"I Was In The Marine Corps, Miss." - The Pacific (2010)

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  • čas přidán 19. 05. 2024
  • #shorts #thepacific #movieinsight
    "I Was In The Marine Corps, Miss." - The Pacific (2010) #shorts #thepacific #movie #scene #ww2 #war
    The Pacific is a 2010 American war drama miniseries produced by HBO, Playtone, and DreamWorks that premiered in the United States on March 14, 2010.
    The series is a companion piece to the 2001 miniseries Band of Brothers and focuses on the United States Marine Corps's actions in the Pacific Theater of Operations within the wider Pacific War. Whereas Band of Brothers followed the men of Easy Company of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment through the European Theater, The Pacific centers on the experiences of three Marines (Robert Leckie, Eugene Sledge, and John Basilone) who were in different regiments (1st, 5th, and 7th, respectively) of the 1st Marine Division.
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 2K

  • @movieinsightreal
    @movieinsightreal  Před měsícem +2927

    Back in Mobile, Sledge reunites with his brother who got back from the ETO, as well as with his mother and father, who constantly worry about his nightmares that he keeps having, undoubtedly about his experiences in the Pacific. Sledge joins in the Auburn University (then known as the Alabama Polytechnic Institute), and Sledge continues to experience trauma even into a grand party and halfway into hunting with his father. Sledge is last seen in the series with a flower in his hand a the woods outside of his house then walking back before his final fate is revealed along with the other characters in the series.
    Later life, Sledge attended the university and received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1949. Sledge gave up his hunting hobby, and a key turning point in his life and career followed when his father advised him that he could substitute bird watching as a hobby. Sledge started to assist the conservation department in its banding study efforts, the origin of his well known passion for the science of ornithology. He found his salvation in science, it kept the flashbacks of Peleliu and Okinawa at bay. Close, constant study of nature prevented him from going mad. However, the war stayed with him, and finally at the urging of his wife, he began to write his memoir "With the Old Breed At Peleliu and Okinawa", at last allowing him to put his horrors behind him. He returned to Auburn in 1953 where he worked as a research assistant until 1955. That same year he graduated from API with a Master of Science degree in botany.
    From 1956 to 1960 Sledge attended the University of Florida and worked as a research assistant. He published numerous papers on Helminthology and in 1956 joined the Helminthological Society of Washington. He received his doctorate in biology from the University of Florida in 1960. He was employed by the Division of Plant Industries for the Florida State Department of Agriculture from 1959 to 1962. In the summer of 1962, Sledge was appointed Assistant Professor of Biology at Alabama College (now the University of Montevallo). In 1970 he became a professor, a position he held until his retirement in 1990. He taught zoology, ornithology, comparative vertebrate anatomy and other courses during his long tenure there. Sledge was popular with his students, organizing field trips and collections around town.
    Eugene Sledge died after a long battle with stomach cancer in 2001, the same year that The Pacific's predecessor, Band of Brothers was released. (Fandom: The Pacific Wiki)
    YOU CAN WATCH THIS TV MINI SERIES "THE PACIFIC" (2010), THROUGH OUR WEBSITE IN OUR BIO

    • @stormangelus6638
      @stormangelus6638 Před měsícem +104

      Thank you! You'd give Paragraph Guy a run for his money!

    • @-0rbital-
      @-0rbital- Před měsícem +27

      RIP

    • @mrdavies09
      @mrdavies09 Před měsícem +69

      So glad that he was able to move on after the war and lead such a successful career.

    • @thegimpygamer
      @thegimpygamer Před měsícem +40

      Semper Fi Sledge.

    • @tbone1574
      @tbone1574 Před měsícem +25

      Read his book twice...
      Incredible he made it home...

  • @garystefanski7227
    @garystefanski7227 Před měsícem +9704

    "Did you do any accounting?"
    "I accounted for a lot of dead JIA."

  • @jarpentnextgen
    @jarpentnextgen Před měsícem +7010

    "They taught me how my ptsd is not service related"

    • @redhed9776
      @redhed9776 Před 26 dny

      that's BS because they handed out 100% disabilities like candy during my 30 yrs at the VAMC.

    • @ericfox7693
      @ericfox7693 Před 25 dny +37

      I’m dead💀💀💀

    • @DanBaker108
      @DanBaker108 Před 25 dny +46

      A little bit of math- how to calculate the drop of an object over a distance in relation to velocity, wind and humidity.

    • @barrett206
      @barrett206 Před 25 dny +5

      actually I’ve seen it from veterans a lot of we2 vets didn’t get ptsd like people who served in man did

    • @ganemrahman3424
      @ganemrahman3424 Před 25 dny +40

      @@barrett206that’s because only 19% of WW2 Veterans served in combat as opposed to 40 to 60% of Vietnam Veterans

  • @Greengeist05
    @Greengeist05 Před 26 dny +1190

    After the war, Eugene Sledge became a biology professor at The University of Montevallo. He said the pursuit of science helped him deal with his ptsd.

    • @Alex-uu5nj
      @Alex-uu5nj Před 22 dny +18

      That’s so cool! I watched the series back in 2019 and I currently attend that university! I never knew that!

    • @vladimirofsvalbard9477
      @vladimirofsvalbard9477 Před 22 dny +11

      I find that PTSD is largely a disorder of understanding where you stand in the world that you were brought up in, compared to your deeds that is.
      In an evangelical world, everything is largely taught in black and white; good and evil.
      When you're constrained to that type of thinking; no wonder you can't cope with such things.
      I think finally understanding that you got conned into doing it breaks most people if they ever get that far.

    • @mike_js2936
      @mike_js2936 Před 21 dnem +10

      He wrote some damn fine books that are easy reads and hard to put down.

    • @chris2790
      @chris2790 Před 18 dny +4

      ​@@vladimirofsvalbard9477The world is black and white, and fallen humanity isn't able or equipped to deal with it on their own.
      In a fallen, rebellious, alienated state, humanity loves to muddy the water and have so much be grey.
      But Christ came to reconcile us to Him, give grace, rest and peace. To help us see our need, to see what God has done to provide for us,, to see things as they are. To empower us to live lives pleasing to Him, to know Him and to spend eternity with Him.

    • @haveaday1812
      @haveaday1812 Před 17 dny +2

      @@vladimirofsvalbard9477That’s not PTSD. You’re describing moral injury. PTSD is the physical manifestation of combat trauma.

  • @coreyharvey6442
    @coreyharvey6442 Před měsícem +11867

    Journalism? Why, yes. I helped write history.

    • @thewildman8544
      @thewildman8544 Před měsícem +126

      Excellent comment!

    • @RusticRonnie
      @RusticRonnie Před měsícem +66

      @@leventhumps3861not just the liberals the conservatives are also trying to rewriting our history.

    • @benwilliams9016
      @benwilliams9016 Před měsícem +89

      @@leventhumps3861history is constantly being rewritten as we learn more and uncover more documents and written experiences, this is not a liberal issue

    • @zacrodriguez3057
      @zacrodriguez3057 Před měsícem +8

      @@leventhumps3861over my dead body this time

    • @patrickancona1193
      @patrickancona1193 Před měsícem +9

      @@RusticRonniesite what exactly we’re trying to “rewrite” kid

  • @fun2916
    @fun2916 Před 27 dny +973

    I run a small business and only employ veterans. My last hire was a marine infantryman who served in heavy combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. I teach them skills and train them to do the job. They deserve a job with paid training. We owe them that

    • @hatinmyselfiscool2879
      @hatinmyselfiscool2879 Před 27 dny +23

      I think you owe the iraqis that after killing a million of them with your war.

    • @tedcuhchinkski7250
      @tedcuhchinkski7250 Před 27 dny +92

      ​@@hatinmyselfiscool2879Not his war, the American people didn't vote for it.

    • @cameronkedas3375
      @cameronkedas3375 Před 27 dny +36

      @hatinmyselfiscool2879
      There were not even close to 1 million Iraqis killed in the Iraq War. In war, everyone gets bit. It’s unavoidable.

    • @williamle8300
      @williamle8300 Před 27 dny

      If he doesn't drink or do heroin then you have one of the best company employees money can buy.

    • @fun2916
      @fun2916 Před 27 dny +105

      @@hatinmyselfiscool2879 I don’t owe the Iraqis shit. I didn’t vote for that war. If you want reparations go ask George Bush. I’m doing my part to help the men and women who were forced to fight in that war.

