Sick bastards.
Posts by Titán
Sick bastards. They should be skinned alive.
Pedophiles calling other people animals?
The Epstein Class in America and Israel are killing the planet, bombing civilians, and bragging about genocide.
“Beeper Type”. “Wet sand”. “Boom Boom” “They came in hard” The president of the United Stares mumbling
The real flex isn’t having something to say.
It’s having something to show. And they show up with shit all the time.
When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross" ..(often attributed to Sinclair Lewis) .. (cartoon David Horsey)
I was aware of certain aspects of the operation as it unfolded. However, the lives of many of our best was in danger and did not comment due to the threat involved.
21/ You walked out of the mountains.
JPRA makes sure the knowledge
never stays there.
I attended NAVY SERE at 19 and later level 3 SERE in SOF at 26. And also became an instructor.
24/
By the end, the story isn’t yours anymore.
It becomes curriculum.
Taught in rooms where someone else will sit one day,
not knowing they’re about to live it.
23/ Nothing is wasted.
That 7-mile climb?
Now doctrine.
Those hiding spots?
Now case study.
That restraint with comms?
Now instruction.
22/ Gear gets debriefed too.
• Beacon usage timing
• Survival kit effectiveness
• What you needed but didn’t have
Because the next version of the kit gets built off this room.
21/They’re looking for fractures.
Not in your body—
in your decision-making under stress.
Where did instinct override training?
Where did training save instinct?
20/Then comes the harder layer:
What did you feel?
Fatigue. Fear. Isolation.
Moments where discipline almost slipped.
Because SERE isn’t just physical
it’s psychological architecture.
19/
They’ll walk it back step by step:
Ejection → Movement → Hide sites → Comms → Recovery
Every decision gets audited.
Not to judge—
to refine the playbook.
This isn’t storytelling.
It’s pattern extraction.
• Did the enemy respond fast?
• What terrain worked?
• What almost got you killed?
Your survival becomes the next operator’s and pilots advantage.
18/ Enter JPRA — Joint Personnel Recovery Agency
They don’t celebrate you.
They reconstruct you.
First objective:
Stabilize the human. Extract the story.
What happened.
When.
Where.
Who saw you.
What you used.
Every detail becomes intelligence.
17/ the Rescue is loud.
Debrief is silent.
No applause. No adrenaline.
Just fluorescent lights, a chair, and questions that matter more than anything that just happened.
16/People call it a miracle.
It’s not.
It’s what happens when training meets pressure and nothing breaks. This what you train for so when everything breaks you keep pushing.
15/By the time rescue forces reached him, he hadn’t just survived—he had controlled the situation long enough to be recovered.
That’s the mission.
14/This is exactly what SERE is built for:
• Survive
• Evade
• Resist
• Escape
13/ For nearly 36–48 hours, he stayed ahead of the hunt.
No noise.
No patterns.
No mistakes. 
That’s evasion—not movement, but discipline.
Not theory.
A blueprint for moments like this.
12/That radio didn’t save him by itself. It worked because he used it with discipline—
moving, hiding, thinking like someone already being hunted.
11/SERE drills this hard:
Don’t over-communicate.
Don’t get comfortable.
Don’t assume you’re alone.
10/CSEL specifically is built for this dance:
• Satellite-based comms (beyond line-of-sight)
• Authentication protocols (so rescue knows it’s really you)
• Low probability of intercept
It’s not loud. It’s ghost comms
9/That’s why he used it in bursts.
Ping → silence
Ping → move
Ping → hide
Like tapping Morse code into the void, hoping only the right ears are listening.
8/The key feature: selective signaling
You don’t just turn it on and hope.
You control when you’re “visible” to friendly forces…
and invisible to everyone else.
7/This isn’t a walkie-talkie.
It’s a downed aircrew lifeline system:
• Secure comms (encrypted)
• GPS positioning
• Beacon signaling
• Two-way messaging with CSAE crews
6/ Even his lifeline was used carefully. That “lifeline” wasn’t just any radio.
It was a survival radio locator , most likely AN/PRQ-7 Combat Survivor Evader Locator
Small. Rugged. Built for worst-case scenarios.
Because the same signal that saves you…
can also expose you.
5/He hid smart.
Not just “in the mountains”—
in crevices, terrain breaks, places that distort visibility and heat signatures.
4/ No support.
Limited gear.
Enemy forces sweeping the area with a bounty on his head.
So he did what SERE teaches:
Evade and hide, don’t fight.