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Warriors fall in, it's time for formation.
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Welcome back to another episode where we dive deep into the stories of survivability, strategy and leadership from those who've lived it on the front lines.
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Today, I'm honored to sit down with a true patriot and warrior, lieutenant Colonel Mark Hasara, a retired US Air Force officer with decades of experience in aerial refueling and operational planning.
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Lieutenant Colonel Hasara has supported some of the most critical combat missions in recent history and today we're going to get more into it his leadership and his mentorship and his national security advocacy.
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Sir, I want to thank you for joining me on the podcast today.
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KP.
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It's great to be with you, brother, and I really appreciate this opportunity to talk to you.
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We've got a lot of stuff to talk about and I'm going to give you examples of training, leadership, mentorship and some really crazy operational planning things where I screwed up.
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It'll be a lot of fun.
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Failing is one of the best things in life, because it causes you to have to brush yourself off and get back up.
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And, as a leader, it causes you to have to brush yourself off and get back up.
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And as a leader, uh, you know, it's it to me.
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I've learned over the years that failing is okay.
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Failing forward is what's most important.
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So, uh, I just wanted to mention too.
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Like you, you go by sluggo right.
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Yeah, s L U G G O is uh how they spell it.
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I got it when I was in pilot training, uh, kp.
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So I got it when I was in pilot training, kp.
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So I got it really early, all right, what was?
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that about my birth certificate.
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I weighed 10 pounds 14 ounces and was 23 and a half inches tall when I was born.
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Wow, yeah, I was a big kid.
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I was a really big kid.
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My dad told me a story.
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He says people would go by the nursery at Sentinella Hospital.
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I was born in Englewood at Sentinella hospital and people would go by and go.
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What's that three month old doing in there?
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My dad had just smiled.
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You were overcooked man.
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I was.
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I was.
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I came out, you know, red with a lot of, uh, black hair.
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Okay, and all that black hair, all that dark brown hair, turned gray when I was about 28.
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Wow, so so you, so you go by Sluggo.
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And then, how many years did you serve in the military?
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24 and a half, 24 years, six months, 29 days is what it says on my DD 214.
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Wow, and, and you know what I loved every minute of it, and so you were involved in how many different conflicts.
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Desert Storm was my first, then Kosovo in 1999.
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And then Afghanistan and Iraqi Freedom, the Shakanah campaign and Desert Storm.
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I was flying KC-135s, I was flying the old A models, the old water-burning engines, and then, right after the war ended, we came home back to Okinawa, where I was stationed at Kadena, and our squadron upgraded to the R model with the new CFM-56 engines, which was, you know, it's a great, great airplane.
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So Afghanistan and Iraq obviously were, you know, sad because of what happened on 9-11.
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From 1999 to 2001, I stood up and was the deputy commander of the KC-135, at that time called Combat Employment School, now the 509th Weapon Squadron of the famous US Air Force Weapon Squadron Weapon School, and there was only two lieutenant colonel graduates of the school, me as a deputy commander and my boss, bobby Fowler, and we'll talk about this too.
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The colonel that I was working for actually fired me and said your leadership is no longer needed here, and we'll get into this when we talk about leadership and everything.
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So that was April of 2001.
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Everything changed on 9-11, as you can imagine, eight days later I was in the Gulf flying missions.
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I was the chief of the air fueling control team three times during Operation Anaconda which, as you well know, did not go well.
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You know I was watching the Battle of Roberts Ridge in real time off of a Predator Ridge in real time off of a Predator.
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Then the run-up to the second Gulf War.
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It was called Operation Southern Focus, where we just started nugging down targets in Iraq, and then for the Shakanah campaign too.
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But I have test experience.
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I worked at our Operational Test and Evaluation Center it's crazy, kp because I'm a tanker guy never shot a gun, never dropped a bomb, never released a missile and I had all joint weapons, you know, like JDAM AIM-9X small diameter bomb, those kinds of things, which was a lot of fun.
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And that was my last assignment in the Air Force.
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I left in 2007.
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I went to work for Rockwell Collins for about seven years and then they sequestered you know all the money from my programs.
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I got laid off and I said you know what?
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I can go live on my pension and and do some other things.
