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General Patton: Why We Still Remember This American Icon
Townhall.com ^ | May 31, 2021 | Robert Orlando

Posted on 05/31/2021 5:34:14 AM PDT by Kaslin


Source: Provided by Robert Orlando

Most Americans recall no more than three World War II generals: Dwight Eisenhower, Douglas MacArthur, and the best-remembered ultimate warrior: General George S. Patton.

Memory is legacy; memory is honor; memory warns the young and naive. Of all the great WWII legends, Patton, aka “Old Blood and Guts” and Winston Churchill alone, have stories and characters grand enough to take over and “own” Academy Award-winning film classics.

Eighty years before today’s “anything goes,” culture, Patton proclaimed, “you can’t run an army without profanity, and it has to be eloquent profanity. An army without profanity couldn’t fight its way out of a piss-soaked paper bag.”

So, let’s clear out all this woke bull%$% with a Memorial Day salute.

General Patton was an intellectual warrior who obsessively studied every facet of warfare - while studying his Bible daily. He had a massive library, a “who’s who,” of ancient and modern war. In every book, he made comments on each paragraph, words now enshrined at the West Point library where his strategy and tactics are “must-reads.”

Why was he such a different type of general? Years of Patton research as an author and filmmaker have been a quest to answer this question. My quest as a dramatist is not so tricky with this naturally dramatic character.

Call him anything, and you’d be right! Long before we ever heard of ADHD, Donald Trump’s favorite general had no impulse control. That’s what made him, as he might say, “so God(*(&^)) funny?” He had a grand sense of humor, a twinkle in his eye, and he was a huge celebrity.

His ego was as big as the tanks he led, but he was equally as effective on the battlefield, going through the Krauts like “&*^&$ through a goose!” The New York Times’ Sid Olson wrote of Patton, “He was unpredictable” - and constantly advancing.

Asked “Where was Patton?” Eisenhower once replied, “I don’t know, I haven’t spoken to him in three hours.” Patton kept charging fiercely forward, crushing the Nazi strategy by moving even faster, demonstrating his constant impatience with bureaucratic “play it safe” generals, politics, and the Washington Establishment.

Patton thought Eisenhower was subservient to the British. In truth, Ike, who smoked three packs of cigarettes a day, was trying to keep a mass coalition of allies on the same page to win a two-front war.

Patton also insulted and hurt colleague Omar Bradley. Bradley was a great general but neither a wartime star nor Renaissance man. Patton came from wealth and high expectations. Bradley, to his credit, was a GI General from a low-income background, reliable enough to help win any war.

Bradley, a primary source for the 1970 film, outlived Patton, shaping the Patton story by describing, “the most fiercely ambitious man and the strangest duck I have ever known. He seemed to be motivated by some deep, inexplicable marshall spirit.”

Patton dressed as if he had just stepped out of a custom military tailor shop. He was unmercifully hard on his men, demanding the utmost military efficiency, but led with a daring lack of fear the French would call “elan-vital.”

Many respected but despised Patton. Although he could be the epitome of grace and charm at social or official functions, Bradley claimed he was the most profane man he had ever known. Yet, those fighting with him had the highest chance of survival.

As a biographer, I agreed with some who suggested that his macho profanity was an unconscious overcompensation for some of his most severe personal flaws, including an “almost comically squeaky and high pitched” voice that “lacked command authority.”

Nicknamed Mickey Mouse, Patton sounded nothing like George C. Scott (who captured the Patton spirit), but Patton’s physical voice turned out to be only a footnote to his bold and brash actions that formed his legacy. We instead recall a man so confident he had a destiny that he would charge toward hails of bullets.

Yes, war is not woke, and it’s time we get that straight. Some of Patton’s rhetoric offended, even leading to massacres in Sicily. BUT... he also chased away the German Army. American Ambassador Harriman told Josef Stalin, no General in the Russian Army could do what Patton did: Quick maneuvers.

Patton once led French-bought Renault tanks in WWI, running out in front and pointing his horsewhip. He was an equestrian rider who turned tank offense into a new cavalry. He knew how to go around the enemy in moves of double envelopment.

His advancements would pierce an enemy’s front lines, surrounding them until they surrendered, like the ghost of William Tecumseh Sherman. He landed in Africa after Americans, replacing a failed U.S. general, who led from too far too behind the lines.

Patton spurted out, “some God damn fool once said, flanks have to be guarded. Before he figures out where my flanks are, I’ll be cutting the $%^$%&’s throat.”

