1950s U.S. NAVY FILM "EASY OUT?" CONSEQUENCES OF BAD CONDUCT DISCHARGE 58154

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  • čas přidán 23. 08. 2024
  • This 1954 black and white film “Easy Out?” is U.S. Navy Training Film MN-7904, produced by The Jam Handy Organization. The film was made to make clear to U.S. Navy personnel the devastating consequences of receiving a Bad Conduct Discharge from the service. Long story short anyone who is dishonorably discharged shames his family, won't be able to impress women, and will be unable to receive any veteran benefits, etc. (A Bad Conduct Discharge (BCD) can only be given by a court-martial (either special or general) as punishment to an enlisted service-member. Bad conduct discharges are often preceded by a period of confinement in a military prison. The discharge itself is not executed until completion of both confinement and the appellate review process.)
    It opens panning a neighborhood. A child rides a tricycle. A telegram delivery guy arrives by bicycle and hands the telegram to a woman wearing a full apron. She has a 1940s hairstyle with her hair tightly rolled up. A cuckoo clock hangs on the wall. She dials a rotary phone (:40-3:20). The family walks to the train station. A large advertisement for Camel Cigarettes is seen. The young girl wears a flower headband that ties under her chin and waves a flag. The mother wears a 1950s small hat and short dark gloves. A man wears a suit with small bowtie and hat. An elderly woman wears a two-piece suit, flower hat and corsage pin, multiple long necklace chains, and short white gloves. The train arrives. Paul, the discharged serviceman, wearing a white suit, receives hugs. He kisses his girlfriend, who holds her gloves and clutch purse (3:21-6:23). The dinner plates have bits of food left in front of the family. One stands to make a toast. Another smokes a pipe. The family asks the sailor questions. His mother wears a cameo pin as the top button. He angrily reacts. The dining room wall has a tall plate rail above the molding boxes. The little girl says good night to her brother. He gets up to take his girlfriend home (6:24-9:52). In the car in front of her family’s house, they kiss and hug in the dark. Her large double pearl earrings are seen as they sit and talk in the car. She is disappointed and then angry when he tells her he purposely received a BCD (bad conduct discharge). She jumps out of the car. He follows and grabs her arm. She takes her ring off and hands it to him. He looks down at it (9:53-14:27). Paul goes to the AJAX MFG Co. He throws down his cigarette and straightens his tie before going into the employment office. He is warmly greeted and given a chair. He puts a cigarette in his mouth, it wiggles as he talks, and lights it. The hiring man hands him a paper that needs to be signed by a VA representative. They shake hands (14:28-16:40). Filing cabinets line the wall at the VA office. After looking at the BCD papers, the VA man informs Paul he is entitled to nothing as a result. Close-up facial emotions are shown as they talk. They stand and shake hands. A large Navy Career for You poster hangs on the wall (16:41-20:27). Upset, he walks down the sidewalk and kicks a tricycle. He continues walking through the neighborhood. Dejected, he sits on porch steps, puts his face into his hands, and cries. He wears the engagement ring on his pinkie. He looks at his BCD paper. He stands up and walks again down the sidewalk, his hands in his baggy 1950s suit pants (20:28-23:20).
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    This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFi...

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @whiteknightcat
    @whiteknightcat Před 4 lety +292

    At the end, poor Paul wanders away, realizing he was only qualified for a life of crime ... or politics.

    • @warlaker
      @warlaker Před 4 lety +14

      ...which IS crime

    • @kc4cvh
      @kc4cvh Před 3 lety +15

      He could become a game show host, then rouse the rabble and get himself elected President.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 3 lety +4

      Those are one and the same... OL J R :)

    • @glennhendrickson7993
      @glennhendrickson7993 Před 3 lety +16

      He could sell pillows

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Před 3 lety +19

      He can join a union. He can drive a truck, be a bricklayer, work in a grocery store, warehouse, operate a forklift.
      I worked with people who had bad conduct discharge. They are like everyone else. If I were a hiring manager, I would give him a job no questions asked. The guy from the VA he is wrong, don't judge a book by its cover and getting a job is as easy as buying a hot dog at your friendly, neighborhood 7-eleven.

  • @BLACKTHUMB01
    @BLACKTHUMB01 Před 4 lety +195

    I made out okay with a BCD, in fact I just got a promotion. My employer now provides gloves for me to use when replacing the urinal cakes in public restrooms.

    • @deborahkuhn9301
      @deborahkuhn9301 Před 4 lety +5

      Urinal cakes! Now I know what those are!

    • @karl28560
      @karl28560 Před 4 lety +6

      Is that during normal banking hours or after the bar closes at 2 am. Lol.

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety +5

      #Sean Hahn some would suggest that it is a promotion to get a job like that coming out of the service.. GO SEIU

    • @GOFLuvr
      @GOFLuvr Před 4 lety +2

      SEAN HAHN Did you at least get the VA to give you an "Honorable for VA Purposes" status?

    • @williamthurmond4940
      @williamthurmond4940 Před 4 lety +4

      Gloves! I gotta ask for those. Maybe for my 10th Anniversary scooping out the clogged toilets. Anyway, my BCD made me what I am today.

  • @m20j_pilot48
    @m20j_pilot48 Před 3 lety +96

    The old steam locomotive is Grand Trunk Western 5627, an American Locomotive Company 4-6-2 series K-4-a.

    • @dalecomer5951
      @dalecomer5951 Před 3 lety +3

      How did you get the locomotive number? The number boards look blank and it's hard to see the number on the side of the cab. Where was the train station?

    • @m20j_pilot48
      @m20j_pilot48 Před 2 lety +6

      @@dalecomer5951 // At the 5:01 mark the number boards can be seen just as the train passes out of the camera view. At 5:30 the GTW emblem can be seen on a passenger car. As far as depot location, I believe the GTW passenger main line ran from MI, IL, IN, and WI (and beyond). I would imagine it was filmed somewhere close to Chicago just for the feasibility factor, but that's just a guess.

    • @dalecomer5951
      @dalecomer5951 Před 2 lety +3

      @@m20j_pilot48 Thanks.

    • @miaouew
      @miaouew Před 2 lety

      Bobby Baccalieri over here

    • @tankcread7792
      @tankcread7792 Před 2 lety +1

      I love in MI and my uncle worked for the Grand Trunk before it was sold to C.SX

  • @lewiemcneely9143
    @lewiemcneely9143 Před 5 lety +80

    Thanks Periscope. I was thinking about 'stretching my wings' al till I got a good stiff look at Leavenworth from the outside while on a deuce-and-a-half driving detail. I was the finest guy you ever saw after that. Yet and still. I think my Lord gave me a little look of where I might go. I'll always be grateful.

  • @Mark-yy2py
    @Mark-yy2py Před 10 měsíci +19

    The key to a successful military career - stay focused on your job, stay away from others who you know are nothing but trouble, and think twice before you do something that you think may be illegal. Worked for me. 21 years with a pension and a honorable discharge!

    • @willardjohnson3832
      @willardjohnson3832 Před 9 měsíci

      Same.

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Uncle served 28 years with full pension. Went to work for the Post office and worked almost as long got a second full pension. Then opened a profitable little online business for fun. My aunt taught school till she got a full pension. They are practically rich. Their work paid off their nice house as well.

    • @Mark-yy2py
      @Mark-yy2py Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@poetcomic1 that’s good! It seems many of my civilian friends and family members comment “must be nice!” When they know I receive a pension; and my response to them is: “yes, it is!”. We all choose our vocations in life, some will make more money than others, but it’s your decision where you work or what you do.

    • @user-bn5df6hl1d
      @user-bn5df6hl1d Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@Mark-yy2py yep same with govt/fed service - you may make less money,but that pension and the benefits and time off are great

    • @Mark-yy2py
      @Mark-yy2py Před 8 měsíci

      @@user-bn5df6hl1d I think it a good trade off, between a higher salary, but subject to termination with little or no notice; or a lower salary, but a decent paycheck, a generous benefit package and job security 😁

  • @bwayne40004
    @bwayne40004 Před 5 lety +142

    "Mary" is Ellen Burstyn. Born the end of 1932, she'd be 21 for this training film.

    • @reallyhappenings5597
      @reallyhappenings5597 Před 4 lety +15

      great catch. yes what a stunner.

    • @williamjones6053
      @williamjones6053 Před 4 lety

      And you know this how ??

    • @jeremyheintz1479
      @jeremyheintz1479 Před 4 lety +3

      @@williamjones6053 it's kind of obvious.

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 Před 4 lety +11

      @@williamjones6053 know that she's Ellen Burstyn? He recognized her. Know when she was born? Wikipedia, of course. But you knew that, because you aren't that dense, right?

    • @general1z
      @general1z Před 4 lety +12

      THANK YOU, I WAS TRYING TO FIGURE OUT WHO SHE WAS, BECAUSE I THOUGHT I RECOGNIZED HER, BUT COULD NOT PLACE HER❗❗❗ IN HER PRIME SHE WAS A LOOKER❗❗👌👌👍👍✔✔👀👀 NOW I CAN SLEEP TONIGHT😁😁😁

  • @caryrevels6584
    @caryrevels6584 Před 3 lety +50

    i served my time in the U.S. Navy It was an honor to serve my country as my father did. Being a Veteran also came with many benefits. Ill always remember the smile on my dad's face when i graduated from Navy Boot Camp. He told me how proud he was of me. I remember that day and those words all these years later.

    • @dwightpowell6673
      @dwightpowell6673 Před 3 lety

      My black dad upon discharge wasn't afforded the same VA benefits as you ....Why?

    • @curbozerboomer1773
      @curbozerboomer1773 Před 3 lety +2

      Sounds like you spent much of your young life trying to please others, especially daddy....I too served a hitch in the Navy, and felt some sense of honor in doing so...but I also began to realize that the country I was serving, was engaging in a dishonorable war-Viet-Nam. So I think much of this film is just propaganda, brainwashing many of us into thinking we should blindly sign up for a duty, that might be questionable....as for what happens aftrer a questionable discharge from the service...well, Jimi Hendrix was discharged for being "UNSUITABLE', after a year in the Army...then he went on to become the greatest electric Rock guitarist of his day...the real consequences of a negative military career are quite minimal for most people.

    • @normanjones5167
      @normanjones5167 Před 3 lety +1

      @@dwightpowell6673 your a liar

    • @qua7771
      @qua7771 Před 3 lety

      @@curbozerboomer1773 Of course it's a propaganda film.

    • @JohnDavis-yz9nq
      @JohnDavis-yz9nq Před 2 lety

      @@dwightpowell6673 well he needed to apply for benefits unless he received a dishonorable discharge. Otherwise he gets the same benefits as everyone else does.

  • @roycrowe1510
    @roycrowe1510 Před 3 lety +34

    BCD is known as a Big Chicken Dinner and that is what mom served. Do you think she knew?

  • @poetcomic1
    @poetcomic1 Před 3 lety +112

    My beagle got a Bad Conduct Discharge from obedience school and has been a worthless freeloader ever since.

    • @joeschmo7957
      @joeschmo7957 Před 3 lety +21

      And his punishment has been kisses and hugs and belly scratches ever since.