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And that's when I wrote my book tanker pilot lessons from the cockpit, which is this book here.
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I took that picture from the backseat of an F-15, by the way.
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Oh, wow, that's your picture.
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Yeah, that's my picture, that's not stock.
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No, I took that picture from the backseat of an F-15.
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I have a lot of flying time in other airplanes, including 10 catapult-assisted takeoffs and 10 arrested landings on eight aircraft carriers.
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I'm a joint warfighter.
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I was designated what's called a joint specialty officer because I taught at the Joint Forces Staff College and taught campaign planning for three years.
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I've met so many pilots and all you guys are so highly technical, highly educated and a lot of times you guys don't give yourselves enough credit, that's for sure.
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Like I've talked to top gun pilots before, helicopter pilots in the Army, I've worked with them exclusively in Iraq and you guys are definitely lifesavers.
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Everything that you do, you know and I can't thank you enough for doing you know, for your service of 24 years supporting our troops and supporting our soldiers out there on the lines.
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Now you mentioned when you transitioned out of the military.
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You worked for Rockwell.
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What is?
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that Rockwell Collins.
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Rockwell Collins is avionics.
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It is now branched off into other things because it was bought out by Raytheon, I think owns it now.
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But we did cockpits okay, and I had flown in a lot of different airplanes and I was actually a systems engineering manager of a team of about 12.
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And I would joke with my boss, kp Toshi, I've gone as far in engineering as my political science degree will allow you know, political science degree will allow you know.
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But the thing, the great thing, kp, of being a systems engineering manager was I got to see what was behind the instrument panel.
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You know what is in a multifunction display, what makes it run, how does the graphics run, how do you program it, how do you maintain it, those kinds of things.
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And I and I really learned a lot in the seven years that I was there at Rockwell Collins.
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Um, I got to fly a lot of really cool simulators.
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Uh, they would have some of us pilots you know that were in the military.
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Uh, fly different.
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We had a reconfigurable cockpit where they could put big displays, small displays, new radios, all those kinds of things in it.
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And the base that they flew at KP was Jackson Hole, wyoming oh yeah, because it's up high.
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So during the summer it's hot, you know, and the air pressure's down, you know hot and humid, you know, which affects performance.
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And then you know hot and humid, you know which affects performance.
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And then, of course, during the winter, you have monster snowstorms, you know blizzards, and so you had all four different kinds of weather that you could fly through KP and really test these new avionics.
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And you know, like the heads-up guidance systems, you'll go into a cockpit of an airliner now and I have this piece of glass.
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You know, down in heads up guidance systems.
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You'll go into a cockpit of a of a airliner now and I have this piece of glass.
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You know down in front of the pilot and, uh, that has really changed the way a lot of uh pilots do things, because it will literally take you right down to the runway and, um, it was just a lot of fun, like I said, said learning what was behind the instrument panel, and then, uh, I did the sales and services.
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You know how you maintain those things.
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One of our biggest contracts was with 160th soar, because the cockpits of their little birds, their mh 60s, uh, mh 47s, is all made by rockwell.
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So you.
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So you mentioned something as simple as putting a glass sort of at like at the feet of the pilots, where you can see the runway is, is, is helpful.
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It's, it's a, it's a HUD in front of you like this.
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Oh, it's a heads up guidances.
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So you've got this.
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When you walk into an airline cockpit, some of them have them.
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When you walk into an airline cockpit, some of them have them, some of them don't.
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I've seen this.
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They have this big piece of glass that folds down in front of you.
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Right, it's just like the heads-up display on a fighter.
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Okay, you're not dealing with dropping bombs or, you know, shooting the gun or anything like that.
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But what you're dealing with is you're using that KP, because it's very precise when you're locked into, like like an instrument landing system or ILS approach.
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But the really cool thing is you have what's called EVS enhanced vision system, which is a camera, an infrared camera, on the outside of the airplane KP, and it sees down through the Merc.
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So you know all the bad weather and everything.
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This thing actually sees down through it.
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And the other piece of the puzzle, too, is what's called synthetic vision.
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So when you're flying into, like I mentioned, jackson Hole, wyoming, it actually puts all the terrain on the display in front of you, okay, synthetically, and it shows you where all the mountains are, where all the peaks are everything, but it also puts that up on the heads-up guidance system.
