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The Difference Between a WWII VET and a VIETNAM VET

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American Veterans Center

American Veterans Center

Күн бұрын

#military #history #avc #militaryhistory #ww2 #marines #vietnamwar
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@americanveteranscenter
@americanveteranscenter 4 ай бұрын
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@velvetbees
@velvetbees 4 ай бұрын
My older sister who was in high school in the late 1960's told me she heard that sometimes the men came home and still had dried blood from combat under their fingernails. If it is true, that sounds so lonely to me. It still breaks my heart.
@upscalesale4292
@upscalesale4292 4 ай бұрын
​@velvetbees Are you joking? Are you actually serious? Do you know what happens in this world and take on board the reality? And they walk off the transport with brains all over them. It's about time that people who have been damaged like this are listened to. They gave everything to see you smiling as they arrived. Back to the UK. Stop sending them, and they will not be killed. If you send them there, why? Why? And is it worth the pin? Well done to this man.
@libbyhobbs4637
@libbyhobbs4637 4 ай бұрын
As a medic my husband totally saw how their homecoming was pelted with garbage, dog feces and cries of baby-killers,murderers ! He's no longer affected but remembers...wouldn't talk about where he'd been or did. And now a presidential candidate who'll be a dictator on day one...WHO'LL STOP him on second day. Hasn't he done enough political and mental damage to the USA? GOD HELP . US!
@kirkslayden834
@kirkslayden834 4 ай бұрын
I fully understand my brother especially when you see somebody die from napalm but America made those boys go into that war why I still don't know why after all these years and my brother was in the jungles of Vietnam and he got a purple heart because his captain got shot in the ear and he had to pull him to safety he never talked about it because it was horrible but I found out that information from somebody else in the family and my brother came out normal he didn't do drugs but he smoked them Marlboro cigarettes and my brother had the best life ever he had a great family with three kids he had his own home and he made his own business on his own but he couldn't stop smoking tobacco and he got cancer and he died on 20/20 the same year my wife of 26 years she was freed to death with radiation and I joined the army on January 7th 1975 and my AIT was electronics and I didn't have basic electronics so I failed and the three choices of flapjack field wireman or motor mechanics did not sound good to me so I got out and the day I got out was the day that Vietnam was over and done May 20th 1975 and I got nothing I am not a veteran and if I would have spent one day in the military I would have got benefits but it's okay because I've been blessed beyond what I could ever imagine my wife bought her house in 2010 paid it off in 2020 when she died can I get death benefits from her death because I would have had to sell the house and moved on But why I don't understand why there's so many homeless veterans it's beyond what I could ever imagine and that is so wrong because our government doesn't care about our military veterans God bless our world God bless America in God we trust in Jesus name amen
@kirkslayden834
@kirkslayden834 4 ай бұрын
​@@godsownlunatics9650I am so sorry for the hell that you went through my brother Long time ago I had a friend named Jimmy Appley he never talked about it I don't know what he went through but he started doing drugs I don't know where he is today and I'm sorry that he went through hell but that's what our government does God bless in Jesus name amen
@J-xc4pw
@J-xc4pw 4 ай бұрын
I can’t believe in all these years this is the first time I’ve heard someone make this incredibly insightful distinction.
@Bulldog6Delta
@Bulldog6Delta 4 ай бұрын
Also the duration of combat - helicopters ensured that Vietnam vets were in almost constant, daily combat. Combined with Firebase postings, outposts etc. Slower WW2 Logistics ensured some rotation in / out of combat back to England or allied lines in France. So the average number of days in actual combat was higher on a per year basis for Vietnam vets vs WW2 vets.
@krzysztofsokolowski6566
@krzysztofsokolowski6566 4 ай бұрын
Not for all the WW2 vets. You know how many Polish vets died in prison tormented to death because they hadn't fought alongside with the Soviet Union? Or stayed hidden in the basements or woods hunted for like animals for half of their life ramaining as the enemies of the state? Or flied to western countries to avoid all that, got old and died separated from their families? Glory to all veterans fot their sacrifice, but please never glorify one over another.
@robertmaybeth3434
@robertmaybeth3434 4 ай бұрын
Oh yes I've read this same problem from almost every story of Vietnam vets I've ever read and heard. One day he is in Asian mud up to his knees standing guard in the dark night, 24 hours later he's standing at the door of Mom's house in Akron. The disconnect of this was very traumatic for most people and sometimes took years to process. If the army had a grain of sense, they would have pulled the soldier off operations a week before the DEROS date. And sent them to a midway pt like Hawaii or even the PI and let them acclimate and decompress with like-minded men, share experiences, and form some kind of closure on a long terrifying year they'd spent. Only then send the men home, where a whole new set of challenges no doubt awaited him, as he tried to restart his whole life all over again, after what might have been a deeply traumatic experience.
@edwardwritt3820
@edwardwritt3820 4 ай бұрын
​@@krzysztofsokolowski6566Well said
@twobirds01
@twobirds01 4 ай бұрын
I remember my government teacher my senior told us that point and it was totally mind boggling that I hadn’t heard or considered that point before
@thereissomecoolstuff
@thereissomecoolstuff 4 ай бұрын
One of the greatest injustices. A draft, horrible war in a jungle, return and released “good luck” Godbless all Vets but especially Vietnam era Veterans.
@ktlarsen9244
@ktlarsen9244 4 ай бұрын
It was a terrible thing they had to do. Then got pissed on. Damn shame.
@sharonporter7132
@sharonporter7132 4 ай бұрын
Especially Vietnam.🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲 The same mentality of the protesters during that war is similar to the same mentality of the protesters now shouting "Death to Israel, Death to America" in Dearborn, Michigan this weekend. Only a small percentage of Americans are involved. The greater majority don't support the protesters then or now. We have no respect for the cowards. We have the utmost respect for our military.❤❤❤🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
@apex107lrp
@apex107lrp 4 ай бұрын
I worked for a Vietnam combat veteran...11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, The "Black Horse" regiment (light tanks)...for 20 years. One of my coworkers was his younger brother. He told me his brother came back from the Army "more grim" than he used to be. It was clear our boss was "damaged goods" in some way...the mood swings, irritability, bad temper etc. My mother, sister and her daughter (my 3 year old niece at the time) came to visit me at work. When my niece looked up at my boss and said "Hi", a veil of misery, impatience and anger dropped away for just a moment when he looked down, smiled and said "Hello" back to my niece. Seconds later he was back to his "old" injured self. War is hell.
@deanfunk8448
@deanfunk8448 4 ай бұрын
So difficult and lifelong scars. At the end of his book, 'Dispatches' Michael Herr wrote "Vietnam, Vietnam, we have all been there".
@PeterDiaz-sg4xe
@PeterDiaz-sg4xe 4 ай бұрын
my best friend's Dad was in the Blue Dragon South Korean regiment during Vietnam, he felt the same way when he got back home We have no idea what these guys went through. This was before PTSD was even a thing there was no counseling they just told them to suck it up and carry on also this guy experienced the Korean War losing his entire family too unfortunately they don’t make it like that anymore
@vernamendiola1573
@vernamendiola1573 10 күн бұрын
This was my dad. He served in the Marines from 1965-1985. He was a Drill Instructor and a Vietnam Veteran. He never spoke about his time in Vietnam. My son became a Marine in 2021. He was able to talk to him about it. I am glad he was able to share some of his experiences with my son. My dad died on December 28, 2023. We miss him so much.
@patriciadewees9300
@patriciadewees9300 6 күн бұрын
Your father's service was greatly appreciated. 🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
@argybargyriddikulus
@argybargyriddikulus 6 күн бұрын
❤ 😇🙏
@robinbeard2572
@robinbeard2572 3 күн бұрын
So sorry for your loss thank you son for his service
@chrisburke624
@chrisburke624 3 күн бұрын
Your dad seems like a genuinely good man. I'm sorry for your loss, truly. Please let your son know that his service is extremely appreciated, especially in the times we are in.
@shewolf2584
@shewolf2584 3 күн бұрын
I am so sorry for your loss and what an honor for your son! All four of my Grandfather's served, all of my uncles served, both my blood father and my Step Dad served and one of my brother's served. I tried but my asthma disqualified me, however being born on Veterans Day in 1964, I found myself very interested in that war particularly and gained great respect in talking to those who served.
@kids.cats.crazy.
@kids.cats.crazy. 14 күн бұрын
Soldiers also returned home from WWII as heroes, celebrated and appreciated. Vietnam vets came home and were called baby killers and shamed and hated. The lack of support and compassion for them was enormously impactful in terms of their well-being and ability to lead normal, healthy, productive lives afterward.
@denisek292
@denisek292 12 күн бұрын
My father’s best friend fought in infantry. Ignorant Americans calling our heroes “baby killers” are shameful and never wanted to know the truth. Viet cong used toddlers, equiping innocents w/ grenades. Our men had no choice, but killing them, as they would have taken out an entire platoon. They were up against an evil enemy. God bless and comfort our Veterans.
@elainemd313
@elainemd313 12 күн бұрын
Vietnam vets became a huge homeless population. They were so broken by media-fueled mob-mentality they couldn't re-start their lives. Horribly sad. 😢 I pray for them till this day. 🙏
@SaltyMinorcan
@SaltyMinorcan 11 күн бұрын
Knowledge it's a weird thing. I did not hate vets the fact that we were lied to about that police action that the vets themselves had to go to court to even get called a war much less get benefits for, and the facts that we saw OnLive television started an anti-war movement that lasts to this day. Also there are those of us pay close attention to what our government does in the foreign field. If we do go to war and American's are complicit, you better believe it is for a just cause.
@jamiemeeks8348
@jamiemeeks8348 10 күн бұрын
I am a huge history buff and I watched a documentary a couple days ago and it talked about the hardships of the Vietnam vets including being spit on as they returned home by the same people they swore to protect abroad these men are not responsible for a war they didn't start it was the men in suits who sit behind desk that send this men to kill and die for there need to control the rest of the world and the worst part is they let tens of thousands of men die only to surrender to the Vietnam cong in the end
@peggysieberichs9156
@peggysieberichs9156 9 күн бұрын
@@elainemd313 they were young boys back then ...
@mannyr8795
@mannyr8795 3 ай бұрын
You can feel the pain in his voice. Best of luck to you sir
@ChesterManfred
@ChesterManfred 3 ай бұрын
He sounds so sad
@ChesterManfred
@ChesterManfred 3 ай бұрын
@@littlegreen9274 Dude, THEY WERE TRYING TO KILL HIM TOO
@yumataylor6642
@yumataylor6642 3 ай бұрын
My dad was a vietnam vet he came back and felt the hate from our own pple the constant threats and insults it hardens the heart, he passed 3 going on 4 years ago when i was in bootcamp i miss him but im happy he aint suffering anymore
@bailey200310
@bailey200310 3 ай бұрын
Got to remember these where teenagers 18, 19 kids god bless him.
