Veterans Archives: Preserving the Stories of our Nations Heroes

40 Episodes
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By: Bill Krieger

In a world where storytelling has been our link to the past since the days of cave drawings, there exists a timeless tradition. It's the art of passing down knowledge, and for Military Veterans, it's a crucial piece of their legacy. Join us on the Veterans Archives Podcast, where we dive deep into the heartwarming and awe-inspiring stories of those who served, no matter when or where.Here, Veterans get the chance to be the authors of their own narratives. Through guided interviews in a relaxed and safe environment, they paint their experiences with their own words and unique voices...

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From Gang Life To The Army (Jesse Krewson)
Yesterday at 7:00 PM

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Jesse Krewson doesn’t tell a “clean” redemption story. He tells the real one, where poverty, identity, and a missing support system push a kid in Grand Rapids toward gangs, weed, and dropping out before high school even starts. Jail becomes routine, not shocking. Then one person steps in, his grandfather, and everything shifts: Job Corps, a GED, getting clean long enough to pass a drug test, and a decision to join the United States Army. 

We talk about the shock of basic training at Fort Benning, the culture at Fort Campbel...


Every Person’s Service Matters (Chuck Dodge)
Yesterday at 6:00 PM

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A lot of people carry a quiet belief that their work “didn’t really count.” Chuck Dodge used to feel that way about his Air Force service, even after four years stationed at Dover Air Force Base, where he could look out and see caskets stacked in a warehouse during the Vietnam era. Then one sentence at a veterans conference cracked everything open: “Every person’s service matters.” That shift turns this conversation into something bigger than a military story. It becomes a roadmap for reclaiming meaning.

We talk with Chuck about growin...


Lucky Charms And The Long Road Back (Jim Bennett)
06/20/2026

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A full-ride scholarship, a Pentagon internship, and a clear military track should have meant a smooth launch. Jim Bennett did the opposite. He chased the Appalachian Trail, learned what it means to “hike your own hike,” and then carried those lessons into the Michigan Army National Guard as 9/11 turned weekend service into a new era of war and responsibility. 

We talk through the moments that shaped him: Hurricane Katrina relief in the Gulf, the grind of leadership training, Kuwait convoy operations, and a darkly funny “bomb threat” that was literally a duct-tape...


What Does A Second Chance Really Cost (Tod Smith)
06/16/2026

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One decision after high school can change the whole arc of your life, especially when it sends you farther than you ever expected. We’re joined by Tod Smith, a Lansing, Michigan native who joins the United States Navy looking for a reset, only to get rerouted by a colorblind test, pushed through boot camp at Great Lakes, and then surprised with orders to Japan. Along the way, Tod shares what it feels like to arrive overseas as a young sailor, how engine room crews become family, and why the first time stepping of...


From Combat Zones To Clean Water (Mike Carie)
06/16/2026

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War stories usually end with the homecoming. Mike Carie’s don’t, because the hard part kept going after the uniform came off. We talk with Mike, a US Army veteran who grew up bouncing from place to place, joined through the delayed entry program, and learned fast what basic training and real-world readiness demand. From Fort Knox to Fort Bliss, he explains how the military can take a drifting teenager and build capability through pressure, repetition, and pure commitment. 

Then the pace spikes. Mike walks us through returning to active duty...


From A Michigan Farm To Vietnam Supply Lines (Robert Tvorik)
06/02/2026

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The Vietnam War wasn’t just fought with rifles. It was fought with fuel, paperwork, convoys, and the kind of responsibility that can follow you for years. We sit down with Robert “Bob” Tvorik, a United States Army officer who went from a tough, introverted upbringing to leading soldiers in a petroleum supply unit supporting major operations in Vietnam. His memories are vivid, practical, and unexpectedly personal.

Bob walks us through growing up in Cleveland, moving at 12 to a farm near Wademan, Michigan, and finding his footing in school after years of low...


From Munitions To Microchips (Bruce Davenport)
05/21/2026

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The draft, Vietnam, a brand-new marriage, and orders that change without warning. Bruce Davenport walks us through a life shaped by service and problem-solving, from growing up in small town Michigan to joining the United States Air Force in 1969 with one clear goal: get solid training and avoid being sent to “pound the ground” in Vietnam. What follows is a candid Air Force veteran story with real-world details about enlistment hurdles, munitions work, and what it feels like to stand out overseas as an American servicemember. 

We talk about starting married life...