    • @BULL.173
      @BULL.173 Před 3 lety +11

      No college or on the job training pay for that beagle (sigh). Doomed to a life of napping, long walks, chasing tennis balls, and free food / housing. If only that dog had seen this 1950's DOD educational film.

    • @tsarbomba1
      @tsarbomba1 Před 3 lety +14

      That's ruff...

    • @commonconservative7551
      @commonconservative7551 Před 2 lety +1

      beagles are just too damn noisy , unless you be huntin bunnies, build it a soundproof cage with 24/7 classical music

    • @bobjacobson858
      @bobjacobson858 Před 2 lety +2

      LOL

  • @wfdix1
    @wfdix1 Před 4 lety +60

    Four months left and he BCD’d. Gifted intellect.

    • @Stuff_happens
      @Stuff_happens Před 4 lety

      wfdix1 B”C?” D. What’s the C?

    • @Stuff_happens
      @Stuff_happens Před 4 lety +1

      wfdix1 oh wait. I got it.

    • @Stuff_happens
      @Stuff_happens Před 4 lety +1

      I have seen that crap happen. Young, dumb, and full of sh@t. Like the part about being smarter than everybody else. I know it’s a government movie; but writing a script for this wouldn’t be fictional.
      Wow. I had to edit this because I said non fictional instead of fictional. Derrrp.

    • @barryhopesgthope686
      @barryhopesgthope686 Před 4 lety +7

      The Big Chicken Dinner.

    • @doyoulikeduckmeat
      @doyoulikeduckmeat Před 3 lety +1

      @@Stuff_happens Me too one of my best friends got a bad discharge from the Coast Guard because he couldn't stop drinking.

  • @stevebell4906
    @stevebell4906 Před 4 lety +117

    I believe that I watched this film in Boot Camp....but the funny thing is that after I got back from Vietnam no one ever cared about or even wanted to see my Honorable Discharge other than when I joined The VFW....but I was occasionally berated at job interviews for my service in Vietnam and for wasting my time in the service insted of gaining valuable experience in the workforce...
    And when I applied for and got a job with The State all that they wanted to know that I was a Vet because they told me that they got money from the Feds for hiring me...They didn't care at all about my discharge status..

    • @shawnmalone9711
      @shawnmalone9711 Před 4 lety +11

      Thank you for your service sir!🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 I tell these young kids to use common sense and don't panic about the Corona Virus. You guys who served in Vietnam went through hell but survived. They couldn't live one month in Nam. You guys served a tour of duty because you had to. No cell phones , no facebook or streaming video. I tell these kids my generation had to "duck and cover" in school (1967-73) and it didn't affect us.

    • @stevebell4906
      @stevebell4906 Před 3 lety +11

      @Uncle Ruckus Well there was historically a time when things like this mattered to people...Like right after WWII.....but time has gone by and attitudes changed...Jane Fonda disgraced herself as a traitor and all of america saw it and knew it ...and Ho -Hum...I finally realized that I had a better chance in a job interview ...if I didn't tell them that I was a VET!...I even had one personal Manager...(A motherly middle aged woman )...Tell me that while I was wasting my time in the service ..other applicants were gaining valuable work experience!

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 Před 3 lety +5

      A belated thank you.

    • @garyflythe1362
      @garyflythe1362 Před 3 lety +5

      @@stevebell4906 Richard Nixon prolong the war by talking to the South Vietnamese president. The real traders are all the people that lied the Gulf of Tonkin incident

    • @retiredyeti5555
      @retiredyeti5555 Před 3 lety +3

      Read this, and it was deja vu time. I experienced the same thing, more or less. Except I joined the American Legion and the Navy Club, instead of the VFW. I got a job with the Illinois Dept of Mental Health.

  • @formerparatrooper
    @formerparatrooper Před 3 lety +16

    Originally I was in the Navy as a Sea Bee back in the late 50s. I was acquainted with a fellow from Denver who did not control his desires and ended up getting STDs at least a half dozen times and ended up with a BCD. He was the sort that didn't care about anyone but himself. His record followed him everywhere.

    • @tomhaskett5161
      @tomhaskett5161 Před 3 lety +7

      STDs? That really was a dishonourable discharge!

    • @formerparatrooper
      @formerparatrooper Před 3 lety +3

      @@tomhaskett5161 He refused to take precautions and he was treated for several different STDs and the Navy finally gave him a BCD, not a Dishonorable Discharge. I think he told me he got these more than 10 times but I cannot remember that specifically. He ended up dying a number of years ago from several cancers and admitted to me that at least one of them was attributed to one of the STDs.

    • @sharonrigs7999
      @sharonrigs7999 Před rokem +5

      The most dishonorable discharge was from his wiener

    • @user-ul3lx2sl1q
      @user-ul3lx2sl1q Před 7 měsíci

      Obviously paul isn’t the only one who’s done dumb things. If I had a buck for every dumb thing I’ve ever done, I’d be filthy rich! (I’ve never been in the service.)

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines Před 4 lety +32

    ".....and so, I put the past behind me. I figured that, one day, I'd come back to my family and hometown- and........-and start over again. Clean.....fresh.......with honor. But I had a long way to go before that could ever happen. I climbed on the train, and headed towards San Francisco. A old friend of mine offered me a job in his agency. He said I'd know the difference between right and wrong- and maybe a few lumps would toughen me up in the process. And that's how I became PAUL ELTON- PRIVATE DETECTIVE."

    • @GySgt_USMC_Ret.
      @GySgt_USMC_Ret. Před 4 lety +6

      Well done! Sounds like material for Radio Classics. Best to all.

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines Před 4 lety +4

      Thanks. That's what the ending suggested to me.

    • @mctransportation9831
      @mctransportation9831 Před 2 lety +2

      I think it would have been cool if the next seen, he picks up the phone and asks his greaser friend to play drums a rockabilly band and that he'd written some tunes in the brig.

  • @HENSLEYMB
    @HENSLEYMB Před rokem +10

    When I worked with army records, whenever a soldier was about to be discharged for a less than honorable discharge, he/she had to sign a certain form. The form advised the soon to be discharged soldier that he/she would lose most if not all VA benefits.
    In this video, Paul stated that he only knew that he could not go to college. He should have known that he couldn’t get any benefits with a BCD even before he left the brig.

    • @gogomountain
      @gogomountain Před 10 měsíci +1

      How about a 'General Discharge'? A guy I used to work with told me he got a general discharge. I didn't see the document, though, so not sure about that.

  • @pauliecali
    @pauliecali Před 4 lety +76

    Exactly what I do. Sit down for a job interview and light up a smoke.

    • @jaminova_1969
      @jaminova_1969 Před 4 lety +7

      You're hired!

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety +18

      you forgot to put your feet up on the employers desk ( that shows confidence without being arrogant )

    • @Alex-uy7pc
      @Alex-uy7pc Před 4 lety +18

      @@evergriven7402 Ya, also grab the picture of his family and say "look at the knockers on her! You must be proud.. and your wife ain't bad either." It shows him your 'one of the boys.'
      Other favorites included, "whoa, soo a... You guys swingers?"
      Always finish up with asking if his daughter is dating yet.

    • @JJ-jv1gu
      @JJ-jv1gu Před 4 lety +6

      I pack a bowl and puff puff pass

    • @barryhopesgthope686
      @barryhopesgthope686 Před 4 lety +6

      Yeah, I know, but it was a different time back then. Smoking was not frowned upon as it is today. I'm surprised the boss didn't light it for him.

  • @schmaltzythegolem4828
    @schmaltzythegolem4828 Před 5 lety +119

    Welp, on to the next town where they don't know you and you can become a drunk.

    • @adamgh0
      @adamgh0 Před 4 lety +6

      Or buy a guitar and become a 50's rock legend.

    • @GOFLuvr
      @GOFLuvr Před 4 lety +8

      Schmaltzy the Golem
      The second thing I got out of this video is "if you're going to receive something lower than a general discharge, make sure you don't live somewhere where everyone knows your name."

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Před 3 lety +1

      @@GOFLuvr He can go to The FBI and get a new name through the witness protection program

    • @nicholaspoplawski601
      @nicholaspoplawski601 Před 2 lety

      Unfortunately it happens, thank God not me.

    • @mikeohagan2206
      @mikeohagan2206 Před 2 lety +2

      you can wear a dress and get a job with the government.

  • @satanofficial3902
    @satanofficial3902 Před 4 lety +37

    Whoa. The pendulum on the clock is really snapping back and forth... Must be marking the passage of time in nanoseconds.

    • @j0nnyism
      @j0nnyism Před 4 měsíci

      Escapement says hold my beer

  • @rpm12091
    @rpm12091 Před 4 lety +105

    I was discharged in 1972, I would have been better off telling people I had been in prison. Good papers meant nothing to employers and it seemed like they would hire anyone before a Vietnam Veteran. I still have trouble understanding what happened.

    • @jakeblanton6853
      @jakeblanton6853 Před 4 lety +14

      I got out later, but I never encountered any of that stuff or knew anyone else who had at any place I worked. Maybe because I worked at a lot of aerospace firms who were doing military contracts and as such, they hired a lot of us vets. They were great places to work -- even the female managers cussed like sailors... :)

    • @rpm12091
      @rpm12091 Před 4 lety +6

      Your reply was enlightening, in 1980 I was hired by Hercules Aerospace. Worked for 3 1/2 years and haven't had any trouble staying employed right up to retirement.

    • @billgund4532
      @billgund4532 Před 4 lety +20

      I ETS'd in early '73 (Northern California). Being a vet put you in the same league as a leper. FAQ in job interviews: how many people did you kill? How was the dope? Do you still have access to the PX? One recruiter had the gall to tell me to roll up my sleeves, so he could check for track marks.
      I lucked out and landed a job in Wyoming.

    • @hauntedmoodylady
      @hauntedmoodylady Před 4 lety +8

      @@billgund4532 A friend of mine served as an Army Officer 4 years active duty (Armor branch). He told me about a job interview the 'character' who interviewed him of course asked him what had he been doing. So my friend explained, the 'character' behind the desk who probably looked like the Pillsbury Dough Boy said well 'that a little better than reform school' have you done anything else?

    • @seka1986
      @seka1986 Před 4 lety +5

      rpm12091 sorry to hear that, it is just wrong. I tip my hat to you! 🎖

  • @jimfinigan1681
    @jimfinigan1681 Před 4 lety +35

    Those BCDs and Dishonorable Discharges can ruin your life. No vet benefits, nobody wants to hire you, and most people don't want to have anything to do with you. My ex brother-in-law pulled a few stunts in the Army. He spent his last 90 days in jail. He got a Dishonorable Discharge. It's been all downhill from there.

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety

      How long ago was that ?? 60 years or so ago ?

    • @jimfinigan1681
      @jimfinigan1681 Před 4 lety +2

      @@evergriven7402 He was kicked out of the Army in 1991.