@marycooper8385
@marycooper8385 3 ай бұрын
He's in so much pain I can see the tears in his eyes
@mrbill4499
@mrbill4499 4 ай бұрын
My cousin, David, lost an arm in Vietnam...I was just 10 when he came home, with his usual comic country boy personality gone...he never got the psychological help he desperately needed, so he struggled with depression for almost a year before he took his own life...he left a note apologizing to his parents..."I'm truly sorry, but I lost more than my arm somewhere in that damned jungle and I don't know how to get it back...please forgive me"...I still can't believe how they were treated when they got home...so sad and tragic.
@cedric3973
@cedric3973 4 ай бұрын
Brought you by the democratic party
@amidalaprin4846
@amidalaprin4846 4 ай бұрын
​@@cedric3973brought to you by the American political system. Doesn't matter blue or red they're on the same team, same boss's, same rules and goals. The more they can convince you "your side" is better than the other, the easier you are to control. We need to either do something or accept this is how it will be forever
@max666tall
@max666tall 4 ай бұрын
@@amidalaprin4846 Thank you for saying that, because growing up hearing stories from relatives and what little was taught in school and from what I learned on my own. Both parties are guilty of the war. Also shame on the people for how these soldiers were treated, people protesting to stop the war and bring the boys back home and as soon as they are brought back home, some of these same protesters spat and abandoned these men.
@cedric3973
@cedric3973 4 ай бұрын
​@@amidalaprin4846 they are on very different teams, one is directly and now says directly that they don't believe in the founding documents or the rule of law. One is directly responsible for amassing a majority of the debt and one ir directly responsible for fighting everytime the budget and getting it under control comes up. One party looted social security. One party was the party of jim crow and slavery. One party was the architect of the community reinvestment act which caused the 2008 housing crisis. Need I go on? Unless when it comes down to it you are a constitutional capitalist and go to the polls and vote in primaries and get people to really turn out for their local elections its all lost. Unless the person who takes power in Novermber stops the spending, deals with inflation and a ton of other issues along with reducing the power of the president, getting rid of homeland security and the patriot act along with a ton of other things within the next year its all over. This has been brought on in part by our parents and grandparents. We can look at who has controlled congress since World War 2 for a majority of the time and tell which party has sunk this country.....what do you know its the democrats. I am not saying the republicans are blameless but to say they are the same and are equally guilty is to undersell the sins and crimes of the democrat party.
@OtiumBorealis
@OtiumBorealis 4 ай бұрын
@@cedric3973 I'm no fan of the Democrat party, but the Bush/Cheney neocon Republican politicians are just as bad. They love sending young soldiers to war while they make money as shareholders in weapons manufacturers. The problem is the politicians in the middle that are not running for ideological reasons but feign having convictions when all they really want is a career in politics. Nancy Pelosi and Lindsey Graham are two sides of the same coin.
@peggysieberichs9156
@peggysieberichs9156 21 күн бұрын
My dad was a pow during WWII working at the railway in Birma. After that He went as a volunteer to Korea known as the Forgotten war. He passed away in 2015 at the age of 95. Let's look after our vets please....Respect and thank you Sir for your service... ❤❤❤
@nicholasdelaney1407
@nicholasdelaney1407 11 күн бұрын
The Burma campaign may just be one of the most horrific moments of the Second World War, I pray that anyone, any soldier who suffered greatly in the Burma campaign finds peace, and I pray that any living WW2 Vets are still loved and respected today 🙏🌹❤️...
@frankrapport4208
@frankrapport4208 10 күн бұрын
❤❤❤
@augustocagner8098
@augustocagner8098 9 күн бұрын
​@@nicholasdelaney1407Just a fez propõe know how Burma, the Gates to hello.
@tatianabrown6903
@tatianabrown6903 5 күн бұрын
My late Husband was a WWII, POW and Korean Veteran. I lost him to Esaphageal Cancer in 2011. God rest his precious soul. Memory Eternal ☦️!
@maxkepler8262
@maxkepler8262 18 күн бұрын
I want to give pops a hug so bad. My grandfather be 80 this year. Was in nam. He was a solid hero. I’ll never forget him
@JoseBurgos-cz7hy
@JoseBurgos-cz7hy Күн бұрын
@maxkepler8262 my father was the best man in my life he and my brother ww2 and Vietnam 🇻🇳 veterans
@toots810usa6
@toots810usa6 Ай бұрын
My Dad is a Vietnam Vet, 79 yrs old. He was drafted. We recently lost my Mom, and he sat down and talked to me about survivor's guilt. He was visibly shaken to this day about the 22 friends he lost on one night, 3 weeks before he came home. I had no idea, and the worst part was nobody believed his stories when he got home. 55 years later I BELIEVED him!!! God Bless every Veteran that has ever served this country.
@questionasker1749
@questionasker1749 Ай бұрын
Please thank your Dad for his service and know he entrusted the feelings he had with you. As a Senior in High school, at Graduation so many of my friends were going right to Nam. It was a sad day when some came back and I was standing at a major airport and there were at the maximum 100-150 people to greet our boys. Sad days.😢😢❤❤
@lindabergman3127
@lindabergman3127 Ай бұрын
Amen ❤❤❤❤ ❤
@e.d972
@e.d972 Ай бұрын
Please give your dad a big hug for me. ❤
@lisawilliamson2742
@lisawilliamson2742 Ай бұрын
Please tell your dad he is appreciated so much by me and my family 💕
@patriciathemaras3274
@patriciathemaras3274 Ай бұрын
I believe him ❤.
@frankedgar6694
@frankedgar6694 4 ай бұрын
For me, the toughest is remembering friends who didn’t make it home. Survivor guilt is a bitch.
@DaltonRosee
@DaltonRosee 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service and your fallen brothers as well. God bless.
@SB4F
@SB4F 4 ай бұрын
Survivors guilt is completely understandable, just know almost everyone deserves surviving, including you.
@frankedgar6694
@frankedgar6694 4 ай бұрын
@@SB4F It took me 20 years before it hit. Christmas and suddenly my CO’s daughter must be celebrating Christmas with her kids never having had a chance to know him. She was about 18 months at the time. And there I was enjoying my kids and grandkids. I’ve heard more than once “Is that way of thinking or that way of feeling realistic?” It took me nearly 10 years to get past it. Good counseling and finally a relationship with God got me back to normal. I’ve been out 47 years now and it still seems like yesterday.
@ThatGuy-vi8ch
@ThatGuy-vi8ch 4 ай бұрын
​@@frankedgar6694 You're amazing... ❤ Keep being you, I could feel that from here.
@jds6206
@jds6206 4 ай бұрын
Then you need to talk to a skilled counselor and figure it out of your head. You do NOT need to live with "survivor guilt".
@Journey-1978
@Journey-1978 27 күн бұрын
I am in tears. My heart breaks for this gentleman. God bless you and thank you for your service.
@robbiemccrory9697
@robbiemccrory9697 24 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing this information. My brother served in Vietnam with the marines. A heartfelt thank you to every combat veteran.
@cozy46
@cozy46 7 күн бұрын
My brother was a Marine too.
@robbiemccrory9697
@robbiemccrory9697 7 күн бұрын
@@cozy46 Please thank him for his service to America for me.
@prenticehammond2003
@prenticehammond2003 4 ай бұрын
A perspective I've never really thought about. Thank you.
@kevinkennedy9343
@kevinkennedy9343 4 ай бұрын
Agreed! And it's huge!
@fjp3305
@fjp3305 4 ай бұрын
Agree. I never heard that point.
@morrissoublet25
@morrissoublet25 4 ай бұрын
The majority of the nation didn’t think about this. JMHO, but this is probably the main contributing factor to the number of Vietnam veterans that are on our nation’s streets today. I wouldn’t be surprised if the same thing isn’t happening to soldiers that have returned to civilian life after tours of duty since Vietnam.
@Blackmark7410
@Blackmark7410 4 ай бұрын
He makes a massive point. Point, that three week transition period, to allow them to have a clear line between the hell of war and the mundane of normal life, the ability to decompress and try to return to "normal", supported by others who are facing the same reality could make a real difference to the well being of the returning soldier.
@Rango390
@Rango390 4 ай бұрын
@@Blackmark7410definitely makes sense when you think about it. When I came back from Iraq,and Afghanistan yes we came back as a unit but it was just the flight back to base and watching everyone else’s families greet them and you go alone to your barracks. Fly back home alone to family and friends. Goin from a war zone to home in less than 48 hours is very difficult to get used to
@KuroMicra
@KuroMicra 4 ай бұрын
This gentleman has nailed it. The importance of peer debrief and decompression should never be underestimated.
@mikeswann2647
@mikeswann2647 4 ай бұрын
YES SIR no un wind time arrived in BDUs and jungle boots, these guys were dumped in and dumped out.. 30 hours out of combat and back in America... my God
@mikeswann2647
@mikeswann2647 4 ай бұрын
God bless you all
@scmtnchick
@scmtnchick 4 ай бұрын
Plus WW2 vets were considered heroes. Vietnam vets not so much, they were shamed for things out of there control
@cynthiaPs63.7
@cynthiaPs63.7 4 ай бұрын
@@scmtnchick My BIL is a VietNam vet. He was in the Navy and was walking (in uniform) with my sister down a sidewalk in Santa Barbara (where they lived) and people spit on him. No grace at all given to the servicemen and women who were drafted into and fought in that war. Shameful!
@red2977
@red2977 4 ай бұрын
@@cynthiaPs63.7 yea the anti-war people who acted like that were real scum. Most especially when many people were drafted and sent to war against their will.
@heathenannblackcloud737
@heathenannblackcloud737 8 күн бұрын
My husband was also a marine sniper. He told me, I have told you more what happened to him and that since he started living with me he stopped having nightmares. I allowed him to be and loved him for Being. ❤ RIP Dwight Grinnell, you are loved!!!!
@julielytton6097
@julielytton6097 10 күн бұрын
The pain in those eyes hurts my soul. How do you not bawl listening to this American hero. Thank you for serving Sir!!!
@joshtolbert3561
@joshtolbert3561 4 ай бұрын
Don’t know if I’ve ever heard an actual vet give such perspective in so few words. God bless, sir.
@bonjourputas
@bonjourputas 4 ай бұрын
Right, this never occurred to me but it makes all the sense in the world.
@blakeb9964
@blakeb9964 4 ай бұрын
Yep it's a really good point that I've never thought about.
@user-ot2kh8zi2u
@user-ot2kh8zi2u 4 ай бұрын
Why are you lying ?