Bass Players Get No Respect Until They Do (Brad Foss)
05/08/2026

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You can hear the exact moment a life changes when someone stops trying to force a plan and starts following the next right step. Brad Foss takes us from Janesville, Wisconsin, where he’s a quiet kid tinkering with early computers and falling in love with music, to a decision that shocks even him: joining the United States Army for a technical career.

We talk through the unglamorous truth of Army basic training at Fort Jackson, the value of focused job training at Fort Gordon, and what it’s like to hand...


What Do You Owe A Country That Raised You (Doug Thorne)
04/24/2026

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Doug Thorne didn’t set out chasing adventure, but service kept handing it to him anyway. From a childhood spent moving around Michigan with a dad in the state police, Doug learns early how to adapt, make friends fast, and keep his footing when life changes addresses. That same skill shows up again when college falls away, the draft number comes up, and he chooses the United States Air Force instead of letting the moment choose for him.

We talk through the nuts-and-bolts work that actually keeps the military running: Air Fo...


What If We Saw One Another As People (Takura Nyamfukudza)
04/23/2026

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You can hear the pivot points in Takura Nyamfukudza’s life the moment he describes them: finishing school in Zimbabwe, getting on a plane to join his mom and sister in the United States, then spotting a Humvee display on a college campus and realizing he wanted something structured, demanding, and bigger than himself. That choice turns into 12 years in the U.S. Army, deployments overseas, and eventually a new mission back home in a Michigan courtroom as a criminal defense attorney. 

We talk about what it really feels like to imm...


What If Your Life Is A Gift You Have Not Unwrapped Yet (Pamelajune Anderson)
04/22/2026

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Some people talk about service like it is a resume line. Pamelajune Anderson lives it like a calling, and she earned it the hard way. We start in Columbus, Ohio, where she grows up in a strict, loving home shaped by church, community elders, and the kind of discipline that teaches you how to stand on your own feet. Along the way, she explains the story behind her name, including the moment she refuses to be reduced to a joke and decides to define herself on her own terms. 

From there, w...


I Came For The Free Army Flashlight (Judy Fryover)
04/20/2026

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War zone medicine is not just trauma bays and helicopters. Sometimes it is 140-degree heat, dust storms that ground flights, and a charge nurse trying to keep blood running while a policy says patients must move in 72 hours. Judy Fryover, an Army Reserve nurse and later colonel, walks us through the real texture of military healthcare, from the small details that make you laugh to the moments that stay heavy long after you leave Iraq.

We start in Portland, Michigan, where Judy grows up as the oldest of eight in a...


From Paper Routes To Sea Routes (Bill Atkinson)
04/18/2026

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A life can look ordinary on paper and still be packed with turning points you only hear when someone tells the story out loud. We talk with William “Bill” Atkinson, a longtime Lansing, Michigan resident and United States Navy Reserve veteran, about growing up near General Motors, watching neighborhoods vanish as I-496 is built, and learning grit the old-fashioned way on a newspaper route. He’s honest about school being rough and why he believes you do not truly learn until you are ready, a theme that reshapes everything that comes next. 

Bil...


What If Your Life Improves Only When You Decide It Must (Charles Thomas)
04/18/2026

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A lot of people say they “worked their way up.” Charles Thomas actually did it, step by step, when the alternatives were a factory line, a foundry floor, or getting drafted into the Vietnam War. We talk with Charles about growing up in Willow Run after moving from Detroit, finding his identity through sports, and grinding through two demanding jobs just to save enough money to start college. That determination takes him from junior college to a full basketball scholarship at Gonzaga University, where he trains for a career in clinical laboratory science and...


Jim Clark Shares How Service And Skill-Building Shaped His Whole Life
04/18/2026

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A lot of people say they want a life story worth saving. Jim Clark lived one, and he tells it with the calm detail of someone who has actually done the work. Jim was born in West Virginia, moved west during the World War II shipbuilding years, and grew up near Portland and Vancouver with memories that feel both ordinary and disappearing fast: barracks housing, coal heat, country roads, and a community expanding in real time. 

Jim explains why he joined the United States Army when he did: not for glory, b...


From The Great Migration To Global Leadership (Harold Pope)
04/14/2026

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Harold Pope’s life reads like a map of modern American choices: leave the South, build a home up North, learn the rules of power early, and decide what kind of person you will be anyway. We talk with Harold about being born in Mississippi during the Great Migration era and growing up in Albany, New York with a single mother who becomes a legendary NAACP leader. Her activism is not abstract to him. It is meetings in the living room, standing up to city hall, and a community that still treats her li...