    • @Newtire
      @Newtire Před 2 lety +2

      Not saying a BCD is a good thing but my honorable discharge failed to offer me my medical benefits that I had counted on. Was promised but only got part of them by writing to a congressman. The VA started listening after the senator sent them an inquiry form of some sort. I received a bare minimum benefit package but mostly got screwed and the treatment I got left me without the use of one lung due to a botched heart surgery and no hope of being seen by a person who could fix me. My back surgery had similar results. Regardless of what people say about how great the VA is, they are under funded and gave me sub standard treatment. I was told there was a procedure available to rich people at the Mayo Clinic to fix my lung malfunction but that I wasn’t going to get it.

    • @jimfinigan1681
      @jimfinigan1681 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Newtire It's disgraceful that veterans have to fight so hard to get the bare minimum, if that.

    • @andrewcross8244
      @andrewcross8244 Před 2 lety +3

      Very true. You could have spent 99% of your hitch as the best man in your squadron or platoon to screwing up and BCD is all that’s remembered

  • @vancouverman4313
    @vancouverman4313 Před 2 lety +8

    That kid's voice could break glass.

  • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
    @PlasmaCoolantLeak Před 3 lety +42

    "Paul, Paul! Where are you going? Now, come inside! I've made a delicious BIG CHICKEN DINNER for you!"

    • @masterblaster3914
      @masterblaster3914 Před 2 lety +3

      "Winner winner chicken din......a WHAT?!? A BCD"?

    • @BELCAN57
      @BELCAN57 Před 2 lety +2

      The one meal A service member doesn't look forward to.

    • @edwardfleming5434
      @edwardfleming5434 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BELCAN57 Shit-on-a-shingle. Those were the days my friend, we'd thought they'd never end.

  • @johnq.customer8027
    @johnq.customer8027 Před 2 lety +9

    I remember when I was in basic training. (1977)
    One of the lectures we had the D.I. explained about general and dishonorable discharges.
    He said that normally they sent a press release to the soldiers home town newspaper.
    It got our attention.

    • @davidfrehlini968
      @davidfrehlini968 Před 2 lety +1

      John Q. Customer. We saw the same at Parris Island back in 64. Semper Fi.

  • @sarjim4381
    @sarjim4381 Před 5 lety +55

    Western Union bike messenger. I do recall seeing a few when I was a kid in 1954, the year of this film, but they were rapidly fading away. This is a rare Jam Handy film produced for the armed forces after WWII. They almost always produced their own films before the war, but the volume of training films needed for the rapidly expanding armed forces meant outside help was needed. Jam Handy produced about 7,000 films for the armed forces during the war. His major commercial work was for the auto industry from the 40's to 70's where he produced another 3,000 films. He was a Detroit native, and his studio was located there. The area around Detroit appears to the filming locale, at least for the train sequence, since the it was a Grand Trunk Western passenger train, one of the few roads still running steam passenger trains in 1954.

    • @flick22601
      @flick22601 Před 5 lety +5

      Interesting information Sar. Thanks.

    • @rudolphguarnacci197
      @rudolphguarnacci197 Před 4 lety +2

      Beautiful homes, beautiful town.

    • @sarjim4381
      @sarjim4381 Před 4 lety +4

      @@rudolphguarnacci197 Yes, it was, before the Mad Max collapse occured. There are still some nice areas like Boston-Edison, Rosedale Park, and Palmer Woods, but you have to be willing to pay for your own street lights, hire your own security patrols, send your kids to private schools, but still pay a huge amount in property taxes. After all that, you are still living in a city that's losing population, provides very few services, and your home will generally be within a quarter mile of some of the worst slums in the country.

    • @stevenhixburn6195
      @stevenhixburn6195 Před 4 lety +1

      Nice commentary Thanks for the insights

    • @JJJBRICE
      @JJJBRICE Před 3 lety

      Ellen Burstyn was from Detroit . I guess that why she is participating in this as a young woman .

  • @billhuber2964
    @billhuber2964 Před 4 lety +67

    My dad told me "come home with anything less than an honorable , don't come at all ". And he ment business. And I got my honorable. Dad helped get my foot in the door at the local steel mill.

    • @reallyhappenings5597
      @reallyhappenings5597 Před 4 lety +9

      Respect to you AND him

    • @sharid76
      @sharid76 Před 4 lety +5

      @Crown Commando - Perhaps he wouldn't have been that hard assed to consider the circumstances. A medical discharge doesn't mean you were permanently injured or disabled under less than honorable conditions. You think every vet of WWII who came home minus a body part was treated as if he did something less than honorable?

    • @OceanSwimmer
      @OceanSwimmer Před 4 lety +14

      My father was a WW 2 veteran, joined the USMC in 1939.
      He used to tell us about it many years later -- He was on guard duty one day guarding 2 fellows who were in the brig.
      I will always remember his description of the kind of guys they were, total losers.
      Dad said a BCD was a badge of shame.
      He also mentioned that a man who contracted VD while in the service would get medical treatment, but would also be disciplined for negligence. I don't know if it was true or perhaps gossip.
      Dad was proud to be one of the few and served in the Pacific theatre in the Solomon and Russell Islands. He was wounded there and received a medical (honorable) discharge in 1944.
      The Greatest Generation is fading away.
      They are dearly missed.

    • @sharid76
      @sharid76 Před 4 lety +2

      @@OceanSwimmer - Yes, that is true. According to sources of the times, (and I can find it on CZcams if need be) contracting VD would remove you from being able to perform every possible normal type of duty, limiting you to only certain kinds of duty for a certain length of time. While this was the case, you were disciplined for "damaging government property" and the time lost to regular duty could actually be tacked on to the end of your enlistment so that the government got the full use of your contracted services to the military. The movie in question, concerned the Navy, and duty aboard ships, which also showed the "special accomodation" afforded sailors in such a condition.
      Before it was proven that VD could *NOT* be contracted by sitting on dirty toilet seats, there was a special one provided to sailors with VD, during their course of treatment, that only they could use so as not to spread it around to other shipmates. It was in a corner, and made of brilliant scarlet red materials. Making it the "Seat of Shame" more or less. (Yes, they showed the whole layout.)
      Seems rather counterintuitive to me, though. IF it could actually be spread in such a manner, wouldn't that actually involve reinfecting themselves by continually using the same seat like that? I mean, spreading it around to the other guys by *not* containing the spread (by limiting contact to one place) would *ALSO* not be a good idea. But, if you were supposed to be able to spread it that way, why would you want the infected individual to continually reinfect himself? Kind of makes ones head spin, doesn't it?🤔?

    • @californiaslastgasp6847
      @californiaslastgasp6847 Před 4 lety +5

      @Crown Commando Medical is still honorable.

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooper Před 4 lety +111

    I am glad to have my DD214 with pride after 23 years of service!!!

    • @dirtydave2691
      @dirtydave2691 Před 4 lety +8

      Me too 21 years.

    • @jakeblanton6853
      @jakeblanton6853 Před 4 lety +5

      Back in my day, I knew some guys who made E-7 in 7 years because they were a certain specialty which required a lot of training and many people in that specialty would get out after they had completed their 6-year commitment. I also met people who were in specialties which did not have much turnover (i.e. you basically had to wait for someone to retire or die in order to make rank) and they might retire after 20 as only an E-5 or E-6. Back then, if you retired at 20, you got 50% of your base pay and if you stuck it out to 30, you got 75%. I haven't kept up with it since then, so I don't know how they structure it these days.

    • @masterbondofox8982
      @masterbondofox8982 Před 4 lety +6

      THANK YOU for that service!

    • @OceanSwimmer
      @OceanSwimmer Před 4 lety +7

      Thank you, Veterans who served with honor!
      God bless you always.

    • @williamsimmons152
      @williamsimmons152 Před 4 lety +1

      20 years equals 50%

  • @pyromedichd1
    @pyromedichd1 Před 4 lety +47

    Choices always have consequences. Unfortunately many people don't consider the consequences when they make choices, and they probably don't know how far reaching their choices can be. A Bad Conduct Discharge or choosing the wrong person to marry or spending unwisely are probably the most life changing choices anyone can make and the consequences can be irreversible.

    • @seka1986
      @seka1986 Před 4 lety +2

      pyromedichd1 is there really a right person to marry?

    • @pyromedichd1
      @pyromedichd1 Před 4 lety +4

      @@seka1986 I honestly can say I hit the jackpot and found the right person to marry. The first wife was a really bad choice on my part, my current wife is a charm and I'm sure she'll stay that way because I've known her for 40 years.

    • @rudolphguarnacci197
      @rudolphguarnacci197 Před 4 lety

      @@pyromedichd1
      Glad you're happy. Maybe I'll reverse my poor choice, but maybe it's, as you succinctly explain, irreversible.

    • @pyromedichd1
      @pyromedichd1 Před 4 lety +7

      @@rudolphguarnacci197 Marriage isn't irreversible, there's always divorce, but that has consequences too. Once again choice plays a role. Stay married and miserable or divorce and suffer financial ruin, and possibly more. My divorce was very costly but staying with the ex would have cost much more, perhaps even my life. I divorced and rebuilt. There as a great deal of pain involved and that's what was intended by the ex. She did her best to make it painful in every way, attempts at career destruction, false accusations of domestic violence, arrests, reputation destruction. She was a Narcissist. I wish I had known enough to recognize that before I married her. It was an expensive, painful lesson. Based upon my experience I would advise anyone contemplating divorce, once the decision has been made, plan ahead for a place to stay and just leave and disappear. Always have a witness to your whereabouts during the divorce so false accusations can't stick, NEVER talk to police if questioned until you've received legal counsel. Stay away from the ex wife to be and do not talk with her at all, ever..

    • @curbozerboomer1773
      @curbozerboomer1773 Před 3 lety +3

      @@rudolphguarnacci197 For every divorce, there is another couple that should be divorced...but many folks will stick with a mediocre relationship, fearing that they cannot do better, or just assuming that all relationships eventually suck, so what the Hell, might as well keep this thing going.Either way, marriage is mostly a bad thing!

  • @thebusterdog6358
    @thebusterdog6358 Před 4 lety +17

    A hero's welcome for a washout. Military isn't for everyone, too bad recruiters lie through their teeth to get young people to sign that contract. My company in boot camp went from 92 recruits to 36 in 13 weeks. When I went in you really had to want to be there. Fortunately I really wanted to be there, but after 4 years active and 2 years of reserves it was time to get out. My honorable discharge opened doors for me, and today at 67 years old I have had free Health Insurance for close to 45 years. No regrets... The reality is, a person once out in the fleet, had to work really hard to get a BCD or DD. But in Boot Camp the US Navy simply didn't want you if you would quit. And the ones that got booted in my company in boot camp all had one thing in common, they quit.

    • @88mike42
      @88mike42 Před 3 lety

      Buster...Knew a guy, after we were both civilians again, who was assigned to the tool crib in his squadron. He was there because he wasn't reliable enough to be assigned to a shop or go on det. He lived his life along the same lines and never saw the light. He never once looked inward. Very sad.