@jeanneserrano3397
@jeanneserrano3397 4 ай бұрын
@user? Why are U cryptic? That's a form of lying. Be specific re: an accusation.
@jeremygardner5987
@jeremygardner5987 4 ай бұрын
Colonial wars damage the psychology of the soldiers of the colonial power. Every US war since WWII has been fought to expand the reach of US financial interests for the project of neocolonial hegemony.
@reecearnold4195
@reecearnold4195 4 ай бұрын
My dad worked with a Vietnam vet and on Veterans Day in the late 90s, my dad thanked him for his service and he started to get upset. My dad asked him if he's alright and he said that my dad was the first person to thank him since he got back.
@sherellsworth6956
@sherellsworth6956 4 ай бұрын
I remember those days, too well! I was so ashamed of the way those soldiers were treated when they returned, which was mostly because of those "hippies" - my heart still aches for those veterans! As if what they had to experience and endure on the battle fields was not enough, the behavior towards them by their own Americans was nothing short of sinful! May God bless America and those who put their lives on the line to protect her.
@TTFerdinand
@TTFerdinand 4 ай бұрын
​@@sherellsworth6956 I'm not American and I'm not a soldier. I remember being stuck in Dubai airport in 2007 because of some visa issues with "The supervisor comes on Monday", but it was Friday evening. I met a guy in uniform, trying to find his Delta flight to the US. The clerk barely spoke English, the guy was clearly frustrated, we had a brief talk, he was going home from Iraq, but then he had to hurry on. He was just anxious to get home. Well... No deeper point, just that.
@user-mv5uy8vh8l
@user-mv5uy8vh8l 4 ай бұрын
​​@@sherellsworth6956 Hippies = Democrats
@BillSundin
@BillSundin 4 ай бұрын
​@sherellsworth6956 I'm a Vietnam era vet, and I had plenty of "hippie" friends before and after I went in - and I didn't know any that treated vets or soldiers badly, they protested the war itself. If you're a person who has to find someone to blame for everything, hippies didn't get us into a bad war and run it ignorantly. Congress did that, and they typically didn't let their kids serve.
@user-mv5uy8vh8l
@user-mv5uy8vh8l 4 ай бұрын
@@BillSundin I like how you're an ERA vet, JERK-OFF. If you hadn't been in the coast guard, and came through LAX in uniform you'd be singing a diff tune. Yeah the government was drunk and sends young off to die, and they still do it today but that doesn't excuse the disrespect.
@user-hc2id4wm1x
@user-hc2id4wm1x 7 күн бұрын
I can see the hurt and pain in this man's eyes. Thank you for your service.
@davidwood-s1n
@davidwood-s1n 24 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching over us. God bless y'all.
@jamielynne1985.
@jamielynne1985. 4 ай бұрын
My grandfather was both a wwii vet and Vietnam vet. He never talked about vietnam. Only his stories of wwii. Thank you for your service, sir.
@max666tall
@max666tall 4 ай бұрын
I have a great uncle like that too, he was at pearl harbor and talked about his experience of the war, but when it came to Vietnam he was silent. When he did talk about it, it was when he would have a bad day with his PTSD.
@mat7083
@mat7083 4 ай бұрын
It’s strange how soldiers can compartmentalize the wars they’ve been on. But, in this context, it sort of makes sense. In WWII, there were clear heroes and clear enemies. A narrative that the fate of the world was at stake, and it was imperative that every man should fight. Boost motivation and morale. And a hero’s welcome back home. In Nam, that narrative is blurred. Fighting against evil turns into fighting against people you don’t even know is friend or foe. Morale and motivation is low and you see a comrade get shot at or blown to bits cause politicians thought it was a good idea to draft men into a war none of them actually understand or care for. And those that survived come back home as “baby killers” instead of heroes. An incredibly lonely and tragic position to be in
@DaleSandusky
@DaleSandusky 4 ай бұрын
I bet he spent the whole time with a Vietnamese child. Lucky man!
@jamielynne1985.
@jamielynne1985. 4 ай бұрын
@max666tall we lost my grandfather 12 years ago to stage 4 pancreatic cancer, that was due to being exposed to agent orange during vietnam.
@mat7083
@mat7083 4 ай бұрын
@@jamielynne1985. I’m sorry
@hagakuru
@hagakuru 4 ай бұрын
my father never once spoke of the war in the 54 years I knew him. he held everything inside for his 86 years.
@TheGetmoneyman
@TheGetmoneyman 4 ай бұрын
Yep my father is a Vietnam vet i never knew until my mid 20s
@suzanna6
@suzanna6 4 ай бұрын
A man I worked for at 3 different places and for many years is a Vietnam Veteran and also never spoke of it but once or twice casually. He simply said it was unspeakable but I was lucky enough to come home and live a good life. God bless them! 🙏
@Mai-Gninwod
@Mai-Gninwod 4 ай бұрын
So many private tragedies born from this horrific unnecessary war. On top of the million+ dead, there is this. One man living and dying with unspeakable pain.
@SnarkyJohnny
@SnarkyJohnny 4 ай бұрын
Same. My father never talked to me about Vietnam. He doed before I became a man.
@user-ot2kh8zi2u
@user-ot2kh8zi2u 4 ай бұрын
Well why didn’t you ask?
@riekebusch2293
@riekebusch2293 Күн бұрын
A very deep reflection! I thank you very much, dear Sir! My generation (German granny,75) was out in the streets to protest against the Vietnam War. We considered it a mistake. We felt so sorry for all the men that were sent there. We disliked the US government. .... To listen to your trauma is difficult and sad. Again: thank you for these words!
@johnburken7788
@johnburken7788 15 күн бұрын
This soldier is a wonderful. He can't say but I will. He is a real hero to fight in rhe Vietnam war. The USA 🇺🇸 was behind the WWII warriors and treated them as such, the Vietnam American veterans had no such fanfare. Still he served and fought for us. I truly believe the greatest generation of Americans are the Vietnam era warriors. Here and overseas. Why, they served when the mission was not as obvious as WWII. My hat is off to you sir.❤
@paul6353
@paul6353 4 ай бұрын
Talking your heart out with someone who actually listens and understands is the greatest medicine.
@jamesarcher1289
@jamesarcher1289 4 ай бұрын
Complex PTSD is horrible. One of the biggest hurdles is that civilians don’t understand it. Families fall apart cause of the drinking to stop the dreams or your just a completely changed person. With hard work and years of counseling and meds a lot of times. A person can start to adjust slowly
@drkalowski256
@drkalowski256 4 ай бұрын
​@@jamesarcher1289in my personal experience with family/ppl in town who have PTSD is they are often afraid of seeking help. I try to simply be there, listen, try to understand. But, what seems to be the most important to Vietnam era vets - GWOT vets is they like to be remembered. NOT because of what they did but because of who they are, because they are human. It is an immense time investment to get dudes to get into the professionals office, but simply reminding them you are there, in their corner of the ring, gets ppl to seek help Everytime I listen to a vet they get teary eyed, you can see the guilt, sorrow in their eyes and sometimes people just need a hug or to share a beer in silence or just for you to sit with them
@scoob4333
@scoob4333 4 ай бұрын
By the way gonna put a source here, because this is actually true. Book: What Happend to You by By Bruce D. Perry, and Oprah Winfrey.
@fredwerza3478
@fredwerza3478 4 ай бұрын
I seen my Dad and so many guys of his generation act like this guy --- eyes well up with tears and shaky voice --- it was just pure hell over in Vietnam
@kilodeltaeight
@kilodeltaeight 4 ай бұрын
One of the most important things we’ve learned with PTSD (and especially complex PTSD) research is that talking about it helps SO MUCH, particularly with experts who understand how to help someone process past trauma, but also with peers who have similar experiences. In that vein, what happened to Vietnam vets was extra cruel, as they were fined the ability to have that more-immediate debrief with peers, AND thrust back into a country undergoing huge shifts socially and economically that encouraged isolation. It was a recipe suffering.
@architecture.w
@architecture.w 4 ай бұрын
My father was a WWII vet. Those guys shared a bond long after the war was over.
@edwardwritt3820
@edwardwritt3820 4 ай бұрын
Respect for all of our vets and especially those who served in combat. Lets not forget about those young men , some teenagers who stormed the beaches of Normandy knowing that they would face certain death. They knew what it was like to possibly be killed and kill . Our Vietnam Vets were treated totally different. If they survived they were put on a aircraft and sent back home . No debriefing , no chance to talk with anyone except for some admin person typing up their paperwork who did nothing but give them their discharge papers and sent them on their way. The WW 2 VETS were respected for what they did and it was earned. Our Vietnam VETS were treated like crap by the public and our government. Especially our government and still are to this very day . Love and respect always
@98zei
@98zei 4 ай бұрын
@@edwardwritt3820 wasn't the Vietnam war an unjust war
@oogway73
@oogway73 4 ай бұрын
Truly an extravagantly wasteful war. 50,000 innocent young men murdered for a paltry jungle country to remain communist. The U.S. was never and will never be the universal police.
@edwardwritt3820
@edwardwritt3820 4 ай бұрын
@@98zei Yes it was unjust. It wasn't even a declared war. It was nothing but a money machine for the politicians who were bought off by the military industrial complex. Billions of dollars in the pockets of political people and the so called defense industry. We lost close to 60 thousand of our citizens . The families of those heroes lost much more than we can ever imagine. Those who survived are still fighting a battle for benefits that they earned. The government is giving them token health care but in reality are just waiting for them to die off . Same thing our Korean war vets went through and it will be the same thing our warriors from the so called Gulf War and the war against terrorism will go through. Our government doesn't hesitate to give billions to Ukraine and the illegal immigrants but yet treat our warriors like crap.
@33d672
@33d672 4 ай бұрын
@@98zeiYeah it was. But it isnt the American troops fault. Most of them was drafted I believe, so blame the politicians and not the men who was forced to fight in the unjust war.
@KRILEY1919
@KRILEY1919 6 күн бұрын
The pain in his voice is heartbreaking. Thank you for your service sir💜
@jimrowell4202
@jimrowell4202 11 күн бұрын
Today! Aug.16 2024. I am so sorry! I lost my brother in law that did the same thing you went through. Agent Orange took his life...later died early from what you had no chance to change. Your were a pawn for our government. Sad. God bless you! Thank you for your courage and for sharing! War is hell on earth always!
@Fnu-ex1tc
@Fnu-ex1tc 4 ай бұрын
After 43 years of remaining silent, just two weeks ago, my father finally talked about Vietnam. It was an eye opening listening session with my father and uncle. They've lost their parents, sister, and older brother.
