The Most Terrifying Man of the Vietnam War

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  • Опубликовано: 4 мар 2024
  • Vietnam, late 1960s. Hostile North Vietnamese troops pin down a Hatchet Force of elite American MACV-SOG operators. They have the numbers and the high ground.
    Nevertheless, the Americans and their loyal indigenous Montagnards do not back down. Staff Sergeant Jerry M. Shriver, also known as Mad Dog, dashes from cover to cover, pummeling the enemy with his unconventional arsenal of several pistols, revolvers, and a lethal sawed-off shotgun.
    Some men are wounded and are slowly hoisted up through the thick jungle canopy to a chopper. The enemy presses on, but Mad Dog does not flinch. He retaliates with all the ammunition at his disposal.
    The friendlies are lifted one by one until Mad Dog is left alone. He calls in for Close Air Support several times. The enemy fire intensified to the point the radio offered Mad Dog Shriver assistance with a fresh unit of ground troops.
    He rejects the offers and replies: [QUOTE] “No, no…I’ve got them right where I want them: surrounded from the inside.”
    -
    As images and footage of actual events are not always available, Dark Docs sometimes utilizes similar historical images and footage for dramatic effect. I do my best to keep it as visually accurate as possible. All content on Dark Docs is researched, produced, and presented in historical context for educational purposes. We are history enthusiasts and are not always experts in some areas, so please don't hesitate to reach out to us with corrections, additional information, or new ideas. -

Комментарии • 4,7 тыс.

  • @jacobbrannon4196
    @jacobbrannon4196 3 месяца назад +4765

    They asked if he wanted help and he basically said, "I'm not trapped in the jungle with them, they're trapped in here with me" what a fucking legend

    • @villiersman951
      @villiersman951 3 месяца назад +60

      hell yes👍👍

    • @tedr4526
      @tedr4526 3 месяца назад

      It’s too bad that our country put him in the position to fight these people, because we invaded them who were protecting your own country

    • @Jestin612
      @Jestin612 3 месяца назад +71

      True 'Merican badass 😎

    • @patwxdaddy
      @patwxdaddy 3 месяца назад +207

      As John Plaster's book described it. Most over the boarder missions a SOG Team was facing 100-600 to 1 odds per team member. One particular mission Shriver's team was facing the high end of that scale. Surrounded on a hill top in a ocean of enemy. SOG had a team guy flying on the Foreword Air Control spotter planes (as in the movie BAT-21) to ensure they got they fire missions exactly as they asked for called flying 'Covey'. Because SOG teams would often be surrounded so badly they would give their own position for their air strike and it would freak the pilots out.
      Shriver's team was back to back on the hill top shooting the enemy in every direction at arms reach with one hand! Each time they dropped an enemy they would grab them and pile their dead bodies in front of them for cover as human sand bags with the other hand. 'Covey' looking down at the team surrounded by thousands of enemy, told Jerry he was not trying to be a downer but was not sure what he could do to help his situation. The commanders listening to the radio in the rear HQ all gasped hearing the situation. Jerry said something like "Thats OK man, I got them right where I want them, Surrounded from the inside! Just give it to me [ the airstrikes] like I tell ya."" Covey replied "Ahhh...Roger?" Everyone listening was stunned at the reply to a team facing a certain death???
      With the aircraft stacked in the sky above, Shriver ordered a swath of Napalm to cut a strip through the enemy on one side of the hill. As soon as soon as Jerry seen the jets come over the horizon he told his team to get down pulling the stack of dead bodies down on top of them. The bombs scorched a bowling ally through the enemy. The team then busted out of the pile of dead bodies and ran down the path of burnt human remains it made. Once the team was clear of the hill, Jerry wail running radioed Covey "Now hit them with the B-52s!"
      B-52s then carpet bombed the entire hill turning the tightly packed enemy into red goo. Jerry intentionally got thousands of enemy against him tightly packed together in order to blast them all at once. This became one of Shriver's signature moves and famously became known as the "Surrounded from the Inside" maneuver.
      It was said that even when an experienced Green Beret came into SOG, they had to have five cross boarder missions before anyone wanted to hear what you had to say. If you had 10 cross boarder missions you were then a trusted team member. If you had 15 missions you were probability a Team Leader. with the 110% casualty rate of SOG, if you had 20 missions it was hard to explain how you were still alive. Jerry Shriver had 52 missions when he went missing after going back to get one of his downed Montanyard team mates.

    • @erictroxell715
      @erictroxell715 3 месяца назад +56

      Oh yes, he DEFINITELY WAS RORSCHACH!!!!😮😮

  • @robertcombs55
    @robertcombs55 3 месяца назад +2323

    I knew Jerry Shriver; I served with the 20th Special Operations Squadron Green Hornets; he was the most vicious; Brutal man I ever met; he was the Greatest Special Forces troop I ever met...who ever lived; he bought me a Beer once; God Bless you Jerry..