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Před 3 lety

      I went through marine corps boot camp. I was out after two weeks, The captain of the company sent me to Balboa Park Navy Hospital for three days. I was given a room, three meals a day, a TV to watch what I want. I was extensively interviewed by a United States Navy psychiatrist and a psychologist and after the interviews, I was given a medical discharge. A man commander Billingsley active duty and a psychologist Commander Wilcox and two others who did the interview told me "I was not suitable for service". I was then given $500, a new pair of clothes, and a one way ticket back to Oakland, California on a United Airlines Boeing 737-200 out of Lindbergh Field. I told him I was not suitable before shipping out. To get his "brownie" points. He had to go to the school to obtain my signature.

    • @nhot2132
      @nhot2132 Před 3 lety +1

      @@frankdenardo8684 You must be very proud.

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Před 3 lety +1

      @Bones McGillicuddy I live on my own I have a girlfriend who is an army veteran. She is a few years older than me.
      I remember an old Camel filters cigarette ad that says "Camel filters are not for everybody, but then again they don't tend to be". I have a job and make very good money. I was not elegible for disabtility. The Navy psychiatrist and psychologist told me I was not suitable for service.
      I was approached of the idea by one recruiter but he kind of lost interest in me. Another recruiter contacted me but I told him what happened. I did not pass the ASVAB test, anyone who did not pass often would be dropped. But the new recruiter was going to get me in but would give me some mickey mouse job I was not going to take. He took me to MEPS for a physical exam. I tried to fail the hearing test and the psychiatrist interview. He called and told me I passed. After graduation from high school. I was shipped off in August. In receiving, they did another exam and I was "red flagged" in layman's terms, subject further examination. The drill instructor pulled me off and it was not discovered until two weeks into training. I don't know how many the platoon had, but I was one of several "singled out" to be out of the corps. Some where thrown out for fraudulent enlistment and like me, medical issues. The company Commander sent to Balboa hospital and after about five days. I was released for medical reasons. In the end I did thank the doctors who interviewed me and that signed off on my release.

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Před 3 lety +1

      @@nhot2132 Let's just say, I am lucky. The so called "crucible" was what will make a person a marine.
      I did not have to go through that. Week two I was instructed by Captain Welsh who was the company Commander and he told me "we are going to send you to Balboa Navy hospital for an evaluation". I was sent there, I was given a private room, with a bed and chair, table, and a TV, the TV I can watch anything I want. IE old movies, game shows, reruns of old TV shows, educational. I was interviewed by two Navy psychiatrists and two Navy psychologists. After extensive interviews, I was told that I will be discharged from the corps do to unsuitability. I was given $500, a new pair of "civvies" lingo for civilian clothes, and a one way ticket from San Diego to Oakland on a United airlines Boeing 737-200. I have a job but I look back and say after these wars we went through. I am lucky to be alive, god bless.

  • @robh.5595
    @robh.5595 Před 4 lety +45

    Quite fitting, that his post BCD meal, was a big chicken dinner.

    • @bender7565
      @bender7565 Před 3 lety +2

      The BCD come with or w/o biscuits......brig time.

    • @frankhenry587
      @frankhenry587 Před 3 lety +2

      Quite fitting......the navy sucks it big time

    • @DerBingle1
      @DerBingle1 Před 2 lety

      @@frankhenry587 Schizer Militair!

    • @DanEBoyd
      @DanEBoyd Před 2 lety

      Better than creamed chipped beef on toast, otherwise known as Shit On The Shingle!

  • @rlr50
    @rlr50 Před 4 lety +18

    Three years on a carrier flight deck. Was it rough? You bet. Very exciting stuff for a 19 year old kid in 1976 and I was handed an honorable discharge for my service. Lots of guys got fed up and took the "easy" early way out but not having that honorable will follow you the rest of your life.

    • @ictpilot
      @ictpilot Před 4 lety +4

      @atomic3939 Depends on the person hiring and the company. But it is a little less of a problem now.

    • @matthewmorrison8611
      @matthewmorrison8611 Před rokem +1

      BS!! You can have medical discharges and General under honorable and you can do just fine. It's punitive discharges like dishonorable and bad conduct that will screw you over.

  • @StonesAndSand
    @StonesAndSand Před 4 lety +54

    Four months, Paul. FOUR MONTHS! You only had four months to go. Talk about short sighted. I'm glad Mary saw through your paper-thin disguise.

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety +3

      ​@INERTWas it an "honorable" or "other than Honorable" discharge???

    • @946towguy2
      @946towguy2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@evergriven7402 A BCD is other than honorable. A general discharge can be with honorable or less than honorable conditions.

    • @JohnDavis-yz9nq
      @JohnDavis-yz9nq Před 2 lety +2

      @@946towguy2 it’s a bad conduct discharge. It is far from a honorable discharge. It is equivalent to a dishonorable discharge. I doubt that it means much nowadays. People would not care if they received a bad discharge. If they were to reinstate the draft I bet there would be a lot of them.

    • @946towguy2
      @946towguy2 Před 2 lety

      @@JohnDavis-yz9nq You are replying to wrong person. Talk to @INERT.

    • @DanEBoyd
      @DanEBoyd Před 2 lety

      Think he did some time in the brig/jail, so he probably had a lot more time to go when he committed his offenses.

  • @karl28560
    @karl28560 Před 4 lety +38

    Back in those days, Paul could have said "Yep, HONORABLE DISCHARGE!" And it would have taken years to notice a mistake.

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 Před 3 lety +5

      You needed the official paper and it is quite official looking.

    • @lisalu910
      @lisalu910 Před 3 lety +2

      They asked for his papers, though, how could he forge those?

    • @946towguy2
      @946towguy2 Před 2 lety +5

      @Bones McGillicuddy The dd214 at least into the 1990's was very easy to fake, since it was a quadruplicate form typed on a typewriter or an impact printer. Before the internet, most employers wouldn't have bothered to verify one unless it was required for funding a program.

    • @donreinke5863
      @donreinke5863 Před 2 lety +1

      @Bones McGillicuddy Depends on the job....but you sure as hell arent getting into law enforcement or anything that requires a security clearance or background check.

    • @946towguy2
      @946towguy2 Před 2 lety +1

      @Bones McGillicuddy In the 1950's through 1990's just about any print shop could make a blank form. Blank forms could also be stolen by an admin clerk.

  • @gooseknack
    @gooseknack Před 4 lety +37

    Reminds me a little of an episode of the Twilight Zone!

  • @L1V2P9
    @L1V2P9 Před 3 lety +9

    He should have moved to Canada. The employers up there would think a BCD was a university degree.
    "US Military service and a BCD eh? Its aboot time we had a person with your qualifications walk in the door. There's a senior management job open and it has your name on it!"

    • @mikeohagan2206
      @mikeohagan2206 Před 2 lety +2

      i doubt it usually we just get the draft dodgers. we try to hire the best person for the job based on skill and the ability to do the job. we dont hire cowards.

    • @chrismc410
      @chrismc410 Před 2 lety

      @@mikeohagan2206 back then, the French Foreign Legion might take him. Probably not so much nowadays

    • @mikeohagan2206
      @mikeohagan2206 Před 2 lety

      @@chrismc410 thats the type of thing he was trying to avoid. do they still have the french foriegn legion i wonder.

    • @dennisholiday1868
      @dennisholiday1868 Před 2 lety

      @@mikeohagan2206 The French Foreign Legion is still around. But he had to make it to France to just to join so he have to get a passport and plenty of money to get there.

  • @donkeyslayer4661
    @donkeyslayer4661 Před 4 lety +36

    Being a telegram boy at his age would make me indifferent too.

  • @4351steve
    @4351steve Před 4 lety +37

    Bad paper. Three and a half years as a Personelman in the mid 70’s. Never discharged anybody with a BCD. I processed some General Discharges. Court Martial. Most of the time a command would try everything to avoid that level of punishment. Not any easy accomplishment to earn yourself that kind of paper.

    • @crankychris2
      @crankychris2 Před 3 lety

      Agreed. Only a General Court Martial can issue a BCD, and it is upgradable.

    • @mikeohagan2206
      @mikeohagan2206 Před 2 lety

      what about theft or cowardice,

  • @macsdaddy3383
    @macsdaddy3383 Před 4 lety +27

    Gotta love that the draft was not for everyone, but at least back then the US military had a good way to take care of those who did not want to learn to conform with rules & reg's and the ways of military life. Life was soo much simpler back in the day.

    • @henrysokol3466
      @henrysokol3466 Před 2 lety +2

      I dispute your latter claim. But yeah: Paul's showing such a bad attitude, most of the disciplinary action he complained about was probably well-earned. And he almost seems like a narcissist; to him it's all about what _he_ wanted _then,_ which makes everything he did right.
      Wanting to get out and even fouling up on purpose to do it can be one thing. Staying casual and dismissive about such wartime conduct in the face of such obvious and dangerously-escalating social disapproval... *during the 1950s?* That's clueless, arrogant, and stupid.

    • @roflmows
      @roflmows Před 2 lety +4

      they drafted people who didn't want to be there and could be troublemakers, then expected them to behave like honor students once they were in?
      inevitably flawed system. we're all so much better off without it.

    • @seanmccann8368
      @seanmccann8368 Před 2 lety +1

      @@roflmows Absolutely.

  • @garkmr6200
    @garkmr6200 Před 2 lety +14

    Say what you will. That era far surpasses the current one. The streets were clean, people dressed well, you could send your child to the store without fear, the locomotives were insanely cool, and a million other reasons.

    • @DerBingle1
      @DerBingle1 Před 2 lety

      I agree 200%

    • @henrysokol3466
      @henrysokol3466 Před 2 lety +3

      Sounds like you have Old World Blues.
      Everything that counted was just as screwed up; everyone just seems to have selective memory. Some absolutely horrible, extremely high-profile historical events happened in the 1950s.
      The perfection you see was usually a paper-thin facade people kept up, despite everyone knowing it was a lie. The same things we have happen today happened then, but simply weren't spoken of. And there was so much *empty ceremony.*
      Frankly, I find the whole pantomime absurd, wasteful, and detrimental to addressing any issues there were. Did you notice how tense the dining room got when Paul announced he wasn't going along with everyone's expectations? This despite the facts that for all they knew he was a hero fresh out of a metal-storm hell, and his decision would put no burden whatsoever on them? _Social status_ seemed clearly the motivation for most who wanted Paul to go through a lot of grueling study and become a lawyer.

    • @roflmows
      @roflmows Před 2 lety +1

      you're talking about being white and well-off, or middle-class. what about being black or brown back then? we still had Jim Crow laws. segregation. voter suppression. the Klan. lynchings. widespread institutional racism. women being openly harassed in public and in the workplace.
      this was the same time as Japanese, Italian, and German internment camps here in the "land of the free". american citizens taken from their homes and imprisoned. completely innocent people dragged away, exactly the same thing the Nazis were doing in Europe. some of these people weren't released until the early 1950s.
      there weren't even marital rape laws until the late 1970s. it wasn't universal settled law until 1993. think about that for a minute. marital rape was treated DIFFERENTLY from other rape cases.
      people being well-dressed doesn't count for anything when your fellow citizens are being treated like prisoners in a concentration camp all over your nation.
      as for it being safe, yes, the 1940s-50s were a very safe time. there was low violent crime, but you know what? NOWADAYS our violent crime is just the same as the 1950s. look at the violent crime statistics--2021 is just as safe as the 1950s.
      i grew up in the 80s-90s, and man, THAT was a hell of a dangerous time to live through. terrible crime, the reemergence of drug epidemics like heroin and crack, the huge rise of street gangs, the beginning of mass incarceration...
      thankfully, today's world is much safer than the 80s-90s.
      the post-war era and 1950s were a bubble. it seemed great, but look what happened in the late 60s and 70s--the Rust Belt, because all that artificial boom died, and they couldn't sustain their workforce.
      so yeah, things LOOKED better back then. but in so many ways, america was rotten to the core. and in many ways, it still is.