@GenXWitch67
@GenXWitch67 4 ай бұрын
My dad, since passed, also said nothing until his end of life. He was in the Navy. Bringing troops to Vietnam then turning around and bring the dead home. Sometimes fishing them out of the water with hooks, etc. it was disgusting and heartbreaking work. Some of them coming back had just arrived on the ship they had brought them over on, not 18 months before. My dad was an aerographer’s mate, (weather man, meteorologist, whatever you want to call him. They sent him to school for it right after boot camp). He chose the Navy as he was against killing people but also had to participate due to the draft and knew he must supposed the US efforts. Even if non-violently. When he came home after his four year stint, with reserve duty in his future, people spit on him, and called him a baby killer. He never contacted his mate’s, never went to reunion, never talked about it other than to say the vets were treated horribly. He also couldn’t stand Hanoi Jane. He didn’t believe her apologies nor her version of events.
@judyfultz5395
@judyfultz5395 4 ай бұрын
My brother was also a Vietnam vet. And he didn't talk about his experience over there until the last few years of his life. And it was an eye opening experience for me to realize what he went through.. and I'm proud to be the sister of a Vietnam vet. 🇺🇸🦅
@darcydoll437
@darcydoll437 4 ай бұрын
My Dad never talked about his time over in Vietnam. He has now since passed. 🥺
@mean_deen
@mean_deen 4 ай бұрын
my Dad wasn’t in Vietnam but WWll and he rarely ever talked about it and even when he did, he never went into detail at all. i knew that he was stationed in a bunch of different places and my Mom was right by his side every step of the way and then he was stationed in Turkey for 4 years and they told me stories of rolling blackouts and it being so dark, he and my Mom would be sitting next to each other and have no idea the other one of them was literally right there. they couldn’t even see their hands right in front of their faces. he told me his job was basically to learn a few languages and he would translate radio interceptions. we lost my beloved Mama when i was just 10 but they’d already been married for 27 years at that point. i just lost him 2 years ago now and at his funeral was where i learned what an unbelievable true bad ass he was in the military. there were so many high ranking military men there and men from the CIA etc. who were all coming up to me after the service, in a line, shaking my hand and telling me how much Dad saved their lives, the things he did for them, how much they all loved, respected, and owed him etc. it was WILD. i had less than NO idea. my Daddy was an extremely humble man. but i’ll tell ya what, it was one of the most incredible, proud, and just mind blowing experiences of my life that i will never ever forget. it honestly really truly felt like the scene at the end of the movie Armageddon when the 1 Astronaut walks up to Liv Tyler and “requests to shake the hand of the daughter of the bravest man he’s ever known” simply the best 🥺💔
@rainbowshenanigans9339
@rainbowshenanigans9339 4 ай бұрын
My wife’s grandpa had never really talked about his experiences in Vietnam until he met me. Bc of my time in the Army he opened up to me in literally minutes about things he had NEVER told his own family. Her whole family just watched us and listened with amazement that he was opening up. I loved listening to his stories, would’ve loved to have heard more! It’s that unspoken bond between service members, brothers in arms!
@billalumni7760
@billalumni7760 4 ай бұрын
Never really heard about the way you come home is such a powerful therapy if done right.
@eddiebear34
@eddiebear34 4 ай бұрын
It won't matter if you go home in 3 weeks with what's left of your squad, or flew home alone in a day or 2. The moments alone to think about what you seen or done will always creep up on you for the rest of your life
@wolfsmaul-ger8318
@wolfsmaul-ger8318 4 ай бұрын
@@eddiebear34 of course it matters, what happened will always come back but talking about your experience with friends and family, people completely uninvolved and people you might want to protect from the gruesome stories is so much harder and different compared to spending a lot of time with those comrades who remained till the last day, who went through the same hell as you, who share the same relief that its over and dread for what's to come
@eddiebear34
@eddiebear34 4 ай бұрын
@wolfsmaul-ger8318 no. The experience of moving on will come when you leave. Be it straight away or weeks after. I'd say Vietnam vets probably had more support (still not much) afterwards, than ww2 men. Watch any documentary on ww2, and those guys are distraught about what they seen and done until their dying day
@wolfsmaul-ger8318
@wolfsmaul-ger8318 4 ай бұрын
@@eddiebear34 the experience of moving on already comes when the war is over, the people you fought with don't turn into strangers. the youngest men who entered the war in 1955 would still be 87 years old and the war went on till 1975, most of the men who fought in the war would be below the old age when veterans usually open up their stories. another thing is that WW2 and vietnam played out very differently in all terms, technology, the enemy, the countries, i don't mean that WW2 veterans had it better but we don't even know how much worse of an impact the war would have done to them if they were flown alone in the span of a few days like in vietnam. speaking is one of the most important aspects of handling and processing trauma.
@eddiebear34
@eddiebear34 4 ай бұрын
@wolfsmaul-ger8318 completely disagree. I'm ex military myself and you could be with your guys for a month afterwards, and you don't reflect on anything until your on your own. And no... Vietnam military personnel definitely didn't have it harder than ww2 guys
@jfree111
@jfree111 11 күн бұрын
Thank you SO MUCH for your service and what you've been through.
@deb585
@deb585 11 күн бұрын
Thank you for your service...I honor all Vets but Vietnam Vets hold a special place in my heart.
@joeneauxvieve6203
@joeneauxvieve6203 4 ай бұрын
My uncle was a Vietnam vet. He was a wonderful man, but it was clear there was a deep sadness within him that he never truly healed from. He had a loving family and we were with him till the day he died, but his loneliness was apparent. Any friends he had from that era were lost in the war or succumbed to their loneliness as well. He was the last of his friends. Subjects like this are so important to highlight and discuss but often go overlooked. Miss you, Uncle Vern. Thank you for your service. Rest in peace.
@YenCrew
@YenCrew 4 ай бұрын
As a service man. As someone who understands that I don't understand with my uncle dealing with this every day as a Vietnam Vet. Thank you to your uncle for his service! May he rest in Peace!
@_A4A
@_A4A 4 ай бұрын
I truly respect & value your story and appreciate you for sharing it with all of us! May your Uncle find peace in The Great Forever and I deeply thank him and all his comrades for their service!.... 🕊
@xxsqf
@xxsqf 4 ай бұрын
@@YenCrew thanking him for invading a country for no reason? R U serious?
@bebbychad7607
@bebbychad7607 4 ай бұрын
​@xxsqf you need to sit down and stfu!
@YenCrew
@YenCrew 4 ай бұрын
@xxsqf It's not about whether he was right or wrong, per say. It's that a fight started & the inevitable ensues. Whether we were right or wrong, if we just bent the knee, who knows what we as a country would be today. Do you really want to take a chance on what would've/ could've been?? I know you know life isn't fair & is ugly. So yes, these men stepped up & did the dirty work necessary for you & others to live the life you live today. It's what I do as well. Holding & maintaining power always comes with backlash... but feel free to believe, think & feel what you want. Oh & if you're gonna be mad, blame & shame anyone. Go do that to uncle Sam
@johnscharff9690
@johnscharff9690 4 ай бұрын
My father had the same experience returning from the Korean War. The long sea voyage was a blessing.
@mountainguyed67
@mountainguyed67 4 ай бұрын
My father was a Korean War veteran, an Air Force bomb loader. My mom told me he said he was a bad boy in the Air Force. That’s all I know about his military service, he died in 1973 when I was 5. Treasure your time with your dad and learning his experiences, some of us didn’t get that. My dad died young, my mom is still alive at 86 years old. She came over for a visit today, so at least I have her.
@hkkim8718
@hkkim8718 4 ай бұрын
Korea remembers Korean War Veterans highlighted by our President's official visit to the US included meeting one of the American vets last year and followed up with a broadcaste that the vet passed away just last month this year. Korea does not forget our allies, and we thank you.
@craigfinley2507
@craigfinley2507 4 ай бұрын
I was young when my pop died I was 14 I wish I could've had a man experience with him. So I feel you bro , be strong 👍​@@mountainguyed67
@mountainguyed67
@mountainguyed67 4 ай бұрын
@@hkkim8718 I’ve heard this before from Koreans, and it’s comforting.
@daimyosutsujin9197
@daimyosutsujin9197 4 ай бұрын
@@hkkim8718 And yet, Koreans are racist towards Filipinos.
@rosemarygress5159
@rosemarygress5159 20 сағат бұрын
Thank you for your service. You will always be remembered. Bless you.
@mojonichols8826
@mojonichols8826 6 күн бұрын
I'm so sorry for your pain. Thank you deeply for your loss and service.
@LogicalPrime
@LogicalPrime 4 ай бұрын
They also came back to a public that hated them, must have been crazy rough. Much respect to you sir
@Flynnoo7
@Flynnoo7 4 ай бұрын
Damn straight!!! Brother.
@brendberryman
@brendberryman 4 ай бұрын
As a wife of a Vietnam Veteran this statement is true 😢
@maxsparks5183
@maxsparks5183 4 ай бұрын
Not all of us hated them. I graduated from high school the month Saigon fell. I never heard anyone here in Arkansas talk badly about the soldiers sailors or marines of Vietnam. Sure, there was a lot of inner conflict in almost all of us and some outward expression of that conflict regarding the war itself, but not about our brothers and sisters who were over there doing the fighting. God bless them. They are the greatest generation.🇺🇸
@wingsoficarus1139
@wingsoficarus1139 4 ай бұрын
I dont think they hated the vets, they hated the higher ups sending the vets. Vietnam was a waste of lives and tax dollars, and we didn't need to draft thousands of young men and boys for an unwinnable war that isn't even relevant to us. People supported WWII because we were at risk of more direct attacks, Vietnam wasn't like that.
@greeneyesdante
@greeneyesdante 4 ай бұрын
Indeed! My father did 2 terms during the war, and many did hate them when they returned. Sad!!
@scottstoughton4834
@scottstoughton4834 Ай бұрын
My dad was a WWII vet. He always said that Korea vets and Vietnam vets were all brothers in arms for our country. It pissed him off how they were treated.
@user-yy4jo9pk2b
@user-yy4jo9pk2b Ай бұрын
Didn’t WWII veterans have a ticker tape parade?
@scottstoughton4834
@scottstoughton4834 Ай бұрын
@user-yy4jo9pk2b in some major cities but not every WWII vet coming home did not get put in a parade they just went home. The biggest difference they basically came home together
@user-kl5st3su8m
@user-kl5st3su8m Ай бұрын
It did the same to my father, a WWII Veteran.