    • @DJGra-jy711
      @DJGra-jy711 3 месяца назад +54

      What nationality was he ? Irish ? Cause that's how Irish roll

    • @astralplainer
      @astralplainer 3 месяца назад +93

      There are not enough words of thanks in the English language that can be heaped on men like Shriver and you. 💪🇺🇸

    • @alucardsucks123
      @alucardsucks123 3 месяца назад +73

      You sir, are as much of a legend as Jerry, thank you.

    • @jimwilson9371
      @jimwilson9371 3 месяца назад +26

      Thank you

    • @mikesperko3921
      @mikesperko3921 3 месяца назад +41

      ​@@DJGra-jy711he obviously ain't gonna answer because he's lying

  • @GarlingtonTX
    @GarlingtonTX 3 месяца назад +215

    "I've got them surrounded from the inside" hit deeper than it should have

  • @p4h10oso
    @p4h10oso Месяц назад +360

    My uncle was a fullblood Indian and did 3 tours. When he died a few years after the war (murdered), the Commandant of the Marines attended his funeral because my uncle was the most decorated Vietnam vet of his state. RIP

    • @joeirvine1033
      @joeirvine1033 Месяц назад +9

      The most loyal of all are Marines

    • @SBU292
      @SBU292 Месяц назад +8

      What was his name? Or is this just Another BS RUclips comment?

    • @Truthmusttriumph
      @Truthmusttriumph Месяц назад +3

      It's almost as if you are proud of this. Maybe the 'civilising' influence the settlers had on your people was a good thing after all.

    • @kimmogensen4888
      @kimmogensen4888 Месяц назад +7

      Probably also because of the reason that Mad Dog spent all of his money on the tribe members that had fought alongside him, don’t know if the Commandant had himself been fighting with your uncle but he did know what all blood brothers new and almost always respected when your life has been seriously threatened and you have to rely upon your fellow soldiers something happens in most soldiers brain and they often bond like they where blood brothers even though they clearly are not, bonds that I have heard several veterans claim felt stronger than their real family bond, unfortunately it is only from soldiers self reporting and behavior no serious studies have been made, my guess is that it is a human survival instinct, your Uncle probably secured a large number of “the tribe of the marines” came home from harms way and loyalty had to be shown, if what the soldiers say is really as powerful as they claim.

    • @MrKvp1
      @MrKvp1 Месяц назад

      @@Truthmusttriumph Well, you win today's Internet for "Dumb Ass Comment of the Day." Why should he not be proud of and honor his uncle's service? What have you ever done in the service of others, for your country? Either in the military or as a civilian, I'll wait. I'm confident the answer is, "not a fucking thing."

  • @SB-qm5wg
    @SB-qm5wg 3 месяца назад +2332

    Any time a story starts with a guy named "Mad Dog" you know it's gonna be good.

    • @richjohnson7362
      @richjohnson7362 3 месяца назад +43

      Dunno it's when they said he was from Florida it all made sense.

    • @SCAR16L
      @SCAR16L 3 месяца назад +34

      @@richjohnson7362 The Grand-daddy of all Florida Men.

    • @donlarocque5157
      @donlarocque5157 3 месяца назад +15

      The NVA called him that. They had a bounty on him. All of the SOG were hunted.

    • @vphls
      @vphls 3 месяца назад +17

      Florida Man. Mad Dog Matis turned out to be a POS.

    • @dave_ryan
      @dave_ryan 3 месяца назад

      "Mad dog Joe Biden" has many a story of his days as a tunnel rat. 😂

  • @johnfritz7222
    @johnfritz7222 3 месяца назад +864

    "Got 'em right where I want em, surrounded from the inside", is one of the most OG things I've EVER heard. R.I.P. Mad Dog

    • @rodneyadderton1077
      @rodneyadderton1077 3 месяца назад +12

      Legend.

    • @damintten
      @damintten 3 месяца назад +1

      Ya glad he was in another country and not here lmao. O and why where we 2000 miles away butchering a society that didn't even know how to fire simple guns??? Lmao death and destructions going to be America's only memory by future society's.

    • @daveblyth8872
      @daveblyth8872 3 месяца назад +6

      I was born on the day he died

    • @MMkayUltra
      @MMkayUltra 3 месяца назад +5

      Main character thoughts.

    • @willymassey8273
      @willymassey8273 3 месяца назад +4

      I've heard this story attributed to people in the Korean war, and world war 2.

  • @dfrasu
    @dfrasu 2 месяца назад +53

    My father was a charter member of the 101 airborne screaming eagles. He went in before ww2. He was a master Sargent at 18 and was in Bastogne, and D day and so much more. He was tough as nails. He was a great man and i was with him till his last breath at 84. Warriors are born. We are lucky to have such great men in our history.

