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If you think the general public thinks killing is cool, think again. I don't know too many people that take personnal satisfaction into killing.
jollyjacktar said:Go back 70 years and John Q Public thought it was very cool indeed.
mariomike said:Some apparently did. I won't post the picture as it may be offensive to some. But, it was Life Magazine's Picture of the Week in 1944.
QUOTE
"May 22, 1944 Life Magazine Picture of the Week, "Arizona war worker writes her Navy boyfriend a thank-you-note for the Jap skull he sent her. The image depicts a young blond at a desk gazing at a skull. The caption says: "When he said goodbye two years ago to Natalie Nickerson, 20, a war worker of Phoenix, Ariz., a big, handsome Navy lieutenant promised her a Jap. Last week Natalie received a human skull, autographed by her lieutenant and 13 friends, and inscribed: "This is a good Jap – a dead one picked up on the New Guinea beach." Natalie, surprised at the gift, named it Tojo."
END QUOTE
Jarnhamar said:I've never been a real fan of morale patches. Overseas I found platoon patches (skull, rams head etc..) good for morale and commeradry. Especially when you were legitimately facing loosing a family member every day. Outside of that meh. I'm proud enough wearing the huge Velcro flag on my arm (and dealing with the drama of getting caught wearing an IR flag on my rain jacket outside of the field)
I can't speak for everyone but what bothered us in the past when we were told morale patches were banned (and hilariously faced being RTUd from a war zone for being caught wearing a patch) was that higher up's and people who didn't routinely leave the wire seemed to be festooned with all types of flashy morale and adhoc unit patches. There was definitely a double standard.
"Well they were authorized". Yea they authorized themselves I think.
Morales patches are elitist in the CAF.
I sorta get why theyre targeted by the chain of command, say as in the Australian military. Government wants the military to be PC and public friendly as possible. It makes people happy to see flashy parades and obedient soldiers on display. On the other hand we're taking young adults and teaching them to violently kill (I'd go so far as to suggest massacre) human beings they've never met. Who surely have families or even play the same Xbox games as these guys and girls. I'm not educated in this stuff but I would guess there's some kind of psychological relationship (defense?) associated with skull and death iconography and the job we ultimately do or support doing.
When you read the OP they're talking about specifically banning Spartan helmets among other stuff. I think THAT highlights that this move is less about skull/death=bad and more about being politically correct and less visually "warrior" minded. If you're going to ban a helmet icon you may as well ban swords daggers spears and shields.
*editing some grammar
daftandbarmy said:It is possible that the souvenir collection of remains continued also in the immediate post-war period.
Journeyman said:Now, people who take normal-sized piercings and turn them into gaping 1" holes you want to put a padlock through...... :
Journeyman said:...Now, people who take normal-sized piercings and turn them into gaping 1" holes you want to put a padlock through...... :
Good2Golf said:...or 6"?