There is something strangely heart-warming about the simple acknowledgement between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. that if aliens invaded either, the the other would come to the rescue.
Nuclear weapons are shockingly difficult to make work. To trigger a true, self-propagating fission chain reaction, the weapon has to work *perfectly,* with the timing of each component accurate down to tiny fractions of a second. If *anything* goes wrong, you get a conventional explosion tainted with radioactive material, but a nuclear detonation. They're are also perishable components that have to be regularly replaced, or, likewise, no boom. Even the ambient temperature of the weapon not being precisely managed can be enough to disrupt the mechanism of the weapon, to the point of failure. When nuclear "landmines" were considered to halt/slow a theorized Russian land invasion through Europe, one of the biggest obstacles was finding a way to keep the weapons warm enough to function, without having to rely on local electrical infrastructure to power climate control for the device (which could fail and/or lead the enemy to the mine). One solution was to a bunch of chickens in the mine's "bunker," with enough feed and water to keep them alive for several months, thus relying on the chicken's body-heat and the heat-generating decomposition of their waste to maintain proper ambient temperatures. Anyway, my point is that a lost device that isn't maintained, let alone pampered in the way they require, is almost certainly not going to remain a true a-bomb for very long.
Of course... as Reagan was stupid enough not to understand most of this "initiative" was pure science-fiction and nothing close to a valid project with realistic possible outcomes. The kindest you can say about the SDI is that it was a pure propaganda operation meant to fool the USSR into believing it was possible and then economically burying itself into the ground trying to keep up with this mirage. It would be a possible interpretation... if the US didn't actually spent tens of billions of dollars on that pile of BS which means they actually believed in their own BS.
In my senior high school one teacher was all about letting us know how imminent nuclear destruction was (including broken arrow things) and one comforted us with the glory of US policy (even though we were Canadian). Duck and cower.
The Able Archer 83 incident deserves a mention as one of the closest instances of accidental nuclear war during the Cold War. Able Archer 83 was a NATO military exercise in November 1983 simulating a nuclear war scenario. The exercise was unusually realistic, involving live troop mobilizations, encrypted communications, and high-level decision-making procedures. This heightened realism alarmed the Soviet Union, which misinterpreted it as a prelude to an actual nuclear strike by the U.S. and its allies. In response, the Soviet Union placed its nuclear forces on high alert, preparing for the possibility of launching a retaliatory strike if further signs of an attack were detected.
I was on active duty when that happened and a cold shiver went down all of our spines on that day in November, but I don't know if you knew that there were several other instances like this one that happened in August 1981 and March 1982.
@@LeeZee-bt7dq This American has (at least AFTER the fact) become aware of how we had almost accidentally-provoked an actual nuclear response when all our forces were doing were 'being obnoxious to annoy the Soviets' or 'truly just innocently practicing multi-national NATO maneuvers'. That '81 to 82' era DEFINITELY saw the Soviets wound RIGHT THE HECK UP, and we had no idea how close we came to attacks at several points. And then in 1983, we all owe our continued existence to Stanislav Petrov, "The Man Who Saved The World". Ahaha! As I write this, the video mentions him at 5:50, how funny! But...yes, he truly, and I think single-handedly, managed to save us all from paranoia when that launch-detection system went awry.
One of those lost Cold War era bombs is near certainly not going produce a nuclear explosion. The critical nuclear fuel in bombs have a relatively short shelf life before they decay beyond being able to achieve critical mass. If just the conventional explosives went off it would be bad, but nowhere near *that* bad.
@@contumelious-8440 that depends on a lot of factors; especially what nuclear “fuel” the bomb uses and how well preserved it stays when it’s lost If it uses tritium, it’s half life is about 12 years so after a little more than a decade half of that fuel will be gone so it won’t be near as effective as when first lost. Tritium also decays into helium 3 which absorbs neutrons If it is only a fission device, if it uses Plutonium-239, its half life is about 24000 years so the “fuel” will still be viable for a long time, but the electronics and explosives for an “implosion device” around it to set it off will most likely corrode and fail long before the half lives, so that would probably be a couple decades before those fail The actinides are also very easily oxidized so if water gets in there, the core will probably corrode pretty quickly (a pourbaix diagram shows Plutonium turning into a bunch of soluble compounds so it will likely corrode) The design that would probably last the longest would be a well preserved simple “unga bunga” nuke like Little Boy, but I’m just spitballing here
I'd call the Department of Defense & put a dollar amount on the weapon along with a tour of Area 51, or the truth about the JFK assassination before handing over the weapon
Decoding the Unknown, he already did it about a month back. Though the existence of bots doesn't mean no one's here. I'm real, I presume you are as well (unless bots are calling out bots, though at this point I don't think that would be too surprising...)
