8/10
Class/caste system and scenes from the battle
7 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
First of all, the Marine who forgot his extra shoelaces would have been verbally chewed out with foul language, probably a physical beating, and doing extra chores. The sergeant would not be giving any rational explanation why you should be carrying extra shoe laces. Back in those days, sergeants did not have to give any logical, practical, reasonable explanations for stuff like that. They tell you to do something,and you did it.

Like the movie The War against Mrs. Hadley, it is totally impossible for children of enlisted men and NCOs to have a relationship with officers. The same thing could be said for people of different economic backgrounds to marry each other. Let's face it America was a social class/caste system based the monetary system and political and religious ideologies. Almost all of the officers for the 19th and 20th centuries came from the upper and rich classes families. They only marry people within their social, political, and economic classes. Even today, there is no contact between the officers, NCOs, and enlisted particularly their children when they are off duty and rich people do not marry people from the lower social and economic backgrounds plus the kind of job you have. Why do you think Goucho Marx made fun of the rich people in many of his movies because he knew what they were really like (Bush, Rockefellers, Vanderbilts, Rothchilds, Duponts, etc).

Om his speech the ex-sergeant told the local population, that people are sick, they see a doctor. Well, back in those days the true is many people could not afford a doctor. Doesn't that familiar today? Finally, some of the air combat scenes were used in the 1977 movie Midway starring Henry Fonda and Charles Heston. I wonder why they don't show more movies like that and the War against Ms. Hadley more often? I have never heard of them until I accidentally run across them.
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