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#141
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__________________
I find no relevence to your identity regarding the humore in this location."--Lawrence, the telecomunications profesional |
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#142
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Basically, I feel like a peace movement like that would if nothing else give people pause. As it is, it appeared to be and often was nothing more than a lunatic fringe, particularly once we had things like the Madison bombing.
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#143
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#144
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No, they would have found another way to vilify them. Look at the socialist in WW1 who wore respectable clothing.
__________________
Prince Henry of Prussia: The Rise of the U-Boat http://www.alternatehistory.com/disc...d.php?t=225455 |
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#145
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Yeah, there is that, I hate to admit it.
__________________
I find no relevence to your identity regarding the humore in this location."--Lawrence, the telecomunications profesional |
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#146
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Very true. I think we need just the right sort of people in the public eye, civilized church-going types who don't work Pinko jobs like education. Even then, the best we can hope for is minimizing the hatred rather than removing it completely.
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#147
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What we REALLY need, and this may very well be ASB, is we need Macnamarra and his whis kids to grow a conciounse and write some "Falling o ntheir swords" books.
__________________
I find no relevence to your identity regarding the humore in this location."--Lawrence, the telecomunications profesional |
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#148
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#149
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__________________
I find no relevence to your identity regarding the humore in this location."--Lawrence, the telecomunications profesional |
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#150
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__________________
Prince Henry of Prussia: The Rise of the U-Boat http://www.alternatehistory.com/disc...d.php?t=225455 |
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#151
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@ Vulture - you nailed the civilian expectations of the US military square on the head. Nam wasn't a straight-up fight to the finish- a la WW2 where we'd eventually march on Hanoi and declare final victory, nor was it a quickie "intervention"/demo of force a la Dominican Republic or Lebanon.
Korea hadn't been adequately processed for lessons learned either by the time Nam was spooling up. Nam was something that hadn't been encountered since the Cuban and Philippine insurgencies post Spanish-American War, a low-intensity conflict that didn't need what we were throwing at it post-1965. Unfortunately for the US military, after the fall of Diem, Nam got an international sodium-arc glare of media attention it couldn't control that created a lot of political pressure to "do something" with the full force of American might. LBJ was first and foremost a politico wheeler-dealer, not a military professional, who inherited a bunch of overqualified frenemies from JFK as his Cabinet. Chances of him doing something silly to look tough and in charge were ~100%. @ BlondieBC & SgtHeretic- I think an honest evaluation of the American strategies, tactics, political and military assumptions, and so forth during the Vietnam War was beyond McNamara's scope and powers. Mac wanted to apply the same quantitative management/system analysis to miltary ops as running a car company and it proved a massive distraction and distortion of effort to say the least. It strikes to a fundamental flaw in his approach and how could Mac admit, our approach was inapplicable and disastrous from start to finish? One could certianly hope he had the humility to admit it. @ SargeH re: the antiwar movement- Many elements of the antiwar movement were clean-cut, Establishment figures, church groups, Nam vets against the War, and so forth. That swung opinion away from it just being hippies protesting the war and built a lot of political capital in Congress. IMO, as I've said before, you had the perfect storm that politically hamstrung the US actively angaging itself in Nam from 1970 on.
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#152
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I'm inflating the currency, after all. |
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#153
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Hmm. What if Lyndon Johnson lived a little longer, and wrote a book about how he was duped by the whiz kids into escalating Vietnam?
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#154
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MacNamara, before his passing, never admitted his own micromanagement or mismanagement, to my knowledege. Not even in his memoirs. Nobody ever asked him if a fear of a repeat of October 1962 hamstrung his decision-making, and that of people like SecState Rusk, National Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy, etc. Add LBJ himself: He was quoted as saying "I can't ask American boys to go into combat with one hand tied behind their back," and yet he was the one who did just that-and did the tying. Lying hypocrite.
