Posted on 08/30/2007 9:39:57 PM PDT by GunnyBob
Last night on TOF on FNC, Ted Nugent claimed he was a Marine. I can find no evidence to support this but I could be missing something.
Someone want to help me out here?
--Gunny Bob
The reference to it I’ve seen is awful, so I’m hoping someone else has a different reference.
I have never heard him make this claim but if he’s posing then he’s toast in my book.
Google it. The quote I saw was where he said something about what “the Marine Corps taught me.” He was probably referencing something he learned from the Marines during a benefit event of some kind.
C’mon - - no way does Ted make a crazy, easily refutable claim that he was a Marine unless he was one.
Here’tis. http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,295157,00.html
(For some reason they accidently label him as Nelson in this response.)
KASICH: Well, Ted, I know rock ‘n’ roll. You know that I know rock ‘n’ roll. But frankly, I mean, that was, like, such a crude thing. You know, like some kind of fourth grade stuff, like you know, these things you said were they just weren’t right.
I mean, why did you ever think these people what about Obama’s kid hearing that? What do we tell him? “Well, it’s just rock ‘n’ roll?
NELSON: I don’t know. What do you tell the children of soldiers who have sacrificed their lives when Obama claims that their daddies are raiding innocent civilians over there?
Come on, John. Let’s get our priorities straight. With all due respect, unless you’ve been to a Ted Nugent concert lately, you don’t know the intensity.
By the way, we’re selling out every concert on this “Love Grenade” tour. And I do exactly what the good Marine Corps taught me every night. And I do PG-13 concerts for the state fairs and the county fairs and all these different family events that I’ve been selling out. Because I want to make sure I do the right thing.
An outrageous, over the top rock ‘n’ roll event like the House of Blues, John, as long as no laws are broken and no one gets hurt. Nothing is sacred.
“By the way, we’re selling out every concert on this “Love Grenade” tour. And I do exactly what the good Marine Corps taught me every night.”
Maybe I am reading something into this, but this sure sounds like a claim to have been a Marine.
Also, does anyone know if the 1990 Detroit Free Press article/interview with Nugent is for real, i.e., where he claims to have soiled himself for a week and done other nasty deeds to flunk his physical? I have a copy of the supposed physical results that show he flunked.
I don’t blame you for being vigilant about frauds when it comes to the Marine Corps - - there’s nothing I hate worse than a Dan Rather “Marine” - - but it’s only the nobodies who think they can get away with it.
Your worry about Nugent is over the top. He’s a smart man.
Semper Fidelis,
LH
I don’t have a final opinion. I just present this article as a starting point for research.
http://arts.independent.co.uk/music/features/article571538.ece
>>In Iraq, he says, he was allowed the opportunity to man automatic weapons. “Our failure,” he tells me, “has been not to Nagasaki them.”
“Is that opinion shared by your friends in the Republican Party?”
“Most of them feel that way.”<<
>>His father Warren was a drill sergeant who went on to become a steel executive. Ted has an older brother Jeff who is “a great guy - he served in the United States Army”. The musician pronounces this last phrase as though it’s the highest praise imaginable. “As a boy,” he adds, “I was inundated with discipline.”<<
>>In the late 1960s he lived with the MC5, a group which was the prototype, musically and pharmaceutically, for acts including Iggy Pop, The Clash and The Sex Pistols. “I shared a house with those dope fiends. I was moved by their music.”
“In February 1977, People magazine reported you as saying that you’d smoked ‘50 joints in the 1960s’ and tried ‘two lines of cocaine’.” “What I actually said to People was that on an average night at the MC5 house I’d turn down 50 joints and refuse cocaine.”<<
>>He has the rage, but he doesn’t have the war record. At 18, he was called up to serve in Vietnam. “In 1977 you gave an interview to High Times [the cannabis user’s journal of record] where you claimed you defecated in your clothes to avoid the draft.”
(”I got 30 days’ notice of the physical,” Nugent told them. “I ceased cleansing my body. Two weeks before the test I stopped eating food with nutritional value. A week before, I stopped going to the bathroom. I did it in my pants. My pants got crusted up.”)
