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Dave Null, Claremont, California, USA
Brandon Thornburg, Portland, OR(formerly Poynton, Cheshire) USA
Michael Commons, WEDNESBURY United Kingdom


A least these days a doctor changes his gloves between testicle squeezings, which wasn't done when I was a lad.
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Russian Red Army recruits undergo humiliating naked exams in astonishing photos
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A terrifying bust of tyrant Josef Stalin looms in the background of one photo as a naked man stands before a table of Red Army officers
Astonishing black-and-white photos have surfaced showing naked recruits undergoing medical exams before joining Joseph Stalin's Red Army.
In one snap, a naked man stands before a table of officers as they inspect him for any abnormalities - as a terrifying bust of Stalin glares over them all.
The year is 1930 and the man has been drafted into the Red Army to fight for the USSR.
Next to Stalin's unsightly head a poster reads: "The most important basis of our army is that it is the army of liberation of the Working and the Peasants, it is the army of October Revolution, the army of the dictatorship of the proletariat."
The chilling images of young Russian men being medically examined were taken after they had been conscripted to fight for the Red Army.
The pictures show nervous-looking men being eyeballed by officers and nurses to check their physical condition.
In military registration and enlistment offices, doctors and nurses can be seen carrying out medical tests such as weighing, measuring and listening for a heartbeat.
The images were taken between 1920 and 1940 as the Soviet top brass built their Red Army, officially known as the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army, pejoratively referred to as the Red Horde.
During World War II, the Red Army was perhaps the most decisive land force for the Allies that consisted of Britain, France and the US.
It was the Red Army that accounted for a whopping 80 per cent of casualties suffered to the Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS, and it was they who ultimately captured the Nazi German capital, Berlin.
Not to mention their invasion of Manchuria which contributed heavily to the unconditional surrender of Imperial Japan.
The Red Army was officially formed on January 28, 1918, and condition of entry was "the support of the coming Socialist Revolution in Europe".
Those early Soviet forces mainly consisted of peasants.
The families of those who served were guaranteed rations and assistance with farm work.
Because of this, recruitment centres were flooded with men and women trying to join up.
However, when the Soviet Union was formed they were at war with their enemies immediately so on the 23rd February 1918 they began drafting recruits.
It was christened Red Army Day and it is still a national holiday in Russia, now known as Defender of the Fatherland Day.
The Red Army went on to become a feared force in World War II, however not without its problems.
After Stalin rose to power in the 1920s he began purging officers leaving them hamstrung with inexperienced leaders.
In 1937, just two years before the start of the Second World War, Stalin dismissed over 11,000 officers and many other high-ranking army chiefs who he thought were enemies.
In 1946, the word "red" was removed from the name of the army, marking the end of an an era.
Stalin saw the Soviet Union through World War II and its post-war reconstruction and famine, and the beginnings of the Cold War.
After years of failing health, he died in March 1953 due to a cerebral haemorrhage.
His death is shrouded in mystery more than 60 years on.
There are still claims he may have been murdered, and possibly even poisoned with warfarin, a rat poison, in a bid to avert a war with the US.
It is estimated that the World War II fatalities of the Soviet Union was 27 million civilians and armed service members.
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Royal Marines ‘whipped and forced to masturbate to gay pornography’ as punishments

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CARNOUSTIE, SCOTLAND - APRIL 12: Royal Marines from 42 Commando take part in an exercise at Barry Buddon simulating an attack on shores of a hostile country on April 12, 2013 in Carnoustie, Scotland. The exercise is part of Joint Warrior which will run from the 15 to 29 April in locations across the UK, involving UK forces and international allies in all aspects of warfare. (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
Royal Marines were hung upside down, whipped and forced to masturbate to gay pornography as punishments for minor faults, a court martial has been told.
Soldiers were also allegedly ordered to shave off all their body hair for issues such as dropping equipment or failing tests.
Corporals Philip Beer, 34, and Danny Foster, 30, stand accused of overseeing a nightly gathering of their 43 Commando troop called “family time”, during which they dealt with “professional failings” unofficially.
One punishment was allegedly named Django, after Quentin Tarantino’s Oscar winning film about slavery, Django Unchained, and required victims to be hung upside down and be whipped.
The acts were part of a perverse version of Deal Or No Deal in which soldiers picked a box at random and were then forced to do the act detailed in the box.
Portsmouth Military Court was told one soldier would play The Banker, handing out punishments to fellow troops as part of the “kangaroo court”.
One punishment involved the men being forced to perform a sex act while watching gay pornography on a laptop.
The soldier who was last to ‘finish’ masturabting to the explicit same-sex films would be forced to perform an additional punishment, it has been claimed.
Lt Col Coombes said: “This case concerns the ill treatment of two marines by the accused, who were troop corporals in 43 Commando at the time.
“During the course of their deployment on a security operation at bases including Faslane and Coulport, the marines would take part in a nightly gathering known as family time.
“This served as an unofficial way of dealing with any professional failings that may have happened, ranging from not wiping up a coffee stain to not looking after troop equipment properly.
“Both the accused were involved in the running of family time.
“The first charge relates to a group of marines being forced to [perform a sex act] to gay porn, which was shown to them on a laptop.
“When one of them told Foster ‘I ain’t doing it’, Foster told him ‘you f****** are’.
“The second charge involves a further punishment called Django, which involved a victim having to hang upside down from a bar and be reefed, otherwise known as being whipped, with a rubber gym mat.
“The punishment derived from the film called Django Unchained, in which during one scene a black slave is chained upside down and whipped.
“This was imposed after a game of Deal or No Deal, which involved a marine standing at the front of the room picking box numbers like they do on the show.
“A person playing the banker could offer punishments throughout the game – in this incident the complainant tried to swap his box, which was part of the game, but Foster refused to allow him to do this and instead imposed Django, which was the offered punishment.
“In the third charge, another marine was given the ‘new born baby’ punishment and was required to shave off all the hair on his body.
“The complainant had two boxes left in a game of Deal or No Deal, when Beer, who was playing the banker, made an offer of the new born baby punishment.
“When the complainant was not willing to accept it, Beer told him he was going to receive it anyway.
“The final charge relates to the previous one, when Beer asked the complainant if he had shaved all his hair.
“The complainant said he had spent an hour and a half shaving and had tried his best, but when checked he had not got all the hair.
Celebs you didn’t know have an LGBT sibling
“He was given 15 minutes to shave the remaining hair, but refused – saying he had gone above and beyond already.
“Corporal Beer told him to go outside because he was to be given a ‘thrashing’, which involved him running up and down a hill in full weapons gear and carrying 20 large water bottles both up and down.
“Both the defendants oversaw this and it took the complainant around four hours to complete.”
Foster denies three counts of ill treatment of a subordinate, while Beer denies two counts of the same charge.