  • @rossgudwer3538
    @rossgudwer3538 Před měsícem +6875

    That's heartbreaking. Combat veterans do all the worst jobs in the military and aren't left with any experience that can help them once they are out of the military. What the hell are you supposed to do with the knowledge of how to kill people in the real world?

    • @mixinthebisquic1238
      @mixinthebisquic1238 Před měsícem +311

      Use it.

    • @macfoster1875
      @macfoster1875 Před měsícem +492

      Become a hitman or become a mercenary, maybe Blackwater

    • @devilmaycry1786
      @devilmaycry1786 Před měsícem +172

      Join Wagner PMC

    • @a_malicious_tea2658
      @a_malicious_tea2658 Před měsícem +233

      ​@@macfoster1875 and say if you didn't want to keep killing you would be completely out of luck

    • @asdf42042
      @asdf42042 Před měsícem

      become an instructor in the army/USMC. Just teaching, no killing.@@a_malicious_tea2658

  • @JustAnotherHo
    @JustAnotherHo Před měsícem +2778

    Mortar Teams = trigonometry, explosives training = chemistry, weapons training = mechanical skills.
    Market yourself well.

    • @24105252
      @24105252 Před měsícem +193

      I highly doubt that handling a mortar rounds equates in any way to chemistry, or that changing angles on a mortar equals mechanical skills.
      Marketing yourself is all well, except when you stretch the truth so much that you start lying

    • @icecold9511
      @icecold9511 Před měsícem +149

      Maybe, maybe the math. And that stuff is worked out in advance so a mortor man doesn't need to do all the math.
      Handling weapons explosive isn't the same as engineering explosives.
      What chemistry? He didn't make the explosives.
      Engineering? What Engineering exactly?
      And she is just seeing if any of his skills might be useful for continuing education. He can always start fresh, just like anyone just going to college.

    • @Native30
      @Native30 Před měsícem +98

      Also you learn surveying. You ever see those guys with a tripod on the streets. You’re taught that as a 0341.

    • @stormangelus6638
      @stormangelus6638 Před měsícem +77

      ​@24105252 LOL Here's something to think on: mortars being fired requires chemistry knowledge (practical chemistry applications), how to angle (geometry/triginometry), how to repair the machines when they went down or had a jam (engineering) & tactical advance/retreat during combat (strategic geology, knowing when to hide in the cave or pass it up because it's full of lime or granite). There's a skill in knowing how to market oneself.

    • @daviddedominici1705
      @daviddedominici1705 Před měsícem +37

      And instead of "explosives," say "accelerants." Sounds more technical

  • @vax3138
    @vax3138 Před 27 dny +964

    Bro, survived Jurassic Park and then was sent to the Pacific

    • @dankengine5304
      @dankengine5304 Před 27 dny +99

      WAIT THAT'S TIM FROM JURASSIC PARK???

    • @patton303
      @patton303 Před 27 dny +60

      And then played bass for Queen. What a life.

    • @JoeXTheXJuggalo1
      @JoeXTheXJuggalo1 Před 27 dny +20

      Don't forget he also fights off can alien from another universe while wearing and AI exoskeleton suit from another universe while trying to find a cure for his aids.

    • @JoeXTheXJuggalo1
      @JoeXTheXJuggalo1 Před 27 dny +34

      ​@@dankengine5304yup that's Timothy "Tim" Murphy (Joseph Mazzello) from Jurassic Park.

    • @Kcets
      @Kcets Před 27 dny +47

      Holy. Fuck. It's him. I've watched the Pacific DOZENS of times and never put it together. Jesus.

  • @diddlethepoodle4812
    @diddlethepoodle4812 Před měsícem +2571

    I loved him in this. Such a great actor. Ever since he was young. Usually stardom is the downfall for young actors but he excelled well.

    • @calkelpdiver
      @calkelpdiver Před měsícem +67

      Joseph Mazzello was the grandson in Jurassic Park, and John Deacon in Bohemian Rhapsody (and Rami Malik played Freddie Mercury). A good actor who has had some great parts.

    • @diddlethepoodle4812
      @diddlethepoodle4812 Před měsícem +11

      @@calkelpdiver and Rourke in river wild and a lot of other good movies.

    • @trje246
      @trje246 Před měsícem +10

      totally, After reading "with the old breed" i only wish _The Pacific_ had just focused on Sledge's story. Still good (and important) series, don't get me wrong.

    • @serpentines6356
      @serpentines6356 Před měsícem +3

      ​@@trje246 This does look like a good series.
      Very handsome actor.

    • @irvinepoker3187
      @irvinepoker3187 Před 27 dny +3

      I remember him from Radio Flyer. years ago. he had a brief part in social network also (zuckerbergs original team)

  • @user-ee2ze9zv1m
    @user-ee2ze9zv1m Před 27 dny +458

    "Why yes ma'am as a matter of fact i was a research physicist with an emphasis on studying the effects of ballistic energy transfer of dense high velocity particles through soft organic mediums..."

    • @R0gueM
      @R0gueM Před 24 dny +16

      Oooo that’s good. That’s real good. Need to write that down.

    • @Stand1ngBear
      @Stand1ngBear Před 24 dny +20

      Do you write resumes for a living? 😂

    • @deiongoldsmith515
      @deiongoldsmith515 Před 24 dny +6

      Im gonna use this lmao

    • @Chrotisofus
      @Chrotisofus Před 24 dny +5

      Welp gonna steal this.

    • @SubvertTheState
      @SubvertTheState Před 24 dny +8

      Particle Physics, Fluid Dynamics, practical stuff like Shockwave properties and effects on Human Anatomy.

  • @EzekielDeLaCroix
    @EzekielDeLaCroix Před měsícem +3313

    'Isn't there anything the Marine Corps taught you that you could continue in 'Bama Poly?'
    'They taught me how to be homeless as fuuuuuu-'

    • @jodav6866
      @jodav6866 Před měsícem +88

      And be damned good at it

    • @candle_eatist
      @candle_eatist Před měsícem +89

      making the best hobos since 1775

    • @ender5342
      @ender5342 Před měsícem +56

      As an Iraq war veteran, that hit home

    • @enriquecabrera2137
      @enriquecabrera2137 Před měsícem +78

      To be fair, sleeping outside, not being bothered by anything. Waking up in a second. Ready for a knife fight at any time. Eating shitty food with your hands. The military is excellent at teaching hobo skills.

    • @nocturnalrecluse1216
      @nocturnalrecluse1216 Před měsícem +21

      "They taught me how to eat crayons. I got pretty good at it." 🖍 😋

  • @cropcircler
    @cropcircler Před měsícem +1104

    The little touches in this scene are brilliant. He’s wearing a suit while all the other applicants are still in uniform. The way she says USMC, innocently negating in an instant the four years of suffering he experienced.

    • @fili0938
      @fili0938 Před 29 dny +144

      She's not negating anything. She's supposed to help him get a job not therapy.

    • @oddity7263
      @oddity7263 Před 29 dny +69

      @@fili0938 good argument. nonetheless I would've gone the route of being sensitive and respectful if I were her, despite accounting for factors like the lack of internet knowledge back in the day, her southern accent indicating a rural background, and the fact that she's female and will not have to worry about dealing with these sorts of issues. I heard as well that in the memoir, the girl was actually apologetic, and that's ok.

    • @DocM.
      @DocM. Před 28 dny +47

      Agreed Cropcircler! ❤ I think she was literally ignorant/oblivious to any and every horror soldiers experienced. This was probably the first time anyone's made her think realistically

    • @DerMoerpler
      @DerMoerpler Před 28 dny +69

      ​@@DocM.Back then the image of war back home was mostly influenced by propaganda. You'd see maybe five minutes of news reels in the cinema before a movie, and thats the only moving pictures you got. If you watch that old footage, it doesn't seem to reflect the reality of war that well - and it wasn't supposed to, because that would've prevented people from signing up. Nobody really knew about stuff like PTSD and many vets probably weren't eager to talk about their experiences. It was pretty difficult to _not_ be oblivious to the horror back then, since there was barely any way to learn about it besides having a vet tell you.

    • @DocM.
      @DocM. Před 27 dny +5

      @@DerMoerpler Well said!

  • @theantitroll
    @theantitroll Před měsícem +1687

    That line at the end though 🥶

    • @ICU2B4UDO
      @ICU2B4UDO Před měsícem +30

      Ikr?? I would've loved to have seen her eyes after he said it though...