    • @janiehopkins5584
      @janiehopkins5584 Месяц назад +4

      Baby Screaming Eagles shout to ya! 101st Airborne Division #1!!!! I hear they built some sort of walk you can purchase a Memorial Brick n put a Name on it up at Ft. Campbell. I took my Son n Nephew up there to Hopkinsville area a few yrs. ago. They had a very nice new park n I think it was called Patriot Park. Funny thing is we were headed up to do some JeepN at Turkey Bay and the Jeep Wrangler we were driving was the PATRIOT Blue edition Wrangler TJ!

    • @paulsnyder2736
      @paulsnyder2736 7 дней назад +1

      God bless your father.

    • @michaelfox2433
      @michaelfox2433 4 дня назад +2

      Master Sargeant at 18 is not even possible unless he joined at age 11.

    • @snidely_whiplash
      @snidely_whiplash День назад

      I think he may have his rank progression confused.

    • @michaelfox2433
      @michaelfox2433 День назад

      @@snidely_whiplash If he is confusing an E-8 with an E-1 or maybe E-2 thats a massive confusion since the vast majority of service members never reach the rank of E-8 which takes a career to achieve, and 18 is minimum age for service, but I personally think its just horseshit.

  • @DogGuy19
    @DogGuy19 2 месяца назад +33

    "He convinced me that for the rest of my life, I'd never go into a bar and cross someone I didn't know." Whoa😮

    • @publicuser2534
      @publicuser2534 29 дней назад

      That is what is said about the men that earned a MOH.

    • @conbec5816
      @conbec5816 15 дней назад +1

      I don't get the quote, can someone explain pls?

    • @BeantownToBigD
      @BeantownToBigD 12 дней назад +3

      @@conbec5816 you never know who is sitting on the bar stool next to you - it could be a Mad Dog.

    • @robertbates6057
      @robertbates6057 23 часа назад +1

      @@conbec5816 You don't know who you're messing with. The most dangerous may not look dangerous.

  • @tvaneaton2466
    @tvaneaton2466 3 месяца назад +1313

    My step mother-in-law was Mad Dog's sister and my Father-in-law was a friend and fellow SOG member Harvey "Hippy" Saal. Harvey told me he was on the clean up team to recover Mad Dog's body. He told me that he believed that found the location where Mad Dog had fought to the death and his body was captured as a trophy, but as stated no proof was ever provided by the North. Mad Dog is a true hero.

  • @stevefranklin9920
    @stevefranklin9920 3 месяца назад +597

    “…surrounded from the inside!” What a heroic statement!!

    • @christianellegaard7120
      @christianellegaard7120 3 месяца назад +17

      "I'm not trapped in the jungle with them, they're trapped in here with me"

    • @ENIGMAXII2112
      @ENIGMAXII2112 3 месяца назад +2

      @@christianellegaard7120
      Oh Yes..

    • @dont.ripfuller6587
      @dont.ripfuller6587 3 месяца назад +3

      I believe it's an homage to Patton, maybe.

    • @neillynch_ecocidologist
      @neillynch_ecocidologist 3 месяца назад +5

      The kind of stuff you just know a RUclips content creator dreamt up.

    • @cmpremlap
      @cmpremlap 3 месяца назад +3

      The balls on that guy, dang

  • @charlestown8997
    @charlestown8997 2 месяца назад +27

    My old man is in there somewhere. He quit counting at 50 kills. I love him so much, glad he made it out.

  • @raven556
    @raven556 Месяц назад +27

    My father is a vietnam green beret veteran. There is a lot he cannot and does not tell me. He had a lot of friends around him where they would talk about flying to and from certain areas.
    I love him dearly. He has written an account of his tours in a diary for his therapy. I'm still amazed at the ferocity of these people.

  • @NCG_EatMyPlasma
    @NCG_EatMyPlasma 3 месяца назад +1140

    This is my dad's cousin. His own Co was afraid of his boldness. I grew up with stories of his exploits and still have the article declaring his death after being listed as MIA for years. He asked his chopper pilot to take care of the dog and his bounty was actually $25,000. Highest bounty on an American soldier at the time. I'm proud that this hero is part of our family's history. We have a great line of military men and women in our family history.

    • @puckerfactor-lw5fi
      @puckerfactor-lw5fi 3 месяца назад +8

      interesting

    • @JacekJurus-pg7mc
      @JacekJurus-pg7mc 3 месяца назад +57

      Why did Vietnam attack the USA .
      A different continent and some " hero " killing Vietnamese people

    • @BushmansAdventures
      @BushmansAdventures 3 месяца назад +3

      👍

    • @TStLou1
      @TStLou1 3 месяца назад +35

      Mental toughness is 100x more valuable than physical

    • @joeydepalmer4457
      @joeydepalmer4457 3 месяца назад +6

      was he ever recovered?

