Do maps, protractors, and compasses not work anymore?" Unfortunately I have experienced that attitude from junior officers and NCOs when the PLUGGER was feilded in the early 90's.
Meanwhile I was plotting mortar fires on a MRE box because of skills I acquired from some highly proficient NCOs at my first unit.
High angle hell!
I used to lead our tank road marches because I was the most proficient at mounted land nav, back in the day (pre-GPS). They always made me do it and I always thought, what will they do when I PCS? So, once in a while, I'd pretend to have engine problems and pull over to wait for maintenance. Then you'd see everyone else scrambling for their maps to figure out where they were. Never failed and they always ended up 'not headed in the correct direction'. 1 time my LT even called over the radio and informed me to trade places with another TC so I could continue the mission. Mind you, this was a test requirement (mounted land navigation), you had to pass, in BNCOC, so most of the tank commanders had been to this school. I betcha this still holds true to this day.
@@JosephHenry-l5e That wouldn't surprise me. In both cases. Land Navigation, whether mounted or dismounted, seems to be a skill that too many seem to forget the moment they leave basic. Seriously, some of these people, and I include more than a few sergeants in that (LTs are a given), could get lost in an open room with nothing in it.
@@jgkitarel I left the military over 20 years ago, I still know how to use land nav I learned and aced during pldc and bnoc. I make sure my son knows how to do it too.
@@gator8639 Yeah, that knowledge tends to stay with you. Aced it in PLDC (which was the last PLDC course run at Camp Jackson, South Korea), aced it in Basic, aced it... you get where I'm going. Never failed a land nav course in my life, and more than a few covered quite a bit of space. It just boggled me how many seemed to suck so badly at it, when that was considered a core skill and was tested every year.
And this was after the refresher training to ensure that the skill was fresh in everyone's minds. Can't fix stupid, or even train it out of people, I guess. Haven't done it in over a decade, not since I left the Army after eleven years, and know that I would need to spend a bit of time to refamiliarize myself with it, but I still know how to use a map, compass, and protractor. Hell, my dad retired more than thirty years ago, and I bet he still remembers how to do it.
When the snow has a funny dialect, it is time to start backtracking back home 😂
I just wanna say that the coolest thing anyone in the military has ever said is “I’m not allowed to say more.”
Watching an F15 doing a max climb is so freaking beautiful.
Not gonna lie, the "Jet Gun" kind of sounds like a upsized Gyrojet...I'm for it.
hopefully it's a gyrojet that actually works well, cuz the actual gyrojet is pretty underwhelming.
@@colbunkmust The idea itself was theoretically sound, it just didn't have enough spin once it left the barrel to maintain it's trajectory IIRC. Better propellants, and stabilizing fins to aid in that should go a long way.
@@Chokah The very nature of the "gyro" component was to induce stabilization through the spin of the propellant, so if you're using fin stabilization instead, then the design would be nothing like the gyrojet. Also, there are lots of ideas are theoretically sound that don't work in practice. Communism is theoretically sound, but that doesn't make me want to more to the DPRK.
probably caseless ammo with some sort of gas or fuel in a superheated combustion chamber, like an engine block, only it moves projectiles instead of pistons. Or maybe a super potato gun. what would be amazing is if they figured out how to use atmospheric gas to get the combustion, so all you would need would be power, like it sucks in the air around it and then compresses it till it goes off.
USA is working on the bolter confirmed next space marine power armor and chainsaw swords
I vote that GA should just have the Foghorn Leghorn voice.
I say, I say, what were ya think’n ya darn indiot.
I think Iraqveteran8888 is Georgian. But the Foghorn voice works for comedy reasons.
That's current state governor Henry McStupid of my state of SC. Don't you start stealing that shit. McStupid, the premature evacuator....
That's Kentucky.
I'm down. I'm Texan, but my whole family is from Georgia. Not really accurate, but comedically understood.
Happy to see the Georgia state get a cameo we’re dying from lack of interest here
Just wait until the elections start. Media will be jacking you off like crazy for the next couple weeks once they do.