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So it not only helps you get to the runway in bad weather, but it's also a big safety feature, kp, because now you can see what's around you around the airplane due to this enhanced vision system, this camera, infrared camera, and the synthetic vision of the terrain that's around you.
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It makes it really safe to go into some of these really high altitude.
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You know, going into a mountain bowl valley, so to speak, particularly like Aspen all right, aspen's a really crazy approach where you're coming in over the mountains like Aspen All right, aspen's a really crazy approach where you're coming in over the mountains and and it's kind of funny because the terrain avoidance system will go off on the approach you know, terrain, terrain, terrain, because you go over this big peak as you come and turn and come into the runway and all of that is all presented on this piece of glass right in front of you.
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And, uh, you know, for all the military fighter pilots that were HUD cripples, this makes life easy for them.
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Yeah, they have those on commercial airlines too, right?
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Yeah, because I recall like I was in a 787.
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I have a cousin that flies for Hawaiian Airlines and he let me get in the I think it was a 787 simulator out there in Hawaii and I want to say that I do remember that that screen that folded down, yeah, um, I would not make a good pilot, like, I'll tell you that right now I was terrible man.
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It was.
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It was so hard to do, so hard to control, and like the pedals and everything I was controlling.
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I mean, you guys are highly technical and and are quick on your feet and decisive.
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Um, but and I want to take it back to the beginning At what point did you realize that you wanted to get into this type of, like, highly technical, professional type of job?
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You, you were born in Englewood, you did, you grow up in Southern California and then, yeah, and then you mentioned Orange County, fountain Valley, all those kinds of things.
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Okay, um, kp, my aviation journey started where you're at, in Southern California, at Los Angeles International Airport in the 1960s.
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Okay, I was about five years old.
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My grandfather and grandmother, my paternal grandparents, lived about two miles or less from LAX, so I could actually watch airplanes from their backyard land on the Sepulveda runways.
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And so, as a five-year-old kid my sister, seven years old, me at five years old, my younger brother, four years old we'd stand on the hood of Grandpa Andy's car, underneath the approach paths to the runways, the two south runways, and at that time there wasn't any fences or anything.
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There were jackrabbits running everywhere.
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And I remember this.
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You know, here I am 67, almost 68 years old and I still remember this feeling and everything.
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When this happened, we were standing on the hood of grandpa Andy's car and 707s and DC eights and jetliners were just coming into being.
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Okay, american airlines was 707s, pan Am, uh, with DC-8s, united, and at that time they didn't have a displaced runway, so the runway was literally right across the fence.
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As you know where those railroad tracks are If you've ever been there, there's railroad tracks on Aviation Boulevard and then you have the railroad tracks.
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Then you have the end of the runway and a 707 went over the top of us and I could feel it going to ground effect, pushing us down, the air underneath it, the pillow of air underneath the airplane pushing us down.
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It was really humid that day, you know, because it's by the beach, and so vortexes were coming off of the wingtips and off the corner of the flaps, which you can hear, okay, it's this sound okay.
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And I remember being pushed down on Grandpa Andy's hood and feeling that go over the top of me.
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And then an American Airlines 707 taxi's up and they're waiting for a while and the pilot, the captain, opens his window and he's got it open and of course he's got his head down doing all kinds of stuff and we're just kids, we're just waving like crazy, and finally he looks at us and he sees us and he kind of sticks himself out and he waves to us.
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You know, enjoy the takeoff, kids.
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And then he shuts the window and takes off.
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And that's when I said to myself why work for a living when I can do this?
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And from then on I studied airplanes.
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I studied airplanes by building plastic model planes, reading books, watching movies, talking to a lot of pilots.
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So, you know, I was born in Southern California but I was actually raised in the San Jose area and I had a lot of airline pilots that lived around me.
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One flew 707s for Western, one flew for Pan Am or no TWA, you know, and I talked to them all the time, incessantly learning all that I could about the aviation world, and so from a very, very young age, I knew what I wanted to do.
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I wanted to fly 707s, and for 24 years I got to fly a 707, like the one you see behind me and loved every minute of it.
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I loved the air refueling mission all right, and everybody goes to pilot training and wants to be, you know, a fighter pilot.