    • @sproge2142
      @sproge2142 Před 2 lety

      We're safer than ever before, but we're more well informed than ever before too, we consume a lot more news on a daily basis and as news is usually negative by its nature it influences our perception of the world and our society thus. Now if our worries are justified or not is a seperate discussion.

    • @skepticon9390
      @skepticon9390 Před 2 lety

      Jerry R might need a cognitive study. Selective memory is a sign of developing dementia and other deleterious cognitive affectations. My grandfather had Alzheimer’s. In the beginning, he remembered a similar utopian lifestyle, one that his beloved wife, my grandmother, knew simply didn’t exist. She was a compassionate lady, a brilliant conversationalist who learned long ago that times don’t change as much as memories do.

  • @Harry-nn4px
    @Harry-nn4px Před 3 lety +15

    The 'Big Chicken Dinner' (laughing). It's better than a Dishonorable.

    • @HENSLEYMB
      @HENSLEYMB Před 3 lety +1

      A General Discharge (OTH) although an administrative discharge, there are zero benefits.

    • @HENSLEYMB
      @HENSLEYMB Před 2 lety

      Used to be called Undesirable.

  • @hornet6969
    @hornet6969 Před 4 lety +49

    4 years. No more. No less. Had a rough time. But I stuck it out. Got that Honorable DD214. Never looked back.
    🤯

    • @jvolstad
      @jvolstad Před 4 lety +3

      26 years in the Army. Retired in 1998.

    • @jakeblanton6853
      @jakeblanton6853 Před 4 lety +9

      Depends upon when you were in... I can remember a lot of different enlistment options on the years in the Navy... Usually a combination of years of active service, combined with years of active reserve or years of inactive reserve... I can remember 2, 3, 4, and 6 year active enlistments with various lengths of active or inactive reserve. I think it depended upon your scores on the ASVAB test, the field you went into, how desperate the Navy was for people in that field, and probably how good you could negotiate with the recruiter. :) But it has been quite a few decades and my memory is a bit fuzzy on some things... Things like what I had for supper tonight... :( Getting old sucks...

    • @sfdanceron1
      @sfdanceron1 Před 4 lety +2

      Sir Kit Braker Best 4 years I had in my entire life:64-68. Would do it over in a heart beat.

    • @hornet6969
      @hornet6969 Před 4 lety +7

      The military is not 4 everybody. I got out with the honorable discharge. That's all that matters 2 me. 🙈🙉🙊 🙂 Keep on truckin...

    • @davemojarra2666
      @davemojarra2666 Před 4 lety +2

      @@sfdanceron1 supply clerk?

  • @DerBingle1
    @DerBingle1 Před 2 lety +16

    The best sequence in the whole picture is the tricycle kick and the little girl running out at the end. It's totally French New Wave and fraught with meaning.

  • @HENSLEYMB
    @HENSLEYMB Před 3 lety +21

    During that time, it was easy to alter or fabricate records. It could make it easier to obtain a local job but never apply for VA benefits.

    • @dwightpowell6673
      @dwightpowell6673 Před 3 lety +1

      You're Caucasian you obviously have no fear good for you.

    • @7thdayproductions330
      @7thdayproductions330 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dwightpowell6673 ✊🏻

    • @SegaDream131
      @SegaDream131 Před 2 lety

      I always heard you HAVE TO LIE....
      AND IF YOU DIDN'T THAT'S WHY YOU DIDN'T GET HIRED.....

    • @roflmows
      @roflmows Před 2 lety

      hell, you can fudge VA records nowadays. people get away with it all the time. they're always catching people who've been doing stolen valor and getting veteran benefits for years, sometimes decades.
      once you've gotten away with it for awhile, nobody thinks or cares to double check. Don Shipley nails these guys all the time, dudes who've been scamming the VA...sometimes since the Vietnam era.
      my friend Amy is an Army veteran, served 12 years and now works for the VA, she's always complaining about people with shady information getting benefits...but most of the time they just pass them along, because there's just no time or resources to do deep research. or the Army, Navy, Marines, etc, never bother doing an investigation. they don't even return phone calls or emails.
      she says that right now, she personally knows of at least 3-4 people who've been fudging their service records for over 10 years, and she's reported them over and over...nobody does anything.
      it's like nobody wants to find out, because it might expose serious flaws--or maybe even crimes--happening inside the VA at higher levels.

  • @antony716
    @antony716 Před 4 lety +24

    In 'Easy Out II' Paul moves to Greenwich Village and tries to write beat poetry, but dies of a smack overdose

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 3 lety +7

      Nah he went to college, smoked a lot of weed and dropped too much acid, and now he's a tenured department chair in humanities and political science at a major university, indoctrinating the younger generation on the evils of capitalism and western civilization while supporting every wacko liberal cause that comes out. Later! OL J R :)

  • @GOFLuvr
    @GOFLuvr Před 4 lety +10

    I know this film was trying to make a point, but what the VA representative didn't mention is that the VA has a status for people who have received BCD's as "Honorable for VA Purposes." Former servicemembers who have received this special status by the VA are still denied VA healthcare if they were BCD'ed, but alas, anything is better than a dishonorable discharge.

    • @Jaxsolo
      @Jaxsolo Před 4 lety +4

      Remember this film was made in the 50s, maybe earlier.

  • @filthylucreonyoutube
    @filthylucreonyoutube Před 2 lety +5

    18:16 He said bailiwick! Gotta love Jam Handy films 😃

  • @evilwillhunting
    @evilwillhunting Před 2 lety +18

    A BCD doesn’t necessarily ruin your life, it just closes a lot of doors. Kind of like a felony conviction.

  • @supercharged6771
    @supercharged6771 Před 4 lety +18

    Some really interesting comments here guys... both my mothers side and dads side are deep military BUT dad went to Vietnam and was very adamant about NOT joining to me and my brother, well we didn't, went to trades school on our own dime and we both do well for ourselves... thanks dad. P.S. at almost 50 years old now not once has anyone said to me or showed me it was a bad move, if fact not much word being said good about healthcare for veterans that goes back to my grandpaw who died in 86. Now ww2 was different times... very patriotic now days not so much

    • @m20j_pilot48
      @m20j_pilot48 Před 3 lety +1

      @supercharged6771 // Some of the best advice ever given to me was by my grandfather (a WWII vet) who said, "Learn a trade with your hands. No matter where you go you'll always have work." I was 18 then and 35 years later I haven't yet proven him wrong....Glazier Local 636

    • @graceburrell8800
      @graceburrell8800 Před rokem

      George Bush took my husband's benefits in August of '03. That draft dodger said my husband's pension was too much money ..so No Benefits for him. No joke.

  • @jvolstad
    @jvolstad Před rokem +2

    US Army Retired. 1972-1998.
    Today I am a retired software developer. I also volunteer at my local VA Hospital.

  • @ultrametric9317
    @ultrametric9317 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Amazing, Ellen Burstyn, an Oscar winner, is in this film. She also won Tony and 2 Emmys, making her a very rare "Triple Crown" winner. She was born in 1932 and is very much still with us at age 90.

  • @seanmccann8368
    @seanmccann8368 Před 4 lety +40

    'Mary' wasn't the sort of girl to give it up to any guy who was less than 'honourable'. ;-)

    • @hornet6969
      @hornet6969 Před 4 lety +5

      Some women won't give it up to anybody doesn't put a ring on the finger. As 4 me.....No thanks. Keep on trucking !

    • @Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry
      @Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry Před 4 lety +3

      Oh, well. He was in the Navy. He could always give Charlie a call...

    • @seanmccann8368
      @seanmccann8368 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry Or palm and her five sisters?

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety

      @@Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry wait... was Paul a submariner ?? did they say somewhere and I missed it ??

    • @hornet6969
      @hornet6969 Před 4 lety

      @@evergriven7402 🤣

  • @HENSLEYMB
    @HENSLEYMB Před 2 lety +11

    Also, a Bad Conduct or Dishonorable discharge is usually the result of a single incident that is criminal in nature.

    • @kennethsouthard6042
      @kennethsouthard6042 Před rokem +6

      Dishonorable discharges and Bad Conduct Discharges are what are known as punitive discharges. They're only given out in a Courts Martial.

    • @HENSLEYMB
      @HENSLEYMB Před 9 měsíci

      Correct

  • @kengordon7613
    @kengordon7613 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I was a JAG officer in the Army and then in the Air Force for 23 years. I prosecuted and defended over 200 servicemen who received a BCD. Some, like our hero here, strived for a punitive discharge during the height of the war in Viet Nam to avoid being sent there. Shameful waste of their lives.

  • @americanmilitiaman88
    @americanmilitiaman88 Před rokem +4

    In my time in the US Navy seabees someone had to royally screw up to receive a Bad Conduct Discharge. Dishonorable Discharges are given out for what would be felony crimes in the civilian world. The only people who i know were kicked out for popping on drug tests or too many alcohol related instances got bad conduct discharges. Its not hard to keep out of trouble. If you get in and realize its not for you. Just keep your head low do what's required and get out with a honorable discharge.

  • @akeffo
    @akeffo Před 2 lety +4

    I like the messenger. He didn’t give a shit, just wanted the mother to shut up.

  • @HENSLEYMB
    @HENSLEYMB Před 3 lety +27

    Military recruiters and the career counselors often do the bait and switch. At the home town recruiting office, the applicant is shown all the different jobs that the service has. But once at the MEPPS, the applicant is told that there are no openings in the MOS he’s interested in but there are openings In other MOSs. The pitch would be” be a real soldier and go infantry or how about being a cook?” The applicant gets suckered into an MOS he doesn’t perform well in when he could have made a good medic or aircraft mechanic. The new soldier gets dejected and either gets an administrative discharge or when asked to REUP, he accepts discharge, even if he’s offered the MOS he first was interested in.
    A good service member, disappointed in the way the military works, goes back to civilian life.

    • @tomservo5347
      @tomservo5347 Před 3 lety +5

      That's exactly what happened to me. Wanted combat medic was told 'no openings' did cannon fodder combat engineers.

    • @samcoon6699
      @samcoon6699 Před 3 lety +3

      Hmmmm....interesting. I wonder era you guys are talking about. The reason being is I took the ASVAB back in 86 and was given a list of jobs I could do based on my score. I made my decision and was given that job.
      Everyone I went through bootcamp with went to their respective school they chose for which they scored high enough to get.
      That's how it has worked for at least that long. You guys must be talking about the Vietnam era or something huh?

