Hearted Youtube comments on T-SPLY (@TSPLY) channel.

  1. 6
  2. 6
  3. 6
  4. 6
  5. 6
  6. 6
  7. 6
  8. 6
  9. 6
  10. 6
  11. 6
  12. 6
  13. 6
  14. 6
  15. 6
  16. 6
  17. 6
  18. 6
  19. 6
  20. 6
  21. 6
  22. 6
  23. 6
  24. 6
  25. 6
  26. 6
  27. 6
  28. 5
  29. 5
  30. 5
  31. 5
  32. This is why you can't buy civilian body armor. Whether that dragon skin crap works or not - you can't buy your own body armor because you have companies like Wish, and Amazon that sell cheap knock offs of real stuff and say it's the real deal. Do you know where your local surplus store is sourcing their body armor they're selling to you? No. You don't. Do you have data from tests on it? No. You don't. Military issued ESAPI plates do work. I have seen them work first hand. And yes, individual equipment sucked in the early 2000s. So did the technology around individual body armor as well. Plus, it's war. The enemy has a vote and they're doing everything to kill you. The response to this was the Armys IOTV concept which essentially turned soldiers into turtles with so much body armor they couldn't move. But when you allow soldiers to use the open market on protective equipment such as body armor. You open the door for alot of liabilities. These aren't vigilantes going out and keeping people off their lawn. They're soldiers assigned to teams with missions to conduct. When that soldier gets wounded or killed. The burden becomes much heavier on the remainder of the team - plus the dude just died of is forever maimed and that is horrible enough already. Now. How would you feel if your homie died because he bought some trash on wish, and he'd be alive if he wore what was issued to him? It's hard to debate between private market and issued market. However. It's the military and you don't necessarily need to have a vote in the matter.
    5
  33. 5
  34. 5
  35. 5
  36. 5
  37. 5
  38. 5
  39. 5
  40. 5
  41. 5
  42. 5
  43. 5
  44. 5
  45. 5
  46. 5
  47. 5
  48. 5
  49. 5
  50. 5