From Foster Care To The Marine Corps (Calvin Jones)
04/14/2026

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A kid from Lansing gets pulled out of a stable home, dropped into foster care, and learns to survive by becoming self-sufficient. Years later, a draft letter and the shadow of Vietnam force a choice that still feels raw: run from service, or step into it. We talk with Calvin Jones, a United States Marine Corps veteran, about what it took to choose the Marine Corps, what Parris Island boot camp did to his mind and body, and the moments that proved teamwork is not a motivational phrase, it is a survival skill.<...


Thom Miller Shares How Travel And Service Built His Values
04/14/2026

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A bottle of Canadian Club sounds like a punchline until it turns into a lifeline on a late night in Marseille. We talk with Thom Miller, a Michigan native and United States Army veteran, about the real decisions that shape a life when there’s no GPS, no smartphone, and no safety net. His memories move from Flint to Lansing’s east side, where a one-income household, a smart and steady mother, and long friendships created a foundation that still holds. 

Thom walks us through school, sports, and the awkward bravery of ea...


A Veteran’s Journey Through War Trauma And Healing (Bill Krieger)
04/03/2026

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He survived Mosul, but the hardest fight started after he came home. Bill Krieger, a U.S. Navy veteran and Michigan National Guard military police officer, walks us through a life defined by the search for belonging, the weight of leadership, and what PTSD and panic attacks can look like when you don’t yet have words for them.

We trace Bill’s path from a chaotic childhood in Lansing to the Navy, where boot camp, technical training, and destroyer life give him structure and a “tribe.” He shares how recruiting taught h...


From Army Brat To Intel Officer (Keith Lane)
04/02/2026

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A HIMARS battalion fires 372 rockets and hits 372 targets. Years later, the same planner is fighting a different battle: drone warfare that gives you 90 seconds to decide if the “lawnmower” overhead is friendly or about to kill someone. That’s the arc of our conversation with Keith Lane, a Michigan Army National Guard veteran whose career moves from college football leadership lessons to military intelligence, civil disturbance readiness, and two deployments that sit right at the edge of how war is changing.

We trace Keith’s story from being born on an Army bas...


I Enlisted Three Months Before 9/11 And Never Looked Back (Jessica Linna)
04/02/2026

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A lot of veteran stories get flattened into headlines. Jessica Linna’s doesn’t. She enlisted in the Michigan Army National Guard in 2001, just three months before 9/11, not because she had a perfect plan but because she didn’t. After losing her sister days before graduation, she’s honest about feeling aimless, trying college, working a solid job, and still wanting a direction that actually meant something.

We talk through what it’s like to become a combat medic (68W), from Fort Leonard Wood basics to Fort Sam Houston training, and the moment...


A Soldier’s Story Of Family, War, And What Comes After (Dave Lewis)
04/02/2026

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Getting fired after a bar fight is not most people’s origin story for military service, but for Dave Lewis it lands just days before 9/11 and everything changes. Dave grew up in the Flint and Fenton, Michigan area, raised by a mom who never stopped showing up while his dad survived a devastating crash and later a brain tumor. That mix of community, hardship, and loyalty sets the stage for why the structure of the Michigan Army National Guard felt like a pull he could not ignore.

Dave walks us through en...


A Soldier, A Teacher, A Lifelong Learner (Jerry Ockert)
03/11/2026

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A sleigh rescue from a blizzard. Kerosene lamps in a farmhouse without electricity. A young man drafted during Korea who ends up rebuilding Europe’s engines and then, decades later, rebuilding how young Americans learn to drive. Jerry Ockert's 95-year journey is the kind of story you can feel in your bones—practical, principled, and full of turns that make perfect sense in hindsight.

We sit with Jerry as he traces a line from horse-drawn fields and Catholic classrooms to factory shifts stamping jerry cans, grueling nights in a state hospital, and...


From Jersey To Jump Wings; A Soldier’s Path (Cedric Davis)
03/09/2026

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The bus doors swung open at Fort Dix and five drill sergeants stared him down—by 0400, bunks were tipping, cans were banging, and Cedric Davis wondered if he’d made the worst mistake of his life. What followed is a clear-eyed story of fear met head-on, pride earned the hard way, and a life held together by family, friendship, and duty.

We walk through Cedric’s Jersey roots and the steady example of parents married for 53 years, then into ROTC, a delayed-entry leap, and the shock of basic training. He shares the in...


