Commanding general of the NVA during the Vietnam war dies at 102
Legendary Vietnam Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap dies at 102
Legendary Vietnam Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap dies at 102
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Giap was a skilled enemy and a cunning adversary. He did not beat our soldiers as he lost every battle. But he beat our politicians and was savvy enough to bend a pliable and easily-misled public to his cause.
As a student of military history, literally, I offer the opinion that Giap was a man due the respect of a warrior. For as an enemy, he was skilled... and in skill there is honor.
Unrelated to the war, 102 friggin years old....after all of that combat, food, everything else.
That's old!
Maybe he didn't starve himself as much as he did his people.
We all have opinions and are entitled to them. The only ones that shouldn't be expressed on this site are those that contravene the site rules. I sorta thought that was an important part of what we were fighting to perpetuate, even though we were doing it halfway around our world, and it's not just us combat veterans who sacrifice(d) to make that so...
I had to point that out. LOL.![]()
For the record, I served in I Corps (Dong Ha, Camp Carroll, Qua Viet, and others places more briefly) for 13 months with the 3rd Marine Division in late 1966 and most of 1967. I served with 11th Engr BN, 12th Mar Rgt, and 1st Amtrac Bn, with some direct engagement with Gen Giap's 325b Rgt. Among other things, I have never walked right since then, and am VA totally and permanently disabled with service connection.
I was a Draftee Marine with 13 months of combat in RVN, and separated from 24 months of active service with 13 months in combat, and 13 months in grade as an NCO. Get your frackin' facts right; my opinions are well enough founded for most folks to accept around here.
Greg
well Greg, looks like we disagree. I did three tours in Vietnam, and take great offense when people talk out their asses about that conflict. You walk my road and you can bitch about.Chezuz Criminy, what's your beef now, guys? I come up with a post that says you and everyone else should feel free to post their minds freely and you got a problem with that?
I said, and I quote:
So how does this invalidate anything you're trying to say? Learn how to read, guys...
For the record, I served in I Corps (Dong Ha, Camp Carroll, Qua Viet, and others places more briefly) for 13 months with the 3rd Marine Division in late 1966 and most of 1967. I served with 11th Engr BN, 12th Mar Rgt, and 1st Amtrac Bn, with some direct engagement with Gen Giap's 325b Rgt. Among other things, I have never walked right since then, and am VA totally and permanently disabled with service connection.
I was a Draftee Marine with 13 months of combat in RVN, and separated from 24 months of active service with 13 months in combat, and 13 months in grade as an NCO. Get your frackin' facts right; my opinions are well enough founded for most folks to accept around here.
This still does not give me the right or privilege to tell others here that they are talking out their asses. If you think it does, we disagree.
Me corporate? Ask LL or the Mods if I'm corporate...; very definitely not the case; I just agree where I find a common sentiment.
Bottom line, you guys are outta line; and please don't make me say it again
Greg
well Greg, looks like we disagree. I did three tours in Vietnam, and take great offense when people talk out their asses about that conflict. You walk my road and you can bitch about.
Same here.Hey Arcticlight... I was wondering where you had gone. Was worried you had disappeared. Never put the names together... but am not always that quick... How's the percussion-pistol building going?
Cheers,
sirhr
Well Greg, looks like we disagree. I did three tours in Vietnam, and take great offense when people talk out their asses about that conflict. You walk my road and you can bitch about.
Greg, I will let you have the last words. I have and will defend every aspect of the Constitution, including assholes and their opinions, based on nothing.Message received and acknowledged.
Like others here, I agree with your having the right to say whatever you believe, and I support your right without reservation.
Like you, I resent it when people use the RVN war as a pulpit from which to spew all sorts of dubious folderol, especially when those utterances clearly indicate a non-experiential basis.
But there's a paradox here.
When we do what we did in RVN, we (or I at least) do so in defense of the basic freedoms we (should) enjoy as Americans. Yet others use those selfsame hard won and hard defended freedoms to advance petty, personal agendas intended to undermine/invalidate those very same freedoms, as well as our own labors to support those freedoms.
That's an inherent danger in the democratic process; one in which the BOR explicitly prohibits legislative and executive privilege to abridge such freedoms, and the very same argument which the Grabbists would foist upon the American electorate as being within their purview. If there is such a thing as a BOR, then that purview becomes moot, or nonexistent. If the BOR is subject to revision, then the freedoms (any and all) that it acknowledges become subject to the same revision, and such purview is something the Founding Fathers explicitly, vehemently opposed as being at the very core of existence deep within the BOR.
The paradox comes when we ourselves declare others unqualified to exercise to those freedoms. When we exercise our right to employ those freedoms, it becomes implicit that we support the rights of others to do the same, because anything else repudiates what we and that long line of predecessors did to establish and ensure the continuance of those freedoms.
Rights of free speech are only valid for as long as we all refrains from accepting the defining of prejudicial and arbitrary limits on that freedom. Freedom curtailed to even one amongst us converts a right into a privilege, something that becomes apparent as some of our government's leaderships are meddling deep within the guts of the same process with our Second Amendment. A freedom denied to one implies the ability to deny it to all.
When we do something similar to that, we affirm a basis for the grabbists to claim similar righteous authority to curtail our own rights ala civilian gun ownership (or any other Constitutionally affirmed right). What's wrong for them is (and must be) just as wrong for us.
No status, be it as a Veteran or as a Government operative, entitles any one of us in a public environment to deauthorize another's freedom.
Here, in SH, we voluntarily waive some aspects of free speech as a condition of our participation, but we do it willingly, and with our implicit permission for the site leadership to do so, regardless of some's inability to recall or understand the rules governing our membership, that we all acknowledged as we joined. For example, it chafes me greatly that I may not engage in political debate; but as a member of the forum, I must accept, however reluctantly, the right of the forum leadership to impose limits on political speech.
Greg
Hey Arcticlight... I was wondering where you had gone. Was worried you had disappeared. Never put the names together... but am not always that quick... How's the percussion-pistol building going?
Cheers,
sirhr