GREAT MUSIC REMIX VERSION🇺🇸🏆”TRY THAT IN A SMALL TOWN”🎬🎤🎼🎧🎸💫

1 year ago
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AMAZING REMIX OF **TRY THAT IN A SMALL TOWN** GOES VIRAL;~
Another American Patriot Made A Music Remix Of **Try That In A Small Town**
This Patriot Just Score Highly~Adding His Own Words To The Lyrics Of An Amazing Song By Jason Aldean—Try That In A Small Town—!!…!!…

https://rumble.com/v1topew-trump-is-america-hope-and-freedom.html

Dark Hat Lloyd Austin💂‍♀️To White Hat General Smith-Release His Men Or Else🚨👨‍🚀🐝
https://realrawnews.com/2023/08/lloyd-austin-to-general-smith-release-my-men-or-else/

United States Marines have detained a U.S. Army National Guard captain who arrived at Camp Pendleton’s gates claiming to hold an urgent message for General Eric M. Smith’s eyes only, a source in the general’s office told Real Raw News.

The Tuesday incident occurred at 4:30 p.m., when the captain, wearing his Class A uniform, approached Pendleton’s Las Pulgas gate in a black sedan and told sentries that he had “come for General Smith,” a poor choice of words. The vigilant Marine sentinels recognized the captain’s insignia as belonging to the 40th Infantry Division at Los Alamitos Joint Forces Training Base, California, a facility plagued with malefic officers loyal to the criminal Biden regime.

The Marines yanked the dapper captain from the vehicle, hurled him to the pavement, stood him up, handcuffed him behind his back, and meticulously frisked him. One marine slid a circular mirror affixed to an aluminum pole under the sedan, looking for explosives. Having diligently searched the captain and his car and found only a manilla envelope marked ‘for General Eric M. Smith’s eyes only,’ the Marines phoned in the intrusion and awaited the arrival of military police.

As the MPs interrogated the shaken and bruised captain at a security building, the envelope and letter were screened for harmful substances such as fentanyl, anthrax, and ricin—no toxins were found.

The captain said he was a messenger tasked with ensuring that Gen. Smith received the letter and that he had no ill will for “the Good Marines at Pendleton,” adding that his garrison commander, Lt. Col. Manju Vig, ordered him to hand-deliver the envelope and return to base.

However, Vig had not written the letter. It was authored by Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, who forwarded it to Vig, who then delegated the captain to bring it to Pendleton. He wanted to leave in peace but was told he wasn’t going anywhere until Gen. Smith read the letter and decided what to do with him. An MP inquired about the captain’s allegiances, asking who he considered to be commander-in-chief of the armed forces. He responded, “President Joseph R. Biden,” footnoting his answer with, “We may have disagreements over who’s calling the shots, but we wear similar uniforms and took the same oath.”

Our source said that General Smith received the letter approximately two hours later as he was preparing to retire for the evening. The missive was another of Austin’s endless and unenforceable ultimatums, this time commanding Gen. Smith to immediately release Cpt. David Dunbar and CSM Nema Mobarakzadeh, the 10th Mountain Division’s staff officer and senior NCO, respectively, whom U.S. Marines apprehended on July 30.

“Dunbar and Mobarrka—I can’t pronounce his damn name. They’re at Camp Blaz now,” our source said.

Interestingly, the letter did not mention the 165 soldiers in custody or the four officers arrested by Special Forces in Germany.

Austin referred to Dubar and Mobarakzadeh as “hostages” and Gen. Smith as a “terrorist betraying his constitutional oath.” He wrote, “Your alliance with former President Trump puts the men you command in greater danger daily. When you fall, they will too. It’s inevitable. But in the meantime, you can do yourself a favor by setting free Captain Dunbar and Command Sergeant Major Mobarakzadeh. Heed this command, or we’ll come for them and for you. Your fate is ordained; the outcomes of those serving you are still to be seen.”

Our source said Gen. Smith put the letter in a shredder and ordered Pendleton MPs to detain its deliverer until further notice. He said Deep State panjandrums once again failed to intimidate Gen. Smith.

Asked whether anyone at Pendleton knew why Austin chose such a circuitous delivery route—instead of sending the letter by email or post—he said, “Only Austin’s demented mind knows why. The coward sure wasn’t going to drop it off himself. And Captain [name withheld] clamped up the second we told him he wasn’t going home.”

Note: We have withheld the captain’s name at the request of Gen. Smith’s office.