From Polio To Black Belt: A Soldier’s Unlikely Path (Andrew Glenn)
03/04/2026

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A draft notice rerouted Andrew Glenn from German beer halls to a rain-soaked tarmac at Fort Campbell, where a drill sergeant’s bark split his life into before and after. What followed reads like a map drawn in pencil and sweat: infantry training, a near-miss with OCS, boredom punctured by juggling rocks, and an arrival in Korea under red alert that replaced comfort with diesel stoves and steel seats in eighteen-below cold. On a base with little to do, he found a doorway: a Korean lieutenant with mirrored shades inviting him into Mudokwan Ta...


How One Soldier-Statesman Turned Family, Faith, And Grit Into Community Change (Adam Hollier)
02/26/2026

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A Detroit childhood two blocks from his parents. Spanish-immersion school, homestays in Senegal and Venezuela, and a front-row seat to how neighborhoods rise or stall. Adam threads those early lessons into a life of service that moves from student government to City Hall, through Detroit’s bankruptcy, and into the dirt—mowing lots, demolishing hazards, and planting 15,000 trees to stabilize a community one block at a time.

Then comes the late leap at 30: Army Basic, OCS, airborne school, and civil affairs. He calls some of it “manufactured angst,” but the grit is real—...


Finding Purpose After 9/11; A Soldier’s Journey (Benjamin Bolen)
01/23/2026

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A pipe purchase, a recruiter’s wave, and a high school morning watching the towers fall—Ben’s story is a chain of small moments that turned into a life of service. We follow him from a childhood shaped by loss through the discipline of sports and faith, into the U.S. Army as a cavalry scout, and onto the streets of Baghdad where seconds, instincts, and rules of engagement determined who came home.

Ben explains what counterinsurgency looks like from a driver’s hatch: evolving IEDs and EFPs, convoy spacing, and the...


From Orphanage To OCEANS: A Veteran’s Road (Doug Brinker)
01/20/2026

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A boy raised in a children’s home becomes a teenage helmsman on a destroyer, threads 40‑foot seas to Beirut, hauls cargo into Fallujah, nearly dies from an unseen infection—and then decides to spend the rest of his life pulling others back from the edge. Doug Brinker’s story isn’t tidy or theatrical; it’s real, specific, and full of hard turns that keep resolving into service.

We walk through the cold bite of Great Lakes boot camp, the grit and humor of ship life, and the shock of being truste...


A Soldier’s Journey From Poverty To Purpose (Darrel Johnikins)
01/20/2026

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A single choice to skip a class set Darrel on a path that reshaped everything—poverty to purpose, private to leader, soldier to deputy, and finally a man content with quiet Saturdays. We sit down with Darrel Johnikins to trace his route from a stove‑heated trailer in Louisiana to air defense Top Gun at Fort Carson, a tense year near the DMZ in Korea, and the relentless pace of a rapid deployment unit at Fort Hood that forced a life‑changing promise: family comes first.

You’ll hear how AIT at Fort...


From Detroit To The Flight Line (Nick Beller)
01/09/2026

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A kid from Detroit peers into a recruiter’s window, falls for the shine of tiny tanks, and years later finds himself keeping real helicopters in the fight. That arc frames Nick’s 38-year journey across active duty and the Guard, from Fort Knox to the German border and night missions over Iraq. The details stick: flying low along a line that looked like color on one side and black-and-white on the other, learning to fly from the right seat one control at a time, and the gut-deep thump of a mortar that land...


From Detroit To The DMZ (Gerard Krenzel)
12/02/2025

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A sunburn that almost became a court-martial, an M60 that felt heavier than the moment, and a van painted the wrong color because there were no wheels to move it—Gerard’s life stitches together grit, humor, and unshakable work ethic. We sit down with an Army mechanic who asked for Vietnam and got Korea, learned fast under air-raid sirens near the DMZ, and found a second home on a Korean Air Force base where Mohawks, helicopters, and better chow shaped his days.

From Detroit’s service stations to Fort Ord’s cold m...


How A Detroit Kid Became A Soldier, Leader, And Mentor (Chuck Fowlkes)
12/02/2025

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A Detroit childhood filled with Belle Isle picnics, DIY bike “Olympics,” and a grandparents’ house that welcomed everyone set the stage for Chuck’s lifelong commitment to service. We sit down with him to follow the arc from neighborhood games to a 30-year Army career, a leadership run at Consumers Energy, and a purposeful reinvention as an educator, nonprofit founder, and leadership coach. The moments that shaped him—an English teacher who flipped his view on writing, a drill sergeant who turned pressure into fuel, and a young family that sharpened his ambition—become pract...