@@mj.ray0898 a pre Milennial model, we both are. I mean humans. Squshe soft humans. I am definitely not a bored robot in a german factory waiting for the shift to begin
They weren't an enemy. Our government was scared of socialist ideas catching on here and taking them from power. The Cold War was a fantasy devised to divide people.
Retired USAF and spent a good amount of that time in the Cold War era in secure comms. Saw a lot of interesting stuff, touched nuke-tipped cruise missiles in a country that the US President denied they were, etc. Very interesting video clip Simon.
1:22 the first ones were 3.8 megaton, not 20… the US never fielded any that large. The biggest was a 15 megaton. The U.S. felt 1,000 times the Hiroshima bomb was large enough
The broken arrow most commonly known in my country happened in 1966 in south Spain, when a B-52G had an incident while refueling in flight from a KC-135 and both crashed. Four 1.1 megaton B28FI, Y1, Mod. 2 fell, of which one parachuted safely into land, one parachuted into the sea and two free fell (parachute failed) into the ground, suffering partial explosions that ejected plumes of plutonium dioxyde into the air (thankfully, fision didn't happen, so no big boom, only small boom). The radiactive cloud contaminated over 600 hectares of terrain that remained several thousands more radiactive than nuclear test sites for decades, and the one that fell into the sea remained there for almost 3 months. Despite the US army spending $80M on decontamination, the region the arrows got broken is still highly radiactive.
My teachers never did a single lesson on the cold war, so this could be a video about anything in the cold war. I learned just about everything I know outside the classroom
He had a really cool briefcase in From Russia With Love. Spent ages trying to recreate it in my childhood but never managed to get the nerve gas working properly.
@7:44, you are incorrect about the moniker "Star Wars." It was Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) who mockingly referred to what the Reagan administration called the "Strategic Defense Initiative" as "Star Wars." The press took to parroting Kennedy's appellation for SDI.
In France, _Démineurs_ are still clearing - and getting killed by - shells fired during WWI. To this day areas where the fiercest fighting occurred have been cordoned off as uninhabitable and unrecoverable...
Don't worry too much, detenting a nuclear bomb correctly is hard. So it is almost impossible for one to go off accidentally. The explosives in one might detonate and spread radiation but no mushroom cloud.
I was confused since I had learned about some of these. Lol. Then I remembered I went to HS outside of DC and took four years of Russian… my curriculum looked different. Lol
😂 that's what the people of maya thought before their neighbors sided with the Spanish. That's what Africans thought before their neighbors sold them to the white man. That's what americans thought when someone wanted to drain the swamp and proceeded to only hire millionaire ministers. Humans are dumb monkeys 6
Why would a alien species invade to start with? Watched to many Hollywood movies.. If they can get here from light years away, and fast enough to be plausible for them they can do pretty much what they want. Resources are plentiful in the universe, yes water also. People are movie damaged.. cars jumping and crashing and just driving on, people fighting and falling onto concrete just to get up and continue . Tiny girls beating up a dozen men at the same time. Aliens invading earth and murica is the savior..
Happy Tuesday! I love being reminded that we don't know where some of our nuclear weapons are, lol. And during this next Cold War between the United States and China, I wonder if we could put aside our differences and fight an external enemy? I just finished reading "The Three Body Problem", and there's a optimistic tone to the novel that gives me a little bit of hope. Also, I bet I wouldn't have minded being assassinated by a female KGB agent… Talk about a "kiss of death", lol again
After the Marines, I worked for the government locating and retrieving broken arrows. We recovered 11 total, and were only one of many teams, and I only worked there 3 years.
Did the last Russian guy get excuted in 1950 because Stalin was always annoyed and just waited for an appropriate time for payback, or was the guy actually a dissent?
