Saturday, August 3, 2019
Vietnam Essay -- essays research papers
   The trials and tribulations the soldiers faced at home were    far worse than any battle they fought while in Vietnam. No    one seemed to fully understand what these men had went    through. They came home looking for love and comfort;    little did they know that they had not yet experienced the    worst of the war.        A numerous amount of people were for the war, but the    reality was, many were against it. " During 1967 public    support for the war dropped sharply. By October approval    of Johnsonââ¬â¢s handling of the war dropped to 28%. A    number of major metropolitan newspapers shifted from    supporting the war to opposing it" (Wexler 145 ). Once the    public realized that the war wasnââ¬â¢t all glory, they regretted    the countryââ¬â¢s involvement.        The government wasnââ¬â¢t exactly the most reliable source of    information during the war. They couldnââ¬â¢t be counted on    when they were needed most. The governmentââ¬â¢s handling    of aid for veteranââ¬â¢s seemed to be carelessly handled.    Veterans were treated poorly and promises were broken    frequently.         The majority of the American population had no clue that    the government was hiding information about POWs. "    From September 1973 to March 1974, a series of    unrelated witnesses reported the movement of nine POWs    between two Laotian prison camps" ( Sauter 189 ). Similar    accounts of American prisonersââ¬â¢ sightings were hidden    from the public.         Ron Kovic was not a prisoner of war. Instead he was sent    home after being wounded. His return home was originally    fine; everything he thought it would be. Yet he did not    receive the welcome he had hoped for. Many resented him.    He received blank stares and vicious glares. even his own    brother was against the war. His family was baffled by the    pessimistic view towards life that he had picked up along    the way.         In Born on the Fourth of July, Ron Kovic often    mentioned that the veteransââ¬â¢ hospitals were torture    chambers. " It is easy to lose it all here. The whole place    functions smoothly, but somewhere along the way I am    losing, and the rest of the people whom I canââ¬â¢t see in the    rooms around me are losing too. Even if I heal this leg, I    will lose. No one ever leaves this place without losing" (    Kovic 129 ). He felt this way, because he had seen the    reality of the war, and he was appalled by the treatment the    men received. Even after they had fought fo...              ...attitude toward the war was bitter and    aggressive. He resented the government and all people who    supported the war. What had Ron become? He used to be    an All-American boy. Characterized by his intense love for    his country; his patriotism exuded in everything he did.    However, once he realized how naive heââ¬â¢d been about war    in general, he learned to hate it. Heââ¬â¢d lecture to families and    children not to enlist for the war, because they might not    come back how they had dreamed. They might come back    like him, or not even come back at all.        A few choice veterans overcame the adversity, but despite    the few gains made by Vietnam vets, in many situations,    public perspectives toward the veterans had taken up the    enemyââ¬â¢s bullets left off. Instead, they had bullets of hatred    and rancor shot at them. Their lives were never the same.        Kovic, Ron. Born on the Fourth of July. New York:    McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1976.        Mason, Patience H. C. Recovering from the War. New    York: Penguin Books, 1990.        Saunders, Jim, and Mark Sauter. The Men We Left    Behind. Bethesda: Saunders and Sauter,         1993.        Wexler, Sanford. An Eyewitness History: The Vietnam    War. New York: Wexler, 1992                        Vietnam Essay --  essays research papers     The trials and tribulations the soldiers faced at home were    far worse than any battle they fought while in Vietnam. No    one seemed to fully understand what these men had went    through. They came home looking for love and comfort;    little did they know that they had not yet experienced the    worst of the war.        A numerous amount of people were for the war, but the    reality was, many were against it. " During 1967 public    support for the war dropped sharply. By October approval    of Johnsonââ¬â¢s handling of the war dropped to 28%. A    number of major metropolitan newspapers shifted from    supporting the war to opposing it" (Wexler 145 ). Once the    public realized that the war wasnââ¬â¢t all glory, they regretted    the countryââ¬â¢s involvement.        The government wasnââ¬â¢t exactly the most reliable source of    information during the war. They couldnââ¬â¢t be counted on    when they were needed most. The governmentââ¬â¢s handling    of aid for veteranââ¬â¢s seemed to be carelessly handled.    Veterans were treated poorly and promises were broken    frequently.         The majority of the American population had no clue that    the government was hiding information about POWs. "    From September 1973 to March 1974, a series of    unrelated witnesses reported the movement of nine POWs    between two Laotian prison camps" ( Sauter 189 ). Similar    accounts of American prisonersââ¬â¢ sightings were hidden    from the public.         Ron Kovic was not a prisoner of war. Instead he was sent    home after being wounded. His return home was originally    fine; everything he thought it would be. Yet he did not    receive the welcome he had hoped for. Many resented him.    He received blank stares and vicious glares. even his own    brother was against the war. His family was baffled by the    pessimistic view towards life that he had picked up along    the way.         In Born on the Fourth of July, Ron Kovic often    mentioned that the veteransââ¬â¢ hospitals were torture    chambers. " It is easy to lose it all here. The whole place    functions smoothly, but somewhere along the way I am    losing, and the rest of the people whom I canââ¬â¢t see in the    rooms around me are losing too. Even if I heal this leg, I    will lose. No one ever leaves this place without losing" (    Kovic 129 ). He felt this way, because he had seen the    reality of the war, and he was appalled by the treatment the    men received. Even after they had fought fo...              ...attitude toward the war was bitter and    aggressive. He resented the government and all people who    supported the war. What had Ron become? He used to be    an All-American boy. Characterized by his intense love for    his country; his patriotism exuded in everything he did.    However, once he realized how naive heââ¬â¢d been about war    in general, he learned to hate it. Heââ¬â¢d lecture to families and    children not to enlist for the war, because they might not    come back how they had dreamed. They might come back    like him, or not even come back at all.        A few choice veterans overcame the adversity, but despite    the few gains made by Vietnam vets, in many situations,    public perspectives toward the veterans had taken up the    enemyââ¬â¢s bullets left off. Instead, they had bullets of hatred    and rancor shot at them. Their lives were never the same.        Kovic, Ron. Born on the Fourth of July. New York:    McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1976.        Mason, Patience H. C. Recovering from the War. New    York: Penguin Books, 1990.        Saunders, Jim, and Mark Sauter. The Men We Left    Behind. Bethesda: Saunders and Sauter,         1993.        Wexler, Sanford. An Eyewitness History: The Vietnam    War. New York: Wexler, 1992                          
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