  • @WickedScott
    @WickedScott 3 месяца назад +452

    Men like that don't die of old age

    • @stekarknugen9258
      @stekarknugen9258 3 месяца назад +34

      Indeed, even though he was close to being done with his third tour, you just know he'd sign up for another one and keep doing it until the enemy got him some day

    • @FoulPet
      @FoulPet 3 месяца назад +5

      Probably suffered for years in a prison

    • @DavidKeithWilliams-hg5nm
      @DavidKeithWilliams-hg5nm 3 месяца назад +10

      As an Army veteran of 25 years, I was wondering what would SFC Shriver be like in peace time, or even leading Soldiers during periods of time he was not in combat. I am not sure what type of leader he would be in those situations, even though he might have been one of the bravest, most fearless, and toughest warriors in the Army during the Vietnam War.

    • @johnkidd1226
      @johnkidd1226 3 месяца назад +4

      Nor do his enemies.

    • @user-wx9vc3yy1c
      @user-wx9vc3yy1c 3 месяца назад

      😂​@@DavidKeithWilliams-hg5nm

  • @paulstanford7535
    @paulstanford7535 2 месяца назад +16

    I’ve heard most of the stories about mad dog shriver, but anytime I see a video about him or SOG in general, I have to watch it even if I have seen it before

  • @superblue1971
    @superblue1971 3 месяца назад +288

    My boss was in Vietnam and told me about a guy nicknamed “Crazy Chuck” who was on his 4th tour and in the field even the LT listened to him. He used an AK-47 because that’s what the “bad guys” used and didn’t want to be tracked down. He would go out on his own scouting and come back days later. Scariest man he said he even knew.

    • @PersonalityMalfunction
      @PersonalityMalfunction 3 месяца назад +13

      Dual edge sword that. If you carry and fire the same weapon as the enemy, and the AK47 has a very distinctive audio and visual signature, there's a better than even chance you'll be on the receiving end of a blue-on-blue.

    • @johndough1703
      @johndough1703 3 месяца назад +5

      @@PersonalityMalfunction Guy, lol. You’re so pedantic that you’re missing the obvious. @superblue1971 said he was “out on his own”, which makes your statement not even on topic.

    • @larrym2434
      @larrym2434 3 месяца назад +8

      @@johndough1703 The enemy is still talking about the toughness and virility of your youtube comments.

    • @brianbeach9472
      @brianbeach9472 3 месяца назад

      😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣 that is freaking hilarious ​@@larrym2434

    • @richardmorris7063
      @richardmorris7063 3 месяца назад

      I wonder how he got ammo for the AK?

  • @patrickallen5781
    @patrickallen5781 3 месяца назад +633

    As bad as it sounds a man that committed was better off not seeing the US pull out of Vietnam.

    • @johntaylorson7769
      @johntaylorson7769 3 месяца назад +112

      It sounds like he was better off not seeing civilian life, to be honest.

    • @JohnLocke1776
      @JohnLocke1776 3 месяца назад +70

      He died doing what he loved, that's how I see it. Something tells me he would've been a self destructive person in civilian life stateside. RIP

    • @rokurota3311
      @rokurota3311 3 месяца назад +15

      ​@johntaylorson7769 He didn't care if he died and knew he would die there.

    • @tommysonnier9848
      @tommysonnier9848 3 месяца назад +34

      So true! I was told by a researcher that we won the Vietnam conflict but, as decided by politicians, we left completely, not maintaining a presence to preserve what we won. After we left, North Vietnam just walked in and took over. It would have been better if we had never gone to Vietnam. So sad those f...... politicians! I'd love to hear your thought on that.

    • @JohnLocke1776
      @JohnLocke1776 3 месяца назад +63

      @@tommysonnier9848 we definitely weren't winning that conflict, it never should've happened in truth. Guerilla insurgencies that enjoy popular support are impossible to defeat. I'm not a commie etc..but the u.s.-backed regime was just that much worse than the norths govt. My Uncle was a LRRP with the 101st, they fought everyone from child soldiers to grand parents. Top brass in Washington completely ignored Ho Chi Mihns proposals for peace before the conflict really broke out. Things like that, the Gulf of Tonkin false flag...the military industrial complex loves conflict at the cost of our young people

  • @andrewthompson9811
    @andrewthompson9811 Месяц назад +3

    Able to just listen. Thank you for that. Dark Skies is perhaps the best channel I've come across. Thank you for all your hard work

  • @ericcox9205
    @ericcox9205 2 месяца назад +8

    I worked with one of these guys, best stories ever. Only second to a guy who I knew who was on the beaches at Normandy. But he was a Navy radio guy, he stormed the beach but then he got back on the ship so his stories while awesome we mostly Normandy. Third would be my grandfather but he was an airplane mechanic and never saw combat his stories are all work all day party all night, lol. Other grandfather did see combat, Battle of the Bulge, only heard stories about him, drank, drugged and fought his way to an early grave. Got a good friend who earned a Bronze Star for Valor in Combat in Iraq, but he doesn't like to talk about it. Somethings sound better when it's not reality.

  • @jonpopelka
    @jonpopelka 3 месяца назад +315

    Not so much the killing, but the kindness and charity he showed to his mountain allies is what makes him a true hero.