From Detroit Streets To Duty And Film (Glen Wilkewitz)
11/24/2025

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A childhood reshaped by an expressway, a career born from a newspaper ad, and a camera that followed him from training fields to a war zone—Glenn Wilkewitz’s story is a masterclass in showing up when it counts. We sit down with Glenn to chart his path from Detroit neighborhoods and ROTC hallways to 30 years in the Air National Guard, where he learned to love both the hum of computers and the craft of photography.

You’ll hear how a young bagger turned data operator rode the evolution from punch cards...


Running Toward Service: Michelle Boulter’s Path
11/14/2025

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What if the structure you craved as a kid became the engine of your entire life? Michelle Boulter takes us from dirt roads in Otsego, Michigan to ROTC drills, blistering Louisville barracks, and the jolt of basic training that taught her to love marksmanship and laugh at a tragically soft grenade throw. Commissioned in 1996 and moved into the Signal Corps, she pushed through a back injury and an early exit, then rebuilt her purpose in law—where research, process, and calm under pressure look a lot like field discipline without the ruck.


He Didn’t Want To Go To War, But He Went And Led Men (David Dargo)
10/24/2025

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A seven-acre childhood with backyard goalposts, glass oil jars at a full-service station, and pickup baseball games—Dave’s life started in motion and never really stopped. That momentum carried him from Delta Airlines to a draft notice, from Fort Jackson’s mess hall floor to a First Cav helicopter banking into a hot landing zone. What follows isn’t a highlight reel; it’s an unvarnished account of what it means to walk point, carry the radio that gives away your position, and learn to sleep in a hole you dug an hour earli...


From Navy Decks To School Fields (Bill Taft)
10/24/2025

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A quiet act of bravery can change the course of a life. For Bill Taft, it started with a decision to enlist rather than be drafted, a choice that led from Navy hangars and base gyms to school hallways, football sidelines, and a wrestling room he built from scratch. We sit down with Bill to chart a path defined by service, stamina, and a stubborn belief that preparation and care beat flash every time.

Bill shares his early years in a big Battle Creek family where older siblings sacrificed so the...


Growing Up Midwest, Leading America’s Soldiers (Jim Vetter)
10/21/2025

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A snowy drive, a borrowed Camaro, and a Christmas party recruiter set everything in motion. From a one-stoplight town in Wisconsin to Fort Knox, Jim Vetter charted an unlikely path: split-option enlistment, tank crew at 18, and a meteoric rise to drill sergeant and commandant. We walk through the first shock at the bus, the carefully engineered stress of reception, and the hard switch that forges civilians into soldiers. Jim shares the moments that stick—the grenade that hit the pit, a rifle flagged on the line, and the first time he stood in fr...


A Soldier’s Road: From Istanbul To Afghanistan (Louis Goldstein)
10/21/2025

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A quarter-mile high school hallway, a foreign exchange year in Istanbul during 9/11, and a “beer man’s kid” from Minnesota don’t usually add up to route clearance in Helmand—yet that’s exactly where Lewis Goldstein’s path led. We sit down with Lewis to unpack a career built on unlikely turns: split-option enlistment, a boot-camp proposal beside a POW museum, missing multiple deployments by timing alone, and then landing in Afghanistan for a year of convoys, MRAPs, and 300-plus IED encounters that rewired how he thinks about leadership, innovation, and luck.

Lewis...


Sea Stories, Second Chances
10/17/2025

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A Detroit-area rebel who ran to Florida at fifteen didn’t just find his way—he found the ocean. We sit down with Tim Kirn to trace a life that arcs from a crowded Michigan home to the steel decks of the USS Nimitz, where a Hollywood film crew rubbed shoulders with sailors and a teenage dropout learned how to lead, endure, and grow. What starts with a shaved head and a stumble on ranks becomes a passport of ports: London’s clockface, Rome’s stones, Paris at night, and the River Jordan where fa...


From Lawn Darts To Hellfires: Childhood Chaos Meets Army Aviation (Jerry Binning)
10/17/2025

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A quiet Midwestern start. A detour through tank trails. And a cockpit view of the night the Gulf War truly began. We sit down with Jerry Binning to chart the improbable arc from Charlotte, Michigan to Fort Hood’s heat, Fort Rucker’s flight lines, and the Apache missions that punched a hole through Iraq’s radar on Day One. This isn’t a highlight reel—it’s the texture of real service: lost orders and last‑minute saves, heat so fierce tools burn skin, and the strange calm of learning to trust instruments wh...