In 1958 a US B-47 bomber collided with a smaller plane and the Air Force pilot radioed permission to jettison the bomb he was carrying in order to have a better chance to safely land his plane. The bomb which was a hydrogen or thermonuclear weapon fell into the ocean off the Georgia coast about twenty five miles from my hometown and has never been found despite at least a couple of serious attempts to find it. But there’s no chance this thing could still go off, right? Cause I still live here! ⚛️❤
😅 it might not go off but for sure it is leaking. Don't eat the fish don't swimm there. Here in germany we have some American rockets from the cold war. They are in silos but are leaking. I assume that in the ocean would be even worst
@AdamtheRed- but OP has a point though. They understand there's a problem, but it's even worse when people interact with them, making the comments more visible, as opposed to just reporting them and moving on
@captainspaulding5963 Oh, I know. I just like to have a bit of fun. Like when people post "first," I like to reply with "first." I know, I'm a child. 🙃
On the last story, I wonder if Reagan was trying to build trust between the two. Not a huge Reagan fan, but it would be a good way to break the ice during negotiations.
I want to see you touch the boats! Bring @MandatoryFunDay along, he can also touch the boats! In saying that, I really like these types of videos, interviewing different members of the military is great, especially Lady Military members ^_^
There's a very famous Egyptian UA-camr called Al dahih. He makes informative videos like this but a bit funnier. Funny enough, every time this UA-camr put out an episode, Simone makes a video with similar content a couple days later. What a copycat lol
To the Poster, Sideprojects: I am friends with Simon and I'm going to ask him if he gave you permission to use some of his content in this video clip from his channel "Into the Shadows" unless this is Simon's new channel.
There is something strangely heart-warming about the simple acknowledgement between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. that if aliens invaded either, the the other would come to the rescue.
Operation Chrome Dome. Simon can relate.
😂
Nah Simons is Super Blinding Dome😅😅
0:35 - Chapter 1 - Broken arrows
2:30 - Chapter 2 - The assassination attempt of fidel castro's beard
4:05 - Chapter 3 - Hidden weapons
5:45 - Chapter 4 - The soviet soldier who saved the world
7:20 - Chapter 5 - Aliens
At this point, shouldn't we be calling it "The First Cold-War"?
CW I as we lurch into CW II
@@nicenutter1980 In hindsight, it feels like we started the Second Cold War a couple of decades ago.
One could argue the cold war never stopped just changed methods
Nuclear weapons are shockingly difficult to make work. To trigger a true, self-propagating fission chain reaction, the weapon has to work *perfectly,* with the timing of each component accurate down to tiny fractions of a second. If *anything* goes wrong, you get a conventional explosion tainted with radioactive material, but a nuclear detonation. They're are also perishable components that have to be regularly replaced, or, likewise, no boom. Even the ambient temperature of the weapon not being precisely managed can be enough to disrupt the mechanism of the weapon, to the point of failure. When nuclear "landmines" were considered to halt/slow a theorized Russian land invasion through Europe, one of the biggest obstacles was finding a way to keep the weapons warm enough to function, without having to rely on local electrical infrastructure to power climate control for the device (which could fail and/or lead the enemy to the mine). One solution was to a bunch of chickens in the mine's "bunker," with enough feed and water to keep them alive for several months, thus relying on the chicken's body-heat and the
heat-generating decomposition of their waste to maintain proper ambient temperatures.
Anyway, my point is that a lost device that isn't maintained, let alone pampered in the way they require, is almost certainly not going to remain a true a-bomb for very long.
The name “Star Wars”, was applied to the SDI by its critics not by Reagan.
Of course... as Reagan was stupid enough not to understand most of this "initiative" was pure science-fiction and nothing close to a valid project with realistic possible outcomes.
The kindest you can say about the SDI is that it was a pure propaganda operation meant to fool the USSR into believing it was possible and then economically burying itself into the ground trying to keep up with this mirage. It would be a possible interpretation... if the US didn't actually spent tens of billions of dollars on that pile of BS which means they actually believed in their own BS.
In my senior high school one teacher was all about letting us know how imminent nuclear destruction was (including broken arrow things) and one comforted us with the glory of US policy (even though we were Canadian).
Duck and cower.
I hope they sent El Presidente his full Dossier in his last days so he could have a good laugh and joke that he won the game with proof of score.
The Able Archer 83 incident deserves a mention as one of the closest instances of accidental nuclear war during the Cold War. Able Archer 83 was a NATO military exercise in November 1983 simulating a nuclear war scenario. The exercise was unusually realistic, involving live troop mobilizations, encrypted communications, and high-level decision-making procedures. This heightened realism alarmed the Soviet Union, which misinterpreted it as a prelude to an actual nuclear strike by the U.S. and its allies. In response, the Soviet Union placed its nuclear forces on high alert, preparing for the possibility of launching a retaliatory strike if further signs of an attack were detected.
