[QUOTE] Originally posted by Chris 62
Let me guess, you don't know much about the Pacific war either, do you?
I never bothered with this movie, but I understand they built up Dorris Miller, the Black mess boy that grabs a gun and start's blazing away.
For the record, his shipmates felt his heart was in the right place, but he was more of a menace to them then the Japs! (A good source of eyewitnesses to this is Walter Lord's "Day of Infamy", written in the 50s from first hand accounts of the attack.
The PC crowd of that era (much like you now, Tinky) wanted to change history, as the movie makers did, and make it seem he did more, like shooting down several Jap planes, and so, he was awarded a valour medal. (Dorris Miller was fleet boxing champ in the 1930s, and didn't survive WWII ).
[QUOTE]
Uh, Chirs62. My previous message was a lighthearted statement. You know something that is supposed to make you chuckle, not ROTFL, but not serious either.
I'll help you out. The movie Pearl Harbour ranks as one of the worse movies ever made. So anyone who didn't see it should consider themselves lucky. Get6 it? Probably not.
Miller was not awarded the medal for shooting down "several Jap planes" as you claim. He was awarded the medal "distinguished devotion to duty, extraordinary courage and disregard for his own personal safety" which he displayed by manning a machine gun. The movie tried to make him bigger by showing him shooting down aircraft.
Did the US gov't make a hero out of someone who was not? Maybe. The US needed any hero it could find to boost morale. If a hero was manufactured, it was not for "PC" reason. I mean come on. This is 1941 when segregation is alive and well. The politically correct thing at that time was to lynch blacks.
Let me guess, you don't know much about the Pacific war either, do you?
I never bothered with this movie, but I understand they built up Dorris Miller, the Black mess boy that grabs a gun and start's blazing away.
For the record, his shipmates felt his heart was in the right place, but he was more of a menace to them then the Japs! (A good source of eyewitnesses to this is Walter Lord's "Day of Infamy", written in the 50s from first hand accounts of the attack.
The PC crowd of that era (much like you now, Tinky) wanted to change history, as the movie makers did, and make it seem he did more, like shooting down several Jap planes, and so, he was awarded a valour medal. (Dorris Miller was fleet boxing champ in the 1930s, and didn't survive WWII ).
[QUOTE]
Uh, Chirs62. My previous message was a lighthearted statement. You know something that is supposed to make you chuckle, not ROTFL, but not serious either.
I'll help you out. The movie Pearl Harbour ranks as one of the worse movies ever made. So anyone who didn't see it should consider themselves lucky. Get6 it? Probably not.
Miller was not awarded the medal for shooting down "several Jap planes" as you claim. He was awarded the medal "distinguished devotion to duty, extraordinary courage and disregard for his own personal safety" which he displayed by manning a machine gun. The movie tried to make him bigger by showing him shooting down aircraft.
Did the US gov't make a hero out of someone who was not? Maybe. The US needed any hero it could find to boost morale. If a hero was manufactured, it was not for "PC" reason. I mean come on. This is 1941 when segregation is alive and well. The politically correct thing at that time was to lynch blacks.
Comment