__________________
Diplomacy is the art of telling someone to go to hell so eloquently that he packs for the trip. War is the simpler art of bringing hell to him. |
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#155
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Second, How would you be inflating the currency by putting more of the commodity it's based on in your thought experiment on the open market? If anything you'd be deflating the currency. Quite likely you'd do nothing to the currency. There's a reason it's called a gold standard. You're merely causing fluxuation by virtue of normal supply and demand of the commodity on the free market, not as a pseudo-government policy that causes the currency to drop in value from the original $20/oz to today's value of $1,581.80/oz The point of the whole exercise and my unfortunate digression is that wars cost money. There are two ways to pay for that war, inflate the currency and pay off debt with devalued currency, or add war taxes to the citizenry. War taxes have a virtue: they're honest. The tax payer knows what his/her money is paying for. It's right there in front of his or her eyes every time he or she looks at the pay check. Inflating the currency takes spending power away from the consumer, because wages never keep up with inflation. It is theft just as sure as the counterfeiter is committing theft (hell, the principle involved is the same). The consumer must begin to cut discretionary spending to pay the bills he or she needs to pay. That causes a contraction of the economy. Contract it far enough and you get a recession. Contract still further, and you get a depression. i'll let other people argue about where those limits are. The advantage of inflating the currency is that one is stealing from EVERYONE...or so it appears, but that is a topic for another time and place. Nobody gets to have exceptions written into the tax code on their behalf. But it is still theft. Don't write the exceptions into the tax code, and you don't have the problem of people not paying. No matter how a government decides to liquidate it's war debt, the original point is that wars are damned expensive things, and that a nation should really count the cost before engaging in one. What the cost of Vietnam did to our economy in the late 70's is beyond dispute, as is the cost of the so-called War on Terror today. Some wars can't be avoided. Government does have the responsibility to protect it's people from invasion...i'd have to put the beginning of our recent Afghanistan actions in that category...They're still no less expensive. Now i don't know whether or not the economic mess of the 70's that finished off both the Nixon/Ford and Carter administrations would have caused a different attitude about the outcome of the Vietnam war. i'd have to say that it is a question that merits a hard look. ...So how was that for a segue back to topic? ![]() |
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#156
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I have three suggestions, two of whitch may be ASB.
1)The culprits of the Whiz Kid Mafia write a series of well writted widely read mea culpa books in which they fall o ntheir swords and admit they THEY mismanaged the war straight into the ground. 2) The ANti-War Movement is comprised not of college kids in wierd clothes, but instead od working people upset about the following caveat. 2a) A war tax is added to the listed FICA and deducted from EVERY paycheck in the country to pay for the VIetnam war. This causes a large minority of lower middle class and poor people who are PISSED AS HELL at the money this "Rich man's war" is costing THEM. Their reasoning is that not only are THEIR kids being conscripted to fight it, but THEY are getting stuck with the check! 3) The release of the "Washington" Papers reveals that neither the Pentagon nor the Civilian leadership has the slightest inkling of a plan or a strategy on how to fight the Vietnam war. They have no idea what they are doing even from day to day let alone year to year, Washington D.C. is literally just making it up as they go along and hoping for the best.
__________________
I find no relevence to your identity regarding the humore in this location."--Lawrence, the telecomunications profesional |
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#157
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It's likely to be option 1....none of those....creatures ever admitted their own faults, as far as I'm aware of.
__________________
Diplomacy is the art of telling someone to go to hell so eloquently that he packs for the trip. War is the simpler art of bringing hell to him. |
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#158
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Here's an option, why not reveal how utterly useless the Saigon government is?
If this is going to be a blame game, why not blame the South Vietnam government, which was incapable of ever gaining loyalty from its citizens, or fighting Vietcong on their own? |
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#159
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Now that is an option, just reveal them to be a collection of charecters from a marx brothers or Three Stooges movie that are so pathetically inept that two years after the U.S. Withdrawel they fall apart like an icecream cake i nthe sun.
__________________
I find no relevence to your identity regarding the humore in this location."--Lawrence, the telecomunications profesional |
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#160
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This requires major *cultural* changes as opposed to military ones. The US defeat in Vietnam was the product of a dual military reality ensuing: the USA was defending Stupid Evil from Smart Evil, and the USA was doing this without any coherent leadership among any of its branches of service and with a war whose skill in planning can be judged by the superiority of Soviet small arms over their US counterpart. US defeat was a product of the invisible sides of war like logistics and strategy, but in the visible tactical manifestation the USA invariably wins all its battles (and after a while forgets that the purpose is to save Saigon, which winning battles alone is never going to do).
In Korea, the USA faced enemies that sought to wage a conventional war of army groups and found a leader more than able to match those leaders and to outlast them in a conventional war of bodies v. bullets and bombs. In Vietnam the USA had no less than three wars at minimum, not counting those of South Korea and Australia and the USA's other allies, all working at cross purposes with each other and those of the Saigon regime. To most Americans a war where they win every battle and lose the war looks like someone was sabotaging it even when they really weren't at all and the defeat was the simple, mundane process of logistical no-win situations having their mind-numbing effect. The bigger problem is that in the 1960s the USA was under an assumption derived from WWII and Korea that its system that hadn't necessarily worked great in either war was working just fine, as the USA at least stalemated those wars. In Vietnam when that system began to erode and blow up in the USA's face, this is the ultimate root of the Dolchstosslegende. A country that had gone from seemingly inevitable ability to turn around disaster wound up presiding over an ignominious clusterfuck and was defeated by an enemy deemed racially inferior, no less. Avoiding the Dolchstosslegende from that witch's brew of cultural memory filtered through ideology would require quite a bit of doing. |
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