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All right, right.
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Everybody wants to kick doors down.
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Yeah, exactly.
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Right.
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But you know I didn't do well enough in pilot training.
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As a matter of fact, I almost washed out but I finished, got my wings and I flew KC-135s for, like I said, 24 years and I got to.
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I was fortunate enough to be able to do it in all different aspects of air refueling, enough to be able to do it in all different aspects of airfueling.
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I have time in British tankers, kc-10s.
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I even had S3 Viking time off of an aircraft carrier and I think that's something I would tell all of your listeners is I had a lot of people tell me I wasn't a good school student.
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All right, because I was studying airplanes.
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And I had a lot of my counselors tell me you know, you don't have the math scores or the science scores, you know, and pilots have to have math and science, all that kind of stuff.
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And I had a P-47 pilot that lived next to me in San Jose, kp.
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His name was Ed Reinhart.
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He flew with the 56 fighter group, okay, the famous Thunderbolt group, okay, and Francis Grabeski.
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All these guys were people he flew with.
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And I was telling him one day in high school I just come home and I had another counselor meeting.
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You know, what do you want to do with your life?
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I'm going to go fly airplanes.
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No, you don't have the math scores.
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You're on the science course.
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And I told him.
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I says I'm so depressed and so discouraged by this because they're telling me you know, I don't have the aptitude for this.
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And he goes, he goes, mark, it's all BS what they're telling you.
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I didn't have math science, I wasn't a good student and yet I flew P-47s all over Europe with one of the greatest groups of men that has ever walked the face of the planet.
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Don't believe in it.
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Don't believe it.
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If you want it bad enough, go get it.
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And that's what I tell all your listeners.
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Okay, if you have a goal, that you want to be a pilot, then go do it.
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Go do it okay, because right now is the best time to become a pilot.
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We're hurting for pilots, not just in the military, but in the commercial side too.
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Yeah.
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Yeah, and I love, I love your story, man, because I was in the same boat Like I.
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Uh, I was told by my guidance counselor that I wasn't college material, I wasn't allowed to take college classes, I didn't have the best grades in the world, but that was because of external circumstances of my home life not being very together, so I could never concentrate, um, but I knew that I wanted to go to college.
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I knew I wanted to do certain things and I love how you were told no, but then you ran into that one person that told you don't believe them.
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And that's a great message for today, for folks out there that might be listening, that you know, don't limit yourself to the end of your block.
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Like, think about beyond the horizon something bigger.
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Um, that's an amazing story.
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And what, what made you go to BYU.
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Oh, Brigham Young University.
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I'm a member of the LDS church and, and so that's where I ended up and, and literally, KP.
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I went down BYU's catalog and I said what will get me out of here the fastest?
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Okay, that's how I picked my major.
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Poli-Sci.
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Exactly KP.
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That's exactly what it was.
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Okay, and guess what?
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Byu had a national security track, and so I could study all of the workings of the national security apparatus.
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But KP, I wasn't interested in it.
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I was a C student in college.
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Me too.
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That's not what I wanted to become.
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I didn't want to become a politician or a political scientist.
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I did it because that's what was required of me.
00:19:52.826 --> 00:19:55.289
To be a pilot, I had to have a four-year degree.
00:19:55.289 --> 00:19:58.773
A friend of mine flew with an F-111 pilot.
00:19:58.773 --> 00:20:00.276
You know what his degree was in.
00:20:02.640 --> 00:20:03.183
Modern dance and jazz dance.
00:20:03.183 --> 00:20:05.076
I was going to gonna say criminal justice, but that's even worse.
00:20:05.076 --> 00:20:06.101
You know what he?
00:20:06.201 --> 00:20:06.962
you know why he did it?
00:20:06.962 --> 00:20:10.251
Because he knew he could meet more women by doing that.
00:20:12.001 --> 00:20:24.829
Okay so he had a plan he had a plan, okay, but again and and that's kind of on me that I wasn't a good student all right, I just wanted to get through school and get into pilot training, all right.
00:20:24.829 --> 00:20:33.288
And so my study habits weren't real good when I got to pilot training and I suffered for that when I was going through pilot training.
