- 8
- 25
- 3
- 15
Found on Reddit.
Backstory:
All I know is he was at the gun range and someone pulled a gun on him and it was a 10mm
- 20
- 40
Classic 2013 video of some Syrian rebels trying to target a Government jet become the target & get obliterated.
Please contact if it's a repost.
Big thanks to the Syria Tube yt channel!
- 1
- 32
The first case of hitmen on Wednesday, September 20, in the city of Durán , adjacent to Guayaquil, was reported before 8:45 a.m.: a 22-year-old man was murdered in the market of the fifth stage of Recreo .
Residents of the sector say that the victim was a known drug user in the sector and that he collaborated in the market. According to witnesses, he was fleeing from his executioners and was shot among the merchants.According to the images from the market's security cameras, which were released after noon, the hitman looked as young as the victim.
The one at the market would be the first in daylight, after at 4:30 in the morning a man who was riding a bicycle was shot in the Los Helechos sector. The day before, nine people were murdered by hitmen in different places in the city. Six injuries were also reported.
So far this year, 195 people have died from hitmen.
Durán, a city of 135 thousand inhabitants, is an area in dispute by drug trafficking gangs since it became the collection site for large shipments of drugs waiting to be shipped on one of the ships that leave for Europe or the United States. from some of the city's ports.
- 9
- 67
Spokane, Washington, United States
July 23, 1944
During World War Two war shows, like airshows today, were a popular way the military drummed up a patriotic spirit in local communities. The shows demonstrated military equipment to awe viewers and show just what all of the homefront efforts had produced.
Spokanintes were looking forward to attending the “Stay On The Job” war show on the afternoon of July 23, 1944. The show was conceived by Spokane air service command deputy commander Colonel Paul Schidecker to encourage the workers of the Inland Northwest to keep working to produce military equipment and vehicles. By having mock firefights and air battles to show how effective the equipment was in use along with how much wear and tear they underwent, the SPASC hoped to curve the high turnover rate the defense industry was seeing.
With the show beginning at 3 P.M., a crowd of over 100,000 viewers gathered in a natural amphitheater north of Spokane to watch the parades, weapons demonstrations, aerial maneuvers, and bomb droppings. About half an hour after the show began, during the parade of military aircraft the crowd's attention was called to three A-25 dive-bombers flying into sight. Moments later tragedy struck as two of the planes collided and fell to the ground, bursting into flames. The crowd initially believed the explosions to be a part of the show, which promised realism, but soon they began to realize just what they had witnessed. Crews rushed to control the fires, and after a 45-minute interruption, the show continued. The next day it was announced that four men died in the crash, two pilots and two engineers.
The deaths of these young men lived on, in a sense, in the 1956 science fiction film Earth vs. the Flying Saucers. Film crews recording the event caught the accident on camera and the footage of the two planes crashing and exploding became stock footage for Hollywood movies.