    • @Briselance
      @Briselance Před měsícem +5

      ​@@ICU2B4UDO
      Was he trying to scare her shitless or what??😅

    • @ShadowMoon878
      @ShadowMoon878 Před měsícem +41

      ​@@Briselance Most civilians only see the war through newsreels and movies, where the heroes are all intelligent and talented and learned all kinds of skills and languages during their bootcamp. They did not realise that it wasn't glamourous at all, despite what John Wayne would have you believe.

    • @temphy
      @temphy Před měsícem +2

      @@ShadowMoon878 There were many who thought the soldier could do it all when most didn't realize the average soldier back then was cannon fodder...

    • @AstroJenkins
      @AstroJenkins Před měsícem +8

      @@Briselance​​⁠Nah, he’s merely making it clear that the Marines taught him nothing but how to kill. So, it’s just pointing out how stupid her question is because he can’t possibly do anything he did over there back home. Also gives way to the insane expectations of these dudes after they’d been through hell back several times over. No real scope of the years of readjustment that would have to take place; at least his dad in the show knew when the mom was bugging him about sitting around for months.
      He’s just lost in this scene.

  • @Mj93266
    @Mj93266 Před 27 dny +384

    Thank God there is no annoying music in the background of the clip

  • @BirdDogey1
    @BirdDogey1 Před měsícem +639

    Had an interview where I was asked that other than being a combat arms officer, did I ever have a real job.

    • @HeroInHelp
      @HeroInHelp Před měsícem +94

      "Thank you for your time, this opportunity is not for me. Don't call me, your questions convinced me as a potential employer you would make this an equitable investment in both our time."

    • @timkincade9763
      @timkincade9763 Před měsícem

      Jodi did the interview, civilians can't and will never understand. When I get asked questions about Afghanistan or Somalia my reply is most the time is f ck off why do you want to know. I'm more bitter with civilian pukes than Alquda, Taliban or Elshabaz.

    • @edgaraquino2324
      @edgaraquino2324 Před měsícem +81

      Their ignorance is staggering...

    • @Abensberg
      @Abensberg Před 29 dny +64

      now here in germany, when you serve your time in the last 2-3 years of it you are allowed to learn a job and the army will pay for it.
      so things like that cant happen.

    • @raymondacbot4007
      @raymondacbot4007 Před 29 dny

      You musta been a shit officer to not been able to get a management role

  • @jwilliams3170
    @jwilliams3170 Před 29 dny +358

    I think what gets me is that they got a really young looking actor for Sledge. He has a boyish quality that makes the haunting experiences all the more worse. It’s that classic loss of innocence story. Except it was a real young man’s life.

    • @user-qt4ee4nb1h
      @user-qt4ee4nb1h Před 26 dny +3

      He was young. Twenty five years later we were younger.

    • @BettyBo-zg1ok
      @BettyBo-zg1ok Před 24 dny +5

      It definitely makes it hit even harder, with how softly he looked and was spoken. You don't even notice his chapped lips until he leans in. Especially when she starts asking for his experience and his eyes start to well up because he realizes how absolutely boned he is.

    • @ffnovice7
      @ffnovice7 Před 23 dny

      Child actor

    • @SharksSJ408
      @SharksSJ408 Před 23 dny

      He’s the kid from Jurassic Park in case you didn’t know

    • @RogerCharlamange
      @RogerCharlamange Před 23 dny +1

      Look up a picture of Eugene Sledge as a young man, because he looked pretty boyish, he was only 19 when he enlisted

  • @marcolian
    @marcolian Před 27 dny +319

    "Did you do any accounting?" "Just accounting the bodies we stacked."

    • @Mysterious-Outdoors
      @Mysterious-Outdoors Před 27 dny

      Don't put quotes for some shit you made up. They are only used when your. S~

    • @Mysterious-Outdoors
      @Mysterious-Outdoors Před 27 dny

      Don't put quotes for some shit you made up. They are only used when your. S~

    • @mar10ssj1
      @mar10ssj1 Před 25 dny +7

      LIES! Most Marines lost count.

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před 25 dny +3

      _Did impact studies."_
      _"Environmental?"_
      _"Small arms."_

    • @ErikPT
      @ErikPT Před 24 dny

      yes they did they taught the marine personal finance by not procuring a 2023 camaro on 20% APR...

  • @edfederoff2679
    @edfederoff2679 Před 28 dny +73

    "With The Old Breed At Peleliu" is one of the best books I have ever read. R.I.P., Sledge Hammer, and thank you.

    • @DRGEngineer
      @DRGEngineer Před 4 dny

      "guys like me, polonsky and miller were considered 'the old breed'. 'old', we werent even out of our twenties."

  • @LJWalter78
    @LJWalter78 Před měsícem +494

    Yes, Sledgehammer did get pretty damn good at it.
    Rest in Peace Mac.
    Semper Fi!

    • @michaelkidd-xh8qu
      @michaelkidd-xh8qu Před měsícem +11

      Sledge did what he did best, "saving his buddies lives!" 🇺🇸

  • @cba2make1up
    @cba2make1up Před měsícem +154

    The contrast between the Eugene at the start and this one towards the end... Brutal.

    • @Mububban23
      @Mububban23 Před měsícem +8

      an excellent portrayal of the horrors of war

    • @r2gelfand
      @r2gelfand Před měsícem +7

      His WW1 Vet dad tried to warn him.​@@Mububban23

    • @jacobdewey2053
      @jacobdewey2053 Před 26 dny +2

      @@r2gelfand Been a while since i watched so I don't remember all the details but I thought his dad only treated guys who came back from WW1, I didn't think he actually served.

    • @infiniteinspiration1628
      @infiniteinspiration1628 Před 26 dny

      Yes😮😮😮😮

    • @labattman
      @labattman Před 26 dny

      It was exactly what his father feared would happen.

  • @williamwestmoreland4069
    @williamwestmoreland4069 Před měsícem +474

    If he was in a mortar squad wouldn't he have to have learned ranging / elevation / etcetera? That's at least basic trigonometry and kinematics

    • @FurikoMaru
      @FurikoMaru Před měsícem +156

      Yeah, but the point is she's a civilian and they didn't bother to train her in this intake process properly. That was him dropping a hint without bragging and she didn't ask any followup questions.

    • @joelfrancisco3798
      @joelfrancisco3798 Před měsícem +63

      When my Sgt got out he went into land survey (he was mortars as well)

    • @Materialist39
      @Materialist39 Před měsícem +49

      @@joelfrancisco3798that is a legitimately perfect fit

    • @randyneilson7465
      @randyneilson7465 Před měsícem +21

      Good background for land surveying

    • @Saunajallu
      @Saunajallu Před měsícem +67

      I was trained to be a mortar squad leader in 2014. Everyone in a mortar squad, including the leader, is mostly doing manual labor. The squad leader gets a fire command that includes the direction, elevation and how much charge packets to add to the mortar. That fire command is generated by "calculator" NCOs who translate company level fire commands into fire commands for each individual mortar. But it's not like they are solving ballistic equations, they have a map and a compass-like paper thing that shows them what elevation and how many packets to use to go a certain distance. The combinations of packet and elevation have been determined on a test range. Of course nowadays the "calculator" NCOs are actually just radio operators because all of this happens on a single computer at company HQ. But they probably still train how to do it the old fashion way just in case.

  • @colinsanders9397
    @colinsanders9397 Před měsícem +65

    Same shit different day. I got out and discovered that all those "we hire veterans" signs are lies. All of that "valuable leadership experience" doesn't mean a damn thing. Even the directly applicable technical skills I learned wouldnt translate because "we're not sure it really works the same outside a military context." So, I got to be homeless. Luckily, Uncle Sam did prepare me for that with all those nights in the field.

    • @Tony.795
      @Tony.795 Před 27 dny +4

      Sledge did get into Alabama Polytechic and did a Masters in botany though. He still came from an educated background after all.

    • @neopatrician
      @neopatrician Před 27 dny +7

      My grandfather served as a Sergeant in a machine gun company in France. After the war he didn't have a lot of skills or education. Luckily the men in his unit called in some favors and got him a good job. Sometimes your friends are all you really have.