00:20:33.288 --> 00:20:48.089
But I still made it through because I wanted it more than other people, right, and I saw people that were about to wash out or had washed out, and I had one of them come up and tell me hey, you're struggling through this, you need to just leave and I'm going.
00:20:48.089 --> 00:20:49.732
No, I'm finishing.
00:20:49.732 --> 00:20:59.613
You know, I don't care what you think, okay, I don't care what my counselor thinks, I don't care what you think, my goal was to fly 707s as a kid and I'm going to do it and I did.
00:21:00.232 --> 00:21:01.314
I love the stubbornness, man.
00:21:01.314 --> 00:21:04.375
I love the stubbornness because, at the end of the day, it's it's that grit.
00:21:04.375 --> 00:21:25.454
And I I used to explain to employers cause, when I was getting out of the army, they they told me like, hey, like, when you interview, the other people that are going to be interviewing that same day with you are going to be Academy guys, they're going to be guys that had 4.5 GPAs, and so you're going to have to describe yourself as a gritty fighter.
00:21:25.454 --> 00:21:36.431
You weren't born with a silver spoon in your mouth, et cetera, et cetera, and I'm like, that's who I am, like, I don't give up, I keep fighting, and that's what I'm hearing from you.
00:21:36.490 --> 00:21:46.174
Man is like, despite the fact that everyone told you, no, this isn't your thing, you stayed in place and you kept going, which I think is important.
00:21:46.174 --> 00:21:46.842
And you know what?
00:21:46.842 --> 00:21:49.630
Going back to what you said earlier, the power of that airplane.
00:21:49.630 --> 00:22:01.409
The power of that airplane motivated you for your future career and I think we need to do a better job as parents and as leaders of putting kids in the driver's seat.
00:22:01.409 --> 00:22:15.409
To feel that motivation, similar to what you did like is get up close, like that, to where you feel that power and that power of that aircraft pushed you in that direction, to have 24 years of honorable military service.
00:22:15.971 --> 00:22:19.519
It's amazing and you know what it was.
00:22:19.519 --> 00:22:20.761
A childhood dream come true.
00:22:20.761 --> 00:22:25.933
Kp and I had had I mean, just phenomenal experiences.
00:22:25.933 --> 00:22:32.132
Now your first combat mission's a little scary, you know, because you don't know what's going to happen.
00:22:32.132 --> 00:22:34.259
You know, amen.
00:22:34.259 --> 00:22:43.194
You know what your strengths and weaknesses are, but they're about to be tested to the max.
00:22:43.194 --> 00:22:55.133
But they're about to be tested to the max and I've become good friends with the flight lead of my very first combat mission, refueling the first Wild Weasel package into Baghdad.
00:22:55.133 --> 00:23:06.028
And it was being led by a guy by the name of John Boy Walton, and in my book that is the first story I have.
00:23:06.028 --> 00:23:07.720
In my book it's called Drinks for Puba's Party.
00:23:07.720 --> 00:23:17.763
Puba is this famous, famous wild weasel electronic warfare officer and he designed the takedown of the integrated air defenses of Baghdad.
00:23:17.763 --> 00:23:33.339
And so here I am flying this mission and if our mission fails, nobody goes into Baghdad because the weasels, the F4G wild weasel, its whole purpose is to go in, hunt surface-to-air missile sites and kill them.
00:23:35.324 --> 00:23:48.808
And I'll never forget that night, you know, two o'clock in the morning, with these guys on the wing, and yeah, you're scared, all right, but you know how to compartmentalize that because you have a mission.
00:23:48.808 --> 00:23:51.026
You have a mission to perform.
00:23:51.026 --> 00:23:54.224
You've got great buds around you and you go and do it.
00:23:54.224 --> 00:24:05.769
And I flew KC-135, tail number 8019, and the crew chief her name was Vonnie Peterson.
00:24:05.769 --> 00:24:06.791
May she rest in peace.
00:24:06.791 --> 00:24:08.342
She died from cancer about 10 years ago.
00:24:08.342 --> 00:24:20.785
Red-haired, freckled glasses, but one of the best crew chiefs on the planet, and I can't say enough good things about crew chiefs that are out there three, four hours before a mission, knuckle-busting on airplanes.