    • @bigbongo1736
      @bigbongo1736 3 месяца назад +22

      NO, IT WAS THE KILLING.

    • @user-dg7df3sv7r
      @user-dg7df3sv7r 3 месяца назад +5

      @@bigbongo1736 *Gross.*

    • @thomasblock1164
      @thomasblock1164 3 месяца назад +11

      ​@@user-dg7df3sv7rbig bongo is correct. War is different and if we just pretend it is all about kindness and charity then we will end up in 20 year endeavors like Afganistan where you lose it the day before you leave. Plus, people have to know the realities of war otherwise we will continue to allow the warhogs to pull into wars at the alarming rate of the recent past.
      If he was just a "nice guy" no one would know his name.

    • @user-dg7df3sv7r
      @user-dg7df3sv7r 3 месяца назад +4

      @@thomasblock1164 I still don't know his name. Nor do I believe "it is all about kindness and charity". I do, however, believe there are other ways to handle conflicts, besides *murder*

    • @thomasblock1164
      @thomasblock1164 3 месяца назад +10

      @@user-dg7df3sv7r Me too! I hate war. But we don't send soldiers over to fight and then refer to them as murderers either. We both know what the problem is and it's not the soldiers.

  • @chrisb-rx9wk
    @chrisb-rx9wk 3 месяца назад +105

    I recognized the photo right away. Thats cool you made a video on mad dog. The stories of macvsog are absolutely insane and very worth the listen. Great choice. A true warrior.

    • @StanleyDoyle-eo7ts
      @StanleyDoyle-eo7ts 3 месяца назад +2

      These are “Real Heroes” ! Not “suckers” like are being called by someone in the news.

  • @hughsmith7668
    @hughsmith7668 3 месяца назад +4

    No matter how we tell the story of Vietnam. We abused our military, lost face and didn't learn a damn thing.

  • @user-ml3dp9hq7o
    @user-ml3dp9hq7o 2 месяца назад

    Thks for ur awesome stories and videos 👍😎

  • @thomasgumersell9607
    @thomasgumersell9607 3 месяца назад +221

    Great video about this Brave and courageous Mad Dog Warrior. Sadden to learn his remains wee never recovered. At 27 yrs of age and 3 tours almost complete in Vietnam. Mad Dog truly left his mark. 💪🏻🙏🏻✨

  • @BladesRKing
    @BladesRKing 3 месяца назад +339

    He didn’t die…he snuck away to become Colonel Kurtz.

    • @MrGroganmeister
      @MrGroganmeister 3 месяца назад +17

      Good one

    • @stanleydolan5609
      @stanleydolan5609 3 месяца назад +21

      Most likely fell and buried by his comrades in the field as not to be trophy. Same thing that happened to the pirate black Bart , speaks volumes.

    • @TheHungryTrollRawr
      @TheHungryTrollRawr Месяц назад +1

      shhhh

    • @MrJhonbaker
      @MrJhonbaker 23 дня назад +3

      I thought similarly - he said goodbye - may have been prophetic or knew he was either leaving vietnam to go home to the US, dying, or vanishing into the mountains with his beloved mountain friends - He was done fighting they said, but not done being there. May be wishful thinking, but I bet he lived for many more years.

    • @gunsup0331
      @gunsup0331 22 дня назад +1

      hussshhh

  • @paul4249
    @paul4249 Месяц назад +1

    That was excellent! Great presentation!

  • @LOZUPONEJ
    @LOZUPONEJ 2 месяца назад +39

    When a psychopaths mind is put to good use

    • @jamessandoval5843
      @jamessandoval5843 Месяц назад +1

      Not necessarily psychopathic. He cared for his people, just loved war. It’s not as strange as you think

    • @GggGgg-ek3dw
      @GggGgg-ek3dw Месяц назад +2

      Loving war ia psychopatic itself, only those who never been there can like it

    • @moth_MCMXCIII
      @moth_MCMXCIII Месяц назад +1

      a low blow to a great man who loved his tribe, his fellow soldiers and his dog!! maybe you should go read up on psychology before you make a statement like that!!

    • @GggGgg-ek3dw
      @GggGgg-ek3dw Месяц назад

      @@moth_MCMXCIII all features of dear adolf i just mentioned

    • @mathewp3416
      @mathewp3416 25 дней назад

      ​@@moth_MCMXCIII Google Tiger force the book.

  • @mariop8576
    @mariop8576 3 месяца назад +169

    He should have also been awarded the congressional medal of honor. A true American hero.

    • @13BadassMetal
      @13BadassMetal 3 месяца назад +4

      Should be, but likely won't be unless his missions get declassified. 😢

    • @ssdd5708
      @ssdd5708 3 месяца назад +11

      They don’t have to declassify to award. It’s the politics getting it all the way up.

    • @rickshaw3397
      @rickshaw3397 3 месяца назад

      They only give awards to they/thems now

    • @richardpagel6959
      @richardpagel6959 3 месяца назад

      A true american killer - so sad that US pro military fools always mix up their murderers as being heroes.

