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RE: Saving Private Ryan?

 
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RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 5:25:46 PM   
timtom


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quote:

ORIGINAL: BrucePowers

Most waited to be conscripted. Those young men knew they would be conscripted. They also knew the war would be a long drawn out hard fought affair. There was othing wrong with waiting until Uncle Sam sent you your greetings letter. Also, if everyone had jumped up and rushed to the recruiting center, the US military could not have handled the influx in January, 1942.


Indeed the Army was less than lukewarm about volunteering as conscription facilitated greater efficiancy in manpower allocation. The fact that volunteers tended to opt for the Air Corps, Navy, or the Marines did help either.

However it doesn't follow from here that, unlike what Greatest Generation mythology would seem to have us believe, everybody was just raring to go do they bit for God, mum and apple pie or that they had any idea what they might be getting themselves into. It probably helped that the US could afford to in effect shield the body polity from direct participation through a by comparison very generous deferment policy. Thus of the roughly 25 million men aged 18 to 37 processed by US Army induction boards 1940-45, 16 million were granted deferments. 15 million of these were on grounds of dependancy, though some hundred thousands (IIRC) were revoked in '44 when the infantry replacement crisis hit. When selective service was introduced in 1940, 75% of those who'd eventually serve in the Army were aged 25 or younger. Crudely put the young and the outcast were shipped off to war, but they did go almost to a man. Conscientious objectors came to 0.13% of Army inductees, fx.





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RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 6:09:07 PM   
witpqs


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My father had quit school after the sixth grade to go to work and help support his mother and siblings. When WWII came around, yes he waited to be drafted.

Definitions change with context. Today a depression seems to mean canceling some cable TV channels. Back then it meant starvation.

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Post #: 152
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 6:28:55 PM   
m10bob


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quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

My father had quit school after the sixth grade to go to work and help support his mother and siblings. When WWII came around, yes he waited to be drafted.

Definitions change with context. Today a depression seems to mean canceling some cable TV channels. Back then it meant starvation.



Correct as usual, my friend.

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Post #: 153
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 6:57:16 PM   
m10bob


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

HMAS, you must've received today's assignment to serve as auto-contrarian.



When well earned, candidates for "The Order Of The Green Button " are promptly rewarded.

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Post #: 154
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 7:01:17 PM   
mikemike

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

Indeed. Civil wars are always the worst.


A good historical example would be the Thirty Years War which was essentially a civil war with a little help from foreign friends and killed about a third of the German population. In some areas, population numbers had barely recovered when the French Revolution happened. The contemporary documents frequently make harrowing reading. When the Imperial Army (consisting mainly of Bavarian troops) made its first foray into staunchly-protestant Bohemia (what is now the western part of the Czech republic) they brought their own Re-catholisation (if that is a word) teams with them, so once a Bohemian town had been occupied by the Imperials, inhabitants came in two flavors: (1) Roman-Catholic or (2) dead. Soldiers mercilessly preyed on the civilian population, even on those nominally on the same side; looting provided a significant part of their income. This got so bad that in the later years of the war villagers organized in self-defence against all comers which was quite unprecedented; soldiers separated from their units that fell into the hands of peasants usually came to a sticky end. At the end of the war large parts of the Holy Roman Empire were in a state comparable to todays Somalia - an almost complete dissolution of law, order, and civilized society.

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Post #: 155
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 8:25:33 PM   
Nikademus


Posts: 25684
Joined: 5/27/2000
From: Alien spacecraft
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quote:

ORIGINAL: timtom

[
Indeed the Army was less than lukewarm about volunteering as conscription facilitated greater efficiancy in manpower allocation. The fact that volunteers tended to opt for the Air Corps, Navy, or the Marines did help either.

However it doesn't follow from here that, unlike what Greatest Generation mythology would seem to have us believe, everybody was just raring to go do they bit for God, mum and apple pie or that they had any idea what they might be getting themselves into. It probably helped that the US could afford to in effect shield the body polity from direct participation through a by comparison very generous deferment policy. Thus of the roughly 25 million men aged 18 to 37 processed by US Army induction boards 1940-45, 16 million were granted deferments. 15 million of these were on grounds of dependancy, though some hundred thousands (IIRC) were revoked in '44 when the infantry replacement crisis hit. When selective service was introduced in 1940, 75% of those who'd eventually serve in the Army were aged 25 or younger. Crudely put the young and the outcast were shipped off to war, but they did go almost to a man. Conscientious objectors came to 0.13% of Army inductees, fx






Enthusiasm also depended on the service entered. For example, Naval or Airforce entry was usually preferable to having to join the Infantry (and be a grunt sitting in the foxhole or being a tank crewman). I think it might have been in Neillands or Miller's book on the air war where I saw reference to tendency for US conscripts to want to join the more glamerous or technical branches of the military vs. the Bill Maudlin type fields. Later the Army would actually experience periodic shortages in replacement infantry and tank crews of which i think this was partly the cause. The irony of such was not lost on me......a nation of millions usually generates the automatic assumption that it's armed service or services would never suffer manpower shortages but you know what they say about making ASSumptions.

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Post #: 156
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 8:51:26 PM   
Terminus


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They make LogBoys ass look extra humongous...?

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Post #: 157
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 10:03:15 PM   
Nikademus


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not as humongus as your bald fat head.....

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Post #: 158
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 10:19:42 PM   
Terminus


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Well at least I have something useful in my mighty skull, unlike the oceans of blubber in your butt...

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Post #: 159
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 10:25:41 PM   
Nikademus


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i don't need a hat in wintertime. pffffft.





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Post #: 160
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 10:28:00 PM   
Terminus


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And I don't need to wear a moomoo 365 days a year...

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Post #: 161
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 10:30:03 PM   
Nikademus


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women don't use the back of my head as a mirror to help put lipstick on while riding on the Metro.

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Post #: 162
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/29/2009 10:36:58 PM   
Terminus


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Jelous...

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Post #: 163
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/30/2009 2:03:52 AM   
AW1Steve


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Jelous?  Is that anything like Jealous? 

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Post #: 164
RE: Saving Private Ryan? - 4/30/2009 2:07:27 AM   
witpqs


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From: Argleton
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Naw, he was asking if he felt like jelly.

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Post #: 165
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