“I never shit my pants to get out of the draft,” says Nugent, good-naturedly.<<
The USMC taught me a lot, too, though I was never a Marine (entry level seperation and all).
it sounds like something intended to make people who weren’t listening very hard think he was a Marine, but gives him wiggle room if he gets called on it. Maybe I’m just cynical.
I heard the same thing 20-30 years ago. If true, I'm sure it will be big time regurgitated news. That rumor has always bothered me about Ted. I'd like to finally find out if it is true.
http://www.starpulse.com/Music/Nugent,_Ted/Biography/
Nothing in there indicates he’s a veteran, and there don’t really appear to be gaps in his career where he could have served. Just more of the same old Nugent bullshit.
the question is, was it ambiguously phrased so as to deceive people into thinking he was a Marine. I guess it’s a matter of interpretation. It sounds suspicious to me, but as I said in another post, I’m a cynic.
Some people sometimes don’t say what they actually mean!
I think he meant that the Marines have taught him to be tough every night!!
That does seem rather extreme to me Gunny. It does remind me of one of the guys at my draft physical who put a glass eye in his butt to be a wise guy.
No Marine ever makes an occasional claim of being a Marine: they are eaten up with it. Like you, for instance....
But he's spent a lot of time with them done a lot to support them.
In looking for marine stuff. I found this video from earlier this month.
He’s pretty nutty for somebody running for governor.
>>I was in Chicago last week I said, “Hey Obama, you might want to suck on one of these, you punk?” Obama, he’s a piece of shit and I told him to suck on one of my machine guns. Let’s hear it for them. I was in New York and I said, “Hey Hillary, you might want to ride one of these into the sunset you worthless bitch.” Since I’m in California, I’m gonna find Barbara Boxer she might wanna suck on my machine guns. Hey, Dianne Feinstein, ride one of these you worthless whore.<<
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=757_1187963465&p=1
Can’t we all learn something from the US Marines?
Values: (excerpt from Warrior Culture of the U.S. Marines, copyright 2001 Marion F. Sturkey)
Why are U.S. Marines considered the world’s premier warriors? Why? What puts the Marine Corps above the rest? Other military services have rigorous training and weapons of equal or greater lethality. So, why do U.S. Marines stand head and shoulders above the crowd?
The truth lies in the individual Marine. He (or she) did not join the Marines. Roughly 40,000 try each year. Those who survive the crucible of Marine basic training have been sculpted in mind and body. They have become Marines.
Once he has earned the title and entered the Brotherhood of Marines, a new warrior must draw upon the legacy of his Corps. Therein lies his strength. In return, the strength of the Corps lies in the individual Marine. The character (often defined as “what you are in the dark”) of these warriors is defined by the three constant Corps Values: honor, courage, and commitment.
Honor: Honor requires each Marine to exemplify the ultimate standard in ethical and moral conduct. Honor is many things; honor requires many things. A U.S. Marine must never lie, never cheat, never steal, but that is not enough. Much more is required. Each Marine must cling to an uncompromising code of personal integrity, accountable for his actions and holding others accountable for theirs. And, above all, honor mandates that a Marine never sully the reputation of his Corps.
Courage: Simply stated, courage is honor in action — and more. Courage is moral strength, the will to heed the inner voice of conscience, the will to do what is right regardless of the conduct of others. It is mental discipline, an adherence to a higher standard. Courage means willingness to take a stand for what is right in spite of adverse consequences. This courage, throughout the history of the Corps, has sustained Marines during the chaos, perils, and hardships of combat. And each day, it enables each Marine to look in the mirror — and smile.
Commitment: Total dedication to Corps and Country. Gung-ho Marine teamwork. All for one, one for all. By whatever name or cliche, commitment is a combination of (1) selfless determination and (2) a relentless dedication to excellence. Marines never give up, never give in, never willingly accept second best. Excellence is always the goal. And, when their active duty days are over, Marines remain reserve Marines, retired Marines, or Marine veterans. There is no such thing as an ex-Marine or former-Marine. Once a Marine, always a Marine. Commitment never dies.
The three Corps Values: honor, courage, commitment. They make up the bedrock of the character of each individual Marine. They are the foundation of his Corps. These three values, handed down from generation to generation, have made U.S. Marines the Warrior Elite. The U.S. Marine Corps: the most respected and revered fighting force on earth.
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