Posted on 11/05/2019 5:20:31 PM PST by Morgana
Want to know how other careers fared? Heres a list of the most 25 most dangerous jobs in America.
1. Fishers and related fishing workers
2. Logging workers
3. Aircraft pilots and flight engineers
4. Roofers
5. Refuse and recyclable material collectors
6. Structural iron and steel workers
7. Driver/sales workers and truck drivers
8. Farmers, ranchers and other agricultural managers
9. First-line supervisors of landscaping, lawn service and groundskeeping workers
10. Electrical power-line installers and repairers
11. Miscellaneous agricultural workers
12. First-line supervisors of construction trades and extraction workers
13. Helpers, construction trades
14. Maintenance and repair workers, general
15. Grounds maintenance workers
16. Construction laborers
17. First-line supervisors of mechanics, installers and repairers
18. Police and sheriffs patrol officers
19. Operation engineers and other construction equipment operators
20. Mining machine operators
21. Taxi drivers and chauffeurs
22. Athletes, coaches, umpires and related workers
23. Painters, construction and maintenance
24. Firefighters
25. Electricians
(Excerpt) Read more at ajc.com ...
I meant the 197th Infantry brigade.
I dropped the 1 some how.
“Community Organizer” MUST have made the list!
I have 12 of the first 18, and am currently #19. I’ve also done 21 and 23. I didn’t go any further into the article.
Thanks for your service sir. peace time service is just as important as wartime service, because one never knows when the balloon will go up, and that war might just be more intense than the one currently going on.
After Nam, I was sent with a tank unit on the German Border opposite the Fulda Gap, where we were slated to halt any Warsaw Pact invasion in that sector. The strategy was to attrite the expected innumerable waves of Soviet armor, while steadily withdrawing to successive phase lines. They figured we would be combat ineffective or ANNIHILATED within 72 hours. We spent more time in the field than in barracks. It was combat without the shooting.
After Germany, I was assigned to the School Brigade at Ft. Knox as a tank gunnery instructor, instructing newly commissioned armor officer students from the US and foreign countries. Best job that I ever had. Once I was checked out on the course syllabus, if I didn’t have a class to teach I was off duty, except for COQ or other special duty. Some weeks I only worked three days a week. 3 days a week off was not uncommon.
The Army offered me a TEN THOUSAND dollar (1971 dollars) variable re-enlistment bonus to re-up. I almost did, but not trusting the Army, decided not to.
Figured that I could wind up in Alaska.
Silly, pointless article. Heart disease and stroke are top two killers. Please avoid sodium and sugar.
From the article:
22. Umpires
24. Firefighters
Too funny. Firefighters have tons more bravery than umpires, because they use it daily.
Hmmm, does not go well with all the badge licker bleating about how dangerous their job is.
M551 I presume?
“Ive got 3, maybe 4 of the top 10 under my belt - guess Im a sucker for punishment.”
Me only three. However, the list is incomplete. It did not include offshore oilfield workers. I did 17 years of this before becoming a pharmacist. We had a lot of injuries. On rare occasions we lost the whole damn rig with much death. Actually the most dangerous job was being a North Sea diver on the rigs.
Click the link to these two disasters in the North Sea.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_L._Kielland_(platform)
The Kielland went down shortly after I was off it. Some of my friends died.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piper_Alpha
Those on Piper Alpha were burned alive. It was ugly. I had no friends on that platform as it was in the British Sector and I was working the Norwegian Sector. It was also most tragic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WimP_x9Rhyg You tube video of a North Sea Storm hitting the Borg Dolphin. It should be noted the air gap on that vessel was about 70 feet. We had a rogue wave hit our rig once. It wiped out the helideck that was 115 feet above the water.
The North Sea in winter is a violent beautiful mistress. She will kill you in an instant.
Between times when I was traveling to give classes on the Sheridan I spent much time in the field. Never had to spend time at the border though, I went back state side before my units rotation came up.
I will always remember my time in Germany as both amazing and sad. As you probably know, Germany was a popular place to send soldiers leaving Nam. It was the military’s way of detoxing soldiers who returned from battle before their tour was up.
I met more guys who had emotional, alcohol, and drug problems than anything.
I was in a 2 man room, my mate was a spec 4. I remember spending my 2nd week there holding him in may arms as he related the incident where his best friend literally lost his head in front of him.
I joined at 17, I was maybe 17 1/2, and this guy was 24. I had no words, and no clue as to what to do. I just held him as he cried like a baby.
There was a brotherhood about them that no one could penetrate, but for some reason I was allowed to be close enough to hear them talk about their time in Nam. One of the barrack rooms had 5 beds, and these guys would get together to do drugs and drink their troubled minds away. I would sit in there and listen to them recall their moments of pain, sorrow, and glory without ever saying anything.
I was like their little brother I guess. I would watch a couple of them shoot up in the room, it was their only way to escape.
I remember watching a staff Sergeant and a Buck get into a fight during a game of craps, and the Buck stabbed the staff sergeant in the thigh over 50 cents. They were best friends. Go figure.
Talk about troubled men, these guys gave me a full education of what Vietnam meant to them. They were proud of their time there, and hated it all at the same time.
I never needed to read about the things that happened, nor have I any need to watch a movie, although a few I did see tried their best to show what I heard. I had the chance to get a first hand account straight from those who gave their all. I often wonder if any of them ever truly came back yet. Or how many eventually committed suicide, died of drug over dose, or died from kidney failure due to drinking.
To tell the truth, I remember feeling glad I missed it, and guilty I did all at the same time.
Thanks for your service brother.
Yes it was. The Sheridan.
Says jobs in America, go with that.
Came back in 69 and was offered an early out 3 months before 4 year enlistment was up. Took it, already had serious problems with authority. Removing my tie got me started on the way home with arsehole MP’s
Sometime think what would have happened if I stayed in. Probably another RVN tour. No bonus offered, guess they had enough of my kind to finish whatever.
Post separation paperwork had me listed as an E-6, always wonder if I had been promoted just as I said sayonara.
What percentage of deaths or serious injuries to officers is acceptable to you so that you can honestly say that police officers don't have a dangerous job?
I have two of top ten !
Solar contractor So roofing and electrical.
Safety is my number 1 priority for my employees
I have ZERO major injuries to date. ( 30 years )
It works. Nice one.
But we are told that being a Mom is the hardest job in the world.
Fatal Employment: Men 10 Times More Likely Than Women To Be Killed At Work
I remember seeing Camille Paglia speaking to a bunch of feminists, and she commented that it is men that do the vast majority of the building, repairing, defending, policing, and dying in the workplace.
The audience was shocked, angry, and outraged.
Makes sense. Thank you.
or working the flight deck of an aircraft carrier...
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