@taylorrenee4880
@taylorrenee4880 Ай бұрын
Or how they treated the Vietnamese…they didn’t ask for America to come shooting at them. A pointless war
@user-kl5st3su8m
@user-kl5st3su8m Ай бұрын
@taylorrenee4880 Taylor, some of the people reading these posts served in Vietnam, may have suffered or lost friends or family, as they still live with the effects of it. I am sure you didn't intend to do this, but it could be disheartening to read an assessment of their life altering experience as being pointless. I understand what you mean and I look to governments as the causes of wars. I am reluctant to presume to know how anyone in the military mistreated the people. A Soldier, Marine Sailor, etc. is not the cause of a war - governments cause wars, especially those that colonized a nation, leaving without establishing provisional government for the people. I just couldn't presume to know what any person did in treatment of the people. I see combat fighters as never to blame for fighting, killing or the "pointlessness" of a war's outcome. I don't think you were intentionally being hard on anyone and I also find all of it disturbing for all people.
@yeahsooo
@yeahsooo 25 күн бұрын
I cannot imagine what it was like for you and then to come home and be treated so disrespectfully and still a lot of vets are treated disrespectfully, but I thank you from the bottom of my heart for your service. God be with you sir❤
@aaronschafer3231
@aaronschafer3231 7 күн бұрын
I can’t help but to get choked up listening to this guy talk about his experience and to hear it in his voice.
@RHINOSAUR
@RHINOSAUR 3 ай бұрын
This man is on the verge of tears in every interview segment I’ve watched. The pain he’s suffered in Nam, and these past long decades must be pure hell. God bless him.
@arsenioseslpodcast3143
@arsenioseslpodcast3143 3 ай бұрын
pAIN HE suffered? Yeah, shooting those children and women, he made a choice to commit a genocide
@DH-rj2kv
@DH-rj2kv 3 ай бұрын
My grandfather was in WW II. He lost two of this brothers and his leg his leg somewhere in Russia, got transported back 3000 miles by truck and train. When he finally came home, he burned all the letters and pictures he had written to my grandma, buried everything and went on with life. He never talked about the war for 50 years until dementia got the better of him. Then he would sometimes sit in the kitchen, dropping names of people and places no one knew and start crying. And there was a whole generation of men like that. Deeply traumatised but what they had seen (and done) suffering for a lifetime, paying the price of survival.
@AC-hj9tv
@AC-hj9tv 3 ай бұрын
Glass Vietnam
@margreetdoodeman1441
@margreetdoodeman1441 3 ай бұрын
I am so sorry for him, he says nobody understood. The difference is as well that the WW were won. once I met someone he was 17 when he went to Nam. He said he met a lot of insults bc of losing. When he returned he did prison time, could not get to 'normal' life, he was too young to know what that would have been looked like. In the end he started living in a buddhist centre. I went to see the Deer Hunter, I left very early. And that is only a movie.
@PeterGriffin42000
@PeterGriffin42000 2 ай бұрын
Jews
@arsenalfish21
@arsenalfish21 4 ай бұрын
I appreciate this man sharing his experience. His pain was palpable.
@JoseBurgos-cz7hy
@JoseBurgos-cz7hy 4 күн бұрын
My father and brother ww2 and Vietnam 🇻🇳 veterans rip to all the God bless their family and friends
@adrianpena677
@adrianpena677 Күн бұрын
These men are true heroes , I knew a few that came back really traumatized , hope they got the much needed help , thank you sir for your service!
@31Alden
@31Alden 2 күн бұрын
Thank you for your brave service at a time in our nation when there was so much unrest over our involvement in Vietnam. And yet you served. Know how much we appreciate your service. Peace to you, Good Man.
@angelawingard5561
@angelawingard5561 4 күн бұрын
Thank you for your service and sacrifice to our wonderful country, Sir! My older brother was in Vietnam. He struggled with cancer from Agent Orange until this death in 2017.
@KaidenBainAstro
@KaidenBainAstro 4 ай бұрын
I once told a Vietnam vet “Welcome Home Sir and thank you for your service.” And he broke down in tears on the spot.
@HimeDelia
@HimeDelia 3 ай бұрын
And then everyone clapped.
@jortal7441
@jortal7441 3 ай бұрын
No body to blame but your self and your country the United States had no business being in Vietnam in the first place. Just like they have no place being in Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan. America or should I say Americans should learn from there decade of mistakes and start putting America and Americans first.
@Higher-Ground
@Higher-Ground 3 ай бұрын
@@jortal7441 It wasn’t the soldiers fault. How can you get mad at a draft and then get mad at the men who were drafted? You hate the draft for forcing innocent lives into war and then you hate the drafted for being forced into to war?
@MrScionic
@MrScionic 3 ай бұрын
@@jortal7441 you arent very smart the soldiers did say "yea I would like to go into a jungle and kill many people" they were sent there clueless and for you to blame them is just disrespectful. Do you know how many young men didnt know they would never come home to their families? No you dont you are very heartless.
@tw7873
@tw7873 3 ай бұрын
@@jortal7441why don’t you share what country you are from? Your hands are not clean either. Every country has been involved in war in some capacity over the years. I have utmost respect for this man and for all men who have served in the US armed forces and want to thank any of them that may be reading this. It’s their not there also just so you know. Does your country teach grammar?
@RedElephantAlly
@RedElephantAlly 4 ай бұрын
I hope this man finds peace and comfort. 😢
@gicudacian6270
@gicudacian6270 4 ай бұрын
And all the people that he killed right? 😂
@chriscarswell450
@chriscarswell450 4 ай бұрын
​I know right. Its so screwed up. Thanks corrupt government ​@@gicudacian6270
@flyingpanda6802
@flyingpanda6802 4 ай бұрын
@@gicudacian6270your kidding right? Vietnam was a draft and it was horrendous what they had to go through during the war and after being sent home. Thats if they survived it. Many then had to suffer for the rest of their lives with ptsd and injuries sustained during the war. They also didn’t have support after like they do now. Which they still don’t have the best support now after they get out of the military.
@jodiegalloway3614
@jodiegalloway3614 4 ай бұрын
I pray that this man and other vets find peace and support. Thank you for your service. I'm so sorry to hear of your experience, I cannot imagine having to kill it be killed. It was your job to kill enemy forces, a terrible place to be put in.
@jodiegalloway3614
@jodiegalloway3614 4 ай бұрын
​@@gicudacian6270you think this is funny? What kind of person are you? Geez
@ceforaprescott
@ceforaprescott 9 күн бұрын
Thank you for your services, freedom isn't free. God bless you, we are so proud 👏 of you all.❤
@jamesmilligan3487
@jamesmilligan3487 2 күн бұрын
I was born in 67 I love all you guys for what y'all have done for us THANK YOU
@Jade-xj3sh
@Jade-xj3sh Ай бұрын
Thank you so much sir. My dad served during Vietnam and he shared your sentiments. He said he was advised not to wear his military clothes. They hated those poor guys. God bless them.
@denisek292
@denisek292 12 күн бұрын
Even if you don’t agree w/ what war these heroes fought, every soldier deserves respect from his countrymen. Shame on Americans, who disrespected our men. And you’re correct: God bless every soldier, as they have preserved our freedoms.
@pathosfear6290
@pathosfear6290 12 күн бұрын
@@denisek292 Nah, they preserved national interests. It's alla bout the money, nothing else. Having said that, soldiers are not to blame for wars or the atrocities committed during them, like in vietnam. They didnt choose to go there, they were following orders, with pretty harsh punishments for disobeying (cant have poor people refuse to go fight rich men's fights). No, its upwards the rage and vengeance should be turned, to the manipulators at the top sending poor people's partners, children, sibblings, to die for dumb reasons. The only justifiable war is a defense war on own soil.
@denisek292
@denisek292 12 күн бұрын
@@pathosfear6290 I completely agree w/ you. Young men fight old men’s wars. Soldiers had no choice, as they were drafted into the Vietnam War. It’s all about the MIC, who are all about money. America has a plethora of problems, without fighting proxy wars, using our young men, and our tax dollars. We should not be the “policemen of the world.” I never supported Ukraine, especially Zelensky, who’s pocketed our tax dollars. Although I feel sorry for Israel, we’re only positioning ourselves for WWIII. Americans are suffering, as this administration’s goal is taking-out our middle class w/ high interest rates and our dependence on foreign oil. I love America, but I have zero love for our corrupt government.
@ThisLeeIsAChick
@ThisLeeIsAChick 11 күн бұрын
... and then there's the traitor Jane Fonda. All the men in the prison she visited slipped her notes and social security numbers so families would know they are alive and she hands them straight to the enemy. Then dines and drinks with them. She's despicable
@dorothyhicks3833
@dorothyhicks3833 11 күн бұрын
We as Americans should be ashamed of how these men were treated! If I had called a military man a baby killer my father would have beat my azz ! I wonder what those people think of them selves now? Are they proud of themselves? I hope they live a nightmare every night!
@flyo7789
@flyo7789 4 ай бұрын
My dad was a WWII vet AND a Vietnam vet, and he said that this is exactly correct. Also, when WWII ended, soldiers typically stayed together in their units for weeks or even a few months waiting for their turn to rotate home. This gave them time together to process what they had experienced and to decompress. It was very different for Vietnam vets -- if they survived 365 days "in country," they simply packed their stuff, "out-processed," and went "back to the world" alone. And, of course, the reception WWII vets got at home was VERY different than Vietnam vets got, so that hurt Vietnam vets too.
@Shansman
@Shansman 4 ай бұрын
I forgot about a man I met that had the same service history. Retired of course. Years ago I met him. He said Vietnam was worse.
@jamesondee1216
@jamesondee1216 4 ай бұрын
But still world war 2 is the deadliest n longest war so talking about hard time I would say still ww2 😁
@magma_man750
@magma_man750 4 ай бұрын
​@@jamesondee1216WW2 was only 6 years. The Vietnam war was 20 years.
@flyo7789
@flyo7789 4 ай бұрын
It's also important to note that In WWII there were clear objectives, and the soldiers achieved those objectives. When it was all over, they rightfully felt like heroes whose sacrifices had saved the world from a terrible fate. Vietnam was different -- while it was part of a global war against the spread of communism, the enemy was elusive, the objectives were less defined, there were no front lines or clear progress toward victory, there were restrictive and often nonsensical rules of engagement, the south Vietnamese governments the US had to work with were very corrupt, agitators in the US were turning young people against the war AND against the vets, and more. And, in the end, there was no victory, at least not until the USSR collapsed in 1989. So, even though the Vietnam vets fought valiantly against communism and served their Country well, many were left wondering about the meaning and value of their sacrifices. These factors and the ones mentioned earlier, combined to make it very difficult for the Vietnam vets.
@coyoteblue4027
@coyoteblue4027 4 ай бұрын
​@@flyo7789 "agitators" You mean people with a functioning moral conscience? America should have never involved itself in Vietnamese affairs in the first place. People called vietnam vets butchers and murderers because that's what they were. They prosecuted an illegal war against a sovereign nation for 20 years. They were criminals, and were it not for the fact that most of them were draftees, they would not be deserving of any empathy or warm welcome. As it stands, they mostly didn't choose to go. So while they certainly didn't deserve a hero's welcome home (because they were the villains) they do deserve some measure of empathy. They didn't ask to be made into monsters.
