• 🛑Hello, this board in now turned off and no new posting.
    Please REGISTER at Anabolic Steroid Forums, and become a member of our NEW community! 💪
  • 💪Muscle Gelz® 30% Off Easter Sale👉www.musclegelz.com Coupon code: EASTER30🐰

Amazing Movie!

[SIL]

AG'S DEMIGOD
Registered
Joined
Jan 30, 2011
Messages
5,916
Reaction score
2,961
Points
0
Location
DRSE HQ
IML Gear Cream!


cant wait..
 

Looks fantastic Sil.....I just can't wait for it to come out on cable....nothing like seeing a movie in the cheap seats..[my sofa] ..
 
I read the book...if it follows....gonna be epic.
 
cant wait to download it for free
 
holy fuck SIL your AVI is hot... well actually its kinda turning my stomach. but its fucking hilarious... well actually its kinda making me want to kill myself.
 
The US Navy Seal who went from Chris to Kristin

By Stuart Hughes BBC News
_69050688_chris_kristin.jpg


Chris Beck spent 20 years as an elite US Navy Seal, often operating in secret behind enemy lines. But the highly decorated serviceman was always hiding a deeper, personal secret - since early childhood, he felt he was a female born into a male body.
As a Navy Seal, Chris Beck's world was tough, macho, sometimes violent. He took part in covert missions from the Pacific Ocean to the Middle East and fought alongside members of Britain's SAS on the Shatt al-Arab waterway near Basra during the 2003 war in Iraq.
But in February, more than a year after retiring from the US Navy, he replaced the photograph on his LinkedIn profile with one of a tall brunette in a white blouse smiling in front of the Stars and Stripes and wrote "I am now taking off all my disguises and letting the world know my true identity as a woman." Chris had become Kristin.
As she awaited the reaction from her former brothers-in-arms, Kristin knew there was no going back from her decision to go public.


_69050690_chrisinuniform_624.jpg

Knowing the news would eventually spread beyond the tightly-knit Navy Seal community, Kristin decided to tell her story before someone else did.
Continue reading the main story ?Start Quote
The military needs to get past gender and look at people like me as a person, not just as a male or female?

She co-wrote a book, Warrior Princess: A US Navy Seal's Journey to Coming Out Transgender, with Anne Speckhard, a professor of psychiatry at Georgetown University in Washington DC. It charts her childhood in a religious and socially conservative household, her attempts to suppress her gender identity by secretly buying and then discarding women's clothes, and her two failed marriages.
"I was trying to live three lives," Kristin says. "I had a secret life with my female identity, I had my secret life with the Seal teams and then I had my home life and what I would show my wife and children or parents and friends.
"People would see snippets of the real me but for the most part nobody really got to know me."
_69050691_seals2.jpg

The rapid and aggressive tempo of special forces operations following the attacks of 11 September 2001, combined with an emotional life which she says was "totally squashed", took its mental toll on Kristin and she developed post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
She says that for years she dealt with the psychological impact of "so much death, so much pain" through "beer, motorcycles, more beer".
Yet she says coming out as transgender has had a "dramatic impact" on her PTSD symptoms. "I'm not as angry and I sleep better just because I'm happier," she says.
Continue reading the main story US Navy Seals

_69050692_seals4.jpg

US President John F Kennedy announced the creation of a Navy special operations force in 1961. The first teams were formed "to conduct counter guerilla warfare and clandestine operations"
The name Seals refers to where the teams operate - on sea, air and land
The maximum age to apply is 28. The gruelling training to become a Seal is said to be the toughest of any special forces in the world - the drop-out rate is believed to be about 80%
Navy Seals have been involved in some of the US military's most dangerous operations including in Vietnam, Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan
Seals took part in the raid on Bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in which the then US public enemy number one was killed

"So many people have said, 'Kris, for the first time in my life I've actually seen you smile.'"
The repeal of the "don't ask, don't tell" policy in 2011 ended the ban on openly gay men and women in the US military. That shift doesn't apply to transgender individuals, however, who can still be discharged if they are found out.
Kristin Beck believes that policy could, and should, change. She proposes allowing transgender service personnel to undergo gender reassignment in a military setting in return for extending their time in uniform once the process is complete.
"It's a human condition," she says. "The military needs to get past gender and look at people like me as a person, not just as a male or female, and understand that I can still do a great job. I may not be able to do all the jobs I was doing before but I can do something else. I could be an intelligence analyst or a security officer at a checkpoint.
"None of us are perfect. I'm not Conan the Barbarian and I'm not Barbie. We're all different."
Kristin says she would have preferred to go through her continuing gender transition in private, rather than in the glare of attention that has inevitably followed the publication of her book.
She says, however, that she is approaching her new role as an unofficial spokeswoman for the transgender community with the same "warrior spirit" - a sense of leadership and commitment to duty despite the odds - that defined her military career.
"I think I've saved some lives. I've had some heart-wrenching emails from people who are caught up in pain and prejudice and that does make it worthwhile," she says.
"I've also had emails from straight men who have said 'thank you for your service for our country. I never understood what this was but now I do.'"
"Fear of the unknown is the biggest problem and I think reading my book has helped break down that fear for many people," Beck says. "I'm not going to hurt anyone and I'm not contagious. I'm just me."
You can follow the Magazine on Twitter and on Facebook
 
IML Gear Cream!
obviously suffers from PTSD like Azza
 
i have a huge cock also
 
^^ spit it out its griff's
 
i?d bite someones cock off, i can rinse out my mouth but can you grow a new cock?
 
anyone else saw that @ 1:38

jhxy4k.png
 
or looking for a goat to marry
 
if they really follow the law they are supposed to either kill and burn the goat after they orgasm, or sell the meat to another village
 
IML Gear Cream!
the storyline reminds me of a battle of height 776 in 2000 where 90 russian paratroopers fought around 2000 chechen and foreign fighters..only 6 survived..muslim scum lost around 500

 
probably would have been easier to just carry the child out till they were clear then let him go. may have been able to get intel from him and reward him with his out goat to fuck
 
probably would have been easier to just carry the child out till they were clear then let him go. may have been able to get intel from him and reward him with his out goat to fuck

Or slot the silly little fuck, oh but! Where would film get it's fucking saccharine story hook and *message* from then?

Do you think we let little brown kids go when we took over half the world wearing bright red uniforms? Ha.
 
I still contend that the British Empire was the best thing to happen to the modern world.

It got shit done. Different coloured bastards were all savages plain and simple.
 
Looking forward to seeing this.
 
just watched it..wow what a fucking awesome movie!..i havent watched the movie so good in years..and ive cried like a bitch
 
Back
Top