    • @MinnesotaGuy822
      @MinnesotaGuy822 Před 25 dny +3

      @colinsanders9397 I'm sorry to hear how people have treated you. I got to be homeless because of lead & mold poisoning and something like chronic Lyme Disease made me housebound-level ill for too long to work. People can be so deceptive, selfish & exploitive: if you can't immediately be beneficial for them, they dump you. There are people who deserve the grateful help of a nation, and those who we send to fight on our behalf deserve to be at the top of that list. I wish I had an opportunity for you, but all I can do right now is to hope you find people who will love you and give you an opportunity to learn a new occupation.

    • @TruthIsLikePoetry
      @TruthIsLikePoetry Před 25 dny +1

      @@MinnesotaGuy822unfortunately our most of our wars were fought for greed, control and power rather than defense of its citizens and sovereignty.

    • @panzerlieb
      @panzerlieb Před 25 dny +1

      @@TruthIsLikePoetryand that fact changes what for the average veteran?

  • @kyle47922
    @kyle47922 Před měsícem +91

    I love his answer. The part where he and his father goes hunting and he breaks down makes me cry.

    • @dblackout1107
      @dblackout1107 Před měsícem +8

      Me too. He’s tired of it all. He doesn’t want to end another living thing’s life. Such an awesome scene at showing his innocence returning, and someone going through PTSD. After watching a whole miniseries seeing what he went through to then see that scene, it makes you really empathize with Eugene

    • @johnyang7909
      @johnyang7909 Před měsícem +7

      That part always gets me too no matter how many times I watch that scene.

    • @planetdisco4821
      @planetdisco4821 Před 18 dny +1

      Yeah that and his mum listening at his bedroom door while he’s screaming in his sleep get me every time…

    • @JamiruDakarusu
      @JamiruDakarusu Před 14 dny +1

      Fr man, I'm trying my best not to cry

    • @johnyang7909
      @johnyang7909 Před 14 dny +1

      I understand she’s just trying to do her job, but wtf did she think Marines did in WWII? Fight in office buildings in Fortune 500 companies?

  • @sblack48
    @sblack48 Před měsícem +34

    Amazing how he portrayed showing up cheerful and hopeful and gradually under her questioning got more and more frustrated until he was on the verge of exploding. They cut the clip a bit too short because they don't show him storming away. Great actor.

  • @peteboll5034
    @peteboll5034 Před měsícem +38

    "Miss, allow me to give you a crash-course in reality. Listen closely..."

  • @DontLetTheOldManIn
    @DontLetTheOldManIn Před 27 dny +145

    Yes, ma'am. I did bring back something that I can carry with me through Alabama Polytechnic; I can overcome, adapt and persevere through any obstacle set before me.

  • @paramnesia2521
    @paramnesia2521 Před 27 dny +56

    local Mafia is looking for someone with your skillset

  • @superbananas7792
    @superbananas7792 Před 29 dny +26

    Fun fact, from my own experience.
    Combat veterans work really well in Healthcare.
    Iv met lots of veterans that have got into Nursing and paramedicine, and they ate honestly some of the best, hardworking, and organised lot you can get.
    One of my close colleagues served in Bosnia, Iraq and two tours in Afghanistan, he was a Nursing Assistant and then went on to study to become a paramedic.
    He was a true grafter, incredibly organised and caring, really down to her kinda guy.

    • @nicholasbrown668
      @nicholasbrown668 Před 24 dny +1

      can confirm, when I got into a wreck I had a retire Corpsman as my nurse, best nurse I've ever heard, got my Iv right every time always made sure everything I needed was taken care of

  • @matthewglaser1812
    @matthewglaser1812 Před 27 dny +57

    I thought mortar guys used a non-trivial bit of math and charts to put weapons on target?

    • @Summersong2262
      @Summersong2262 Před 27 dny +17

      Depends on how you define it. Some basic trigonometry and geometry, and a bit of chart consultation. 8th/9th grade stuff in the end. Elementary algebra. It's combat arms USMC, remember. Absolute minimum requirements for that sort of thing.

    • @micahthezilla9432
      @micahthezilla9432 Před 27 dny +1

      Combat engineers use a bit of math to measure how much explosive is needed for breaches/demolition.

    • @johnwicksfoknpencil
      @johnwicksfoknpencil Před 27 dny

      Yes, so basically he used the math he learned more actively and tangibly than 95% of the rest of the population who learn it ever will

    • @Cole_McGill
      @Cole_McGill Před 27 dny +5

      As far as I know, that experience doesn't translate into college credits(which was the purpose of her questions, whether the guy realized it or not).

    • @johnwicksfoknpencil
      @johnwicksfoknpencil Před 27 dny

      @@Cole_McGill They did not issue “college credits”, she is purely asking about real life experience.

  • @davejohns6694
    @davejohns6694 Před měsícem +12

    This made me emotional, after 35 years in the military, dealing with civilians and all the bureaucracy does my head in.

    • @derek96720
      @derek96720 Před 28 dny

      35 years in the military and it's the civilians that do your head in? Really?

    • @davidwholly5209
      @davidwholly5209 Před 23 dny

      I only did a little over four years, but even then, civilians drive me nuts sometimes. Grew up on military bases even before I enlisted myself. Two different worlds.

    • @davejohns6694
      @davejohns6694 Před 20 dny

      @@davidwholly5209 Absolutely.

  • @Fruzhin5483
    @Fruzhin5483 Před měsícem +30

    Mortar crews tend to do things that are itty bitty more complicated than regular grunts, at the very least the basic of balistics.

    • @hustensaftvernichter3785
      @hustensaftvernichter3785 Před 28 dny +1

      Today, they really don't... At least not as a standard procedure. Back then it was a *lot* of trial and error, because there were no computers but only charts that offer "ideal" data that does not consider many factors, most-importantly the ever-changing terrain.
      If fires were not adjusted (like, for example, in any attack scenario) the skill they likely needed most was "improvisation".

  • @fus149hammer5
    @fus149hammer5 Před měsícem +148

    I've just started watching The Pacific for the third time. Everyone goes on that it's not as good as Band Of Brothers but it is every bit as good. It goes deeper into the minds of the men than its predecessor and is much more nuanced. The utter misery of life in the Pacific theatre and the fanaticism of the enemy so graphically shown is something Easy Company never had to face. The more I watch the more I like.

    • @dblackout1107
      @dblackout1107 Před měsícem +10

      Agreed. It’s not been a question since the first episode came out for The Pacific when I was in middle school. It has always had an impact on me equal to BoB. If not an even stronger one in many ways. Combat is starkly different when fighting an enemy who’s culture drives them to truly be suicidal in an effort to maybe kill you. War trauma isn’t a competition, but just from an honest look at what Pacific troops endured, I know without a doubt that theater would have made an animal out of me. To me, it is the most savage modern military conflict the likes of which we won’t see again and this show paints that so well with an outstanding cast.

    • @AireJayy
      @AireJayy Před měsícem +13

      Definitely more dark but I think people coming from BoB expect a similar experience of following 1 company through the whole war. Where the Pacific had 3 very different POVs. It’s a bit jarring at first but it gave you a broader perspective of the war on the Pacific. Definitely felt more personal too

    • @alancates5368
      @alancates5368 Před měsícem +7

      Band of brothers glorified war and the pacific showed the true horror of war

    • @REB4444
      @REB4444 Před 29 dny +4

      Was a more brutal campaign, against a fanatical enemy fighting to the death, with no nice R&R back in London between short battles.

    • @willarthur5718
      @willarthur5718 Před 29 dny +6

      The war correspondent Ernie Pyle started the war reporting on the war in Europe and originally downplayed the Pacific Theater. Then he transferred to the Pacific and the brutal of island hopping campaigns quickly changed his mind. Pyle was killed in action by Japanese machine gun fire on Iejima in April 1945 during the Okinawa campaign.

  • @SimonCrowne
    @SimonCrowne Před 27 dny +14

    I was trained on how to follow complex instructions, and then to give instructions while instilling integrity and discipline to large groups of men to lead them to accomplish our given goals and tasks in furtherance of our national interests, whole doing so I received many awards which have allowed me to be here today speaking with you.

  • @chuckf2156
    @chuckf2156 Před měsícem +14

    I served in the USMC infantry. Afterwards I went to college and felt super weird and depressed because of the stark contrast between USMC and normal people. It’s that moment when you realize that you’re not the same person coming out as you were going in.
    For me it was like when I joined, the real world was put on pause. Then all
    This stuff happens and you get out and the play button is hit and life begins again, except all this shit just happened and now it feels like it didn’t happen and I was wondering what the f***. I don’t know, maybe that’s just me? Anyone else….?