  • @clintfauth9830
    @clintfauth9830 3 месяца назад +671

    My Dad served 2 tours in Vietnam, he was also in the 101st airborne, he was very proud to have been a screaming eagle, he served 20 years,retired and became a police officer for 18 more,very proud of my dad

    • @richardpagel6959
      @richardpagel6959 3 месяца назад

      So your dad is the perfect example of an eager system slave, murderer and fanatical imperialist - nothing to be proud of at all.

    • @Phearsum
      @Phearsum 3 месяца назад +16

      101st Screaming Eagles were some bad ass mfers.

    • @GT-sc5sk
      @GT-sc5sk 3 месяца назад +20

      Proud on what?
      Not having critical own opinion and killing inocent ppl?

    • @stevenchurch8901
      @stevenchurch8901 3 месяца назад +40

      ​@@GT-sc5skI'd pay to see you talking shit to one

    • @Fishing4fun76
      @Fishing4fun76 3 месяца назад +36

      ​@GT-sc5sk these men paved the way for your freedom. Don't disrespect behind a keyboard.

  • @gotchagoing4905
    @gotchagoing4905 Месяц назад +7

    I carried a brand new M3 grease gun on my second tour up on the dmz. I was also in the 101st. Flying at tree top level, low and slow,our mission as Air Cav Scouts was to locate the enemy either visually or by smell, they quickly fired at us, and sometimes bring us down in their mists. The M3 was perfect being a short range cannon for when we were brought down. At the end of my second tour, I miriculed it a new guy that I trained up to be a aero scout. I hope he made it home, as I often wonder about that.

    • @janiehopkins5584
      @janiehopkins5584 Месяц назад +4

      Thank you for your Service n Salute to You Screaming Eagle!!!

    • @darrensean
      @darrensean День назад +1

      Sir do you mind if I ask why was the M3 called a grease gun

    • @gotchagoing4905
      @gotchagoing4905 День назад

      @@darrensean Good question. It got that moniker back in WWII because it somewhat resembles a grease gun that is used on machinery/ cars/ trucks / anything that needs frequent lubrication of bearings. The body of the grease gun is fat and round and that really goes a long way to that nickname. I wish I could post a pic of me and my, (at the time), grease gun. Just do a search on the 45acp grease gun.

  • @TheBarrett1971
    @TheBarrett1971 3 месяца назад +122

    Dad served with him, spoke of him often. Was amazing to hear and see stories of the man, myth, and legend. Thank you for making this.

  • @MsGarcia79
    @MsGarcia79 3 месяца назад +105

    My father is a vietnam vet and is now home on hospice dying from a cancer they said was probably from agent orange exposure. Love you dad so much. Vietnam didn't get you then but caught up now.....😢

    • @zettal2316
      @zettal2316 3 месяца назад +8

      My Uncle died when he got stateside from it- cancer. He didn't make it out of his 20's. I still remember his smiling face. He was my hero.

    • @bobbyrea5194
      @bobbyrea5194 2 месяца назад +5

      Sorry to hear about your Dad.
      I served in Nam 1966-1967 and asked to have a A O test years later. The idiot at V. A. just looked at me (no test) and told me I didn't have it.
      I've been trying to get counseling for past year and they claim there is nobody in my area. So much about me, hope your Dad not suffering.

    • @MsGarcia79
      @MsGarcia79 2 месяца назад +4

      @bobbyrea5194 He passed on Monday April 8th. He will be greatly missed. He would tell a few stories but kept most of it to himself.

    • @bobbyrea5194
      @bobbyrea5194 2 месяца назад +3

      @@MsGarcia79 sorry for your loss but just know he's at peace now.

    • @jordanark9784
      @jordanark9784 2 месяца назад

      @@MsGarcia79 No great loss.

  • @pulido6974
    @pulido6974 Месяц назад +6

    A true American hero. God-bless all who have served this great country. ❤🇺🇲

  • @kalleklp7291
    @kalleklp7291 2 месяца назад +1

    "I don't need help...I've surrounded them from the inside." This guy means business.

  • @user-mk7fw9en6f
    @user-mk7fw9en6f 3 месяца назад +275

    I met Jerry while jogging around the airstrip at Quan Loi. I was a Cobra pilot there with the
    11th ACR. We waited until late afternoon to launch, too late to help. Screwed up mission.

    • @BlahMcJones
      @BlahMcJones 3 месяца назад +34

      Thank you for your service, sir. We are in your debt.

    • @bthorn5035
      @bthorn5035 3 месяца назад +15

      What years were you there? My dad flew with the 11ACR on Huey gunships. 67-69.