@lc3763
@lc3763 9 күн бұрын
I have so much gratitude for OUR Veterans.
@dgirdaukas9587
@dgirdaukas9587 20 күн бұрын
I see the tears in your eyes..if I was there, I would have comforted you. Thank you for your service and God bless you forever.
@Matt_b146
@Matt_b146 4 ай бұрын
As an Army veteran i completely understand where he is coming from. I went through the same thing coming home from Iraq. My first night back in the states, i spent sleeping in a rental car in a Walmart parking lot. I didn’t fly home with anyone i knew. There was no welcome parade or news cameras. The most support i have ever received and the most appreciated support was from Vietnam vets. I can honestly say that they saved my life with how welcoming they are and how they never want another service member to experience what they did. Keep up the great work, you are literally saving fellow veterans lives, like mine!
@joeysworldsewer
@joeysworldsewer 4 ай бұрын
God bless you man, thank you for your service. You all deserve better than you're being given
@hentschmen12
@hentschmen12 4 ай бұрын
Welcome home and thank you!
@casteel765
@casteel765 4 ай бұрын
Same here with me. I didn't go to Iraq. I was deployed to Columbia several times. Being responsible for blowing cartel mansions and cocaibe factories with innocent people working in them including children is pretty rough. Nothing like Iraq but it still gets to me from time to time. I had a gag order for 15 years so i could talk about anything.
@emilianosintarias7337
@emilianosintarias7337 4 ай бұрын
. "My first night back in the states, i spent sleeping in a rental car in a Walmart parking lot" Tells us everything we need to know about the supposed "democracy" that is the USA now.
@ismail_368
@ismail_368 4 ай бұрын
How many kill you innocent people in Iraq " patriot" guy
@juliodavila5333
@juliodavila5333 4 ай бұрын
Incredible after almost 60 years those wounds still open. My respect to you sir and hope you will find you peace.
@chrisstockwell9235
@chrisstockwell9235 4 ай бұрын
Once you've taken another humans life you never truly find peace, think of all the childhood memories that bounce around in your head and the things that remind you of your childhood, now change that to combat those memories will always be there and the triggers are around every corner, in no way is this criticizing your gratitude just explaining combat vets get rewired in order to cope with the everyday things most take for granted.
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 4 ай бұрын
​@@chrisstockwell9235right
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 4 ай бұрын
​@@chrisstockwell9235...
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 4 ай бұрын
37,1,2d35min
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 4 ай бұрын
....
@richardweaver4361
@richardweaver4361 10 күн бұрын
Thank you sir. I am sorry for the the grief you live with because of the great sacrifice you have made for me and for my country. You are loved.
@user-gm9yy3li9d
@user-gm9yy3li9d 12 күн бұрын
I'm so sorry for your pain!!! Thankyou for your service brother...Bless you!!!
@concordmilitia3471
@concordmilitia3471 4 ай бұрын
World War II vets averaged about 40 days in combat over four years. The Vietnam soldier averaged between 240 and 300 days of combat within one year.
@Night.League
@Night.League 4 ай бұрын
Woahhh
@skullsaintdead
@skullsaintdead 4 ай бұрын
Surely thats only US soldiers? I would think Allied soldiers/sailors/airforce who entered the war two years earlier, would have more combat time?
@matthewhelsley2840
@matthewhelsley2840 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this information. I have never seen a comparison like that before. Not questioning your point but it'd also be great to have a link or citation to a source on this number. Sometimes the source drives the point home that much harder.
@bartgomez4872
@bartgomez4872 4 ай бұрын
That's hogwash. My late father spent a helluva lot longer in WW-2.
@matthewhelsley2840
@matthewhelsley2840 4 ай бұрын
@@bartgomez4872 The number mentioned is supposed to be an average. Averages can be technically correct and still hide outliers. Perhaps like your father. I'd like to see a citation for the number posted above because that could be an interesting source. It might also have things like a standard deviation or other details which could explain why it's so unexpected given your father's experience.
@danieldastous6763
@danieldastous6763 4 ай бұрын
Absolutely the lack of friends to talk to after such horrific events must've been horrendous
@bojankojic108
@bojankojic108 4 ай бұрын
killers chat ? they were not soldiers....
@EmergencyL0tion
@EmergencyL0tion 4 ай бұрын
@@bojankojic108womp womp
@aaronluepke8999
@aaronluepke8999 4 ай бұрын
​@@bojankojic108disrespect is amazing... you own it. You couldn't handle doing anything those soldiers did. Stay in your blue state in your blue house.
@kinglokimrvegas8687
@kinglokimrvegas8687 4 ай бұрын
​@@bojankojic108explain
@Sir_Squirrel_TheIV
@Sir_Squirrel_TheIV 4 ай бұрын
@@bojankojic108as much as I hate to say it, they are soldiers and veterans of a country, and they deserve our respect, the Americans killed nearly all of my great greens parents, great uncles, and the cause absolute horrendous damage to my ancestral home but I still have to respect them.
@candyaldridge4796
@candyaldridge4796 9 күн бұрын
Thank you sir for my freedom. My Dad was in Vietnam and he was so different when he came home. I love all you vets 💖 God bless you all 💗
@tamarabuckallew3765
@tamarabuckallew3765 Күн бұрын
I just want to say I'm so heartbroken that so many where forgotten in the Vietnam War ,I don't believe you were treated kindly or where ever Honored for your Sacrifices There and at Home. So Thank you with all my Heart .Your struggles and Nightmares are Valued and I Love you all so much.With sincere heart Tamara Buckallew in Missoula Montana.
@js207802
@js207802 3 ай бұрын
My grandfather, since passed. Didnt talk about a lot with Vietnam only the "good" stories. He said, i am only going to tell you the stories that teach you something. The rest "you dont need to know". Is what he took to the grave. He served Vietnam & Korea. Vietnam vets have a special place in my heart because of what my grandfather went through that i didn't know.
@Kodousinx
@Kodousinx 3 ай бұрын
Vietnam. America using chemical warfare placing ridiculous amount of landmines , till this day kids are getting blown up
@southernracing2468
@southernracing2468 2 ай бұрын
Same with my uncle I only heard a few good stories but I know there was a lot of bad ones he lived off beer and didn’t hardly eat at all for many many years till he passed
@TheJoker-ex5rb
@TheJoker-ex5rb 2 ай бұрын
I know different war but my great grandfather ww2 vet never talked bout it with us and he passed in 06 to this day all we know was he was a cook and loaded bombs on planes thanks to a news article we found on him
@user-et9jm7eu7h
@user-et9jm7eu7h 2 ай бұрын
The government did not give correct info regarding virt nam.. and civilians foolishly listened..hence abandonment socially and psychological
@edwardainslie9770
@edwardainslie9770 2 ай бұрын
Wow my grandfather was the same! He unfortunately just passed before I was born and he served in Korea and Vietnam also. When I ask my dad if he knows any stories it’s only a handful of meaningful moments and everything’s else he would just tell my father he didn’t want to talk about it.
@microneus
@microneus 4 ай бұрын
Very well said. Debrief and decompress, very important.
@kuiperrene
@kuiperrene 4 ай бұрын
That's what I was thinking, the decompression and rest before getting back home. Not to be underestimated.
@precessionoftheequinoxes3224
@precessionoftheequinoxes3224 4 ай бұрын
I didn't get to do any of this coming back from Afghanistan. Within 3 weeks, I was back out field doing live fire shoots on exercise. We had 3 days debriefing which consisted of banks offering mortgages etc.
@paulcarey1708
@paulcarey1708 4 ай бұрын
Younger guys in Vietnam as well. Much more frequent combat as well.
@johnlozauskas778
@johnlozauskas778 4 ай бұрын
One of the things he did not mention, and I was a little boy at the time was the HORRIBLE way the returning service people were treated upon returning to America.
@smoll.miniatures
@smoll.miniatures 4 ай бұрын
America is the one of only a few countries in the world that gets involved with foreign wars, murders thousands of innocent people for no reason, then talks about how much “they” hurt…..
@mikekane5114
@mikekane5114 10 күн бұрын
As a kid growing up the news always had a number on the screen of how many soldiers lost their life, each day the large number kept growing and I certainly hated it. I knew it was a terrible thing. Thank you all for what you had to do. TOTAL RESPECT!!!
@HfknK
@HfknK 4 күн бұрын
Thanks you for your service sir. I'm glad you made it home.
@cadenz7719
@cadenz7719 4 ай бұрын
My grandfather, navy corpsman, said he experienced the same thing. He said it just felt like he woke up in the states, and the first thing that hit him was the protesters screaming at him while he was looking for his wife. He said he had no one to talk to until he saw his dad again who was WWII Pacific Theater. Then when he saw the rest of his brothers when they came back. He said his father being a psychologist is the only reason he was around for so long after the war and was able to do anything. He was never able to work in anything medical ever again, but he could go back to water after a few years.
@oralebonafide9720
@oralebonafide9720 4 ай бұрын
That is absolutely horrible 🤕☹️ defending our country with your whole life only to come back & have protesters saying your the anti christ for being in the military.... really harsh times 💔
@sherylwilson865
@sherylwilson865 4 ай бұрын
​@@oralebonafide9720 They were called baby killers. ALL 3 of my uncles were in Vietnam. Thankfully they all came home. But they were called baby killers by the protesters and idiots.
@MadHeadzOz
@MadHeadzOz 4 ай бұрын
This is more accurate in general than the short. I'm not discounting this mans experience. The difference was the propaganda machines. People were more aware of the lies. It should not have been the returned service men who bore the brunt of public dissatisfaction. People get chewed up and spat out or shat out by the grubs who profit from the conflict.
@mabriff
@mabriff 4 ай бұрын
My dad was also a Navy corpsman during the final years of Vietnam. All he would ever tell me about his service during the war is that he saw a lot of broken men - physically and mentally/emotionally. It definitely took its toll on him. He served on the USS Nimitz after the war, and later at Bethesda as an x-ray technician. I think he was happy to end his naval career working in a hospital and not on a warship.