    • @geoben1810
      @geoben1810 Před 2 lety +3

      @@samcoon6699
      It WAS Vietnam Era. And that's what happened to me and a lot of others. But I still got my Honorable. U.S. Navy.
      '73 >'77

    • @bloqk16
      @bloqk16 Před 2 lety +3

      I reminded of the movie "Private Benjamin," where the Judy Benjamin character was told by the recruiter of the marvelous time to be had in the US Army with travel and lodging accommodations. Gee! She was sure in for a surprise when reality set in.

    • @lawrenceshadai4966
      @lawrenceshadai4966 Před 2 lety +6

      That is how I got talked out of signing up in the late 1980's. A few Vietnam vets who never met each other shared their exact same experiences with this happening. "I was told my job would be X by the recruiter, but after I signed I learned there was no opening and I would have to chose something else." I was told that, by my time, they stopped doing that. But, who would I believe- the recruiter with the incentive to lie or the multiple vets who went through it themselves ?

  • @theonlybuzz1969
    @theonlybuzz1969 Před 4 lety +9

    Maybe he could find a piece of paper that had the word good on it, then cut it out and glue it over the bad, then he could have said that he was “special “and no one else was really like him.. LoL

  • @brown-eyedman4040
    @brown-eyedman4040 Před 4 lety +30

    Remember when a BCD or DD made you virtually unemployable? Employers were mostly veterans and understood how easy it was to get either an Honorable Discharge.

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety +3

      when was that the 40s??

    • @chrismc410
      @chrismc410 Před 4 lety +3

      @@evergriven7402 it still does make you unemployable. The only people I've seen overcome BCD and DDs were dual nationals of third world countries who went back to the country of birth or the other country that was not the United States. They had no chance of a life here so had no choice but to go there and try to make life as best they can there. Most didn't have what most Americans would consider a good life but most had their own homes, a job they wouldn't have otherwise and surviving far better than they would otherwise. Employers there had no problem exploiting them. No chance of them leaving, would work that much harder knowing they had no choice but to accept as there was nothing better for them as BCD and DD would not only follow them in the U.S. but most Anglophone countries like Canada, the UK, Australia, New Zealand, etc. The best he could hope for is going to France and joining the French Foreign Legion. If he survives the five year contract he can get French citizenship but he can never again set foot on American soil if he wants a future. France is nice but it is not the United States and theee idifferences enough between the two cultures will never adapt to or in his heart of hearts will never accept.

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety +5

      @@chrismc410 not to mention Paul could and should have lied about discharge character and not pursued any VA benefits back in the 50s.. He would have been OK ... as long he stayed away from Police or any govt job and maybe thats why a lot did make it because This film assumes that someone that is Immoral enough to do the shit he did to get his "Easy Out" out would still be moral enough to tell the truth on an employment application where it was next to impossible to verify in the private sector

    • @rontreen3278
      @rontreen3278 Před 3 lety

      When I got out of the Navy in 79 with an honorable discharge, nobody asked for my DD-214.... of course pumping gas at a Union 76 station and being a custodian for the school system did not require a high-clearance level like maybe a government job?

    • @KariIzumi1
      @KariIzumi1 Před 2 lety +1

      @Bones McGillicuddy huh. I live in San Diego and separated 6 years ago but not one place has asked for my DD-214. I have five official copies but even for being the largest major city with a huge vet population, it's not a big deal.

  • @submechanophobia768
    @submechanophobia768 Před 2 lety +9

    This should have been a pilot to an ongoing saga.

    • @DanEBoyd
      @DanEBoyd Před 2 lety +1

      Excellent idea!!! First was the drinking, and then the beatnik phase. Later came the 1960s and drugs, and then the hippy phase - which culminated in contracting VD from the Manson girls. The 1970s ushered in stretches in prison...

    • @geoffreymoseley6801
      @geoffreymoseley6801 Před 2 lety

      Netflix should pick up that saga

    • @j.e.8442
      @j.e.8442 Před rokem

      @@DanEBoyd what tha...🤣

    • @magnusdiridian
      @magnusdiridian Před rokem

      Yes, the next chapter should be called Days Of The Janitor

  • @mssedmebich1621
    @mssedmebich1621 Před 2 lety +7

    A good friend of mine got a Less than Honorable from the Army in the early 80's. He was a dropout with a 7th grade education and a troubled youth who spent most of his teen years in one reform school or another. His mother signed the papers to allow him to enlist at 17. It got him out of her hair and house. Too many AWOLs and what technically amounted to desertion got him booted by age 18. He always regretted his decision to leave with an LTH. I can't say it ruined his life. He was making half a mil a year when he passed away and had earned his Masters degree in technology. His Doctoral thesis was going thru peer revue when he died while vacationing in Mexico.

    • @marine4lyfe85
      @marine4lyfe85 Před 2 lety +1

      Sorry, those things don't add up.

    • @mssedmebich1621
      @mssedmebich1621 Před 2 lety

      @@marine4lyfe85 Then take a math class.

    • @marine4lyfe85
      @marine4lyfe85 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mssedmebich1621 I already did. I graduated high school, not 7th grade. But tell me more about your friend's Masters in "Technology".

    • @mssedmebich1621
      @mssedmebich1621 Před rokem

      @@marine4lyfe85 Internet security. He was an adjunct professor at Dunwoody teaching computer forensics. In the old days people thought it was cool to hack your computer and let you know they had done so. Now they want to get in, steal your data and get out without you knowing you were hacked. Most big online company's now employ internet security managers so they don't have to tell millions of customers that their credit card numbers are all for sale on the dark web.

    • @markbeames7852
      @markbeames7852 Před 11 měsíci

      no such type of discharge as Less than Honorable.

  • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
    @PlasmaCoolantLeak Před 3 lety +10

    "Oh, Judy, tell Mr. Coleman to save me two quarts of ice cream!"
    "Jesus Christ, woman, tell Mary, chicken, ice cream, I'm only a little kid, Goddamnit!"

  • @keithfaccone8124
    @keithfaccone8124 Před 2 lety +10

    I served six years of my youth on active duty got discharged and a honorable discharge. now that I’m in my 60s and can use some VA medical help I’m told I make too much money that back in the 1980s after I had done my time in the military they change the rules and I make too much money now. I wish I never spent one day in the military and unlike most I don’t go around saying I loved it it was the greatest time because just like the ones that say that I couldn’t wait to got out and I got out and if they feel that it was the best time in their life why didn’t they stay in. Don’t let the military industrial complex bullshit you there’s no benefit from being in the military.

  • @Titan500J
    @Titan500J Před 4 lety +10

    4 years in the Navy and I was just a dumb kid but somehow I got out with an Honorable.

    • @retiredyeti5555
      @retiredyeti5555 Před 3 lety

      Yup - about the 3rd day in boot camp in 1961, I realized that I had made a mistake by enlisting, but toughed it out, knowing what the alternative was. (The draft notice came to my folks home 2 days after I enlisted in the Navy). There is a consequence for every action, and sometimes it keeps your sorry behind out of harms way. Put in my 4 years and got out - used some of my GI benefits for nursing school, and the first 2 houses that my wife and I bought.

  • @remb9614
    @remb9614 Před 3 lety +11

    I would've joined if I had known I could get a farm when I got out!

  • @TheManDownstairs13
    @TheManDownstairs13 Před 2 lety +6

    His bad conduct was pretending to cry on the steps.

  • @johnb4010
    @johnb4010 Před 2 lety +3

    Paul has learned the first consequence of the BCD is, no nookie from Mary.

    • @mikesebphoto
      @mikesebphoto Před 3 měsíci

      Yeah, the way she was nibbling on his neck in the car showed she was good to go until she found out about that BCD!

  • @RonJohn63
    @RonJohn63 Před 4 lety +33

    I know when my son is supposed to be discharged. If he came home before that, my first question would be *why?*

    • @highsecurityagent8778
      @highsecurityagent8778 Před 2 lety

      His answer will be it sucked.

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 Před 2 lety

      @@highsecurityagent8778 suck or not is irrelevant.

    • @highsecurityagent8778
      @highsecurityagent8778 Před 2 lety

      @@RonJohn63 I was just being humorous, but irrelevant or not something went wrong or something happened that would cause him and the service to part ways. Like the saying goes in many languages (shit happens). Thank you for responding.

  • @dennisjones9044
    @dennisjones9044 Před 3 lety +4

    the easiest and the least painful for both the service and service member is "Unsuitable for military service" which can mean anything from bedwetting, peterpuffing, undisclosed medical condition or fraudulent enlistment that is not waiverable . BCDs and DDs are for what civilians refer to as "felonies" and you will be set a military prison.

    • @orvilleh.larson7581
      @orvilleh.larson7581 Před 2 lety

      Of course, a prospective employer might not be so discriminating. That is to say, he'd wonder why the applicant couldn't hack military life. . . .

    • @coolerking7427
      @coolerking7427 Před 2 lety

      I got a discharge for Unsuitable for Military Service. But, it was due to blowback from turning in senior drill instructors and officers who were doing illegal stuff. They got wind of it and forged my papers. It got to the point it was getting dangerous. It got so bad that one guy committed suicide. I got out and contacted CID. I got a wavier to go back in anytime. This was back in 1993. CID did find out they forged my papers and lied. I tried to get in the Navy in 2000 and everything went well except the Navy recruiter didn't push my paperwork due to not getting a bonus and Navy billets were being cut.

  • @roflmows
    @roflmows Před 2 lety +3

    screwing up one time completely screws up the rest of your life? what a shitty deal. imagine if we all were judged because of one stupid, insignificant thing we did a long time ago.
    violent crime is one thing. but everything else, meh....you shouldn't be judged by that. "bad conduct" could be anything. it could be theft, could be not showing up to work on time, could be lots of things. it doesn't make a person completely USELESS as a human being forever.
    terrible system.

    • @mikesebphoto
      @mikesebphoto Před 3 měsíci +1

      It takes a lot more than a single screw up to get a BCD.

  • @caryrevels6584
    @caryrevels6584 Před 4 lety +6

    I was Honorable Discharge. Proud of it U.S. Navy was the best thing that ever happened to me. I was a Radioman 3rd class. made a man out of me. G.I. Bill VA mortgage etc. My dad had a smile a mile long when i returned home.

  • @richdouglas2311
    @richdouglas2311 Před 3 lety +11

    A BCD is a result of a court-martial. Almost always, I was able to deal with bad conduct either with Article 15 (nonjudicial punishment) and/or administrative discharge. Everyone I did--dozens--resulted in an honorable discharge, even if the member had committed a court-martial offense. Better to move them along to the next phase of their lives.

    • @randynielsen1413
      @randynielsen1413 Před 2 lety +2

      I still do it the same way today. The only one I've had that was actually moving to court martial ended when the member decided to take the offered separation in lieu of- smart move. He'd certainly have gone to jail.

    • @highsecurityagent8778
      @highsecurityagent8778 Před 2 lety

      @@randynielsen1413 Captains mass or Article 15's.

    • @markbeames7852
      @markbeames7852 Před 11 měsíci

      I call bullshit.

    • @richdouglas2311
      @richdouglas2311 Před 11 měsíci

      @@markbeames7852 Vulgar clown.