    • @Semperf11
      @Semperf11 3 месяца назад +3

      🇺🇸🤙🏾

    • @aarondecelle9532
      @aarondecelle9532 3 месяца назад +36

      My dad was in 3/17 CAV at Quan Loi in 70-71. He was an OH-58 pilot. He was KIA in 71. I got to meet several men he served with to include the gunship pilot who flew top cover for him that day. He is a director at a museum called Cactus Air in Nevada, and when I met him, he brought the museum’s cobra and flew it. There is an annual relay race named in honor of my father and he flew it over the starting line on the 50th anniversary of the race. The race is run around Lake Tahoe. Thanks for your service! I did 22 years in the army myself as an Armor Officer serving mostly in the CAV.

    • @batzzz2044
      @batzzz2044 3 месяца назад +3

      Wish you would have stayed home. Sorry for your murders

  • @3wolvesrunning
    @3wolvesrunning 3 месяца назад +2

    RIP Brother! We need many more like you today.

  • @Dusty888
    @Dusty888 3 месяца назад +1

    Salute that statement Sir.

  • @winter7946
    @winter7946 3 месяца назад +299

    My best friend was in the Special Forces in Viet Nam in 1966. He told me a lot of stories of what happened there. As he got older, he blocked out many of those memories because they were so gruesome and painful for him. He died 4 years ago. I was 11 years old when we met, and we had been friends for 62 years when he died. I got drafted in 1967, and I served as well, but I didn't have to go to Nam. It's possible that my friend knew Jerry since there were not that many men in that elite group of soldiers. RIP to all of the brave men who have fought in our wars.

    • @jasonm949
      @jasonm949 3 месяца назад +10

      Everybody's best friend was Special Forces in Vietnam.

    • @willymassey8273
      @willymassey8273 2 месяца назад +4

      @@jasonm949 or dad, or uncle cousin grandpa.
      Like the guy claiming a Gurka gave his dad (Who was Special Forces) his Kukri, and that the Gurka could hit a target the size of a playing card 40 to 50 yards away when throwing those knives. LOL everyone loves historical military fiction.

    • @ThomasComiskey-uz4ie
      @ThomasComiskey-uz4ie 2 месяца назад

      ​@@jasonm949troll, get a life or education

    • @ThomasComiskey-uz4ie
      @ThomasComiskey-uz4ie 2 месяца назад

      ​@@jasonm949why

    • @ThomasComiskey-uz4ie
      @ThomasComiskey-uz4ie 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@@jasonm949 you shouldn't comment by reading your comic books

  • @eugeneblum5686
    @eugeneblum5686 3 месяца назад +143

    They got Klaus' stomach upset and he crapped on the floor. The jokers rubbed his nose in it and threw him out. Later Mad Dog shows up in his smoking jacket, puts a .38 on the table, craps on the floor and dares anyone to rub his nose in it. This is from John Plaster's book SOG. Mad Dog was definitely one bad man and a legend. Lost a cousin of my Mom over there in Dec '67. Was in the 101st ABN. KIA in a province NW of Saigon by a booby trap with 2 others on a med call to a village. Was on his 2nd tour of duty. Have a history of family serving in the Armed Forces back to the Civil War. All branches except Coast Guard. Army veteran myself, along with my Dad, 2 brothers, 3 uncles and 2 nephews. One nephew did 5 tours in Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Had a MOS very much in demand by deploying units. I saw where 2 idiots wrote a book on white rural folks are a "danger to democracy". Yeah, go stand in Arlington or any other military and civilian cemetary, look at all the headstones of those veterans and spout that BS. But then, I wouldn't want them desecrating that hallowed ground with their presence. 🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @chad1682
      @chad1682 3 месяца назад

      @eugeneblum5686 "democracy" is their code word for communism. The enemy is within our borders and they are far more demented than the Viet Cong.

    • @GBOB68
      @GBOB68 3 месяца назад +1

      Saudi Arabia? 😮

    • @arminiusdergrosse
      @arminiusdergrosse 3 месяца назад

      Thank you for your service brother. There's a lot of "idiots" out there that want to see all White people dead, most are in "our" government, universities, media/Hollywood, the ADL and leaders of the UN.

    • @eugeneblum5686
      @eugeneblum5686 3 месяца назад

      @@GBOB68 build up to the offensive. Staged some units in Saudi Arabia. They unloaded and assembled Apaches I believe. He did so many I can't remember where he was for sure. I know he said one time they guarded an Iraqi town. They might have been a sect that weren't Sunni. So when they were turning things over to the Iraqis, these people were on their "shit list" so to speak. They actually had to sit and watch them beat people to death. Think he did convoy duty once. I worked with a guy who did that in Afghanistan. Machine gunner on a gun truck. He suffered from TBI from running over an IED. Worked with the Afghan army a lot on convoys.

    • @guerillabeats2404
      @guerillabeats2404 3 месяца назад +3

      A threat to liberal "democracy" is what they should say.

  • @tamagotchirightsactivist4184
    @tamagotchirightsactivist4184 Месяц назад +4

    General: Get me a man from Florida.

    • @jamesb8573
      @jamesb8573 17 дней назад

      No men in Florida anymore.