He was a genius at air-to-ground coordination and felt planes were more interested in bombing than supporting infantry. His skills led to the critical breakout moments in World War II:

*He invaded Africa in 1942, captured Sicily in 1943, beat rival generals to Messina, and forced the Germans back onto the mainland. *In Bastogne, on Dec 16, 1944, he relieved (not rescued) the 101st Airborne division. Taylor MacAuliffe was on the ground holding his position, answering the German appeal to surrender with the now-famous word, “Nuts.” *Sidelined at Normandy, in 1945, by “the slapping incidents,” and asked to act as a decoy to peel off Rommel’s defenses from the pillboxes defending the beachheads, Eisenhower called him to break open Operation Cobra.

When Eisenhower called a meeting at Verdun for the Battle of the Bulge, Patton said, “I’ll make a meeting engagement in three days, and I’ll give you a six-division attack in six days. Patton turned hundreds of thousands of men around, from a due East campaign to head due North to join the hardened men in Bastogne.

In Normandy, Patton broke through the German lines then swooped west, then east, and ran through France like the tank cavalry. He would capture hundreds of thousands of surrendering Germans, and in the opinion of this humble author, he would have had Berlin had Eisenhower allowed him.

Patton, technically was behind Simpson’s Ninth Army, who had scouts already in the city. Still, he would have arrived soon enough because of his rolling 3rd Army and because the Germans wanted to surrender to U.S. troops rather than face the marauding Russians.

Boldness and ingenuity, Patton’s campaign should be measured not only by Washington’s Delaware, but also by Washington’s hero, the Roman General Cincinnatus.

Patton always thought his Army was undersupplied, but he won every significant battle; he was never in a position to advance beyond orders. Had he been, Patton might have ended the war much sooner with far better results.

So was he a belligerent who deserved hatred and censorship and supervision? Yes. But who would Americans want to challenge the murderous regimes of Hitler and Stalin? Dictators who didn’t slap soldiers but shot their officers in the head?

Patton was a 20th-century man with an ancient spirit of war, haunted by American patriotism and his duty to fulfill his destiny. In the afterlife, I’m sure he would greet his old brothers in arms in the Pantheon of great warriors.

A frequent Patton order to troops is echoed by today’s voters, who cry the exact words toward Washington: “Don’t you ever stop fighting, you sons of &%$^%$!”


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: georgepatton; memorialday; wwii
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1 posted on 05/31/2021 5:34:14 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Like Oswald and Ruby when things seem like there is more than coincidence going on.....it probably is more than coincidence. (I’ll take the aluminum foil off my head now, thank you)


2 posted on 05/31/2021 5:37:33 AM PDT by Vaquero ( Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you. )
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To: Kaslin

Among the many reasons that I admire Patton so much is that he wanted to be buried in France...with his men...rather than in California,or at Arlington National Cemetery.


3 posted on 05/31/2021 5:40:46 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Trump: "They're After You. I'm Just In The Way")
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To: Vaquero

Can we assume that you’re talking about Patton’s death?


4 posted on 05/31/2021 5:41:50 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Trump: "They're After You. I'm Just In The Way")
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To: Kaslin

Was the 1970 movie a realistic depiction of Patton? I first saw it when I was 12 at a friend’s whose family had a VCR.


5 posted on 05/31/2021 5:46:32 AM PDT by OttawaFreeper ("The Gardens was founded by men-sportsmen-who fought for their country" Conn Smythe, 1966 )
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To: Vaquero; Kaslin

worth considering

I recently went to a friends father’s funeral. he fought at Bastogne

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Bulge

feet were frozen so bad they thought he was going to lose them. he didn’t. lived into his upper 90’s. his vocation was a barber.

i spoke at the services. he always had that twinkle in his eye like he was gonna pull a prank on you. i referred to him as Bud Weiser.

R.I.P., Bud Newingham. love

(much more to this story but i’ll save that for another day)

thanks for posting, Kaslin


6 posted on 05/31/2021 5:47:04 AM PDT by PGalt (Past Peak Civilization?)
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To: Gay State Conservative

Yup


7 posted on 05/31/2021 5:49:45 AM PDT by Vaquero ( Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you. )
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To: Kaslin

‘Your job is not to die for your country. Your job is to make the other poor bastard die for his.’ -George Patton


8 posted on 05/31/2021 5:55:22 AM PDT by joma89 (Buy weapons and ammo, folks, and have the will to use them.)
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To: Kaslin
“you can’t run an army without profanity, and it has to be eloquent profanity.

Profanity today suffers from the illiteracy of the modern man.

It also suffers from overuse.

90% of the profanity used to today IMO consist of a single word (I think it unnecessary to tell anyone what that one word is).

The average man/woman today suffers from a deficient vocabulary, poor grammar, and bad manners.

Subsequently the average conversation is peppered with F-bombs and little else to brighten the discourse.

It would have been a pleasure to sit in on a conversation with the General just to experience his use of the English language.

