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On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 09:47:36 -0400, Vince wrote:
Ed Rasimus wrote: On Tue, 20 Jun 2006 15:11:33 -0700, "Leadfoot" wrote: We were prepared to fight as long as it took, IF--repeat IF--the give-up rather than fight crowd in the US would have stopped distracting the politicians so that we could have won. So we could still be there today, eh? No, we would have been out by 1968. Review the effect on "negotiations" of the period 18-29 December 1972 for a concrete example. Ed, with all due respect the "dolchstoss" theory didn't wash then and it doesn't wash now. No "dolchstoss" involved here. There was certainly no knife in the back in '64-'68. We had the military power to impose our will if we had the political will to do so. For whatever reason our proxies , the south Vietnamese , would not fight with the same intensity as the Russian and Chinese proxies, the north Vietnamese. And, we were woefully ignorant of culture other than our own. The agrarian south was not quite as easily mobilized as the industrialized (and hence Marxist prone) north. Yet we could have "contained" the communist threat readily had we not gradually fell victim to political posturing and pacifism at home. Throw in a draft, a Spock-raised generation with expectations of a life of privilege, a rising expectation of equality for our minorities, and a propensity increasingly for politicians to pander for votes rather than doing what is arguably painful but better for the nation in the long run. Since both sides had nuclear weapons we were constrained to fight a limited war. As a result "we" could not win. Only the south Vietnamese could win and they did not want to fight. Exactly the issue. We were still woefully uncertain of how to keep wars "limited" and how to stem escalation. This was obvious to the world in the late 60s. Up until that line we had significant agreement. Not much of all of this was obvious to the world in the late '60s. And, I would forecast that in 2040, not much of what will be then obvious about jihadists and dealing with them will have been known now. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
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Ed Rasimus wrote:
On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 09:47:36 -0400, Vince wrote: Ed Rasimus wrote: On Tue, 20 Jun 2006 15:11:33 -0700, "Leadfoot" wrote: We were prepared to fight as long as it took, IF--repeat IF--the give-up rather than fight crowd in the US would have stopped distracting the politicians so that we could have won. So we could still be there today, eh? No, we would have been out by 1968. Review the effect on "negotiations" of the period 18-29 December 1972 for a concrete example. Ed, with all due respect the "dolchstoss" theory didn't wash then and it doesn't wash now. No "dolchstoss" involved here. There was certainly no knife in the back in '64-'68. We had the military power to impose our will if we had the political will to do so. You need to read up a bit "The Dolchstoßlegende, (German "dagger-thrust legend", often translated in English as "stab-in-the-back legend") refers to a social mythos and persecution-propaganda theory popular in post-World War I Germany, which claimed a direct link between Germany's defeat with German citizens who nationalists claimed had sabotaged or otherwise lacked dedication to the promoted cause of the war —ie. "to unify the German nation." Der Dolchstoss is cited as a important factor in Adolf Hitler's later rise to power, as the Nazi Party grew its original political base largely from embittered WWI veterans and those sympathetic with the Dolchstoss interpretation." It's precisely on point to your claim that: IF--repeat IF--the give-up rather than fight crowd in the US would have stopped distracting the politicians so that we could have won. and We had the military power to impose our will if we had the political will to do so. "Conservatives, nationalists and ex-military leaders began to speak critically about the peace and Weimar politicians, socialists, communists, and Jews were viewed with suspicion due to their supposed extra-national loyalties. It was rumored that they had not supported the war and had played a role in selling-out Germany to its enemies. These November Criminals, or those who seemed to benefit from the newly formed Weimar Republic, were seen to have "stabbed them in the back" on the home front, by either criticizing the cause of German nationalism, instigating unrest and strikes in the critical military industries or profiteering. In essence the accusation was that the accused committed treason against the "benevolent and righteous" common cause." "Other wars have been viewed as winnable but lost due to some sort of homefront betrayal. For example, some believe this had happened to the United States during the Vietnam War. However, some believe that the so-called "Vietnam Syndrome" is also a myth." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolchsto%C3%9Flegende For whatever reason our proxies , the south Vietnamese , would not fight with the same intensity as the Russian and Chinese proxies, the north Vietnamese. And, we were woefully ignorant of culture other than our own. The agrarian south was not quite as easily mobilized as the industrialized (and hence Marxist prone) north. It was not able to fucntion at all, and in both countries the majority of the population were farmers. Yet we could have "contained" the communist threat readily had we not gradually fell victim to political posturing and pacifism at home. Ah yes, more dolchstoss The official birth of the term itself possibly can be dated to mid 1919, when Ludendorff was having lunch with a British general Sir Neil Malcolm. Malcolm asked Ludendorff why it was that he thought Germany lost the war. Ludendorff replied with his list of excuses: The home front failed us etc. Then, Sir Neil Malcolm said that "it sounds like you were stabbed in the back then?" The phrase was to Ludendorff's liking and he let it be known among the general staff that this was the 'official' version, then disseminated throughout German society. This was picked up by right wing political factions and used as a form of attack against the hated Weimar regime, who were the exponents of the German Revolution. great excuse when you've lost a war. Throw in a draft, a Spock-raised generation with expectations of a life of privilege, a rising expectation of equality for our minorities, and a propensity increasingly for politicians to pander for votes rather than doing what is arguably painful but better for the nation in the long run. Like avoiding 50,000 plus dead Americans? Since both sides had nuclear weapons we were constrained to fight a limited war. As a result "we" could not win. Only the south Vietnamese could win and they did not want to fight. Exactly the issue. We were still woefully uncertain of how to keep wars "limited" and how to stem escalation. This was obvious to the world in the late 60s. Up until that line we had significant agreement. Not much of all of this was obvious to the world in the late '60s. And, I would forecast that in 2040, not much of what will be then obvious about jihadists and dealing with them will have been known now. I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. I recall talking to French paratroopers who had been at Dien Ben Phu. The duplicity of the US government, the a lack of a meaningful game plan for Vietnamization , The corruption of the south Vietnamese government , the over estimation of the effect of bombing, the reduction in quality of the conscript infantry and the political problem of bombing the North and risking Russian nuclear attack were matters of daily conversation. I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. |
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On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 14:05:17 -0400, Vince wrote:
Ed Rasimus wrote: On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 09:47:36 -0400, Vince wrote: Ed, with all due respect the "dolchstoss" theory didn't wash then and it doesn't wash now. No "dolchstoss" involved here. There was certainly no knife in the back in '64-'68. We had the military power to impose our will if we had the political will to do so. You need to read up a bit "The Dolchstoßlegende, (German "dagger-thrust legend", often translated in English as "stab-in-the-back legend") refers to a social mythos and persecution-propaganda theory popular in post-World War I Germany, which claimed a direct link between Germany's defeat with German citizens who nationalists claimed had sabotaged or otherwise lacked dedication to the promoted cause of the war —ie. "to unify the German nation." Der Dolchstoss is cited as a important factor in Adolf Hitler's later rise to power, as the Nazi Party grew its original political base largely from embittered WWI veterans and those sympathetic with the Dolchstoss interpretation." It sounds like you found a term and are dedicated to making it apply. The conspiracy theory for Germany doesn't hold much water for WW I or II and it doesn't get traction for the US experience in SEA. It's precisely on point to your claim that: IF--repeat IF--the give-up rather than fight crowd in the US would have stopped distracting the politicians so that we could have won. and We had the military power to impose our will if we had the political will to do so. "Conservatives, nationalists and ex-military leaders began to speak critically about the peace and Weimar politicians, socialists, communists, and Jews were viewed with suspicion due to their supposed extra-national loyalties. It was rumored that they had not supported the war and had played a role in selling-out Germany to its enemies. These November Criminals, or those who seemed to benefit from the newly formed Weimar Republic, were seen to have "stabbed them in the back" on the home front, by either criticizing the cause of German nationalism, instigating unrest and strikes in the critical military industries or profiteering. In essence the accusation was that the accused committed treason against the "benevolent and righteous" common cause." "Other wars have been viewed as winnable but lost due to some sort of homefront betrayal. For example, some believe this had happened to the United States during the Vietnam War. However, some believe that the so-called "Vietnam Syndrome" is also a myth." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolchsto%C3%9Flegende "Some believe" is a load of crap. There's been a lot of work written since 1975 to describe what went right and what went wrong. Much has been written by politicians on the scene (i.e. Kissinger, McNamara, etc.) and much be military historians. A lot of research has been done by political analysts in universities on both the pro and con sides of the war. (For that matter, there's been a lot of first-person participant writing on the topic--even I wrote two published books on the air war.) Not many proponents except possibly on the fringe who suspect some sort of conspiracy or betrayal. It goes a lot deeper than that. For whatever reason our proxies , the south Vietnamese , would not fight with the same intensity as the Russian and Chinese proxies, the north Vietnamese. And, we were woefully ignorant of culture other than our own. The agrarian south was not quite as easily mobilized as the industrialized (and hence Marxist prone) north. It was not able to fucntion at all, and in both countries the majority of the population were farmers. You probably didn't get the view of Hanoi, Haiphong, Thai Nguyen, Cam Pha, Viet Tri, Pho Tho, and other urban areas that I did. Yet we could have "contained" the communist threat readily had we not gradually fell victim to political posturing and pacifism at home. Ah yes, more dolchstoss None of the sort. Politicians seldom transcend the base selfishness of the re-election motive. One need only examine the tax structure of the US and the redistribution schemes of the IRS to see proof of catering to the majority of the electorate. Welfare sells for votes and anti-war is always more convenient than combat in terms of popular appeal. The official birth of the term itself possibly can be dated to mid 1919, when Ludendorff was having lunch with a British general Sir Neil Malcolm. Malcolm asked Ludendorff why it was that he thought Germany lost the war. Ludendorff replied with his list of excuses: The home front failed us etc. Then, Sir Neil Malcolm said that "it sounds like you were stabbed in the back then?" The phrase was to Ludendorff's liking and he let it be known among the general staff that this was the 'official' version, then disseminated throughout German society. This was picked up by right wing political factions and used as a form of attack against the hated Weimar regime, who were the exponents of the German Revolution. great excuse when you've lost a war. A fairly anecdotal and arguably revisionist view of the seeds of Nazism. One might look at the reparations of Versaille as a more concrete causative factor. Throw in a draft, a Spock-raised generation with expectations of a life of privilege, a rising expectation of equality for our minorities, and a propensity increasingly for politicians to pander for votes rather than doing what is arguably painful but better for the nation in the long run. Like avoiding 50,000 plus dead Americans? The number is a bit over 58,000, but why quibble. Better for the nation would be winning conflicts decisively as quickly as possible. Better for the nation is doing what needs to be done before the nation suffers another terrorist attack of the magnitude of 9/11. Better for the nation is a stable Middle East (rather than an abandoned one under control of the jihadists.) Since both sides had nuclear weapons we were constrained to fight a limited war. As a result "we" could not win. Only the south Vietnamese could win and they did not want to fight. Exactly the issue. We were still woefully uncertain of how to keep wars "limited" and how to stem escalation. This was obvious to the world in the late 60s. Up until that line we had significant agreement. Not much of all of this was obvious to the world in the late '60s. And, I would forecast that in 2040, not much of what will be then obvious about jihadists and dealing with them will have been known now. I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. Passing through town or with a job relevant to the policy-making process? I recall talking to French paratroopers who had been at Dien Ben Phu. Most every officer I knew had read Bernard Fall. "Street Without Joy" has more relevance than "Hell in a Very Small Place." I've seen Dien Bien Phu. It's a poor site for a defensive battle--inaccessible, surrounded by high ground and supportable only by air. The French must have read George Custer's tactics manual. The duplicity of the US government, Eisenhower provided logistic, but not military support to the French. He accepted the Geneva Accords. Kennedy had more Laos on his plate than Vietnam. LBJ, unfortunately was saddled with McNamara and might have been duplicitious. Nixon initiated Vietnamization and wrapped up the treaty that got us out and got the POWs returned. At the same time he opened up trade and relations with the PRC. the a lack of a meaningful game plan for Vietnamization , The term was coined by Nixon in 1968. We were four years (more actually) into it by then. In his first term he brought troop levels down from half a million to about 65K in the summer of 1972. What wasn't "meaningful" about that game plan? The corruption of the south Vietnamese government , the over estimation of the effect of bombing, I suspect I've got a more immediate estimation of the effect of bombing on N. Vietnam than you, unless you were some sort of child protege in your position inside the beltway. the reduction in quality of the conscript infantry and the political problem of bombing the North and risking Russian nuclear attack were matters of daily conversation. The draft reflected the increasing lack of education, morality, ethics, integrity, and self-sacrifice of the population at large. The "political problem of bombing the North" apparently was pretty minimal. We did it from 1964 to 1968, intermittently from 69-71 and then resumed it with impunity in '72. I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. It seemed to work for you. I served with a large number of "rich, well-born" and decidedly "able" folks in combat. That canard about who went to war and who went to the Guard has been discussed at length in R.A.M. Flying single seat, single engine tactical jets for 4.5 years trumps driving a fishing boat upriver for six months and then calling everyone you served with a war criminal in the balance of most of the folks I deal with. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