White Hats Military C.I.D Arrest Dark Hat Army Recruiter💂‍♂️🚨👩‍🚀🐝
https://realrawnews.com/2023/08/army-cid-arrests-black-hat-army-recruiter/

Investigators from the Army’s Criminal Investigation Division (CID) have found and arrested a former Army Staff Seargent (E-6) who bribed future enlistees to take part in the Deep State’s war against President Donald J. Trump and his supporters, sources in Gen. Eric M. Smith’s office told Real Raw News.

As reported last week, a few of the 165 Fort Drum soldiers in White Hat Custody revealed to investigators that military recruiters visiting High Schools had singled out students who disliked Trump and promised them $5,000 a month plus base pay to enlist and await further orders. Those accepting the offer were eventually assigned to companies and platoons loyal to Lloyd Austin and the criminal Biden regime.

Our source said White Hats pulled and reviewed the soldiers’ personnel files.

“Someone with much authority redacted, blacked out, recruitment details on 145 files, the recruitment stations, the station commanders, and the recruiters’ names. Only a bigwig at the DOD could do that, and it has complicated our job because only four of these guys are talking. Three remembered their recruiters’ names, and two were recruited by the same sergeant at the same high school the same year,” our source said.

Former SSG Jayden Carter enlisted in the Army following his senior year at Central High School in Philadelphia; he graduated in the bottom 10% of all graduating students that year. His SAT score was abysmally below average. He passed the armed forces placement exam by only 4 points, scoring 35 out of 100, limiting his military career options. He attended infantrymen (11 Bravo) Basic Combat Training and Advanced Individual Training at Fort Benning in 2016, after which he was assigned to the 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum, where he excelled and apparently pleased his chain of command. In 2020, as his contract neared fulfillment, his commanding officer encouraged reenlistment, promising Carter a letter of recommendation to the Army’s Basic Leadership Course. Carter accepted the offer and completed the course with excellence, whereafter he returned to Fort Drum and was quickly promoted to sergeant.

Six months later, he requested to attend the Army Drill Sergeant School at Fort Jackson, South Carolina. Again, he surpassed expectations as would a college valedictorian and completed the 65-day course. He then returned to the place of his military genesis, Fort Benning, instructing future 11 Bravos how to fight and, hopefully, stay alive on the modern battlefield.

In January 2022, Carter received orders reassigning him to the Army Recruiter Course at Ft. Knox. Upon graduating, his MOS changed from 11 Bravo to 79 Romeo (Army recruiter), and he was placed at a recruitment station in his hometown of Philadelphia, at which point he, defying all odds, metrics, and requirements, was promoted to the rank of Staff Seargent ahead of others who had more time-in-grade.

In April of that year, Carter visited his old high school and–as is described in a previous article–convincingly persuaded at least two students—now PFC Malik Johnson and PFC Jamar Davis—to enlist with an understanding that they might be called to action to defend Joseph Biden from his enemies, fellow soldiers and civilians who still endorsed Donald Trump.

For reasons unknown, Carter in June 2023 requested and received an early discharge, approved by Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin. Although such requests are commonly denied sans extenuating circumstances, 10 USC 1171 states that any regular enlisted member of an armed force may be discharged within one year before the expiration of the term of his enlistment or extended enlistment. Carter did not meet the established criteria.

When Army CID decided to arrest Carter on charges of treason, aiding and abetting the enemy, bribery, insubordination, and treason, they encountered an obstacle because none of Carter’s separation paperwork had a forwarding address. Interviews with family and acquaintances led investigators to believe that Carter had magically become wealthy and was living a lavish lifestyle in the Virgin Islands. Carter, it turned out, had bought a $850,000 beachfront home in St. Thomas, where he cruised the tropical nirvana in a $140,000 Audi R8 sports coupe. While Carter’s impoverished siblings and mother lived in destitution in Philadelphia, he squandered fistfuls of cash at pricey bars, brothels, and strip clubs. His wanton spending and chronic inebriation put a bullseye on his back, simplifying the task of arresting Carter after he drunkenly stumbled out of a beachside bar Wednesday night.

“From what our friends at CID told us, Carter could barely stand. They read him the charges even though he was probably too damn drunk to understand and took him in. They flew him stateside. Once he sobered up, he flipped out seeing himself in handcuffs on a flight back to the U.S. As far as we know, he isn’t talking. What we do know is he must’ve done a hell of a lot more than recruiting two Black Hats to get that kind of cash. CID will handle the first interrogations, then he’ll go to Camp Blaz. One sure thing is that the Army doesn’t just swap out someone’s MOS. He must’ve asked for it and someone out there was pulling some strings. He was a stellar soldier until he turned. What a shame,” our source said.

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