This is some cold shyt brehs & brehettes.
This is the brother
This is the brother
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What's the context? Did he say anything before or after that?
Like; "It's hard to see a soldier go, but he knew what signed up for".
I say harsher shyt all the in any context, so this doesn't bother me. Its the truth, but ultimately, the brother should've never joined, fukking fighting for your country, hit the reserves.
What's the context? Did he say anything before or after that?
Like; "It's hard to see a soldier go, but he knew what signed up for".
I say harsher shyt all the in any context, so this doesn't bother me. Its the truth, but ultimately, the brother should've never joined, fukking fighting for your country, hit the reserves.
No sympathy from me he was there to oppress Africans.
sounds like he was fighting arabs
RIP from the breh... south florida lost a real one. dude went from popping wheelies to the army
Johnson's family -- including his 2-year-old son and 6-year-old daughter -- were at the Miami International Airport waiting for the Delta Airlines flight that was bringing the casket with his remains. The Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Department welcomed him with a water salute.
The widow, who is expecting their third baby in January, leaned over the U.S. flag that was draping his casket. Her pregnant belly was shaking as she sobbed uncontrollably. Their daughter stood next to her stoically. Their toddler waited in the arms of a relative.
There was silence. Local politicians, police officers and firefighters lined up to honor him for his service and for the efforts and discipline that got the former Walmart employee to defy all odds as a 25-year-old member of the 3rd Special Forces Group at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
The procession traveled from Miami-Dade to Broward County. After moving eastbound on State Road 112, northbound traffic was closed on Interstate 95. Police officers and firefighters saluted their American hero. Some held their hands on their chest and there were tears. The procession arrived at the Fred Hunters Funeral Home in Hollywood about 6:25 p.m.
His body will remain there until a public viewing from 4 to 8 p.m., Friday, and a funeral service from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday, at the Christ The Rock Church, 11000 Stirling Rd., in Cooper City. The internment will be a the Hollywood Memorial Gardens, 3001 N. 72 St.
Johnson was fighting alongside Green Berets when he died. The group, which included a Nigerien patrol, didn't have U.S. overhead armed air cover when Islamic militants ambushed them Oct. 4 near the Niger border with Mali.
Johnson was left behind when French forces' helicopters scrambled to evacuate the soldiers, and it took nearly two days for Nigerien forces to find his body in the desert of the landlocked nation, according to the U.S. Africa Command.