Tgace
Grandmaster
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2003
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Keep in mind that Ambrose, while good at interviewing soldiers, was a lousy historian.Tgace said:I remember reading a WWII history book (Ambriose??) that mentioned an advantage the US had was good ole farmboy fix em' up attitude. The tankers developing and welding plows "on the fly" onto their machines to go through the Norman hedgerows, fixing up broken vehicles on the road instead of leaving them for follow up mechanics and being able to drive almost anything (American love of vehicles). Small skills and abilities that magnified their military capacity.
Kane,Kane said:My bad, I meant extreme liberism (even though I you knew what I mean :wink1: .
Yeah, probably. I just recall a point about vehicle breakdowns and how the German SOP was to ditch and leave it for follow-on mechanics, while US troops were more prone to fix it themselves. Thats all. I wasnt debating the truth of it or Ambrose's validity.PeachMonkey said:Keep in mind that Ambrose, while good at interviewing soldiers, was a lousy historian.
This so-called US advantage was also possessed by German, Soviet, and English soldiers.
rmcrobertson said:. . .
Oh, I forgot..."Nazis," is far worse than "Jerry," especially for the many members of the German-American Bund in this country during the War. And their allies, like Lindbergh. Might as well complain about calling KKK members sheet-heads...
Mr. Robertsonrmcrobertson said:Oh and hey DUDE, re-read the part of "Starship Troopers," where Mr. Dubois goes after the notion that body count matters, in ways that interact interestingly with Dylan Thomas' "After the first death, there is no other," and old Joe's own, "One death is a tragedy, a million is a statistic." Get a load of the body count of Native Americans that occurred as a direct result of capitalism in its early colonialist period. Three smacks with a copy of "Slaughterhouse-Five; or, the Children's Crusade." Or, hell, since we're in on WWII, go read Hersey's, "Hiroshima," and then come back and lecture on Stalin.
rmcrobertson said:Dear Rich:
In the first place, you cannot show me a post in which I've attacked people using Heinlein quotes. I've objected to the political implications of those quotes, to some of Heinlein's ignorance of reality, to distortions of meanings. I do not attack people personally, because I do not know them personally. I cannot help it if they--and you--are attributing motives that I do not have.
rmcrobertson said:I might note, however, that these pretenses of being polite and you're just MEAN are a major reason that I've about run out the string of posting on this forum or most others. It's a boring discussion, for one thing--and it hides the remarkable offensiveness of many of the "polite," posts, which often involve saying that everybody but me is going to hell, or nobody but me is a patriot, or please let me grossly distort reality but if anybody objects they're just being MEAN.
rmcrobertson said:As for your own last post:
1. The Nazis were A political party of the day, not THE only one. Germany had a democratically elected, liberal/left government before Herr Schickelgruber came to power. You want an alternate history? One that doesn't repeat 47 bad science fiction novels, and encourage an unhealthy fascination with war toys? How 'bout the Weimar government gets intelligent help from people like Lindbergh, who in that alternate universe is a socialist rather than a fascist? How 'bout there's a failed coup in Japan, and their democratic government stays in power, and rejects the hell-bent capitalism that drove them into fascism?
rmcrobertson said:2. The notion that calling Nazis, "Jerry," is even vaguely comparable to racist slurs on the groups that they gassed, and which we enslaved, is absurd. An alternate history? Fine. Try one in which white Protestants were systematically oppressed and persecuted. Or one in which Amazons rule the world, like I saw on a "Buck Rogers," episode. Then, such a comment would make sense. Until then, it must I am afraid remain classed with the Klan guys who go off about how, "Us'n white folks is picked upon," and the types who sit in bars and lament the way that, "them women run EVERYTHING! it's reverse discrimination, that's what it is!!" Language depends on history and society, dude. it does not work in a vaccuum.
rmcrobertson said:3. Ambrose, it would seem, is unreliable as a historian. Try John Keegan, who knows a helluva sight more, and generally avoids the kind of moral pontification that gets you into trouble when you get caught stealing your ideas and words, as Ambrose did.
rmcrobertson said:4. Some of the responses to the silly stuff I write come because it is far easier to try and convince me that I've been mean, or am a bad guy, than it is to examine the ideas, and rethink one's own. Or even consider reality, for that matter. Some arrive because, after years of being beat down intellectually by screaming, wealthy ignoramuses like Hannity, Rush and Savage, folks have lost both the remnants of American cynicism about the wealthy and their own sense of solidarity with others in the same boat. Others come, because from time to time I screw up, and write as offensively and unthinkingly as those who cheerfully assert that Jews will burn in hellfire for their beliefs, or John Kerry's a coward and traitor, or everything is just ginger-peachy except for those whining liberals.
rmcrobertson said:5. This thread isn't about histories. It's about boys with toys. Enjoy it without me; I shall be trying to remember that I have nothing further to say.
rmcrobertson said:Regrettably, yes, it addresses what you are pleased to consider my red herring, or Communist bonito, or whatever. It basically confirms the analysis: easier to attack the fantasized person, than to tackle the argument.
The Heinlein quote is precisely on point: if you'll read the thread, you will note that I'm getting screamed at for being a Commie, and who knows what else; Heinlein is quoted as a response.
Hey, if you think that there is horrifying, try this: I quite liked the Rendell speech.
I tell ya what: I'll rethink my apporach, if'n yawl will consider the way that your reiterated personal attacks precisely duplicate the strategies of Hannity, Savage et al, regardless of wheteher you're a fan or not.
And if you'll consider this: to me, Rendell's pretty much right--and one of the things that pisses me off most is that my country has pissed away its extraordinary moral and historical advantage.
Oh, and Mr. Parsons? That "alternate," universe where white guys and their corporations rule the planet? That's the one we're living in.