Posted on 09/26/2007 2:30:49 PM PDT by VOA
This is a "heads-up" for the airing of "The War", the Ken Burns
(Florentine Films) production on PBS.
Agreed, it was much more hidden in the North.
I was just assuming...didn't know the definition, and Grandpa talked about it so rarely that I wasn't sure. When I think "combat troops" I think of soldiers sitting in foxholes on the front line. Stereotypical, I suppose.
It would have been better if Burns included what the black soldiers actually did and not what they didn't do. They did a great job in driving the Red Ball Express into combat zones. I didn't see that yet. Maybe later. I know the December 1944 and afterward period from my own observations. I'll check it out.
BTW I don't see this so far as any 'hate America' exercise.
And, as for the Jessica Lynch affair, it just goes to my point that the theater of war is a dangerous place to be. One of the guys I went to school with was killed in the first Gulf War when a SCUD hit his barracks...it was in Bahrain (maybe Saudi? not sure) a really good ways from the "front line".
That's why I never, ever trivialize the contributions a soldier makes to a war effort. And, why Burn's piece on our black soldiers was a little frustrating to me. Ordinance isn't going unload itself...someone had to do it!
If John Kerry tried to pull his PH jive in WWII he would have been wearing 3 boots.
The problem was, as usual, Monty was lagging behind while Patton was racing toward Germany. So, we hadn't taken the big Belgian or Dutch ports, which meant we were still hauling most of our supplies from Normandy.
So the Red Ball Express was a network of roads, petroleum points, maintenance shops and other support, that kept a continuous flow of 2 1/2 ton trucks carrying badly needed supplies up to the front 24/7, and back again. A good many of the troops manning the Express were African-American and they did a splendid job.
I’ve only caught about thirty minutes of this documentary. I plan on buying it sometime in the near future, having found Burn’s work on the Civil War magnificent.
That said, I was very disappointed to hear him use this as a way of criticizing the WOT on Scarborough this morning.
‘It would have been better if Burns included what the black soldiers actually did and not what they didn’t do. They did a great job in driving the Red Ball Express into combat zones.’
There was also a African American TD unit that had an incredible record you rarely hear about.
First of all, they acknowledge that fact at the beginning of each episode. Second, this is just another chapter in the on-going exploration of WWII. You have to read history, TV by it's very nature is "superficial". There are nuggets of wonderful information to be taken from any telling of the story of WWII. Take it for what it is. For example, I was brought to tears by the retelling of a story on Guadalcanal about the single shot fired and the moaning and crying of the person who had been shot. The person telling the story explains how it was night and you could not see anything, and they were all exhausted and just wanted to sleep but the cries of the wounded soldier keep them awake. He wished that the soldier would just die so they could sleep. In the morning he finds that it was his best friend. He has had to live with that thought for his entire life. It was something, I am sure, that happened a lot during that war.
The guy was a paratrooper, dropped on D-Day. He said the tube was full of morphine. If you were shot up, and you knew help wasn’t coming for a while, you were supposed to take off the cap and jam the needle in to stem the pain.
Sledge was from Mobile, and his book was heavily used by Burns.
Are you talking about the Black Panthers? They were first rate.
They still are. But do any of those sentiments register now? How many bridezillas, liberal or conservative, are willing to wear a pretty dress that costs less, and have a buffet instead of the same lavish sit-down with all the bells and whistles, and donate the rest of the money to the wounded veterans, or for body armour, if that is still needed?
Since theme weddings are so in vogue, why not a WW II-style wedding?
Something else. It's funny in retrospect, but very touching.
When I got engaged my NY Jewish liberal friend Sandy dropped in, looking grim. Sandy is my mother's age, and she remembers the war. She sat me down, and the lecture began. She began by telling me that I was now in a different role than the usual fiancée. I had to think and live differently. To paraphrase:
"Nothing you do and nothing that happens to you or the kids is important. If you break your ankle, he doesn't have to know about it. If one of the kids gets into trouble, don't bother him with it. If the kitchen catches fire, deal with it. The same goes for the kids. Be cheerful and funny. He needs that. Listen to him when he talks. I mean LISTEN. Don't forget he's where the fighting is. I heard him tell your cousin a mortar came through his tent. Lucky he wasn't there. He needs to focus on his safety and the safety of his men. He can't have his attention wandering because he's thinking about some trivial c*rap going on with you. He'll probably forget your birthday, the kids' birthdays, your anniversary and everything else. His mind will be on other things. You chose to marry a soldier. Deal with it."
I thought I heard the sound of Big Band music, and that if I looked in the mirror the face that looked back would be wearing red lipstick, hair encased in a snood. It was like a scene out of a very bad movie. For all that, Sandy's WW II-era advice was spot-on. And bless her heart, she was there for us.
With all due respect: those black guys were patriots. They WANTED to fight. They were willing to take the risk of being maimed, crippled or killed if only they would be allowed fight for their country. In that regard they were no different from your brother.
I think some of the fires were started by the Japanese fire balloons.
I know. If only their present day counterparts were more committed to patriotism and less to hip-hop, drugs, marching with Al Sharpton, getting handouts, etc., I could have more respect for them.
If he doesn't, it would be a shame. The Red Ball Express kept Patton moving. I've always wondered what would have happened if Patton had gotten the supplies that Monty wasted in Market Garden. Might the European war been over in '44? Or, would we have wound up at war with Russia? Or...would the cold war have taken place in Poland/Eastern Europe instead of Germany and on a much smaller scale?
Just performing the (millionth? million millionth?) refighting of WWII....
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