    • @oldman4021
      @oldman4021 Před měsícem +3

      Same for me but I was Army.

    • @chairzombie8378
      @chairzombie8378 Před 24 dny +1

      Nah it's like that for near everyone. I call it living in exile, or coming back from 10 years in exile.

    • @tonytiger8451
      @tonytiger8451 Před 3 dny +1

      EXACTLY! The Marines make warriors! And darn good ones! Thank you for your service! Most people will NEVER experience what it takes to earn the Title U.S. Marine and wear that uniform! Semper Fi!

  • @colemanmorris634
    @colemanmorris634 Před 27 dny +52

    Alabama Polytechnic Institute (API) is now known as Auburn University in Auburn, AL.

    • @tristanholland6445
      @tristanholland6445 Před 23 dny

      Yes it’s known as Auburn today.

    • @michaeln3527
      @michaeln3527 Před 14 dny

      @@tristanholland6445It was known as Auburn then. It was known as Auburn in the 1800s.
      Nobody ever called it "bama poly" 😂

  • @ricarte1986
    @ricarte1986 Před měsícem +175

    Damn, a lot of soldiers die in combat. These men had interests, futures, careers, families, all taken away with a single shot or shrapnel
    Edit: 90 likes sheesh thanks

    • @MJ-we9vu
      @MJ-we9vu Před 28 dny +4

      And I know a hell of a lot more who died when they came back because they didn't get the support they needed to get back into life. Used and cast aside.

    • @simonlhill-si4sx
      @simonlhill-si4sx Před 28 dny +3

      I often think of the history that could have been created by war dead, like they could find a cure for diseases or anything

    • @SprikSprak
      @SprikSprak Před 26 dny

      I'd suggest reading the book this is based on. You really see that most of these guys were just late teens or early 20s, kids really in any sane measure. Eugene Sledge talks about some that don't make it and you do get a sense of how much is lost when these young people don't make it home.

    • @ricarte1986
      @ricarte1986 Před 25 dny +2

      @@SprikSprak I have a a book related to one of the marines featured in “The Pacific” they knew sledge, leckie, and basilone. Its called voices of the pacific. It has a bunch of vets i cluding sid philips. You should read it

    • @SprikSprak
      @SprikSprak Před 24 dny

      @@ricarte1986 thank you - I will 😊

  • @ricomorales1307
    @ricomorales1307 Před 27 dny +10

    USMC.. the way he answered was not by choice at the end..but that set the bar to a whole new level period!

  • @worms1
    @worms1 Před 27 dny +83

    After your discharge you realize very few civilians have any idea what you've been through

    • @brokeloser7236
      @brokeloser7236 Před 27 dny +10

      it’s crazy how you completely misinterpreted this scene tough guy

    • @DontLetTheOldManIn
      @DontLetTheOldManIn Před 27 dny +5

      Nor have you any idea what they've been through, either. Mutual patience and understanding will carry one far. Intolerance will not.

    • @worms1
      @worms1 Před 27 dny +3

      @@brokeloser7236 i see your problem

    • @worms1
      @worms1 Před 27 dny +8

      @@DontLetTheOldManIn you're so right. that registrar babe looks like she's been to hell and back

    • @JessiContingenC
      @JessiContingenC Před 27 dny +4

      @@worms1eh the idea is to be patient because they haven’t gone through what you have and you can’t expect them to be informed unless you had a long talk with them or they themselves served or worked with the military as a civilian employee. Gotta be humble and sell your military skills in a way that makes sense to civilian interviewers

  • @kevy0307
    @kevy0307 Před měsícem +286

    In real life:
    Sledge: Lady there was a killing war going on and I was one of the ones that have to do some of the killings.
    The woman apologized with shame.
    Sledge: That’s alright I know you don’t understand.

    • @jarejare63
      @jarejare63 Před měsícem +6

      in real life? its the 1940s she would get slapped for talking back to him lol

    • @Aphakiastudies
      @Aphakiastudies Před měsícem +7

      ​@@jarejare63real life: her husband would have beat her if she told him that story

    • @MDMDMDMDMDMDMDMDMD
      @MDMDMDMDMDMDMDMDMD Před měsícem +91

      The 1940s was not an all you can eat slappathon for women

    • @rlryan1
      @rlryan1 Před měsícem +15

      its annoying when they have word for word and first hand accounts of ineteractions and incidents and they change it for dramatic effect

    • @roymarshall_
      @roymarshall_ Před měsícem +56

      ​​@@jarejare63peoples conception of social etiquette in 1940s America has been completely demolished by modern propaganda. There were more gendered social rules but that also meant that there was an even higher expectation than there is today to be polite to women.
      Undoubtedly there was more bad stuff happening behind closed doors but that wasn't happening in public between strangers.

  • @gabriel-tc2cn
    @gabriel-tc2cn Před měsícem +10

    When I got out, I was told all I could do was shoot, but ptsd wouldn't let me, so I better turn to day labor I've been a manager in retail I don't know what's worse staying in service, retail, day labor or being dead.

  • @hungngo-tl5vb
    @hungngo-tl5vb Před měsícem +11

    The baker bakes, the barber cuts, and the cook cooks etc. as a basic infantryman the JOB is crystal clear and I quote "...You don't have to sacrifice for your country you make the other poor bastard sacrifice for his country..."
    Semper Fi Mac!

  • @grumpycatgames9322
    @grumpycatgames9322 Před 27 dny +24

    Reasons like this is why American troops can get free collage

  • @Philboid
    @Philboid Před měsícem +5

    In reality sledge got really mad and yelled something like “MISS THIS WAS A KILLING WAR, AND I WAS SOMEONE THAT HAD TO DO SOME OF THAT KILLING”
    He said everyone around stopped and just stared at him and the “poor woman” looked extremely embarrassed/horrified
    In his later life he said he felt very embarrassed about this moment.

  • @turtle926
    @turtle926 Před měsícem +91

    I served in the Afghan National Army ma'am, they taught me how to smoke hash and run away

  • @truddy3971
    @truddy3971 Před 28 dny +4

    There's a movie made in 1946 called "The Best Years of Our Lives". There's a scene exactly like this one.

  • @profesionalemea
    @profesionalemea Před 29 dny +14

    Is that the boy who appeared in Jurassic Park? 😂

  • @TheSleepSteward
    @TheSleepSteward Před 23 dny +1

    Phenomenal acting. You can see the PTSD in his eyes, in his face. The movements with his body. Absolutely incredible performance. - Someone with CPTSD

  • @reedusurrights2547
    @reedusurrights2547 Před 27 dny +18

    Hardest line in the whole show to be honest if you know the backstory

  • @Ben-zr4ho
    @Ben-zr4ho Před 29 dny +3

    Fun story. I was talking to a woman recently and as I have done many times in my life I was explaining to her how all man have to register for the draft when they turn 18 (and if you dont think you did, you did. Even if you didnt yourself. Through your driver's license or any number of things. Anyway if you somehow slipped through the cracks if there was an actual draft on youd quickly find yourself unslipped.) She at first didnt believe me, "They dont do that anymore." I finally convinced her. Her response? "Well that just isnt fair. Woman should have the right to be drafted if they want to be."

  • @albertenriquecrowleybeastc217
    @albertenriquecrowleybeastc217 Před měsícem +89

    I got pretty damn good at it. 😆 Damn cold as ice

    • @watata1t
      @watata1t Před měsícem +4

      And its not worth anything

    • @3october1993
      @3october1993 Před měsícem +1

      @@watata1t It's worth everything.

    • @MC-th5by
      @MC-th5by Před měsícem

      @@3october1993 Job is part of everything, and he sure as hell aint getting that one. So no its not worth anything.

  • @pepleatherlab3872
    @pepleatherlab3872 Před 27 dny +12

    What we have here are two aliens with completely contrary life experiences meeting one another. I never felt so alien upon returning home. After several tours abroad I think I shared more life experiences with convicts than anything else. Which is sad. Police was a good second choice, and I took it. Many do.

    • @Tony.795
      @Tony.795 Před 27 dny +2

      The american civilians never really experienced the war. It must have been different for the british and german people.

    • @user-yd9od2xu9q
      @user-yd9od2xu9q Před 27 dny

      Did you victimize more people as a soldier or a 🐽?