I was on active duty when that happened and a cold shiver went down all of our spines on that day in November, but I don't know if you knew that there were several other instances like this one that happened in August 1981 and March 1982.
@@LeeZee-bt7dq I personally didn't, what happened at those times?
@@LeeZee-bt7dq This American has (at least AFTER the fact) become aware of how we had almost accidentally-provoked an actual nuclear response when all our forces were doing were 'being obnoxious to annoy the Soviets' or 'truly just innocently practicing multi-national NATO maneuvers'. That '81 to 82' era DEFINITELY saw the Soviets wound RIGHT THE HECK UP, and we had no idea how close we came to attacks at several points.
And then in 1983, we all owe our continued existence to Stanislav Petrov, "The Man Who Saved The World". Ahaha! As I write this, the video mentions him at 5:50, how funny! But...yes, he truly, and I think single-handedly, managed to save us all from paranoia when that launch-detection system went awry.
Same thing in Norway 94, only because of a science rocket incident.
One of those lost Cold War era bombs is near certainly not going produce a nuclear explosion. The critical nuclear fuel in bombs have a relatively short shelf life before they decay beyond being able to achieve critical mass. If just the conventional explosives went off it would be bad, but nowhere near *that* bad.
I had wondered how long a lost nuclear bomb would be a threat.
@@contumelious-8440 that depends on a lot of factors; especially what nuclear “fuel” the bomb uses and how well preserved it stays when it’s lost
If it uses tritium, it’s half life is about 12 years so after a little more than a decade half of that fuel will be gone so it won’t be near as effective as when first lost.
Tritium also decays into helium 3 which absorbs neutrons
If it is only a fission device, if it uses Plutonium-239, its half life is about 24000 years so the “fuel” will still be viable for a long time, but the electronics and explosives for an “implosion device” around it to set it off will most likely corrode and fail long before the half lives, so that would probably be a couple decades before those fail
The actinides are also very easily oxidized so if water gets in there, the core will probably corrode pretty quickly (a pourbaix diagram shows Plutonium turning into a bunch of soluble compounds so it will likely corrode)
The design that would probably last the longest would be a well preserved simple “unga bunga” nuke like Little Boy, but I’m just spitballing here
Good to know
@@Abdega what if they arm it with the mc rib. I heard those last for ever
@@Abdega ~ as per the electronics do you suppose they'd be susceptible to the 'tin whiskers' problem that plagues some electronics?
So, hypothetically speaking, suppose I happen to have one of those missing nukes in my basement. Who do I call?
Nobody, you posted this on the internet, you will be contacted shortly 😂
The Ghostbusters?
Sorry, reflex.
Hello i am igor mc Donald.
Our government would love to come and get it. Where do we fly
Salaam alaikkum, I would like to collect this item for the Ayatollah- I mean, US Air Force. We will be visiting shortly in a Toyota Hilux
I'd call the Department of Defense & put a dollar amount on the weapon along with a tour of Area 51, or the truth about the JFK assassination before handing over the weapon
After looking through the comments, maybe do a dead internet theory video.
Decoding the Unknown, he already did it about a month back. Though the existence of bots doesn't mean no one's here. I'm real, I presume you are as well (unless bots are calling out bots, though at this point I don't think that would be too surprising...)
Oh look two bots chatting to each other , 2025 man
At least we graduated from whining about thumbnails.
Lol
@@mj.ray0898 a pre Milennial model, we both are. I mean humans. Squshe soft humans. I am definitely not a bored robot in a german factory waiting for the shift to begin
Nothing brings humans together more than a common enemy.
They weren't an enemy. Our government was scared of socialist ideas catching on here and taking them from power. The Cold War was a fantasy devised to divide people.
The French !
Retired USAF and spent a good amount of that time in the Cold War era in secure comms. Saw a lot of interesting stuff, touched nuke-tipped cruise missiles in a country that the US President denied they were, etc. Very interesting video clip Simon.