    • @richdouglas2311
      @richdouglas2311 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@highsecurityagent8778 "Captain's Mast."

  • @Daledavispratt
    @Daledavispratt Před 4 lety +30

    You raise your hand, you take your oath and you honor your word..period. I did it and millions of other people have too.

  • @t.b.5115
    @t.b.5115 Před 7 měsíci +1

    My old boss had a dishonorable discharge from the airforce, but he was a jet aircraft engineer so he had zero problems getting a job and was earning more money than anyone i knew.

  • @dragonmeddler2152
    @dragonmeddler2152 Před 4 lety +11

    Knew a guy who wanted out so bad he faked a LSD flashback at sea in the Tonkin Gulf in 1967. He was off our ship and gone, gone, gone within 24 hours. Never heard of him again.

  • @franciscodanconia45
    @franciscodanconia45 Před 5 lety +21

    The Big Chicken Dinner

  • @stuglenn1112
    @stuglenn1112 Před 3 lety +10

    While interesting for a historical perspective the America that this film attempts to portray is gone with the wind.

    • @lizardprotector
      @lizardprotector Před 2 lety +1

      I may not have been born until 1981, but I just find it hard to believe that that America EVER existed.

    • @maxkronader5225
      @maxkronader5225 Před 2 lety +2

      @@lizardprotector
      Of course, because you've been told your whole life it never did. An America close enough to the one portrayed in old movies to be immediately recognizable as such did in fact exist. In most places (outside of large cities) it didn't die off until the 1970s.

    • @davidfrehlini968
      @davidfrehlini968 Před 2 lety +1

      Stu Glenn. Paul's Neighborhood don't look like that now. And White People don't live in that Neighborhood anymore. God Bless.

  • @robertbrouillette6767
    @robertbrouillette6767 Před měsícem

    Coming from a family that had several members of the military, I knew the importance of an Honorable Discharge. It was in 1974 and going to school on the GI Bill was not all that great, but my service experience came in handy. I’ve seen guys with BCDs and General Discharges and most didn’t do very well. Actually the military treated me better for my experience than civilian life.

  • @calbob750
    @calbob750 Před 3 lety +10

    Back during the Vietnam Era getting a discharge from active duty varied by branch of service. One example I knew based on my time in the Air Force was the following. The airman went to the Hospital Squadron Commander and said “I can’t afford to live in the manner to which I’m accustomed.” He had a wife and child, had bought a house and new car and couldn’t keep up payments on $450 a month pay (1964).
    Another example was an airman who would sleepwalk off site from the barracks at night. This was a radar site in Louisiana so he didn’t have to sleepwalk far to be in bayou country. He got a discharge. My understanding is that the Army was much more restrictive.

    • @mctransportation9831
      @mctransportation9831 Před 2 lety

      I heard all you have to do is pee the bed and you get med discharged with full benies.

  • @luckyapple2655
    @luckyapple2655 Před 3 lety +7

    When USA was really a country of education. Nowadays? No comment.

    • @drizler
      @drizler Před 2 lety

      This was before the comrades were college professors and today when a good portion of public school teachers became like them and a majority either agreed with the crap or were cowered into going along with them🦨

  • @wfdix1
    @wfdix1 Před 4 lety +15

    Isn’t the girlfriend actress Ellen Burstyn?

    • @russboden5792
      @russboden5792 Před 3 lety +1

      yes, good thing she dumped him..or else she wouldn't have became a successful actress..and would have continued making these "D" movies.

  • @petersage5157
    @petersage5157 Před 2 lety +2

    Alternative title: "The perils of being too smart for military service."
    BTW, my long form DD214 shows honorable discharge. With the 1990s government shutdown delaying my GI Bill pay, it didn't help my post-service education benefits much.
    "You can write to Washington," but flush twice.

  • @dagda825
    @dagda825 Před 4 lety +5

    Why didn't you write Paul? I've been in the stockade.

  • @karl28560
    @karl28560 Před 4 lety +2

    I fudged up 9 years in the Marines after the Gulf War as a Sergeant (drunkeness/ conduct unbecoming- Office Hours)! None of my buddies would come by me with a 10 foot pole. Passed over for Staff Sergeant. Told to get out but try to reenlist a year later. Did so, got denied reenlistment, got multitude of benefits. ALL I WANTED WAS THAT HONORABLE DISCHARGE! GOT IT AND GOT THE FUDGE ON WITH LIFE!

    • @joshualusco2573
      @joshualusco2573 Před 4 lety +1

      I don't know much about military law but if the guy was trying to hide the fact why didn't he wear a uniform when he met his family just wondering

    • @karl28560
      @karl28560 Před 4 lety +1

      @@joshualusco2573 dishonorable discharge... They take your uniforms away from you while you process out. You go home in civilian attire.

    • @stevenhixburn6195
      @stevenhixburn6195 Před 4 lety +1

      @@karl28560 Civvies were a LOT more comfortable to wear anyways ... They also didn't make a target out of you in foreign countries on liberty and especially in the united states

    • @chrismc410
      @chrismc410 Před 3 lety +1

      @@karl28560 i thought you kept your uniforms as you bought them on enlistment. More accurately, the cost is deducted from your first check.

    • @edwardfleming5434
      @edwardfleming5434 Před 2 lety

      @@chrismc410 Yep.

  • @crimpcreep6887
    @crimpcreep6887 Před 5 lety +13

    The world has changed. Not everything in black and white, like this film.

    • @jimfinigan1681
      @jimfinigan1681 Před 4 lety +6

      @PompierCanadien In fact, the more of a shitbag a person is, the more he is respected. We went drastically wrong somewhere.

    • @Solocat1
      @Solocat1 Před 4 lety

      @PompierCanadien Preach!

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety +2

      @PompierCanadien Yeah!! Testify!!!! because Paul was such a bad Sociopath that deserves to be locked up like he raped a child or something .....right ???

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety +2

      @PompierCanadien and...OK ...Boomer!!!

  • @lizardprotector
    @lizardprotector Před 2 lety +2

    There was a draft. Men didn't get to choose whether to join the military, the government decided for them. And of course the government didn't care about individuals, only getting more military personnel into the war than the other side. What this film deliberately omits is that Paul was railroaded. He found out that life in the military wasn't what he'd been told it was, so he tried to get out instead of making a mistake that might cost lives or working himself to death for no more than maybe an inch of ground gained, if that. So what do the military and government do? Box him in with one way, and one way only, to get out, then padlock an albatross around his neck for the rest of his life for taking it. Not everyone serves best IN the military. If every person of legal age and suitable fitness joined up, who would run the factories? Who would repair the cars? Who would staff the hospitals? If there was a war and everyone went to fight, what would be left of the country they were fighting for?

  • @bloqk16
    @bloqk16 Před 2 lety +5

    Way down in this Comments section a person wrote that the part of Mary was played by a young _Ellen Burstyn;_ which explains why that actress playing the part of Mary did very well with expressing emotions.
    I thought there was something vaguely familiar looking with Mary, and when I saw the reference to Burstyn in the Comments section, it dawned on me.
    I don't recall seeing such acting quality in other film productions like this one of that era.

    • @rikijett310
      @rikijett310 Před 2 lety +1

      Private Snafu is pretty awesome!!! LOL

  • @bboucharde
    @bboucharde Před 4 lety +19

    Paul does not belong to any "protected class," so he is SOL.

    • @MomMom4Cubs
      @MomMom4Cubs Před 4 lety +7

      Not a thing in this time. It's only a thing now because these protected classes whined about their fair shake, so bleeding hearts deemed them protected.

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety +2

      for real! if only he had been a senators son or something ?

    • @clayz1
      @clayz1 Před 4 lety +2

      Back then he WAS in the protected class. WASP.

    • @evergriven7402
      @evergriven7402 Před 4 lety

      @@clayz1 you mean White Anglo Saxon Protestant??

    • @keyweststeve3509
      @keyweststeve3509 Před 4 lety

      @@MomMom4Cubs what's the matter B anass? I know you think the protected class should still be strictly limited to white men but do you still have to cry your little pussy tears about it all the time? You poor cowardly conservatives, your just so afraid of everybody. What a collection of gutless wonders you are.

  • @jacksonreilly3441
    @jacksonreilly3441 Před rokem +2

    Excellent video presentation. One thing surprised me however. Paul was unaware that by taking the BCD he had forfeited his entitlement to veterans' benefits. including the G.I. loans. I would have thought that his counsel at the court-martial would have advised him of the consequences of his actions before the trial had begun.

    • @oldsaerotech1167
      @oldsaerotech1167 Před rokem

      This movie short is the concept of life with a BCD.
      THOSE are the particulars; that point in time when you arrive home and how and who is affected by having a BCD and how your life won't be so great .
      The objective of Uncle Sam flying this film was to prevent more walkies from checking out and punking the machine.

  • @jerryhablitzel3333
    @jerryhablitzel3333 Před 4 lety +6

    Bad attitude did him worse than bcd. I don’t think anyone cares about the level of your discharge unless it’s a dishonorable. Most guys with that one did time.

    • @oldfart3137
      @oldfart3137 Před 4 lety +2

      He said he didn't write because he was doing time.

    • @edwatts9890
      @edwatts9890 Před 4 lety

      @@oldfart3137: Yeah -- for AWOL!

  • @jakeblanton6853
    @jakeblanton6853 Před 4 lety +4

    Just to be technical, a BCD is not a dishonorable discharge... The DD counts as a felony and the BCD is kind of like a misdemeanor, but it doesn't show up on the person's criminal record... In some cases, even a DD might not show up... I have never had to show my DD-214 to an employer, even though I've held quite a few jobs that were with aerospace companies working for the DoD or the Navy... And as far as I can remember, I don't think I've ever been asked or known anyone else that was asked what type of discharge they received. I seem to remember someone in the personnel department at one of the companies telling me that I cannot ask what type of discharge a person received during a job interview. Something about it being treated as private information like medical information or some sort. I served with a guy that had what was probably a really personality conflict with a CPO that was over our group. I'm not sure what started it, but the CPO was constantly harassing him and trying to find fault with him. At one point, the guy just wasn't there anymore and no one knew what happened to him. Eventually, I heard that he just couldn't take the constant harassment, left, and bummed around the country for awhile. He supposedly even tried to reenlist under another name. Eventually he came to the attention of the police when he was stopped for speeding or sleeping somewhere he wasn't supposed to be and they returned him to the Navy. From what I heard, the Navy gave him a court martial and he got a BCD out of it.
    I wasn't a lifer... I did my one hitch and got out... I *thought* about going back in, but instead ended up dropping back into college, and picking up a couple of degrees. I even considered going back in after I had gotten my degrees since that would mean that I could be an officer. But by that time, I had picked up a wife and being non-single and hitting port would not be fun... :)
    I've heard it argued that even a person who went in and got a DD is better than someone who didn't go in at all -- at least they *tried*... There might be some truth in that... I don't know...

    • @mike89128
      @mike89128 Před 4 lety +1

      There are many occupations which require background checks, especially in bonded positions, or Government contractors. Forget getting a security clearance.