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![]() "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 14:05:17 -0400, Vince wrote: Ed Rasimus wrote: On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 09:47:36 -0400, Vince wrote: Ed, with all due respect the "dolchstoss" theory didn't wash then and it doesn't wash now. No "dolchstoss" involved here. There was certainly no knife in the back in '64-'68. We had the military power to impose our will if we had the political will to do so. You need to read up a bit "The Dolchstoßlegende, (German "dagger-thrust legend", often translated in English as "stab-in-the-back legend") refers to a social mythos and persecution-propaganda theory popular in post-World War I Germany, which claimed a direct link between Germany's defeat with German citizens who nationalists claimed had sabotaged or otherwise lacked dedication to the promoted cause of the war -ie. "to unify the German nation." Der Dolchstoss is cited as a important factor in Adolf Hitler's later rise to power, as the Nazi Party grew its original political base largely from embittered WWI veterans and those sympathetic with the Dolchstoss interpretation." It sounds like you found a term and are dedicated to making it apply. The conspiracy theory for Germany doesn't hold much water for WW I or II and it doesn't get traction for the US experience in SEA. It's precisely on point to your claim that: IF--repeat IF--the give-up rather than fight crowd in the US would have stopped distracting the politicians so that we could have won. and We had the military power to impose our will if we had the political will to do so. "Conservatives, nationalists and ex-military leaders began to speak critically about the peace and Weimar politicians, socialists, communists, and Jews were viewed with suspicion due to their supposed extra-national loyalties. It was rumored that they had not supported the war and had played a role in selling-out Germany to its enemies. These November Criminals, or those who seemed to benefit from the newly formed Weimar Republic, were seen to have "stabbed them in the back" on the home front, by either criticizing the cause of German nationalism, instigating unrest and strikes in the critical military industries or profiteering. In essence the accusation was that the accused committed treason against the "benevolent and righteous" common cause." "Other wars have been viewed as winnable but lost due to some sort of homefront betrayal. For example, some believe this had happened to the United States during the Vietnam War. However, some believe that the so-called "Vietnam Syndrome" is also a myth." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolchsto%C3%9Flegende "Some believe" is a load of crap. There's been a lot of work written since 1975 to describe what went right and what went wrong. Much has been written by politicians on the scene (i.e. Kissinger, McNamara, etc.) and much be military historians. A lot of research has been done by political analysts in universities on both the pro and con sides of the war. (For that matter, there's been a lot of first-person participant writing on the topic--even I wrote two published books on the air war.) Not many proponents except possibly on the fringe who suspect some sort of conspiracy or betrayal. It goes a lot deeper than that. For whatever reason our proxies , the south Vietnamese , would not fight with the same intensity as the Russian and Chinese proxies, the north Vietnamese. And, we were woefully ignorant of culture other than our own. The agrarian south was not quite as easily mobilized as the industrialized (and hence Marxist prone) north. It was not able to fucntion at all, and in both countries the majority of the population were farmers. You probably didn't get the view of Hanoi, Haiphong, Thai Nguyen, Cam Pha, Viet Tri, Pho Tho, and other urban areas that I did. Yet we could have "contained" the communist threat readily had we not gradually fell victim to political posturing and pacifism at home. Ah yes, more dolchstoss None of the sort. Politicians seldom transcend the base selfishness of the re-election motive. One need only examine the tax structure of the US and the redistribution schemes of the IRS to see proof of catering to the majority of the electorate. Welfare sells for votes I think lately it's been bribing the voter with tax cuts My take on taxes is short and sweet Taxes = Budget and anti-war is always more convenient than combat in terms of popular appeal. Bush got elected by a lot of sheep The official birth of the term itself possibly can be dated to mid 1919, when Ludendorff was having lunch with a British general Sir Neil Malcolm. Malcolm asked Ludendorff why it was that he thought Germany lost the war. Ludendorff replied with his list of excuses: The home front failed us etc. Then, Sir Neil Malcolm said that "it sounds like you were stabbed in the back then?" The phrase