@gtas321
@gtas321 4 ай бұрын
you have to understand that we also were not on the right side of that conflict. Stories of entire families being slaughtered were being shared worldwide. The atrocities were terrible. ​@@oralebonafide9720
@motionalarm8351
@motionalarm8351 3 ай бұрын
I came back from Iraq in early 2000s by myself. Nobody to greet me at the airport, not even family (Nobody told them because of OpSec). Getting off that plane to nothing made me really wonder what I was doing this for. We don’t even need to get into the PTSD that was made worse by this. I pulled through after many years, but it wasn’t easy. Just being able to talk about it on the way home probably would have healed a lot of wounds that you can’t see. After seeing this video though, I’m glad to see I wasn’t alone after all, our brothers and sisters in arms share that pain and try to help others by talking about it
@rickraber1249
@rickraber1249 2 ай бұрын
This is Mrs. Rick. First, thank you so much for your service. Second, I'm so sorry for your pain. I've never been in combat, but I've had some nasty trauma, and it sure makes you feel isolated. I don't know your name, but the good Lord does. I'll pray for you.
@johnnyalviso7350
@johnnyalviso7350 2 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry u had to go through that. Thank u for ur service sir.i really do hope u are ok.
@christianposekany1941
@christianposekany1941 2 ай бұрын
I was in Iraq/ Syria some odd years ago. What didn’t make sense to me is when it was time for demobilization I felt like I would rather be there in the Middle East then back in the States. People I worked with were understanding and easy to talk to. We could joke about what we were going through and now back in the states if I were to tell people what im thinking or have that type of humor they’d think I belong in a mental institution.
@LK-bz9sk
@LK-bz9sk Ай бұрын
@@christianposekany1941Yes….one day you are in Iraq with your unit, a jet ride or two later youre back in the states, everyone is at Starbucks talking petty nonsense or off to Best Buy to get crap they dont need, and youre probably thinking, do they even remember the war is still going on and that young Americans are there doing that work for them. Thank you for your service, welcome home, and I followed that war daily and know and remember what you guys did per your orders. That was not lost on me
@Rance-lb1in
@Rance-lb1in Ай бұрын
thankyou for your service sir, have you since been able to talk to other veterans etc ?
@marysharvey
@marysharvey 8 күн бұрын
Thank you for your service and for speaking up. You are 100% right. My husband of 54 years was a Corpsman in Vietnam. In 54 years of marriage I have only heard him talk once about his experience in Vietnam and that was the day when we were newly weds that his Gunner showed up on our doorstep. They spent the night reliving their horror stories, as I sat in the other room on our bed listening in shock and realizing I had no idea what this man I had married had been through. May we never have another Vietnam.
@scatpackdriver2535
@scatpackdriver2535 10 күн бұрын
Thank you for your service sir.
@Notyamomma1313
@Notyamomma1313 4 ай бұрын
I just want to hug this man and let him know we love him. We are grateful for him. I feel his pain in his voice, and it hurts my heart. He and all the vets deserve so much better than what our government gave them. We, as a nation, have to try to make all vets lives easier and better. Small things can make a huge difference in their life.
@nereidatorres7613
@nereidatorres7613 4 ай бұрын
I AGREE 800% NO VET SHOULD BE LIVING IN THE STREETS, NO VET SHOULD BE LIVING IN POOR CONDITIONS, NO VET SHOULD BE WITH OUT A GOOD PLAN OF HEALTH CARE. THEY DESERVE TO BE TREATED MUCH BETTER THEN THESE ILEGAL IMMIGRANTES. WHO COME TO USA COMMITING CRIMINAL ACTS AGAINST THE AMERICAN CITIZENS AND OUR CHILDRENS. BREAKING THE LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND GETTING AWAY WITH IT AS IF THEY WERE IN THIER OWN COUNTRY. A BUNCH OF FREE LOADERS WHILE OUR BRAVE VETS ARE LIVING IN BAD CONDITIONS. OUR VETERANS DISERVE TOTAL RESPECT.
@georgezink8256
@georgezink8256 4 ай бұрын
It’s 55 years to late?? God bless you
@georgezink8256
@georgezink8256 4 ай бұрын
As a severely wounded Vietnam veteran I got used by v a hospital in Ashville nc,and now beg for little bit of pain medicine, because others have killed them selves , I suffer 24/7
@timharton7306
@timharton7306 4 ай бұрын
Beautiful post. ❤
@SergeantSquared
@SergeantSquared 4 ай бұрын
​​@@georgezink8256been called a criminal multiple times at the VA myself, refused help, abd left in tears. Its been a day since your comment, and I hope you made it through another day. Without Jesus, I wouldn't be here many times over my friend. Cliche, sure, but very, very true. A fellow church member was a victim of the punji sticks....
@DelEast740
@DelEast740 3 ай бұрын
Thats why I think my dad's generation coming back from the war had it harder than my grandfather's coming back from WW2. That month of decompression and being with your brothers in arms is huge. That is the best therapy you can get.
@cheesyman10
@cheesyman10 2 ай бұрын
WW2 vets returned home to cheers and parades and were well respected, Vietnam vets were met with disdain and disgust and tossed to the side when it was over.
@DelEast740
@DelEast740 2 ай бұрын
@@cheesyman10 yes, very true. My grandpa hated hippies for that reason.
@amber40494
@amber40494 2 ай бұрын
True, but there was no treatment for ptsd in ww2 days. My dad was a ww2 vet and he suffered from ptsd and depression his whole life. He was fortunate to have a good buddy from his bomber crew. They met back up in their late 50's and hung out together for several years. He had a couple other lifelong war buddies.
@Make_A_ChangeKYSelf
@Make_A_ChangeKYSelf 2 ай бұрын
Exactly ww2 vets got special treatment and were treated with love. Vietnam vets didn't. I'll open the door for a vietnam vet but a ww2 vet I'll let him do it himself
@amber40494
@amber40494 2 ай бұрын
@Activisnbeams why? Ww2 vets went through hell too. They didn't get extra love from everyone that's a myth. They may have been appreciated on returning home but then they had to get back to work just like everyone else. Vietnam was a very unpopular war here at home. But why take out your feelings on the individual who had to go serve? It's our evil, corrupt government that's at fault.
@crestarook
@crestarook 19 күн бұрын
Sir, thank you a million times over and again for your service.
@kathleengarrison1302
@kathleengarrison1302 10 күн бұрын
I cries when he cried. Thank you for your service , sir .
@QuietFury9
@QuietFury9 4 ай бұрын
One of the greatest shames of my country. To leave these men with nothing and no one to talk to. Many many years too late but thank you for your service
@studiobauhaus7740
@studiobauhaus7740 4 ай бұрын
what service? The Vietnam war was evil being done by the USA. Blame the government for sending those kids out to die in vain. not every damn war is a service to the USA. Not since WW2 has it been a service to Americans.
@curiouser-and-curiouser
@curiouser-and-curiouser 4 ай бұрын
Yes but there was a greater sin than that. Men were left behind, alive, & it was covered up.
@singhmastr
@singhmastr 4 ай бұрын
Dude, this is one of the smallest errors the US govt has made.
@Mashedpotato334
@Mashedpotato334 4 ай бұрын
You’re countries done much worse don’t kid yourself
@samuel-nq6he
@samuel-nq6he 4 ай бұрын
Usa has done far worse lol
@truth0149
@truth0149 3 ай бұрын
War is Hell ! My father was front lines Korea . It took a long time for him to talk about it , but when he finally did it was good for him to share . He passed away last year & I miss him alot .
@jolie1327
@jolie1327 3 ай бұрын
Also the Korean vets were not treated fairly either.
@paulvonlettow-vorbeck4302
@paulvonlettow-vorbeck4302 3 ай бұрын
War is war, and Hell is Hell, and of the two I reckon war is a hell of a lot worse.
@dlspiritdancer9548
@dlspiritdancer9548 3 ай бұрын
My dad was also in Korean War but refused to talk about it.
@davidcastellanos2492
@davidcastellanos2492 3 ай бұрын
I’m sorry for your loss and may your father Rest in Paradise.
@masonmansitomargiela1399
@masonmansitomargiela1399 3 ай бұрын
Rest in peace pops
@jsinnott5952
@jsinnott5952 12 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for your service and what you did for this country.
@AScrapOfKindness
@AScrapOfKindness 11 күн бұрын
My father was Infantry in Korea and two tours of Vietnam. Between his two Vietnam tours he was given the responsibility of going to people's homes and notifying them of their son's death. How he dreaded the phone ringing. Never did he speak of his experiences, so I appreciate the insight this gentleman has shared. To all who have served, currently serve, and will serve -- thank you for your selflessness.
@StarrySpider
@StarrySpider Ай бұрын
My neighbor was it Vietnam. He told me stories and has a Purple Heart due to being blown up. He was with about 5 guys in their tent, walked across the tent to his buddy who just came in with beer and bam, a mortar struck their tent and killed everyone but him and the guy who had the beer. He still has shrapnel in his back from it. Great guy. Would do anything for anyone. He has a good family and good support but I know many don’t. God bless our troops ❤
@Mr.PeabodyTheSkeptic
@Mr.PeabodyTheSkeptic 3 ай бұрын
A cousin served 2 tours in Iraq with the Army. He saw very heavy combat. Most of his contemporaries and family never served, myself included. He was obviously traumatized when we first saw him on his return. Luckily he had my uncle, his grandfather a WW2 vet, to bounce stories, concerns and ferlings off of. But when my uncle died just a few years later, my cousin just couldn't cope and ultimately ended it. What a tragedy for such a beautiful young man. For about 20 years I would take my mother, an Army vet, to the VA here in Houston before she passed this year. I loved striking up conversations with vets and just letting them talk. Remember that they are just people who did what did because most wanted to help other people. When these vets return it's our chance to give back. Just listen. Really listen.
@AntiMason
@AntiMason 3 ай бұрын
I am the same way, I love to listen to them talk. I could do it for days. I'm usually unaware of how deep some of my questions are to people so I try to keep my mouth shut. But I've been lucky and met a few good older fellas who were honestly a little excited to talk about it with me. I wish there was a way to say "Tell me your stories if you need someone to talk to" without offending someone. Some people love to talk about it and others can't bare it.
@lepangolin4080
@lepangolin4080 3 ай бұрын
You cannot say a soldier in Iraq is doing this bc he want to help other people...That's just pure propaganda. This war was just a war for american interest, oil profit and destruction. Soldiers were justed brainwashed meat. I won't praised any of them for killing ppl in their own country just bc "I was told to do it" You cannont compare for one sec what was the goal in WWII and this absurd and shamefull war.
@GwynRosaire
@GwynRosaire 3 ай бұрын
Coming back from any trauma that catastrophic is a long road. I've lost friends to the post 9/11 wars, some by their own hand. We must hear each other.
@elainegoolsby9902
@elainegoolsby9902 Ай бұрын
Amen!🙏🙏🙏I understand, and I pray your heart, mind and body will be healed. I listened to my veteran Dad, and his stories were just awful. I don't know how anyone who served in these awful wars came home sane. The way some veterans were treated is just unconscionable! God bless you Dear Sir, and thank you for your service. I pray God gives you the grace of peace! ❤️🙏🙏✝️.