    • @user-yd9od2xu9q
      @user-yd9od2xu9q Před 27 dny

      Well maybe you aren’t alien but you are certainly less than human since you came back

    • @user-yd9od2xu9q
      @user-yd9od2xu9q Před 27 dny

      oink

  • @timeschange4604
    @timeschange4604 Před 28 dny +3

    Thats how it felt at ACAP getting out as an infantryman, hearing everyone else talk about their skills that translate to the civilian world.

  • @manelicvaltierrezsr3085
    @manelicvaltierrezsr3085 Před 27 dny +19

    Put some salt on that

  • @michaellavoie1336
    @michaellavoie1336 Před 27 dny +11

    Timmy is now a grown up 😂

  • @jamesross1799
    @jamesross1799 Před 27 dny +10

    Id say he learnt a valuable skill at the time otherwise he would not be standing there answering the questions.

  • @leekasten3921
    @leekasten3921 Před 27 dny +31

    Marines can do anything

    • @r31n0ut
      @r31n0ut Před 27 dny +4

      somehow I doubt the marine corps prepares you to be both a trapeze artist and a nuclear scientist at the same time...

    • @mikepastor.k6233
      @mikepastor.k6233 Před 25 dny

      ​@@r31n0ut anything that requires reasonable training 😮

    • @tristanholland6445
      @tristanholland6445 Před 23 dny

      Sledge did he became a biology professor with PhD and obviously he wrote “With the Old Breed” he did come from an educated background he father was a doctor.

  • @SLDFMechWarrior
    @SLDFMechWarrior Před měsícem +64

    Damn
    She a bit rude
    It felt like an insult when she asked if the Marine corps taught him anything.
    Like he said he was in a mortar squad and handled explosives.
    That should be enough of an answer

    • @shaunnichols1743
      @shaunnichols1743 Před měsícem +26

      That conversation might not have ever actually happened. It wasn't about her being rude, she was a metaphor of how the men who fought in the war often felt like they spent their formative years going through hell just to come back and feel like they got nothing out of it other than a medal and psychological trauma.

    • @Breadnought_
      @Breadnought_ Před měsícem +7

      she wasn't rude

    • @theskyworrier
      @theskyworrier Před měsícem

      ​@@Breadnought_ no she was just being a dumb shallow bitch

    • @ghanaboyz
      @ghanaboyz Před měsícem +4

      not intentionally rude, just rather junior and very ignorant. Technically she did not say" taught him anything", but more like "taught you anything that you can continue with here". A bit crude and ignorant, but not intentionally rude I think.

    • @Wustenfuchs109
      @Wustenfuchs109 Před měsícem +5

      Not rude at all. We watched his entire journey and suffering, so we are on his side - why isn't this man given what he deserves for all of it?!
      But look at it from her side - there are a bunch of young men, applying for college, with no skills in the years where they should have plenty, and they need to be a productive members of society in peace. Even if she knew about all the horror of the things Sledge went through, questions would have been the same - sir, do you have ANY skills that can be used in peace and in civilian world?
      There are many positions in the army that would give you those. Various drivers, logistics personnel (every branch and unit has them), communication (again, every unit has them)...
      He had none, he was a grunt. So, a college has no use for him when there are many others in line (and positions were limited) that had SOME skills usable in peace time. They had to pick, for a limited number of spaces, out of millions that were coming back from the war, the best fit.
      It is all nice and well that he was good at killing Japs for 4 years, but war is over, and you need to do something for the rest of your life... and it would be irresponsible for a government/institution to give you something to do, for which you have no skills, just because you killed people during the war. There ARE other jobs, this was a recruitment for college, highest academic institution. She was completely in the right and not rude at all.
      He came from the war, straight to college no less, with no skills in any of the subjects relevant... and expected something. Why? If anyone's rude, its him, regardless of how much I like his character in the show and how I respect actual people who fought.

  • @andrewsnyder9148
    @andrewsnyder9148 Před 27 dny +8

    That line is cold.

  • @joeschmoe2697
    @joeschmoe2697 Před měsícem +7

    I never served, but I couldn’t imagine what it’s like to be counted on in the most stressful situation known to mankind, being responsible for keeping your brothers in arms alive while you face death and have to be quick in though and action… then you come home and are treated as less-than.

    • @Off-HandedBarrel
      @Off-HandedBarrel Před měsícem +2

      Yet people wonder why we're all alcoholics.

    • @evangreenberg1666
      @evangreenberg1666 Před 28 dny +2

      @@Off-HandedBarrelyeah it’s kinda outlandish that people and the government were like why are so many veterans killing themselves?
      Turns out committing violence on the states behalf will do that to a normal person. Like the soldiers in Afghanistan were put in situations where the enemy could be anyone, even women and children. Soldiers who in a split second had to decide if they were going to shoot a child or civilians because they had almost no time to determine if they were an enemy or not.
      Putting soldiers in positions where they would commit war crimes because they only had mere seconds to react. Raiding houses to only determine it’s just a civilian house. Etc etc, shit like that.
      Then the general combat against guerrilla forces who were fanatical. Suicide bombers of all kind. The government traumatizes these soldiers by having them commit acts of violence.
      I’d only serve if it was all out war against Russia or china but at that point I think the nukes are flying and if there isn’t nukes there would be a draft. I’d definitely get drafted.
      I’m in decent shape, not stupid, and have no disabilities or anything that would disqualify me. That’s good enough for most branches and definitely the army.
      If the nukes fly I have nowhere to run or hide. Definitely no money for a million dollar bunker. I’d spark up a joint and watch the boom booms.

    • @Off-HandedBarrel
      @Off-HandedBarrel Před 28 dny

      @evangreenberg1666 I floated between security and insertion teams for Nightengale while attached to the 31st MEU until Sewoul. A handful of us were attached to SOCAF after that. 6th fleet, 40th TF, 10th NSWU. Though we spent just as much time on ships as we did land. Did TACEVAC/MEDEVAC and Spec Ops support/transport. Everything from SEALs and FAST teams to NATO infantry from France and Britain. Mainly spent time with African Union troops from different countries and transporting civilians to hostpital ships. Fought Boko Haram, Al Shabab extremist, and warlords for 3 1/2 years trying to help people that didn't want it. Pulled security for TCETT airlifts and handoffs. Came home to divorce papers and a medical discharge. No non-combat related skills. Handful of pills every day just to work a crap job and fight the government for services. Show of hands who even knows we have troops in Africa.

  • @NIGHTSTALKER0069
    @NIGHTSTALKER0069 Před 28 dny +6

    Still to this day if you go to any combat arms you have only have a few skills. Killing, managing stress, dealing with boredom followed by high intensity life or death back to boredom.

  • @twomouse5572
    @twomouse5572 Před 27 dny +3

    Id hire Sludge as a supervisor as a mountain highway explosive technician. From 1949-1990s, newly developed provincial highways were the gold mine of jobs.

  • @beardboywonder4458
    @beardboywonder4458 Před 28 dny +2

    The fact that this is the kid from the original jurassic Park still freaks me out 😂

    • @thatzwhat
      @thatzwhat Před 27 dny +1

      I believe he was selected because he looks very similar to the real Eugene Sledge at that age. He and Remi Malik are excellent in their portrayals of young marines in The Pacific.

  • @patton303
    @patton303 Před 27 dny +52

    Auburn is still dumb. Roll Tide.

  • @keviiinramaaaage7650
    @keviiinramaaaage7650 Před měsícem +5

    If I remember his book correctly the woman apologized immediately to him and Sledge felt bad for snapping.

  • @maximtyo2625
    @maximtyo2625 Před 27 dny +23

    There were no wars on territory of USA since 1864. On one hand, it's great for the Americans. On the other hand, how tough it was on American GIs to run to this kind "clueless" people?

    • @vrcmf3172
      @vrcmf3172 Před 27 dny +4

      ??? The Japanese attacked US territories like Guam, etc. also had an entire force land on an island on Alaska

    • @y.r._
      @y.r._ Před 27 dny +5

      @@vrcmf3172 He obviously referred to the US mainland. Essentially no american civilians died in the entirety of WW2.

    • @DAethrys
      @DAethrys Před 27 dny +3

      @@y.r._ The Japanese and Germans tried particularly hard, they just weren't very good at it.

