The charm takes too long and gets lousy results. I don’t recommend it.
Павличенко отвезли на фронт и вручили винтовку. Там наблюдатель указал на двух румынских солдат, которые работали с немцами по другую сторону линии фронта. Тогда наблюдатель сказал Павличенко убить их, вероятно, думая, что она не захочет или не сможет. Так что представьте себе его удивление, когда Павличенко снял их за несколько секунд. Очевидно, что женщина, которая только что убила двух человек на большом расстоянии, не тот человек, которому вы хотите сказать «нет». И Павличенко начал обучение на снайпера.
Ludmilla Pavlichenko was the real thing.
Pavlichenko was taken to the front and handed a rifle. There, the observer pointed to two Romanian soldiers who worked with the Germans on the other side of the front line. Then the observer told Pavlichenko to kill them, probably thinking that she would not want or could not. So imagine his surprise when Pavlichenko took them off in a few seconds. Obviously, the woman who just killed two people at a great distance is not the person you want to say no to. And Pavlichenko started training as a sniper. Thanks enjoyed that.
I’ve posted this here, priorly: (minor edits)
In any large PD, there are no “GOOD” cops. None. The “good” cops know who the “bad” cops are, and do nothing turn away so they can say they didn’t see it. They literally cannot because of their (?guessing here) “blue code”. Best screen example; Sgt. Gordon in the Batman movie. What could he do? Who could he tell? Yeah, I know. It was only a movie, but still illustrative.
Yeah, I know; there are a lot of “good” officers that are known. ASK THEM if there are any “bad cops” on their force. Watch their eyes when they answer. (Though, some are VERY good at lying!)
Edited
I think it’s cool to honor and recognize women in the military and who have made achievement heights in sharp shooting, including olympic sports.
If I could only figure out how to “pull” the trigger in between beats. If anyone knows how to time it such that I pull in between beats, please “do tell”. LOL.
For their contributions and their motivating our youth – both young women and young men.
I wonder when it comes to police officers treating civilians respectfully during a stop or arrest, if female officers tend to keep a “cooler head”. IDK if there’s such a research study on that?
Might it be important for a law enforcement agencies to get better at screening and vetting “all” workers before hiring them?
What all makes for a real good price officer? Dozens of characteristics?
Thinking about all the roles a good officer fills. Including in domestic violence, child safety, detectives, investigating, homeland security, administrative, leadership, education and training.
There were a few times when officers “helped” me. On more than one occasion, the officer was a lady.
How most of us have sisters, wives, daughters, mothers; Society might also need and benefit from female officers and their professional contributions.
It’s rare a good cop will snitch on a bad one. Once the good cop is tagged as a snitch – his or her career is over.
That happened to this female Florida Highway Patrol Trooper Donna “Jane” Watts when she arrested speeding police officer, Fausto Lopez, in 2011. She clocked Lopez driving 120 mph on the highway and ignoring her signal to pull over.
She arrested Lopez immediately for speeding and reckless driving and took him to the slam.
Ever since, the other cops shun her, she can’t get promoted, etc. Not sure, but I think she finally got tired of it and quit.
You’ll not want your heart to stop beating. If it does, you’re in big trouble.
Try shooting the rifle more and more, until it’s all second nature.
The oil rig example is a poor example. I work in the energy sector, what your trying to say here simply isn’t true.
What do you mean? The oil rig is something most men can’t even do.