I greatly miss William F. Buckley and his fantastic use of the language.

A great mind does not necessarily need a great vocabulary but it certainly doesn’t hurt.

9 posted on 05/31/2021 5:55:47 AM PDT by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spiritL)
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To: Kaslin

Bttt.

5.56mm


10 posted on 05/31/2021 5:56:53 AM PDT by M Kehoe (Quid Pro Joe and the Ho need to go.)
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To: Kaslin
The author used the wrong word here, I think: Bradley, a primary source for the 1970 film, outlived Patton, shaping the Patton story by describing, “the most fiercely ambitious man and the strangest duck I have ever known. He seemed to be motivated by some deep, inexplicable marshall spirit.” Pretty sure he meant "martial".

I read the book "Patton: A Genius for War" a few years ago. According to that book, Bradley actually despised Patton, and it really pissed him off that Patton got the assignment to relieve Bastogne.

The author names Patton as one of three WW2 generals everybody remembers. I do not think that would be true if not for the 1970 movie.

As to Patton's voice, it was nothing like Mickey Mouse. There are videos of him on Youtube giving speeches. He certainly does not sound like George Scott, but he does not sound ridiculous. He speaks with almost a southern drawl, with words like "there" coming out as "thayah".

11 posted on 05/31/2021 5:58:16 AM PDT by Sans-Culotte (11/3-11/4/2020 - The USA became a banana republic.)
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To: OttawaFreeper
It's hard to say. Very few people who served over him,with him or under him are still alive.There is a short video on youtube of him giving a speech in California (for War Bonds IIRC) about what's been happening in Germany.

One of the high points of my life is having once been assigned to Fort Knox,"The Home of Armor",and thinking that I trod the same streets that he trod many years earlier.

My sense,however,is that "Patton" was at least somewhat accurate although,perhaps,not accurate enough to qualify as a documentary.

12 posted on 05/31/2021 5:59:20 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Trump: "They're After You. I'm Just In The Way")
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To: OttawaFreeper
Patton Speaking In California
13 posted on 05/31/2021 6:02:46 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Trump: "They're After You. I'm Just In The Way")
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bump


14 posted on 05/31/2021 6:05:14 AM PDT by foreverfree
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To: Kaslin

One of the best movies ever. George C. Scott was magnificent.


15 posted on 05/31/2021 6:13:34 AM PDT by ReleaseTheHounds ("The problem with Socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money." M. Thatcher )
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To: Kaslin

“...Donald Trump’s favorite general had no impulse control.”

“Do your damnedest in an ostentatious manner all the time.” — General Patton.


16 posted on 05/31/2021 6:15:03 AM PDT by odawg
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To: Gay State Conservative

Better yet with speech 21min
General Patton’s Death - Accident or Murder?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWL0Nz4g5yk

Best 1hr 34min
Patton: A Genius For War | Full Documentary | Biography
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FbV8Rfiq1Ko


17 posted on 05/31/2021 6:18:22 AM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: Pontiac

Later


18 posted on 05/31/2021 6:18:24 AM PDT by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spiritL)
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To: Gay State Conservative
“Patton” was at least somewhat accurate although, perhaps, not accurate enough to qualify as a documentary.”

I thinks that's pretty much the way it was. I read his biography and the film didn't stray too far.

Of course films always have to be geared to the ‘un-lettered’ so the usual allowances have to be made.

My father was Army Air Force, and they followed Patton's tanks across Europe.

His salty language in the film was no exaggeration.

Among my father's many stories is the one about a particular flyer who repeatedly missed a German tank column.

Ground crews listened to exchanges between Patton and the flyers. After about the third pass, without success, Patton yelled to the pilot: ‘If that's the best you can do... ram the G*@ damned thing, next time!’

I asked if Patton was well liked or not. Dad thought for a long time and said, ‘Patton was respected but not liked. Some guys even thought that if they could plug him and get away with it, they would.' He remembered how abusive Patton was with pilots and crews when they couldn't get off the ground to relieve Bastogne. I guess that's understandable.

19 posted on 05/31/2021 6:27:17 AM PDT by SMARTY ( "Force always attracts men of low morality. " Albert Einstein)
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To: SMARTY

> I asked if Patton was well liked or not. Dad thought for a long time and said, ‘Patton was respected but not liked. <

I knew a guy who was an infantryman in Patton’s Third Army. He absolutely hated Patton for what he felt was the general’s petty behavior. Example: This guy was on a work detail and had taken off his tie. Patton came by, stopped, and immediately fined the man for being out of uniform.

The guy was still angry about it 40 years after it happened.


20 posted on 05/31/2021 6:39:45 AM PDT by Leaning Right (I have already previewed or do not wish to preview this composition.)
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