    • @vrcmf3172
      @vrcmf3172 Před 27 dny +1

      @@y.r._ Alaska is a US state. Also 911 was on US soil.

    • @user-yd9od2xu9q
      @user-yd9od2xu9q Před 27 dny

      @@vrcmf31729/11 was a war? I thought it was a day.

  • @papafrenchie6088
    @papafrenchie6088 Před měsícem +175

    Civilians just don't understand

    • @watata1t
      @watata1t Před měsícem +15

      No, we just don't care, because it don't translate to civilan life

    • @LF77Z
      @LF77Z Před měsícem +34

      ​@@watata1t oh buddy hope you never get drafted. A little compassion for those that sacrifice sanity so you can be yourself isint much to ask.

    • @watata1t
      @watata1t Před měsícem +4

      @@LF77Z buddy, im conscripted because we were invaded in 1939, you just invaded

    • @feartheghus
      @feartheghus Před měsícem +5

      @@watata1t He is obviously smart enough to respond well to training, he got very good at a task he set his mind to, and that can translate to literally any other task. He was trained to have discipline and to be a fucking weapon of a man. You have none of that, and you could use any of it to have been a more decent person.

    • @GabrielWarlock
      @GabrielWarlock Před měsícem +2

      It's not like we don't want to. We can't...

  • @bluecordprecisiongrading2504

    Transitioning from combat to civilian life can be very difficult. I've been out for 20 years and I still struggle

  • @PaintAndPlayWithJay
    @PaintAndPlayWithJay Před 28 dny +3

    Love this scene as it really shows the ignorance that a lot of people had at the time of what they went through. They didn't attend summer camp and learn lots of new skills, they fought in a literal hellscape and got PTSD for the rest of their life.

    • @user-yd9od2xu9q
      @user-yd9od2xu9q Před 27 dny

      why should she care

    • @cameronkedas3375
      @cameronkedas3375 Před 27 dny

      @user-yd9od2xu9q
      Because of what he went through for America and its citizens, that’s why.

    • @mathiasbartl9393
      @mathiasbartl9393 Před 25 dny +1

      She literally doesn't know where and in what capacity he served.

  • @johns2240
    @johns2240 Před 27 dny +20

    Fucking Auburn

  • @finnthehuman624
    @finnthehuman624 Před 27 dny +49

    Worst part is USMC is kinda the worst one out of all of them for continuing civ life after. Not a lot of white collar jobs or high end blue ones. Which sucks because USMC has the hardest jobs along with the Army.

    • @thatonedude5667
      @thatonedude5667 Před 27 dny

      Ain't no heroes in a white collar racket anyway.

    • @iloveyoushima
      @iloveyoushima Před 27 dny +3

      ​@@thatonedude5667Except the people trying to cure cancer.

    • @heycidskyja4668
      @heycidskyja4668 Před 27 dny +1

      @@thatonedude5667 Nobody likes a hero. People like those who contribute to society.

    • @thatonedude5667
      @thatonedude5667 Před 25 dny

      @@iloveyoushima after over a hundred years of formally industrialized medicine, how's that coming?
      Just more low to no honor sheep who never put themselves on the line but rather make lots of money by dragging things along.

    • @JulyFourth1776
      @JulyFourth1776 Před 24 dny +1

      ​@@thatonedude5667as a neurosurgeon, I disagree.

  • @themanwithnoname2857
    @themanwithnoname2857 Před 27 dny +6

    Accounted for confirmed kills and ammo. Helped engineer a bridge for safe passage and partook in journalism by way of writing history, letters home and a personal diary. Next question???

  • @Guardsman-sy8qm
    @Guardsman-sy8qm Před 27 dny +46

    If you're ever in the military and you have to work with civilians you'll find that, unless those civilians were also in, you probably won't like them, especially if you were or are combat arms.

    • @techmarine83
      @techmarine83 Před 27 dny +6

      He is a civilian now bro.

    • @flagondragon1854
      @flagondragon1854 Před 27 dny +2

      ​@techmarine83 once you're a marine you're always a marine. Retired or not

    • @DontLetTheOldManIn
      @DontLetTheOldManIn Před 27 dny +8

      Then, maybe it's time for you to develop as much patience for them as they have to for you.

    • @yaboileeroy3038
      @yaboileeroy3038 Před 27 dny +4

      Exactly how my friend was after coming back from Afghanistan. Just absolutely disgusted with me as a person, and tbh I was at a pretty low point in my life so I don’t blame him. Just vanished and never heard from him again. 5 years and zero word from him. I pray for him regularly.

    • @paulnejtek6588
      @paulnejtek6588 Před 27 dny

      Mmmm. Not, really. For the most part military ppl ain't too smart. Especially enlisted. Especially Army. 15th Finance Battalion at Ft. Hood is the most incompetent ppl ever.

  • @tacocat318
    @tacocat318 Před měsícem +28

    Sometimes, the worst thing that can happen to a soldier who's made for war, is that they never died.
    This is no hate towards any veteran, just an unfortunate truth. A man made for war, who has served in war, will often make their own war in their own minds should they make it through such hell.

    • @msgtmac8115
      @msgtmac8115 Před 29 dny +2

      I WAR every day. 10 years retired, I try to be normal and happy. I’ve failed, it’s too awkward. I can’t talk to normal people because we have nothing in common. My conversation subject matter makes them uncomfortable. Especially when they realize how I describe the horrible conditions of war with such ease. I’m that man made for war, I am lost because I have no war.

    • @Dwagonier_XAceX101
      @Dwagonier_XAceX101 Před 29 dny +1

      ​@msgtmac8115 Go join some volunteer divisions in the UKR-RU conflict. Heck or isreal. There's plenty of war going on still.

    • @hustensaftvernichter3785
      @hustensaftvernichter3785 Před 28 dny +1

      ​@@Dwagonier_XAceX101I am sure that something that troubles your mind that much will not be alleviated by experiencing even more of it.
      Wars are for ever, but warriors are not. There is a reason they usually send 20 year olds, and not 50 year olds. The shift in perspective does a lot to your perception and tolerance towards violence and danger. I am not too sure if I would still willingly go out into a warzone twenty years from now.

    • @Dwagonier_XAceX101
      @Dwagonier_XAceX101 Před 27 dny

      @hustensaftvernichter3785 father served in JTF2 im pretty sure i know what it's like. So nice one online warrior. If they want war, they got it. Plain and simple

    • @hustensaftvernichter3785
      @hustensaftvernichter3785 Před 27 dny

      ​@@Dwagonier_XAceX101 I don't see what you are trying to say. Being a father going to war is *much* different than a single, young man. At least to me and everyone I got to know during my own military life. The perspective is a lot different for many people once they have a family of their own to return to and the risks (at least in combat roles) seem to be much less acceptable.
      ''If they want war, they got it.'' ...But do they, really?! I think a lot of that is an exaggeration of the misplacement they feel once they realize they haven't got anyone who remotely understands what it's like. I don't think they really wish to return once they are out of their prime and there is a good reason Infantrymen (for example) are considered senior once they reach their 30's. You know exactly what I mean if I say we are not on the sharp end forever, both mentally and physically.

  • @CodeResp
    @CodeResp Před 27 dny +39

    She prob had to change all of her clothes after that

    • @RedFrog_191
      @RedFrog_191 Před 27 dny +7

      What, why?

    • @trevorbrixton5195
      @trevorbrixton5195 Před 27 dny

      @@RedFrog_191 creamed her jammies

    • @davidbryanttrucking
      @davidbryanttrucking Před 27 dny

      Cause she was wet... There. Someone said it. 😂

    • @johnboykin3128
      @johnboykin3128 Před 27 dny

      Just her panties

    • @guitarjacksonblue
      @guitarjacksonblue Před 27 dny +8

      ​@@RedFrog_191 i think he is projecting. Sees a female with raunchy voice and gets a lil stiffie. And yes at first she seems interestested but looses that the moment she realizes he is just another grunthead with nothing besides his hate and trauma or any actually useful skills. Girl dried up fast at that point. But OP probably never talked to a girl in RL and now objectifies fictional women who could be his great granny at that pointnin time. Hope that makes it clearer

  • @archangel1221
    @archangel1221 Před 26 dny +1

    Sledges book “With the Old Breed” is one of the greatest combat narratives ever written.
    This man saw “life” (and death) on a level that few people on earth can comprehend. And she was worried about accounting.

