In trying to overcome some of the BS de jour, I took great pride
(still do) in trying to use some common sense in every situation.
Wilton
Thank you, Sir, for your common sense lent to the USAF for all those years.
It was exactly that: the ability of the common
soldier/sailor/flier/Marine to draw on their depression era
experience and cut through the BS and figure out new and better ways
to accomplish the task at hand with the material on hand, that
enabled us to win WWII. Without that element, we'd be sprechen Sie
Deutsches, or saying Hai!
Most current merkuns don't understand how close we came to losing
that war. While it is true that any invasion on mainland USA would
have been very difficult, because of the armed and independent
populace, we are seeing how the country can be destroyed from within.
Whenever they find a way to disarm us, it is all over.
Had the axis powers taken over the RTW, Life here would be very
different. Some valuable commodities during WWII were obtained from
the axis sphere of influence without their knowledge.
For example: Can you imagine a life in this country without rubber
from say 1943 on? There is no rubber grown in the USA. We'd have
invented synthetics from petro faster, but times would have been very
difficult.
We have probably lost the opportunity to document all the field
inventions from WWII, but there were many and some were key, like the
wall busters invented in Normandy to allow tanks to break down and
pass through the rock walls and hedgerows in the little fields.
A more recent example was done by a friend of mine. He and his dad
bother were in the Navy, underwater. One time he was going on leave,
and the skipper of another boat asked him to come aboard and fix
something that had been problematic. Jim fixed it in a day or two,
and the boat went on to perform admirably. Several months later Jim
was called into the Admiral's office. He was asked how he figured
out how to effect the repair on the boat he fixed. Jim informed the
Admiral that he had never been assigned to that boat. The Admiral
told Jim, "Cut the BS, We know you did it. You welded your initials
on the job." So Jim 'fessed up, told the Admiral how he fixed it and
why it worked. The Admiral used some sailor adjectives and told Jim
that the Navy had spent Millions of $$$$$$$$ trying to solve that
problem on all the boats of that class, and nobody could fix it but
him. The same repair was done on all the boats of that class, and
the problem was eliminated.
Jim has always been very creative, and so is his Dad. His dad can
fix nearly anything, and Jim is an artist in metals.
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