😂 don't say that. President is always right🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
An alien invasion uniting the US and USSR are the exact plot thought by Ozymandias in Watchmen
Thank you. 👍👍👍
1:22 the first ones were 3.8 megaton, not 20… the US never fielded any that large. The biggest was a 15 megaton. The U.S. felt 1,000 times the Hiroshima bomb was large enough
The broken arrow most commonly known in my country happened in 1966 in south Spain, when a B-52G had an incident while refueling in flight from a KC-135 and both crashed. Four 1.1 megaton B28FI, Y1, Mod. 2 fell, of which one parachuted safely into land, one parachuted into the sea and two free fell (parachute failed) into the ground, suffering partial explosions that ejected plumes of plutonium dioxyde into the air (thankfully, fision didn't happen, so no big boom, only small boom). The radiactive cloud contaminated over 600 hectares of terrain that remained several thousands more radiactive than nuclear test sites for decades, and the one that fell into the sea remained there for almost 3 months. Despite the US army spending $80M on decontamination, the region the arrows got broken is still highly radiactive.
The press called it "Star Wars". Reagan called it the "Strategic Defence Iniative".
US making a plan to nuke the moon is still crazy to me
2:59 Why does Liam Neeson look like Fidel Castro…
Former Canadian PM Justin Trudeau is the spitting image of a younger Fidel Castro.
Came to see if anyone else saw the similarities
My teachers never did a single lesson on the cold war, so this could be a video about anything in the cold war. I learned just about everything I know outside the classroom
Thanks Simon...I needed that!
My teachers had a perfectly valid reason for not teaching me about a few of the things mentioned, none of them could predict the future.
You are Gold
"Operational Briefcase" something straight out of a James Bond film.
As I recall, it of something based on it was part of a sting on "White Collar".
Made in germany.
BUY OUR SCHEIß!
THANK YOU
He had a really cool briefcase in From Russia With Love.
Spent ages trying to recreate it in my childhood but never managed to get the nerve gas working properly.
@@MrMarcusIndia Yes he did. I'm actually in the middle of a James Bond movie marathon right now.
It’s surreal to think that one almost destroyed Quebec!
Would ja miss it?
@ well yeah, I live there. I don’t want my face to melt off
We were *this close* to eliminating the Quebecoise dialect smh
@7:44, you are incorrect about the moniker "Star Wars." It was Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) who mockingly referred to what the Reagan administration called the "Strategic Defense Initiative" as "Star Wars." The press took to parroting Kennedy's appellation for SDI.
Here in germany the ww2 bombs in the ground are starting to detonate. I hope this can't Happen with these nuclear ones
In France, _Démineurs_ are still clearing - and getting killed by - shells fired during WWI. To this day areas where the fiercest fighting occurred have been cordoned off as uninhabitable and unrecoverable...
Don't worry too much, detenting a nuclear bomb correctly is hard. So it is almost impossible for one to go off accidentally.
The explosives in one might detonate and spread radiation but no mushroom cloud.
Operation ingrown hair would had been good mission name for Castros op.
2:37 that lady seems to be a little bit in love. She not letting go😂😂😂
I was confused since I had learned about some of these. Lol. Then I remembered I went to HS outside of DC and took four years of Russian… my curriculum looked different. Lol
"Why are those guys pointing their briefcases at me?"
Wonderful introduction
Petrov actually knew the system was buggy - he was a Radar Operation Officer.
Ten comments 7 of them porn bots .
Sole purpose of coming to the comments 😂
Interesting, never seen these on Whistle Boy’s channels before 😮
@@ConjureNoonSloth They usually get purged quickly. And they also only post right after the video is published.
They should make a movie about that with the aliens usa and soviets coming together absolutely
Someone said watchman is about this but i don't know
Missing nukes, wondering if there sitting on fire sides as ornaments.
There should be a comedy movie made about the attempts on Castro's life
Which is more concerning, 'Broken Arrows' or the fact that they happen often enough that they have a name for them?
Wait, so you're telling me the Castro beard thing had to have inspired the movie The Dictator?
That was a documentary 😂
First time i was this early the berlin wall still stood
Liar 😂
8:50 I think most of humanity would be able to come together if we had an extraterrestrial invader.
😂 that's what the people of maya thought before their neighbors sided with the Spanish.
That's what Africans thought before their neighbors sold them to the white man.
That's what americans thought when someone wanted to drain the swamp and proceeded to only hire millionaire ministers.
Humans are dumb monkeys 6
And when the threat was over we go right back to killing each other
Why would a alien species invade to start with?
Watched to many Hollywood movies..
If they can get here from light years away, and fast enough to be plausible for them they can do pretty much what they want.
Resources are plentiful in the universe, yes water also.
People are movie damaged..
cars jumping and crashing and just driving on, people fighting and falling onto concrete just to get up and continue .
Tiny girls beating up a dozen men at the same time.