  • @Vnix
    @Vnix Před měsícem +6

    Man she's pretty

    • @chazlewis8114
      @chazlewis8114 Před 24 dny +2

      I'm shocked no one else has mentioned it!

  • @svyalinirnhut890
    @svyalinirnhut890 Před 27 dny +17

    They don’t teach kids about Journalism or Engineering in high schools and they can register in bachelor degree just fine, I don’t see why he couldn’t do it, probably had a lot more experience with physics than most people.

    • @madlarkin8
      @madlarkin8 Před 27 dny +16

      The purpose of these interviews is not to accept or reject applicants to the university but to see if any schools he had in the military could translate to college credits or degrees. For example an army nurse could qualify to get their biology 101 course credit immediately. A pilot could qualify for an immediate associates degree in aeronautics, which would grant credits towards degrees in meteorology, engineering, or aviation science.
      Unfortunately front line jobs are the most important job in a military, bearing the brunt of casualties, trauma, and hardship, yet they have few skills that translate directly to being a civilian. Often, the things which gets these folks ahead is their relentless drive and ability to overcome stress from experience, which makes them good entrepreneurs and leaders of others.

    • @CdrChaos
      @CdrChaos Před 27 dny +2

      Handling explosives? That’s chemistry and physics.

    • @artg6700
      @artg6700 Před 27 dny

      @@CdrChaosI don’t think so. Wasn’t he referring to grenades which don’t require any kind of knowledge of chemistry because you aren’t making them and aren’t actually making the compounds himself just kind of “pulling the trigger” on them

    • @CdrChaos
      @CdrChaos Před 27 dny

      @@artg6700 First-hand experience with the reaction of gunpowder on various real-world objects and materials.

    • @johnwicksfoknpencil
      @johnwicksfoknpencil Před 27 dny

      @@artg6700Mortars are not grenades. They are completely different.

  • @BadgerOfTheSea
    @BadgerOfTheSea Před 27 dny +18

    Well then, campus security it is

  • @charleskimball7058
    @charleskimball7058 Před 28 dny +2

    “Lady, there was a killing war going on, and I had to do some of the killing!”
    -Eugene Sledge

  • @ImaginaShip
    @ImaginaShip Před 28 dny +3

    He’d make a good safety expert, bomb squad tech, policeman, fireman, roughneck. Anything where quick thinking, the ability to assess and overcome dangers, handling dangerous or hazardous machinery, and/or saving lives.

  • @OvernightCountFraud2024
    @OvernightCountFraud2024 Před 27 dny +18

    See you in Korea

  • @bachtruongson9408
    @bachtruongson9408 Před 17 dny +1

    "Engineering?"
    "Well I blew up a few, does that count?"

  • @lloyd9710
    @lloyd9710 Před měsícem +2

    This scene hits hard you fought you bleed you suffered for your country and when you leave you are nothing your struggle to make ends meet you struggle to integrate back into society

    • @hustensaftvernichter3785
      @hustensaftvernichter3785 Před 28 dny

      Even happens to a lot of soldiers who have not been to war. They are so absorbed by the military they are having serious trouble flipping that switch, especially in their social lives.

  • @herbert5491
    @herbert5491 Před měsícem +13

    What a wonderful series. We honor all that served

  • @maximebertin3948
    @maximebertin3948 Před 27 dny +5

    That answer is cold from Sledge

  • @brucedoyle4055
    @brucedoyle4055 Před měsícem +1

    "How about working in a Shushi Bar?"

  • @mugsbugsly2975
    @mugsbugsly2975 Před 29 dny +1

    E B Sledge is a legend. His book “With the Old Breed” is required reading if you like history. Or if you just want to appreciate how good your life is.

  • @eibarc
    @eibarc Před 29 dny +3

    Jamás volverán a ser lo mismo o servir para algo en la sociedad por qué jamás se librarán de los horrores de la guerra

    • @karlchilders5420
      @karlchilders5420 Před 28 dny +4

      You are wrong my French dilettante. They can absolutely serve and be useful in society. They need help reintegrating back into it, that's all.

  • @pirobot668beta
    @pirobot668beta Před měsícem +27

    Never ask a combat veteran what they are good at.

    • @hieug.rection1920
      @hieug.rection1920 Před měsícem

      “Blood makes the grass grow, kill, kill, KILL”

    • @potatosalad6699
      @potatosalad6699 Před měsícem

      Idk man. My dad is a damn good welder and machine gunner

  • @tylergeurkink8398
    @tylergeurkink8398 Před 24 dny +1

    The following scene when he goes hunting with his dad is just heart breaking.

  • @leeweesquee
    @leeweesquee Před 22 dny

    a hearty " thank you for your service" solves PTSD

  • @jesusmartinez1358
    @jesusmartinez1358 Před měsícem +4

    rest in peace Sledge!now it's time to guard the streets of Heaven😢❤😇😇✝️🛐🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @ashtonm2379
    @ashtonm2379 Před měsícem +4

    Jesus this is real, if you dont know anyone outside of the military it's hard to acclimate and get a decent job. I'm lucky that was able to get into a skilled trade

  • @hanginbangin
    @hanginbangin Před 27 dny

    As a mortarman I can say the “did you do any accounting” line killed me 😂

  • @paulshri8609
    @paulshri8609 Před 29 dny +1

    Line at the end was cold 🥶 ❤❤❤

  • @TheGraffiti600rr
    @TheGraffiti600rr Před 28 dny +3

    As an infantryman who's been to war a few times and spent a decade of my life either training to kill or killing, I feel this. It's incredibly agitating that my skill set has zero relevance state side. I think the worst part is, there's millions of us who experience this... in some cases, exactly this. Remember, counting rounds is accounting 😉 😂

    • @Tony.795
      @Tony.795 Před 27 dny +3

      In the US life just moved on. It didn't really change much during the war in the first place and very few servicemen were in combat arms. This scene plays at least a year after the end of the war, because Sledge got stationed in China before retuning home. He basically missed all the fanfare right after the war and basically returned to exactly the same country as he left. In general it must have been hard for US veterans because production was turning down and less people were needed and there was nothing to rebuild. European veterans had something to do and a purpose right after coming home.

    • @user-yd9od2xu9q
      @user-yd9od2xu9q Před 27 dny

      So what, you come home and decide to continue the killing? I thought your kind join to defend the country, not rehearse a war with the people.

    • @cameronkedas3375
      @cameronkedas3375 Před 27 dny

      @TheGraffiti600rr
      Thank you for your service. Judging by your profile picture I assume you were in the 2nd Infantry Division. After I graduate HS I plan on joining the army and being a paratrooper. That’s what my great grandfather did in WWII. He was a paratrooper in WWII. He was with the 509th Parachute Infantry Regiment in North Africa and later the 456th Parachute Field Artillery Regiment assigned to the 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment in the 82nd Airborne in Sicily. He was then sent back to England to prepare for Operation Overlord when he was transferred to the 101st Airborne and jumped into Normandy, and later jumped into Holland. He also participated in the Battle of the Bulge and Western Germany. He had made either 4 or 5 combat jumps during the war. He survived and passed away in 2006. Anyway, I’d like to thank you one last time for your service. I have unlimited amount of thanks and gratitude for servicemen like you.

    • @TheGraffiti600rr
      @TheGraffiti600rr Před 27 dny

      @@cameronkedas3375 it's all good man. And it super cool and commendable that you want to follow in your grandfather's footsteps. Kudos. Can I please make a recommendation? Choose something (an MOS) that transfers over to civilian life. Become an 88M truck driver or a medic to become ems later or a nurse or join the airforce, do high-speed stuff like being a TACP, then get a job at an airport in the tower making bank. If what I'm saying falls on deaf ears because you're determined to follow in family footsteps, that's fine, I get it. Please know there are options though when you join. Please plan accordingly. I'm trying to explain this to my kids while they're still young and hoping it sticks later.

    • @user-yd9od2xu9q
      @user-yd9od2xu9q Před 27 dny

      @@cameronkedas3375 Good luck finding those WMDs!

  • @hellishrain1835
    @hellishrain1835 Před 27 dny +10

    How did M.J get here?

  • @OCREASONER
    @OCREASONER Před 25 dny

    This line and the part when Robert Leckie tells the army officer that he missed the war were some of the coldest lines in the series.

  • @LiquidT3nsion
    @LiquidT3nsion Před 28 dny +1

    'Bama Poly certainly doesn't hire the brightest.