I was _delighted_ to see that we got our 5 seconds in the limelight. Now, of course, I must politely request more.
Yes more of good ol GA
Gyro Jet 2.0 baby!
We see you Georgia, best wishes from the UK.
Jet guns... Well... I'm gonna tell him they're reinventing something
The Gyrojet is a family of unique firearms developed in the 1960s named for the method of gyroscopically stabilizing its projectiles. Rather than inert bullets, Gyrojets fire small rockets called Microjets which have little recoil and do not require a heavy barrel or chamber to resist the pressure of the combustion gases. Velocity on leaving the tube was very low, but increased to around 1,250 feet per second (380 m/s) at 30 feet (9.1 m). The result is a very lightweight and transportable weapon.
Long out of production, today they are a coveted collector's item with prices for even the most common model ranging above $1,000. They are rarely fired; ammunition, when available at all, can cost over $200 per round.
"Love your work!"😂😂😂Pretty sure we have the technology to clone Simo.......🤔🤔
"Look at you, telling the truth and shit.." Priceless!!!!!!😆😆😆
Russia: "Wait! NO!"😨
As a georgian (state), you have represented the general attitude towards outsiders and people from atlanta.
He's actually doing an impression of a character named Crazy Earl from borderlands lol
Uh-oh... Finland entering that USSR PTSD arc again 💀
Nah they always been in it. They got more bunkers under buildings than a doomsday prepper
@@wanderingaceminecraftandmo8034 talking about the snow phase, bub💀
@@wanderingaceminecraftandmo8034 Helsinki alone has what is basically an underground city that can house up to 900k people. Also almost every church, supermarket and apartment building is by law required to have a Bomb shelter in it. Also Finns build Bridges with spots for mines so engineers can easily detonate and collapse them. Roads leading to east are built in such a manner that they make a funnel if you happen to cross the border AND some tunnels are built through bedrock so they can be blocked easily as well slowing an advance. Highways can be used as landing strips for aircraft. And so much more. Attacking Finland is like attacking a fortress the size of a nation
@@aleksiheija8170 Finland is a nation shaped by not seeking war, but being prepared for it. That is certain
@@wanderingaceminecraftandmo8034 When everyone else prepared for nuclear war with just diplomacy, we Finns also made bomb shelters. Since nukes never stopped being a thing, we never stopped making bomb shelters.
Winged Hussars, White Death, Aegis... the references are getting spookier and spookier.
As a born a raised Georgia boy i can see that voice for Georgia.
I lived in GA for a while! Accent was spot on 😂😂
I'm from Alabama and I agree😂
Damm straight the only thing wrong about it was a yankee saying it y'all are wrong for that
from Georgia: he got it perfect. 60% of GEorgians are like that, the other 40 just want to chill and drink a beer.
@@firebert123 yep, I think I've drank beer w most of the 40
I'm actually from Georgia. Hardly anyone outside of Savannah still uses that accent.
A jet gun? With all the weaponry we have we could build a Gundam!
We don't have sustainable Fusion Reactors yet, so they would end up being those battery-powered ones from the SEED timeline. And I am way too poor and sober to deal with the idea of geneticly engineered super humans right now.
Form the shuffle alliance?
Giant robots of any variety would have to be scaled down to be practical, which is a good thing. Gundams and suits like it are too bulky. Something like the Macross robots are already possible, though. Not with transforming, but scale. You could just scale up a boston dynamics robot with a cockpit and you're there. 40 foot maybe? Still big and intimidating without wrecking cities by walking, and it wouldn't sink into the ground too far.
@@crazyjoeshorts5256God it is so cool to see Macross/Robotech get some love on an HLC video.
Wonder how hard it would be just to get the G and F configs working? The full Battleroid seems a little excessive and unnecessary for terrestrial combat, excluding the possibility by invasion from 40-foot tall extraterrestrial humanoids and the need to conduct infantry combat against.
@@barbatosmcmurderton4209no need. Fission works just fine. Just need a little more shielding. Anything smaller would run on diesel or LPG ICE or turbine electric w/ a small battery backup.
