Modern Americans dont get it.........think "Lone Survivor" to some extent.
But you better believe our enemies are on the same page as that WWII Marine.
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That gentlemen carries a burden in his soul that not many people know the feeling of. He carries it well, and deserves more than this country is showing people like him these days. It’s a shame what has become of history and the people that do what they can to preserve it.
The burden is still there. Not saying it was for this story but it is there. War is never a game, it is a brutal no holes barred life changing event regardless of how tough you are.He has no burden save the loss of friends.
War is not a game.
Though all war is political there is little doubt WWII was one of existential outcomes.
As a "last resort" this gentleman knew failure meant those same japanese testing their swords on American citizens.
Going to war with an attitude less than what he exhibits is criminal.
His approach to war limits loss of life on both sides.
That warrior mentality allowed us to contribute to the conquering of 3/4 of the world in 4 years as opposed to our current 20 year long war trying to defeat a tiny fraction of a percent of the world.
Our politicians send men such as him to the arena of shit than want to hold him accountable for his desire to live........bullshit.
Easy to be moral while they are safe in DC not under the threat he lived.
He has no burden save the loss of friends.
War is not a game.
Though all war is political there is little doubt WWII was one of existential outcomes.
As a "last resort" this gentleman knew failure meant those same japanese testing their swords on American citizens.
Going to war with an attitude less than what he exhibits is criminal.
His approach to war limits loss of life on both sides.
That warrior mentality allowed us to contribute to the conquering of 3/4 of the world in 4 years as opposed to our current 20 year long war trying to defeat a tiny fraction of a percent of the world.
Our politicians send men such as him to the arena of shit than want to hold him accountable for his desire to live........bullshit.
Easy to be moral while they are safe in DC not under the threat he lived.
I also took note of that quote.Hi,
"Shoot first and live longer"....That guy is awesome!!!
Sincerely,
Theis
The burden is still there. Not saying it was for this story but it is there. War is never a game, it is a brutal no holes barred life changing event regardless of how tough you are.
the political game they play in DC is reckless and endangers lives every second of every day. Sleeping in your comfy bed every night makes it easy to forget what you did that day that impacts the grunt sleeping in the dirt in some shithole country.
Met this man and bought his book, back in 01 or 02. He survived the Bataan death march.
I highly recommend reading his book. His opinion of the Japanese never changed.
Amazon.com: Flashbacks: Prisoner of War in the Philippines: 9781570900976: Middleton, T. Walter, Roberts, Ralph: Books
Amazon.com: Flashbacks: Prisoner of War in the Philippines: 9781570900976: Middleton, T. Walter, Roberts, Ralph: Bookswww.amazon.com
Oh I couldn’t agree more. He has no burden for killing that jap. That is not the statement I originally made or intended, I should have clarified better on that.The thing that is not a burden was his treatment of the japanese prisoner.
The interviewer has our modern beliefs as evidenced by asking the Marine to wit "Does shooting that Japanese bother you?" and the response is "No" with a smile.
I take the Marines response as truth.
The Marine Corps experience in WWII was different.
The Army in the Pacific didnt fight the war the way the Marines did, perhaps the Goettege Patrol set that course as far as the Marines were concerned.
The Army suffered similar atrocities yet it never resulted in an organizational commitment to treat the enemy as the enemy treated its people.
Some would say the Army took the "higher ground".
I am of the mindset when you decide upon the course of war you have abandoned the recognition of "higher ground".
If not maybe the reason to war was not there.
Met this man and bought his book, back in 01 or 02. He survived the Bataan death march.
I highly recommend reading his book. His opinion of the Japanese never changed.
Amazon.com: Flashbacks: Prisoner of War in the Philippines: 9781570900976: Middleton, T. Walter, Roberts, Ralph: Books
Amazon.com: Flashbacks: Prisoner of War in the Philippines: 9781570900976: Middleton, T. Walter, Roberts, Ralph: Bookswww.amazon.com
My bad......
I took "Met this man" to mean the interviewee.
I think you are just saying you met the author of that book.
Sorry.
Will keep my earlier post so perhaps some will research Shofner and remember him.
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Austin Shofner - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org