Aliens invading earth and murica is the savior..
pretty sure the bomb that had the chute deployed was the one that almost exploded
Don’t forget “Covered Wagons”.
Chrome done lmao ok Simon
They could had just offered Castro's barber a million to accidentally shaved off part of his beard. Then extract him from Cuba
Now we know why Liam Nelson never grew a beard...
Somehow the Sideprojects channel is way more interesting then the Megaprojects one 😅
You forget the events of Black Ops 1 and 2 and Cold War
Was taught sweet nothing about any wars, well maybe bits & pieces but nothing interesting.
I had to self-educate instead
School was useless
Not even a couple of minutes old and half a dozen bots already posting their BS.
At night it is cooler than outside
Happy Tuesday! I love being reminded that we don't know where some of our nuclear weapons are, lol. And during this next Cold War between the United States and China, I wonder if we could put aside our differences and fight an external enemy? I just finished reading "The Three Body Problem", and there's a optimistic tone to the novel that gives me a little bit of hope.
Also, I bet I wouldn't have minded being assassinated by a female KGB agent… Talk about a "kiss of death", lol again
Okay now I want Independence Day style movie with the Russians and Americans teaming up
After the Marines, I worked for the government locating and retrieving broken arrows.
We recovered 11 total, and were only one of many teams, and I only worked there 3 years.
🧢
@kremepye3613 I have no idea what the hat means
Hope your flu gets better, Simon.
Did the last Russian guy get excuted in 1950 because Stalin was always annoyed and just waited for an appropriate time for payback, or was the guy actually a dissent?
_Star Wars_ beats _Space Force_ 🤔😂
In 1958 a US B-47 bomber collided with a smaller plane and the Air Force pilot radioed permission to jettison the bomb he was carrying in order to have a better chance to safely land his plane. The bomb which was a hydrogen or thermonuclear weapon fell into the ocean off the Georgia coast about twenty five miles from my hometown and has never been found despite at least a couple of serious attempts to find it. But there’s no chance this thing could still go off, right? Cause I still live here! ⚛️❤
😅 it might not go off but for sure it is leaking. Don't eat the fish don't swimm there.
Here in germany we have some American rockets from the cold war. They are in silos but are leaking. I assume that in the ocean would be even worst
Well if it does, you're going to have one hell of a story to tell.
@@marcbeebee6969 TU⚛❤
Interesting 😎
Reagan made a speech to the UN in 1987 about the world uniting should an alien threat arise.
Great history lesson here. You are a very intelligent and good looking man. Thanks for posting for us.
The only thing becoming more annoying than the bots are the people that feel like they have to point out the bots on every f****** video
Not sure if you noticed, but there are a ton of bots in the comments. Look out, buddy.
@AdamtheRed- but OP has a point though. They understand there's a problem, but it's even worse when people interact with them, making the comments more visible, as opposed to just reporting them and moving on
@captainspaulding5963 Oh, I know. I just like to have a bit of fun. Like when people post "first," I like to reply with "first." I know, I'm a child. 🙃
At night it is cooler than outside
Simon: "During the Cold War the U.S. and U.S.S.R. built guns into briefcases!"
Agent 47: "That's nothing- my briefcase IS a weapon!"
On the last story, I wonder if Reagan was trying to build trust between the two. Not a huge Reagan fan, but it would be a good way to break the ice during negotiations.
you have. 2:51
2:48 Simon & co, you know what you need to do.
I want to see you touch the boats! Bring @MandatoryFunDay along, he can also touch the boats! In saying that, I really like these types of videos, interviewing different members of the military is great, especially Lady Military members ^_^
There's a very famous Egyptian UA-camr called Al dahih. He makes informative videos like this but a bit funnier. Funny enough, every time this UA-camr put out an episode, Simone makes a video with similar content a couple days later. What a copycat lol
Interesting. But a bit rushed IMO
Daddy did it
Dude, are you working out?
is that garment meant to be a tshirt or a jumper? either way its not exactly delightful.
Nair shampoo! muahahahaha
You are wrong. My teachers taught me all of this and more
Yea yea , Americans will believe any att any time ,,m😊
To the Poster, Sideprojects: I am friends with Simon and I'm going to ask him if he gave you permission to use some of his content in this video clip from his channel "Into the Shadows" unless this is Simon's new channel.
hahaha .. Sideprojects has been going for years ..
Keep your drivel coming, I'm bored.
You're so mean 😂
Comment