The US Navy is working on integrating PAC 3 onto its AEGIS destroyers and the missiles can be quad packed into its VLS... would love to hear your thoughts
"Going into a battle of wits completely unarmed." Such an understatement 🤣
I thought he was going to announce that in the spirit of the A10, and the AC130, that we were going to build another aircraft that only exists in order to make a gun fly.
AC-130 started as a cargo plane.
@@Battleship009 that is a factual statement.
2:10 The missile knows where it is, because it knows where it isn't...
2nd comment. Feel proud my friend.
When Finland asked for sniper rifles I was just waiting for Simo reference! As always you do NOT disappoint. A good day to you and yours and happy Memorial day!
Non-American here, so correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't Memorial Day usually around the last weekend of May?
The 27 of this month is the last Monday in the month of May. That is how it is determined when memorial day and weekend occur. We honor thos who fallen in the line of duty and those that have served and currently are. Hope that clears it up a bit.
@@Austin1723 Yes, the day itself is the last Monday of May, but the whole weekend is considered "Memorial Day Weekend" (and the Indy 500 race always takes place on the Sunday before Memorial Day)
‘Fine! Come back nevuh’ 😂
had me dyin'
Crazy Earl from borderlands
Oh, that was a good episode. Plenty of burn time in it. Very humorous. 😊
Found the channel a few weeks ago and just love what you do. Funny enough I feel I get better more accurate world news from you than msm
Georgian law is actually quite questionable.
Authoritarian regimes all over the world use similar laws to oppress their opposition media.
Indeed. Like most sinister things, it only sounds good. But that breaks down when you realize that it'll be the government implementing this. A government that has a vested interest in labeling certain dissenters as "unpatriotic."
If you trust any government to apply a law equally, then I got a bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.
and it's basically a copy of russia's same law, but Georgia is run by a russian oligarch so it's no surprise to people in that region, unfortunately for them. they're protesting like hell against it. they're a lot braver than the russian citizens that sit at home and pout
@@ame7165 The consequences for protesting in Georgia, admittedly, is a little less grave than for Russians. (Though recently it’s getting to those levels, so at this point who knows). I will say that there’s just a lot of Russians who have been brainwashed since birth and just believe whatever is spouted on Russian state tv which is *very* unfortunate.
But yes, the *amazing* amount of people and especially younger generation who are fighting for their country is awesome.
The missile knows where it is at all times. It knows this because it knows where it isn't.
The US has talked about making sure its warfighters can continue the fight in a GPS compromised environment for a couple of decades now. I feel confident that our defense industry accounts for that contingency in the design of our smart weapons.
Funny thing is, all they need to do is go lower tech. Map and compass, inertial navigation, astrolobe, radio navigation, the list goes on. That's ignoring any new methods they have probably developed.
They do. ALL US missile systems are REQUIRED to have backups in case GPS is unavailable for some reason. Knocking out the GPS network would be more of a problem for DoorDash than for the military.
@@avroarchitect1793theres automated star navigation and radar terrain mapping too.
1:50 also, the US and Isreal both recently scored exoatmoshperic intercepts a few weeks back.
I love everytime finland shows up and reminds everyone they produced the deadliest sniper in human history...by far my favorite person learning about when studying the world wars
That "life to your president" line was perfection 😂
Ah yes, we’ve come full circle from muskets to automatic weapons to freaking steroid abusing Nerf Guns 🤣
Don't forget the GMD program, and the fact that our drones can supply GPS functions incase satellites are being jammed or not functional.
I mean, I don't think anybody who works with US equipment would ever say it's perfect. They're always coming up with ways to make it better. But yes, our equipment *is* better than just about everything else on the planet.
Getting some Borderlands "Crazy Earl" vibes from the state Georgia with that "come back nevah!"
So thats where Crazy Earl is hanging out right now
This one got it 🤣
"Whatchu want? Don't you hurry back!
Where are you, Skrappy? Skrappy-y-y-y!"
Such a fun character!
As a resident of the State of Georgia, Great accent.
@2:00 - I don't know about Aegis, but i do know that everything in the US Military that flies has an internal inertail navigation system, and the GPS is a SECONDARY system used to increase the precision of the INS unit. This includes GPS-guided bombs and missiles.