    • @jakeblanton6853
      @jakeblanton6853 Před 4 lety +1

      @@mike89128 -- A actual official government security clearance is costly and takes some time. Many companies will only hire people with currently active security clearances so that they do not have to pay for it. Considering how long it takes from what I understand, a person might work at a company for quite awhile before the clearance came back either approved or denied.
      I would think that if a person had a type of discharge that they really wanted to hide, probably their best bet would be to just not mention that they had ever been in the military to any future employer. You don't want to lie since that is grounds for immediate dismissal by many companies, but just not volunteering the information is not the same as lying. Most people go into the military probably not that many years out of high school, so it would be easier to hide a few years gap in your job history back at the start. They say that when you are writing your resume, you should not list *every* job you've ever had and that only the last few would be what a potential employer would be interested in looking at. They also say that if your resume gets past 2 pages, it is unlikely to get read.

    • @jakeblanton6853
      @jakeblanton6853 Před 4 lety +2

      @Howie Felterbush -- I assume you are responding to me... Trophies? Nawh, don't have any, that's a civilian thing... But "ribbons" could be interpreted as the ribbons you are authorized to wear for various awards / medals and if you really look at it, there's quite a few that are kind of a "participation" thing instead of an individual thing. For example, the Sea Service Deployment Ribbon, Meritorious Unit Commendation, Navy "E" (Battle Efficiency) Ribbon, Navy Arctic (or Antarctic) Service Ribbon, National Defense Service Medal, and then there are the ones that signify that you served in various war zone (even if you were not directly involved in it) like the ones for Vietnam, Afghanistan, Korea, Kosovo, SW Asia (Iraq), etc.
      I was a technician in the Navy, so not much chance for heroics... That means that you get the "participation" ribbons... Not much of a compensation for the crappy hours and shitty pay though... I still think that everyone should serve at least one enlistment in the military after getting out of high school... It mellows you out and if you end up in college afterwards, you do better than if you had just went to college straight out of high school... I definitely did better in college after getting out of the Navy than I did before going in...

    • @NeoSovrnson
      @NeoSovrnson Před 4 lety +1

      @@jakeblanton6853 : Ever heard of "lying by omission"? Most employers will ask on their applications if you have ever served in the military. If you did serve and then tried to conceal
      that fact by not saying you did, then yes, you are guilty of lying by omission.

    • @jakeblanton6853
      @jakeblanton6853 Před 4 lety +1

      @@NeoSovrnson -- I'm retired and I do not ever remember an employer asking if I served in the military on their job application forms. But then again, as an engineer, I probably did not go through the same hiring process as a low level worker might go through. Recruiters often contact us directly because they are looking for a particular skill set and someone you previously worked with mentioned your name. My military service, being somewhat related to my subsequent degrees, is listed on my resume, but I could see how someone who was just a cook in the military might not bother to put it on their resume if they had gotten a college degree in engineering after getting out of the military.
      If the application asked you if you had ever been in the military and you answered no (when you in fact had), that would not be a lie of omission, that would just be a lie.
      I've seen my share of "creative" resumes over the years on people that were sent by recruiters. Sometimes, it's as simple as a person who says that they attended a university for a certain period of years, but they do not list a degree attained. Sometimes, it is due to just running out of money and they could not complete their degree. I knew a guy who put it that way on his resume. He had completely all the necessary core courses in his degree, but was missing some of the BS courses that did not pertain to his major (History, English, that sort of stuff). I would have not had a problem hiring him because I knew what he was capable of. The same cannot be said for most of the Indian "engineers" whose resume was submitted by the recruiters. They would tailor their resume to the job requirements even if the person had no experience working with anything like that. If you made the mistake of hiring them, then you would find out eventually that they didn't know anything and instead were getting help after hours from their Indian friends. It's part of their culture apparently. Every once in awhile, you would actually get an Indian who was competent and who did not need the help of his Indian friends, but this sort of person was definitely in the minority. At least that was my experience over my career...

  • @danstinson7687
    @danstinson7687 Před 3 lety +7

    Good lesson for a young man to know.

    • @israelzayas361
      @israelzayas361 Před 2 lety

      - Good lesson? This is but the harshest lesson anybody could have other than a firing squad.

    • @danstinson7687
      @danstinson7687 Před 2 lety +1

      @@israelzayas361 im referring to showing this film to the young men so they know what awaits if they screw the pooch.

  • @readytogo99
    @readytogo99 Před 6 měsíci +1

    3 Captains masts in 4 years. Eventually I decided the time left was not that long. The VA has looked after me well all these decades.

  • @toastnjam7384
    @toastnjam7384 Před 7 měsíci +1

    When I served in the Navy 1970 -73 a couple of guys in our division just wanted out so they purposely got caught with pot. The penalty then was 30 days in the brig followed by a dishonorable discharge.

    • @user-pi6ro7ye5q
      @user-pi6ro7ye5q Před 2 měsíci

      When I was in the Navy '79-83, pot use was almost treated like a joke. We had guys that got popped 3 or 4 times for weed, got the standard "award" (1/2 month's pay for 2 months, 45 days restriction, 45 days extra duty, reduction in rate by one grade), and went on with their tours.

  • @overcastfriday81
    @overcastfriday81 Před 4 lety +6

    Before all the "candidate background" check companies popped up in the 90s, I wonder if he'd get away with simply saying his discharge was honorable. I don't know about the military, but I do know the mail-order-college-degrees were working up until the mid 90s.

    • @chrismc410
      @chrismc410 Před 3 lety +2

      Not with Bad Conduct or Dishonorable. Both require Court-Martial to receive and like all court proceedings, all public record . Anyone can access it.
      The administrative discharges, unless you're applying for government jobs, first responder jobs, jobs that are held to higher standards than normal civilians, no one will know you were in unless you tell them.

    • @CanadaMatt
      @CanadaMatt Před 3 lety +2

      @@chrismc410 I think this may be fairly unique to Americans. For example, unless you were criminally charged while in the armed forces, A Canadian employer/school would never know about your military record (good OR bad) unless you decide to tell them. Military service records aren't part of basic criminal record searches or other public records. Of course, high-security jobs like Law-Enforcement would be a different story, but a DD wouldn't have any impact on applying for education or regular hiring processes. Veterans' benefits would be about the only roadblock.
      I still have my (honorable) discharge papers from the Navy 26 years later, but no one's ever asked to see them.

    • @chrismc410
      @chrismc410 Před 3 lety +1

      Over here, and even back in the day, Bad Conduct and Dishonorable Discharges require Court-Martial proceedings and is therefore public record, anyone can look at the transcript, scrubbed if any classified is involved, the disposition, etc

    • @oldsaerotech1167
      @oldsaerotech1167 Před rokem

      $300 and you graduated from Harvard.
      Suitable for framing bogus diploma.

  • @JMazzaTaz
    @JMazzaTaz Před 3 lety +5

    Only 4 months left? Unfreakinbelievable!! 😂

    • @DanEBoyd
      @DanEBoyd Před 2 lety

      I think it said that he served time in the military prison, so he probably had quite a bit more than four months to go when he committed his offenses.

  • @davidfrye5362
    @davidfrye5362 Před 2 lety +2

    I know Paul,s Neighborhood does not look this nice now today.

    • @user-wk2zb4ss1k
      @user-wk2zb4ss1k Před rokem

      @davidfrye5362. Hello from Palermo. Good Evening Dave. Well, you are exactly correct. As a matter of fact there is no more White People living in that once beautiful, lovely well - kept Neighborhood. A mixed race Family lives in Paul's old House, and a Family of illegal refugees from Mexico lives in his X Girlfriends old House. Hay you know. The U.S.A. God Bless Dave. Say hello to Bagheria.

  • @sargentsakto9236
    @sargentsakto9236 Před 2 lety +3

    The bad conduct discharge also known in the USMC as the Big Chicken Dinner. The most common discharge I saw other than an Honorable was a less than honorable which allowed you to petition to upgrade that later. But why dick around don’t go for anything but an Honorable Discharge it’s not that hard.

  • @objvif
    @objvif Před 2 lety +3

    It could be much worse for Paul. He could have been a lawyer.

  • @josephstevens9888
    @josephstevens9888 Před 2 lety +3

    Looking back at those guys who got into trouble during my active-duty time I never felt sorry for any of them. They had themselves to blame. In fact, one time I was serving as prisoner escort for a guy in my squadron who was sentenced to 10 years of hard labor for theft of government property - smoke grenades and 7.62 rounds. He received a dishonorable discharge was going to be sent to Fort Lewis. During my escort time he admitted to me he was a dumbass and no one to blame but himself. I actually admired him for stating that. Most guys who got Article 15's or worse would bitch and claim they were being screwed over. Those guys were just children failing to hold themselves accountable for their own actions. They got what they deserved.

  • @SuperBigblue19
    @SuperBigblue19 Před 3 lety +11

    In the 80's when I was in you only got BCD's (piss paper) for doing a crime. Just not going with the program would only get you a OTH (other than honorable ) And you know with a BCD your not getting benefits . Hell I knew that in bootcamp. I almost got a admin discharge after I had just made E-5 for missing ships movement in Darwin AU but the Capt squashed the A-hole XO recommendation because everyone below him went to bat fore me. But I didn't reenlist because making chief with a NJP in your file as a Navy Diver was impossible . The rating was to small.

    • @TheGearhead222
      @TheGearhead222 Před 3 lety

      Dayum! Missing ships movement got you, at best, an OTH discharge most of the time when I was in in the 1990's! Things sure have changed!-John in Texas

    • @rontreen3278
      @rontreen3278 Před 3 lety

      @@TheGearhead222 well I miss ship's movement for about 10 days back in the late 70s and I ended up with an honorable discharge.

    • @jasonjoyce7504
      @jasonjoyce7504 Před 2 lety

      I mean, he does tell Mary he couldn't write because he had to do some time so he obviously received confinement along with the BCD.

    • @SuperBigblue19
      @SuperBigblue19 Před 2 lety

      @@TheGearhead222 It was tech MSM but my cab broke down 8mi from the berth. When I got there I was able to catch a police boat out to the boat & climb up a net. Most squids wouldn't have had a chance of running 8mi to the boat. But I had to be in shape to stay dive qualified.

  • @marklowery8193
    @marklowery8193 Před 3 lety +27

    2:00 the telegram guy isn’t a prick, he is a whole entire cactus

    • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
      @PlasmaCoolantLeak Před 3 lety +11

      He got a BCD, too, and is still bitter about it.

    • @88mike42
      @88mike42 Před 3 lety +6

      @@PlasmaCoolantLeak He does look a bit old to be a telegram boy.

    • @DanEBoyd
      @DanEBoyd Před 2 lety +1

      Perhaps he's supposed to represent an older Paul. And his nearly obsolete job of delivering telegrams via bicycle represents the dearth of opportunities now available to Paul.
      All Paul ever has to do is not ever rely on government for anything for the rest of his life, and while plenty see that as a crisis, it is really more of an opportunity, if he rises to the challenge and meets it well.

  • @jenniferrucker2266
    @jenniferrucker2266 Před 4 lety +4

    I’m reminded of a butterfly being cut out its cocoon. It’s wings don’t develop and it it will never be able to fly....not ever.