Patrick Kelleher

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October 16, 2022








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Published: 16:58 BST, 17 July 2016 | Updated: 18:18 BST, 17 July 2016
A photograph has surfaced online showing dozens of Turkish soldiers huddled together naked on the floor following their surrender during the failed military coup.
The army personnel look to have been stripped of their uniform as they lay on the floor on an indoor basketball court in Sirnak, east Turkey, handcuffed as officials loyal to the Government look over them.
The group of soldiers are a part of more than 6,000 rebels to be detained in the aftermath of the failed uprising that killed at least 250 and wounded more than 1,500.
It comes as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has vowed to purge all state institutions of supporters of an Islamist cleric his government blames for Friday's coup attempt. 
A photograph has surfaced online showing dozens of Turkish soldiers huddled together naked on the floor following their surrender during the failed military coup
Soldiers, who surrendered following the defeat of last night's attempted coup, are loaded onto a bus following their arrest by police officers and civilians
More than 6,000 rebels have been detained after their failed military coup that killed at least 250 as Turkish President Erdogan vows revenge for the bloody uprising
Speaking at a funeral in Istanbul on Sunday, Erdogan broke down in tears as he vowed to cleanse the country of the 'virus' of Fethullah Gulen supporters.
He said Turkey, through the justice ministry and foreign ministry, would request the extradition of the cleric, who is based in the United States, and his backers. He has denied any involvement in the coup effort.
Some 104 plotters were killed after a coup attempt to bring down the Turkish government, while 160 people - at least 41 of them police and 47 civilians - fell as 'martyrs'. 
The rebel army faction said they were trying to overthrow the government to 'protect human rights' and restore democracy from Erdogan's Justice and Development Party, AKP, which has repeatedly faced criticism over its brutal crackdowns on anti-government protesters.
However, Erdogan has blamed his old scapegoat, Fethullah Gulen for orchestrating the uprising.
Muslim cleric Gulen, the president's rival who lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania, U.S. as the head of a billion dollar religious movement, has often been blamed for political unrest in Turkey. 
After launching the coup, the Turkish military imposed a curfew on civilians telling them to stay in their homes, but Erdogan called on supporters to ignore the order and take to the streets, which is thought to have caused the army to relinquish control.
A soldier cowers as he is confronted by plain-clothes police officers and civilians after the military surrendered on Bosphorus Bridge
A Turkish civilian whips soldiers with his belt after they surrendered to police on Bosphorus Bridge, a strategic landmark which was seized by the army during the coup
More than 6,000 members of the military have been rounded up accused of being part of the coup
Turkish military officers who fled to Greece by helicopter after a failed coup were charged on Sunday by a prosecutor with illegal entry and violating Greek airspace.
The men, who have sought asylum in Greece, arrived by military helicopter on Saturday after sending a distress signal to authorities at the airport in the northern city of Alexandroupolis.
They were prosecuted for illegal entry into Greece, their lawyer Ilia Marinaki said, adding that they will appear in court on Monday.
She added that they remained under arrest and had not made contact with their families.
The asylum seekers insist they took no part in the putsch and fled to Greece to save their lives 'when policemen started shooting against them'.
Marinaki added that the soldiers - all married and in their forties - feared for the safety of themselves and their families.
More than 265 people were killed during the five-hour coup which ended in the early hours of Saturday morning amid dramatic scenes
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