r/MURICA

SGM Mike Vining interview on Vietnam, Delta Force, and the sardines he never ate. His new book is coming out in August 2026
▲ 312 r/MURICA+22 crossposts

SGM Mike Vining interview on Vietnam, Delta Force, and the sardines he never ate. His new book is coming out in August 2026

We Are The Mighty profiles retired Sgt. Maj. Mike Vining through the smaller personal details behind a much larger military résumé: Vietnam EOD work, Delta Force, Operation Eagle Claw, and later life outside uniform. The article uses the “sardines he never ate” story to humanize someone usually presented as a meme or legend.

Vining served as an explosive ordnance disposal specialist in Vietnam, where he recalled multiple near-death moments, including being left behind at an abandoned Special Forces camp and helping destroy the massive “Rock Island East” enemy weapons cache in Cambodia.

The profile also connects Vining to Delta Force’s early history. A related We Are The Mighty piece says he joined Delta in 1978 as an EOD specialist under Col. Charlie Beckwith, making him one of the unit’s original members.

The article’s strategic value is not just biography. It shows how specialized technical skills, especially EOD, became central to elite special operations as missions grew more complex and politically sensitive.

Vining’s post-service life, including mountaineering, historical writing, veteran community work, and distance from his internet fame, adds a useful contrast to modern military celebrity culture. The profile suggests that some of the most consequential operators may be least interested in mythmaking.

Do stories like Vining’s help preserve serious military history, or do meme-driven portrayals risk flattening complex service into legend?

wearethemighty.com
u/Sgt_Gram — 20 hours ago
▲ 574 r/MURICA

Nuthin ‘merican and Jesus than burger

The nonstop country music makes more sense now.

u/berdulf — 5 days ago
▲ 100 r/MURICA

Taps playing at American Dunes off the 9th hole in Grand Haven, MI.

American Dunes plays taps every day at 1pm and everyone on the course stops golfing for a few minutes to pay respects. Talk about being at the right place at the right time.

u/MadMan8181 — 4 days ago
▲ 368 r/MURICA+13 crossposts

The US Military used to "own the night"

  • The article traces U.S. military night vision from active infrared systems in World War II to passive image intensifiers, helmet-mounted goggles, white phosphor, thermal fusion, and mixed-reality displays. The core pattern is that each generation solved one battlefield problem while creating new training and usability burdens.
  • Early active infrared gave troops a way to see in darkness, but it also created a signature that an enemy with similar equipment could detect. The shift to Vietnam-era passive systems like the AN/PVS-2 “Starlight Scope” reduced that exposure by relying on ambient light instead of an infrared lamp.
  • Helmet-mounted systems changed the tactical value of night vision by helping soldiers move, not just aim. The tradeoff was reduced depth perception, tunnel vision, and the need for disciplined scanning, meaning the technology created an advantage only after units adapted their behavior around it.
  • Modern systems like ENVG-B combine image intensification, thermal sensing, wireless weapon-sight links, and Nett Warrior integration. The Army says ENVG-B is designed to operate in very low light and interoperate with weapon sights, lasers, and soldier networking tools, turning night vision into a broader battlefield information system.
  • The next challenge is cognitive load. IVAS-style systems aim to merge night vision, augmented reality, maps, targeting, and mission planning, but developers still have to balance capability against reliability, weight, cost, and how much information a soldier can process under stress.

Discussion question: As battlefield optics become networked displays, does the bigger advantage come from seeing better, or from deciding faster?

wearethemighty.com
u/Sgt_Gram — 6 days ago
▲ 666 r/MURICA

Soldiers from the 45th Infantry Division of the Seventh U.S. Army celebrate atop the Luitpold Arena in Nuremberg, Germany, April 1945

Original caption reads: "U.S. Soldiers Capture Nuremberg. Troops of the 45th Division, Seventh U.S. Army, wave battle-worn American Flags from the dais of the Luitpold Arena in Nuremberg, Germany, after capture of the shrine city of the Nazi Party on April 20, 1945 (Hitler’s birthday). This is the very spot from which Hitler, Goering, Gobbels and Himmler harangued their massive Nazi audiences at party festivals in the defiant prewar days. After the U.S. forces had crushed the last flicker of enemy resistence in the city, masses of liberated foreign slave workers streamed into the huge stadium".

u/Antique_Quail7912 — 9 days ago
▲ 54 r/MURICA+10 crossposts

What military service is like through the eyes of a mother

  • We Are The Mighty published a personal essay by Adam Gramegna, an Army infantry veteran, about military life as seen through his mother’s experience rather than his own.
  • The piece argues that parents of service members, especially mothers, often carry a quieter version of military stress: fear, waiting, guilt, and helplessness without a uniform or official role.
  • The essay uses moments from basic training, duty-station assignments, deployments, care packages, and brief phone calls to show how military moms experience service from the outside.
  • Gramegna describes three deployments: Iraq in 2004–2005, Afghanistan in 2013, and Afghanistan again in 2015. The focus is less on combat itself and more on what it meant for a parent waiting at home.
  • A major theme is that military moms build their own support systems, including online groups and communities such as BAMM, because the military-family conversation often centers more on spouses and children.
  • The takeaway: military service affects more than the person wearing the uniform. Parents may not deploy, but they still live with the fear, uncertainty and emotional cost of war.
wearethemighty.com
u/Sgt_Gram — 11 days ago
▲ 544 r/MURICA

If you ain’t cheating, you ain’t trying! Praise the boomstick💥🇺🇸🦅

Credit: Frankabyte

u/SuperEarth_Helldiver — 14 days ago
▲ 405 r/MURICA

I could already vote in my home country when I moved to the US. Still, putting on this watch band made me feel goosebumps.

it was funny as it just arrived today, and on my way home from work, i was listening to my favorite country station which played the national out of nowhere 😂 im so ready to commission into the Navy.

u/FluffyLittlFlyingCow — 14 days ago
▲ 221 r/MURICA

half balls half sticks requires context that i cannot explain but just know that its equivalent to A tier

all states are scaled to be the same size for fairness (for reference, how they would fit within a 6x6 square at their default orientation.)

all shapes are 3-dimensional, being 1/4 inch thick

dc included just for fun

u/monalisawannabe — 15 days ago
▲ 227 r/MURICA

Parked to get some caffeine at the gas station and had an unintended 'Murica moment...

u/Wilds_Garage — 14 days ago