@sharonball1834
@sharonball1834 7 күн бұрын
My dad served three terms in Vietnam. You are in this heart.
@user-ox3cb8ih5h
@user-ox3cb8ih5h 8 күн бұрын
Thank you for your service. With lots of respect and love..May God Bless you always.
@bobbyduke777
@bobbyduke777 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service, Sir
@placefeature5329
@placefeature5329 Ай бұрын
amen! Thanks
@BradPitbull
@BradPitbull 4 ай бұрын
As a Marine Corps veteran... Thank you for sharing this perspective
@billlawson1606
@billlawson1606 4 ай бұрын
My son is in a Marine Machine Gunner Squad with the 1/7 !
@avantoa
@avantoa 4 ай бұрын
Semper Fi !!
@Adelaide672
@Adelaide672 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service, sir ❤️🇺🇸
@traceydaizy
@traceydaizy 16 күн бұрын
I'd love to hear more from this person. He deserves to tell his story and be listened to.
@stephenjacques554
@stephenjacques554 2 күн бұрын
Truer words never spoken served during Vietnam felt the same way when I spoke with older vets that had a chance to decompress before coming home. Thanks to all the vets that have served and will serve.
@gingerleamcwow435
@gingerleamcwow435 4 ай бұрын
Watching him tear up while just talking about how the WW2 guys had time together to cool down before returning was heartbreaking. I've never even thought about this aspect of coming home from duty, so thank you for giving me a completely new perspective. The lack of resources for veterans who have served in combat is absolutely disgusting.
@g25504
@g25504 4 ай бұрын
And these BABARIC take it as fun..well that's how they portray it to be..taking selfies etc etc...but then again most of iof not Israelis so it's like "who cares.... THEIR CONSCIOUS gonna get them in BIG WAY
@travismacha2891
@travismacha2891 4 ай бұрын
Another thing that was deferment was the war was over. Vietnam there were guys you knew are still fighting when you were boarding the plane home
@mbuck253
@mbuck253 4 ай бұрын
Super messed up all the way around. No doubt WWII vets had it much better overall coming back. But thousands of WWII Vets had lobotomies done to them as their thank you for service when they got home.
@nathancook8987
@nathancook8987 4 ай бұрын
It’s a strange thing to hit a thumbs up on a post like this, and thank you for sharing your perspective and story sir! Thank you for your service!
@user-ee7qd7mj2j
@user-ee7qd7mj2j 22 күн бұрын
I have often wished they gave us different options for liking or disliking a post. Many times I would like to be able to explain my thoughts.
@ssuzyd1st
@ssuzyd1st 6 күн бұрын
My husband came back and even his family seemed to not believe he had even gone. He said I was the only one who believed him. I listened to his stories and cried with him for his experiences.
@cyriloliver6747
@cyriloliver6747 11 күн бұрын
Thank you for your service Sir. And thank you for explaining the differences.. Much respect to alll vets✊🏾
@Ark-Angel44
@Ark-Angel44 Ай бұрын
Such wisdom. In minutes he explains the problem that our Vietnam vets have struggled with.
@Wiseman__
@Wiseman__ 4 ай бұрын
you can tell this man has a good soul.
@666Kaca
@666Kaca 4 ай бұрын
He participated in an illegal invasion and killed civilians
@ravanpee1325
@ravanpee1325 4 ай бұрын
Did he mention the dead Vietnamese one time?
@Tipper709
@Tipper709 4 ай бұрын
@@ravanpee1325 Yes, he called them "People". Clearly says Vietnam Vet.
@Melior_Traiano
@Melior_Traiano 4 ай бұрын
@@ravanpee1325 He was a Scout Sniper and said killing is not a good thing. That alone tells you he has a good soul.
@genghis2020
@genghis2020 4 ай бұрын
Good soul was Muhammad Ali, and others who refused to take part in aggression against sovereign country and commit war crimes against civilians.
@Hippie_Chick_11
@Hippie_Chick_11 10 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing what you went through and how you feel! Thank you for explaining what the war veterans from every war endured during and after coming home. ❤
@gracedebow8295
@gracedebow8295 6 күн бұрын
I love VN vets. I was married to a man who was captured in VN. I understand you sir. God bless you and thank you for your service. !
@partin25
@partin25 3 ай бұрын
My dad was in Vietnam in the late 60s. Now that Im older I realize how bad his PTSD was because he never got any help for it. Whiskey was his therapist. Great father and a great man, and I wish he could have found some peace while still alive. Respect to those men for what t through
@richardirizarry6460
@richardirizarry6460 3 ай бұрын
Same with my father. Drunk himself into a stupor.
@stayturnt_2015
@stayturnt_2015 3 ай бұрын
Yup Heroin and alcohol were what made them cope with what they had to see and do over there, and it's so f'd up, when he came home, the government didn't give two shits about them, no help, no one to talk to, no compensation and the VA was a joke, always excuses with waiting lists and all that bullshit, He Enlisted he wasn't drafted, (he had his personal reasons). I just feel like they should have been better taken care of
@JscottSears
@JscottSears 3 ай бұрын
I'm sorry both your fathers went through that.
@pamelapayton3857
@pamelapayton3857 Ай бұрын
My love and prayers to u soldier. You have earned it. U received hate going to Vietnam, and received hate when u came home to the U.S. His tears, even now, are so sad yet moving. I love and respect u sir...please be well.
@user-qp1jn7ee3g
@user-qp1jn7ee3g Ай бұрын
TOTALLY AGREE, SORRY FOR YOUR SADNESS AND HURT,THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE MUCH RESPECT TO YOU SIR AND " "GOD BLESS", AND MAY GOD HELP YOU THROUGH YOUR PAIN.❤❤❤❤❤❤😢😮😢😢😢😢😢. I HAD A BOYFRIEND WHO WAS A "MARINE AND SERVED IN VIET NAM AND RECEIEVED THE "PURPLE HEART MEDAL, HE WAS NEVER THE SAME WHEN HE RETURNED HOME FROM NAM, GOD BLESS ALL WHO SERVED AND THANK YOU FOR FIGHTING FOR OUR "FREEDOM".❤❤❤❤❤😢😢😢😢😢😢❤❤❤❤🎉
@nixvallas
@nixvallas Ай бұрын
That's really beautiful.☺️✌️😊
@annamartin522
@annamartin522 Ай бұрын
Thanks for your heroic service and everyone who served. I feel your hurt. May God bless your life and bring you healing.
@laurablazo8895
@laurablazo8895 25 күн бұрын
I agree and I’m so sorry for your sadness your amazing and what it truly means to be a hero
@leviashanken2506
@leviashanken2506 14 күн бұрын
A travesty all around for everyone.
@joijencuyah2345
@joijencuyah2345 2 күн бұрын
Sending you kindness & gratitude ❤
@brianstarnes6637
@brianstarnes6637 12 күн бұрын
With utmost appreciation Sir. Thank you for your service and sacrifice. And to all of the Vietnam veterans male and female and canines.
@KourttneyL
@KourttneyL 4 ай бұрын
My grandpa was lost in the forest for over 30 days in Vietnam. I wish that I could have talked to him about his stories before he passed away . 😢❤
@rbibbe34
@rbibbe34 4 ай бұрын
Sometimes they don’t. My grandpa was a flame thrower in Korea. Mean drunk. I wish he was more like this man; but it breaks people.
@user-wg4ie9pb3x
@user-wg4ie9pb3x 4 ай бұрын
It was a jungle, probably.
@sarakempton9384
@sarakempton9384 4 ай бұрын
My father is a Vietnam vet and it's pretty messed up over it and it wasn't till I was older that he talk to me a little bit. I heard two stories, one funny one and one not so funny one it's all I ever got out of him he wouldn't talk about it. These men and women suffered horrific PTSD. My father became an alcoholic and a mean one of that I'm glad I didn't know him like that he was sober by the time I can remember.
@KourttneyL
@KourttneyL 4 ай бұрын
@@sarakempton9384 thankfully my grandpa wasn’t a alcoholic. He did have agent orange and it messed him up.
@shmodzilla
@shmodzilla 4 ай бұрын
@@KourttneyL My dads spine is a crumbled mess from agent oarnge. 87 and he still keeps going though not much more than the couch to the bathroom anymore.
@348Tobico
@348Tobico 4 ай бұрын
My Dad was nearly killed during the Battle of the Bulge. He was hospitalized for 2 yrs in England before coming home on the Queen Mary. He then spent 31/2 yrs at the VA hospital in Battle Creek Michigan. He joined the VFW and the Disable American Veterans while at Battle Creek. He spent the rest of his life doing outreach to veterans of WWII, Korea and most especially Viet Nam. We lived on acreage by a lovely lake and almost year round had 1 or 2 big squad tents pitched for honored visitors. As kids we learned that real, good men could have injuries unseen and we must always respect the men and the sacrifices they made, willing or otherwise. They needed the decompression and having other men older and younger to speak with. I am so thankful my Dad was such a compassionate man and that he shared that compassion with other warriors in need. God Bless you Dad. You made more of a difference in this world that you ever knew. And thank you to all the guys who helped my Dad deal with the demons the war sent home with him. God Bless each of you guys, too.
@witwicky5565
@witwicky5565 4 ай бұрын
This is lovely, do you have any more stories about his work?
@xplicitiv8494
@xplicitiv8494 4 ай бұрын
I am a teenager but I have supported and done many things for the VFW, and these stories make me motivated to keep on serving our veterans!
@N2Mtns2
@N2Mtns2 4 ай бұрын
@@xplicitiv8494Son, the VFW ?? (Or Daughter) but the VFW ?? Please do some research and Gid Bless You for having the Heart to Help.
@patriciadavidson3743
@patriciadavidson3743 4 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing this brief story. It sounds like your Dad was a very special person. ❤
@N2Mtns2
@N2Mtns2 4 ай бұрын
Bless his heart. My FIL was Patton’s 3rd & caught one @ the Bulge and another crossing the Rhine. He hid his medals everywhere in drawers & he could talk about it - then the “shade pulled down in The Eyes”. G.I.’s made a pact on the Queen Mary to “not bother there family with details”. He made it from Utah Beach all the way to Austria. He *Nevet could talk about helping release the POW or Jewish Camps. No he couldn’t. RIP Sarge. 🫡 And ALL *Whose Number Was Called* (drafted) (Marines volunteer). Never Forget. Semper Fi
@francaweitenberner3040
@francaweitenberner3040 Күн бұрын
Bless you- it was my era and my brother was a Marine and came back and the only one he had was my dad who understood him. My Dad was a Marine in WWII and Korean- miss him with my heart and soul. The screaming at night - my dada was there for him.
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