Killing GPS sats is gonna fuck up commercial aviation for the entire world, but the only impact you'll notice for the US military will be that the CEP of a JDAM increases from 5' to 50'.
Funny how you made Georgia sound like Crazy Earl from Borderlands.
Its exactly how i pictured the state to sound in my head.
As far as I'm concerned this guy is the voice of America
"life to your president!!!!" 😂
KOBE!
I’m surprised by now America hasn’t just decided.
“Hey. Them Gundam things. They seem plausible.”
Of they did but it's classified and we'll find out 30 years after they built it when china gets around to building a cheap knockoff.
We tried, but Japan took us to court over copyright infringement.
To be fair someone else would have to make Zakus first.
ZAKU is a little advanced. We need something like a GINN first. Walk before you run.
Japan has gundams already. One can't move much, one can't move at all, and one I think they gave up and went with a patlabor instead.
Simo Hayha, White Death. What a story, thanks to Count Dankulas video I actually know of him.
Fuck.... i forgot about count dank. Dude lost hella weight.
Gps signals are so easy to jam. Inertial nav and terrain reading is the future.
I got to visit Georgia a little while back. Beautiful place to visit, lots to see, terrific food. Many Georgians speak English too.
HLC- ‘Just felt like killing a satellite with a boat’
Kid- ‘Now a BOAT is getting more action than me?!’
Just a tip USAF if you don’t want the kid downing ALL of the Russian satellites, best to put another pad lock on the hanger 😂
Probably a few more padlocks then just one.
Maybe for safety reasons buy an entire stores worth of pad locks. But still that might not be enough. 😂
Probably best to keep him from watching McNally or LPL while we're at it.
As long as it isnt a masterlock
😂
Simo maybe too short in the family tree but Simo's Secret Sniper School sounds gangster enough to short the whole title using the sound of S as you blow on your pointy finger silence sign.
"It uses hyper pressurized hot air."
Ah hell yeah let's go weaponize bending. Gotta start with Fire, fire of course so many destructive capabilities, maybe Air next Airbending is SO heckin OP and NO ONE RESPECTS IT (Gyatso and Yangchen out here showing why it's so dangerous love that for them). Then Earth we can just pull a Kyoshi and RAISE THE SEA FLOOR (this happened in her books via Avatar State GOD what a woman) then finally Water we can just pull a Katara and see about bloodbending some mfs.
3:29 The President Joke goes hard 🔥🚁💥
For those curious about his Aegis reference their are GPS systems that work based off the sun, they can accurately measure the time it takes to reach them and essentially determine their position off of that.
"Jet Gun"
COD Zombies players: **nervous sweating**
Thunder gun when?
*bus horn honk*
@@DebilNo4Mk1AAHH
as an Estonian, that finnosh accent needs A LOT of work
Tät iss veri truu, pekause in finland vee speek laik tis. Rallienglanti, juu nou.
That *comeback nevuh* was perfect
I love how your Georgia (the state) character is like an Evil Jimmy Carter! 😂
Georgia being Crazy Earl from borderlands is so funny.
Georgia was to Brod. Atlanta like that.
YOU'RE IN THE SNIPER'S SIGHT!
THE FIRST KILL TONIGHT
@@Andrei-ri2cm SAY GOODBYE
@@enderborn6860 AFTER THE DAWN WHEN MORNING HAS BROKEN
But he packed snow in his mouth, we can't see him. What snip-
George’s hostile because they have all those Nissan Altimas, acting like missiles in the streets of Atlanta 😂
ATL is crazy yall literally got an interstate underneath the airports runway.
Cool ass feat of engineering.
@@someguyfromtheinternet5102 said interstate is also one of the deadliest interstates in the country (I-285)
@@owenhardy7035 Lol. Lies. Come to texas and get on I 35. We got more deaths on one highway then yall do in the whole stste.
Bruh that Simo line though. Maybe the most underrated human in history.
As a Cod Zombies Veteran...My definition of 'Jet Gun' is a Dumpster Fire