was to Ludendorff's liking and he let it be known among the general staff that this was the 'official' version, then disseminated throughout German society. This was picked up by right wing political factions and used as a form of attack against the hated Weimar regime, who were the exponents of the German Revolution. great excuse when you've lost a war. A fairly anecdotal and arguably revisionist view of the seeds of Nazism. One might look at the reparations of Versaille as a more concrete causative factor. Throw in a draft, a Spock-raised generation with expectations of a life of privilege, a rising expectation of equality for our minorities, and a propensity increasingly for politicians to pander for votes rather than doing what is arguably painful but better for the nation in the long run. Like avoiding 50,000 plus dead Americans? The number is a bit over 58,000, but why quibble. Better for the nation would be winning conflicts decisively as quickly as possible. Better for the nation is doing what needs to be done before the nation suffers another terrorist attack of the magnitude of 9/11. Better for the nation is a stable Middle East (rather than an abandoned one under control of the jihadists.) How many muslims hated us enough to want to kill before March 2003 How many hate us enough to kill us today? I'm sure the latter is higher. Since both sides had nuclear weapons we were constrained to fight a limited war. As a result "we" could not win. Only the south Vietnamese could win and they did not want to fight. Exactly the issue. We were still woefully uncertain of how to keep wars "limited" and how to stem escalation. This was obvious to the world in the late 60s. Up until that line we had significant agreement. Not much of all of this was obvious to the world in the late '60s. And, I would forecast that in 2040, not much of what will be then obvious about jihadists and dealing with them will have been known now. I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. Passing through town or with a job relevant to the policy-making process? I recall talking to French paratroopers who had been at Dien Ben Phu. Most every officer I knew had read Bernard Fall. "Street Without Joy" has more relevance than "Hell in a Very Small Place." I've seen Dien Bien Phu. It's a poor site for a defensive battle--inaccessible, surrounded by high ground and supportable only by air. The French must have read George Custer's tactics manual. The duplicity of the US government, Eisenhower provided logistic, but not military support to the French. He accepted the Geneva Accords. Kennedy had more Laos on his plate than Vietnam. LBJ, unfortunately was saddled with McNamara and might have been duplicitious. Nixon initiated Vietnamization and wrapped up the treaty that got us out and got the POWs returned. At the same time he opened up trade and relations with the PRC. the a lack of a meaningful game plan for Vietnamization , The term was coined by Nixon in 1968. We were four years (more actually) into it by then. In his first term he brought troop levels down from half a million to about 65K in the summer of 1972. What wasn't "meaningful" about that game plan? The corruption of the south Vietnamese government , the over estimation of the effect of bombing, I suspect I've got a more immediate estimation of the effect of bombing on N. Vietnam than you, unless you were some sort of child protege in your position inside the beltway. the reduction in quality of the conscript infantry and the political problem of bombing the North and risking Russian nuclear attack were matters of daily conversation. The draft reflected the increasing lack of education, morality, ethics, integrity, and self-sacrifice of the population at large. The "political problem of bombing the North" apparently was pretty minimal. We did it from 1964 to 1968, intermittently from 69-71 and then resumed it with impunity in '72. I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. It seemed to work for you. I served with a large number of "rich, well-born" and decidedly "able" folks in combat. That canard about who went to war and who went to the Guard has been discussed at length in R.A.M. Flying single seat, single engine tactical jets for 4.5 years And not getting shot at and it being unlikely you will all through daddy's help trumps driving a fishing boat upriver for six months and having Bullets whistle by your ear and dealing with the the people we were fighting for up close and personal. and then calling everyone you served with a war criminal in the balance of most of the folks I deal with. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
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Vince wrote:
:I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. ... Yes. And so you know more than the folks who were there doing the fighting. Or so you think. :I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, :well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. Yes, well everyone wasn't like you, Vinnie. I find it funny that you hate George Bush and try to smear him with claims that he 'dodged the draft' by going in the National Guard, while at the same time you love Clinton and make statements like the preceding. Feh! -- "Der Fiege droht nur, wo er sicher ist." --Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
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Fred J. McCall wrote:
Vince wrote: :I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. ... Yes. And so you know more than the folks who were there doing the fighting. Or so you think. If the issue is what the world political view was, yes. Being a fireman give you lots of insights into fighting fires, but is not the same as understanding an arsonist. :I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, :well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. Yes, well everyone wasn't like you, Vinnie. I find it funny that you hate George Bush and try to smear him with claims that he 'dodged the draft' by going in the National Guard, while at the same time you love Clinton and make statements like the preceding. Clinton was a draft dodger, Bush served honorably , but in such a way as to minimize his exposure to any real combat. Gore did the same. Kerry was actually in combat, but may have exaggerated his accomplishments. I had and have the deepest respect for the grunts who were at the broken bottle end of a stupid pointless war. Despite your sneering abuse it is entirely possible to combine respect for American fighting men and women and oppose the pointless wars Idiot politicians send them to. Vince |
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![]() "Fred J. McCall" wrote in message ... Vince wrote: :I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. ... Yes. And so you know more than the folks who were there doing the fighting. Or so you think. :I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, :well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. Yes, well everyone wasn't like you, Vinnie. I find it funny that you hate George Bush and try to smear him with claims that he 'dodged the draft' by going in the National Guard, while at the same time you love Clinton and make statements like the preceding. Your saying the "rich, well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies" isn't true? Feh! -- "Der Fiege droht nur, wo er sicher ist." --Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
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On Thu, 22 Jun 2006 04:01:50 -0700, "Leadfoot"
wrote: Yes, well everyone wasn't like you, Vinnie. I find it funny that you hate George Bush and try to smear him with claims that he 'dodged the draft' by going in the National Guard, while at the same time you love Clinton and make statements like the preceding. Your saying the "rich, well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies" isn't true? John Kerry didn't. George Bush did. Both were from wealthy families. So the picture is not exactly "clear." I got my wings in July, '69. I completed the multi-engine syllabus at NAS Corpus and was assigned to a VS squadron. I'd guess that a maybe half of my class and squadron mates were where they were because of moral or ethical problems with our S.E. Asia adventure. I personally know of two who later went to West Coast VS squadrons and flew Market Time. So they were willing to follow orders, they just didn't volunteer. Some may consider that some form of dishonor, I don't. I am personally aquainted with several peers who were children of fairly wealthy families who got drafted and went. I know of one who did the "chicken run" to Canada. I know one who got into the Guard (probably due to family influence). Again, the picture is quite mixed. Most conflicts have some elements of being "a rich man's war and poor man's fight." Bill Kambic Haras Lucero, Kingston, TN Mangalarga Marchador: Uma Raça, Uma Paixão |
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Fred J. McCall schrieb:
Vince wrote: :I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. ... Yes. And so you know more than the folks who were there doing the fighting. Or so you think. :I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, :well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. Yes, well everyone wasn't like you, Vinnie. I find it funny that you hate George Bush and try to smear him with claims that he 'dodged the draft' by going in the National Guard, while at the same time you love Clinton and make statements like the preceding. Feh! -- "Der Fiege droht nur, wo er sicher ist." --Johann Wolfgang von Goethe I´m quite sure Goethe wrote "Der Feige droht nur, wo er sicher ist." ;-) |
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Moritz Wünsch wrote:
:Fred J. McCall schrieb: : : Vince wrote: : : :I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. ... : : Yes. And so you know more than the folks who were there doing the : fighting. Or so you think. : : :I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, : :well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. : : Yes, well everyone wasn't like you, Vinnie. I find it funny that you : hate George Bush and try to smear him with claims that he 'dodged the : draft' by going in the National Guard, while at the same time you love : Clinton and make statements like the preceding. : : Feh! : : -- : "Der Fiege droht nur, wo er sicher ist." : --Johann Wolfgang von Goethe : :I´m quite sure Goethe wrote "Der Feige droht nur, wo er sicher ist." ;-) Damned keyboard has a mind of its own.... -- "The way of the samurai is found in death. If by setting one's heart right every morning and evening, one is able to live as though his body were already dead, he gains freedom in The Way. His whole life will be without blame, and he will succeed in his calling." -- "Hagakure Kikigaki", Yamamoto Tsunetomo |
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