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The Left is in a no-win situation.

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President Trump:

“My beloved Space Force… it’s turning out to be very important. They tried to end that, but the military refused to allow that to happen.”

Read between the lines… 😉😜😎

https://t.co/kKdHzOJuoG

Hi SpaceForce

Space Force for the .win

u/#q4509

That is all I will say for now. Love you all and blessed to be here at this amazing site during these incredible times. Best is yet to come.

More to come.....

u/#prayer

u/#noah

😉😜😎

"Use other platforms as a form of centralized command and Control"

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https://greatawakening.win/p/1ARwwmOSW9/youre-gonna-love-this

do not know why this didn't get stickied, it's cool and raises a lot of questions https://www.ingersolllockwood.com/

there are songs that talk about the great awakening and say "ncswic"

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Former Space Force analyst who shot and killed Colorado teen sentenced to 54 years in prison

Updated: August 15, 2025 / 10:21 PM MDT

A former U.S. Space Force signals intelligence analyst was sentenced to decades behind bars in Colorado on Friday for shooting two suspected teen car thieves and killing one of them.

An Adams County judge sentenced Orest Schur, of Aurora, to 54 years in prison following his conviction in June.

Schur was a sergeant in the Army before he transferred to work at Buckley Space Force Base until the end of his service a year ago.

In July 2023, Schur chased the 13 and 14-year-olds down in the 19500 block of East 58th Circle after allegedly catching them trying to take his wife's car.

Although they didn't succeed in taking the car, Shur chased after them. Investigators say Schur started shooting at them and wounded the 13-year-old with a gunshot wound to the back.

He ultimately killed 14-year-old Xavier Kirk. Neither of the boys were armed, and the investigation found 11 shots were fired even as the boys ran away.

Family members spoke at the sentencing, asserting that the teens made a mistake, but didn't deserve to die.

One family member said, "You know, kids make mistakes, and so, I always teach my kids in my family, like my nephews and nieces, about consequences and repercussions.

We're not trying to excuse any wrongdoing of Xavier, or wrong they were involved in. The part that's messed up is Orest Shur's car was never stolen."

The judge said Schur, a discharged soldier, should have known not to take lethal action that night.

Prosecutors read a statement in Friday afternoon's court hearing written by the teen who survived.

It said, "An adult chose to use deadly force against two unarmed teenagers. That is not justice, that is not safety, that is not accountability. I survived, but I am not the same.

My friend didn't survive at all. And no matter what we did that night, I didn't deserve to be shot, and Xavier didn't deserve to die."

Before his sentencing, Schur addressed the court and pleaded for mercy, stating, "I am sorry for the events that occurred that night, for the pain, for the grief and trauma that have followed and for the impact that my case had on so many lives.

Schur will serve 36 years in prison for one count of second degree murder. For the count of attempted murder in the second degree, he will serve 18 years.

The maximum overall sentence he could have received was 80 years in prison. The minimum was 26. He was taken away to begin his sentence immediately.

https://www.cbsnews.com/colorado/news/orest-schur-murder-colorado-teenager-xavier-kirk-sentenced-prison/

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Link in a reply to a fren asking for a clip! In his Iowa rally speech last night, Trump said that the Biden admin tried to eliminate Space Force in the first year of the Biden term but the military stopped the effort. I find that highly interesting.

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This colossal US space weapon just changed the game for satellite defense

July 2, 2025

A U.S. Space Force “mothership” in low Earth orbit will soon carry and deploy satellites or defensive drones on demand---slashing replacement times from months to hours and redefining space warfare.

Revolutionizing Space Deployment with Orbital Carriers

Imagine a giant depot floating 500 km above Earth, able to launch replacement satellites or interceptors at a moment’s notice.

That’s the vision behind the U.S. Space Force’s orbital carrier concept, developed by Gravitics, Inc. and funded under the Defense Department’s SpaceWERX innovation arm¹.

Unlike traditional expendable rockets, this reusable platform functions as a floating “garage,” stocked with spares, sensor pods, and defensive drones---ready to respond instantly when assets in orbit are threatened.

On-Demand Launches: A New Era in Space Strategy

Until now, deploying or replacing satellites meant booking a launch years in advance---often delayed by weather or launch manifest backlogs.

The orbital carrier flips that model: spacecraft are pre-staged, maintained in orbit, and dispatched within hours rather than months.

It’s the spaceborne analogue of a naval aircraft carrier, shifting the paradigm from static assets to a dynamic, ready-response force.

Addressing Threats in Orbit

Space has become increasingly contested: adversaries test jamming equipment and explore anti-satellite missiles.

The orbital carrier counters these threats by providing rapid replacement of damaged satellites and hosting interceptor drones or electronic-warfare payloads.

In a domain where every minute counts, this capability delivers a decisive edge in protecting warfighting and communications networks.

STRATFI: Accelerating Innovation and Deployment

Central to the program’s swift progress is the Strategic Funding Increase (STRATFI) initiative, which condenses acquisition timelines from a decade to under two years.

Gravitics’ STRATFI award ensures the orbital carrier moves from prototype to full-scale orbital demonstrations as early as 2026---an unprecedented pace for a military space capability².

A New Era of Space Defense: Questions and Challenges Ahead

While the orbital carrier promises game-changing resilience, it also raises critical questions: Might it spur a new logistics race among great powers? How will existing space treaties govern a militarized, crewed platform in orbit?

Whatever the answers, the ability to launch and defend satellites on demand marks a fundamental shift in space strategy---one that could determine who commands the final frontier.

Footnotes

https://jasondeegan.com/this-colossal-us-space-weapon-just-changed-the-game-for-satellite-defense-2/

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