Posted on 11/10/2010 10:13:49 AM PST by Ed25
235 years!
(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...
Happy happy birthday to the marine corps!
I haven’t watched it yet. I’m a little suspicious of it because of HBO, Spielberg, Hanks and Goetzman. Not really your average patriotic Americans. My father was in the 1st Marine Division, 1bn 7 Marines during WWII and new John Basilone. I’ll catch it sooner or later. I hope it’s not as bad as you say but I don’t have any reason not to believe you.
If you are talking about mutilation of Japanese bodies and attitudes about no quarter from the enemy, you are wrong. Read With The Old Breed on Peleliu and Okinawa, by E.B. Sledge. Sledge’s account and commentary about the Pacific campaign fit pretty well with the movie. Sledge was an ordinary grunt on the ground and his account parallels very closely with what I was told by several WWII Marines I knew as a teenager and several of those veterans I served with as a Marine. In the book Sledge acknowledges that there were unrecognized heros and that the ferocity and casualty rate of the island fighting set up conditions where those who witnessed the acts of heroism did not survive. There was also a concept among those Marines that each was doing their duty and there were many individual acts of heroism on a daily basis but many of those who were part of those acts including the officers did not survive. The one recognized hero of the series was John Basilone and there was also a good bit of coverage of Chesty Puller who won five Navy Crosses over his career. It is recognized that Puller was nominated for but never won the MOH because he was despised by the Army brass. Remember that the Army under Dugout Doug MacArthur had much of the operational control over the Marines in the Pacific.
Semper Fi!
Contrary to marine mythology, marines are men; subject to all the noble and savage impulses of men like all other men.
Happy Birthday, USMC!!!!!!!!
God Bless you then, and God Bless you NOW!!!
You’re probably right. I watched a couple more episodes, and now it seems more believable. I could see how the cruelty and fear would just make people nuts. It is emotionally disturbing to watch episodes where a Marine deliberately tortures an enemy soldier, though. I just watched the part where I think Sledge is going to cut the teeth out of a Japanese soldier, but another soldier tells him not to even though he has apparently already done so himself. That was one moment where at least some shred of the good made an appearance.
The book gives even more horrific detail on Japanese atrocities and how it affected the Marines fighting them. The book is also a lot better at explaining the what and why of how the Marines acted and reacted but that is because it is a book and can give a lot more detail than a movie can.
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