  • @SamMartinez-rf2is
    @SamMartinez-rf2is 2 месяца назад +1

    I joined the Army in 76, and I believe and have seen photos even, and the Vietnam Vet has my utmost respect

  • @thomasseitz5477
    @thomasseitz5477 3 месяца назад +68

    Love that you made a video on this badass. It’s about time someone did one dedicated to this warrior. Out of all you channels and episodes this is my favorite episode yet.

    • @nmatthew7469
      @nmatthew7469 3 месяца назад +1

      Between this guy and Lauri Torni, epic legends.

  • @tonyjetton8352
    @tonyjetton8352 3 месяца назад +464

    6:35 That is no sawed off shotgun. That is a M79 Grenade Launcher.

    • @vSwampFox
      @vSwampFox 3 месяца назад +18

      Coincidental timing.

    • @kurtthewicked9009
      @kurtthewicked9009 3 месяца назад +20

      They used to call them "Thumpers"; my dad carried one in Vietnam.

    • @vSwampFox
      @vSwampFox 3 месяца назад +9

      @@kurtthewicked9009 we used them in Fallujah

    • @DrDale16
      @DrDale16 3 месяца назад +5

      @@kurtthewicked9009 So did I for my first two months in-country as a grunt.

    • @PetraDarklander
      @PetraDarklander 3 месяца назад +6

      That's what I was thinking.

  • @jaywalker0112
    @jaywalker0112 29 дней назад

    Thank you So Much! That was cool.
    John Basilone comes to mind though.
    Cool video though.
    Former Army 11 Break Things here.

  • @michaelc9313
    @michaelc9313 2 месяца назад +1

    This narrator reminds me of that one kid in English class, that has to try and read too fast. Their tongue gets all gnarled and their lips don't move fast enough. So I just muted it and read the CC. Good vid.

  • @OMGItsJimmyNash
    @OMGItsJimmyNash 3 месяца назад +45

    THAT is how you title a video! I was all in at first glance, and it didn't let me down either. This is the kind of stuff people need to know about... Kudos!

  • @duncanwood6095
    @duncanwood6095 2 месяца назад

    Taking NOTHING away from this fella 🫡… I reckon Every fighting force, in Every conflict, has a “ Mad Dog “ ✊🏻✌🏻

  • @HappyMealBieber
    @HappyMealBieber 3 месяца назад +238

    Rambo: "_*Im Your Worst Nightmare_*
    Mad Dog : *_Hold My Beer_*

    • @christopherlewis1847
      @christopherlewis1847 3 месяца назад +5

      Good point. Rambo would quake in fear at the sight of Jerry Shriver. After he was done soiling his pants.

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 3 месяца назад

      @@christopherlewis1847 you see you have just proven how stupid you are. You do know Rambo is a fictional Hollywood character, right?
      Oh I forgot, the rest of the world saw that movie as just that. You saw it as reality.

    • @MattRockwell1
      @MattRockwell1 3 месяца назад +6

      Big difference between a fictional character and a real soldier bud

    • @punctuationpatrolman1615
      @punctuationpatrolman1615 3 месяца назад

      @@MattRockwell1 🚨 Mouth breather alert 🚨

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 3 месяца назад

      @@MattRockwell1 don't destroy his dream of HIS! reality.

  • @PlayitagainVHS
    @PlayitagainVHS 10 дней назад +3

    They need to make a major movie about mad dog.This man is a legend. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

    • @paulsnyder2736
      @paulsnyder2736 7 дней назад

      Richard Marcinko as well.
      The Navy is very tight lipped about him - except to note, begrudgingly, he was the conceiver and founder of a Seal Team that never previously existed - Seal Team
      Six. The Viet Cong also head a price on this Ensign, going off on his own, having “WTF” moments, ambushed so deep in their territory, they never thought any Americans could possibly be there. He had his squad trek the last 10 miles barefoot, in black pajamas, silent as death.
      “I never fought fairly. I always attacked from an ambush position.” - Marcinko.

  • @barahng
    @barahng Месяц назад

    0:50 Certified "I'm not locked in here with you, you're locked in here with me" moment

  • @EnergyCenterTV
    @EnergyCenterTV 3 месяца назад +36

    RIP Mad Dog. Thank you for your relentless bravery.

  • @pete98146
    @pete98146 3 месяца назад +42

    My high school tennis coach was a Captain in the Vietnam war. He said the war "was the best time of his life." But again, he was the most competitive person I've ever met in my life. He was definitely wired differently than most of us!

  • @terryenyart5838
    @terryenyart5838 2 месяца назад +15

    100% respect. I still believe America has men capable of similar heroic acts & patriotism. There may be a few less, but I still believe in Americans & am proud to be one.

    • @publicuser2534
      @publicuser2534 29 дней назад +1

      Kyle Carpenter, Marine.
      Dakota Meyer, Marine.
      Edward Beyers, USN.
      Etc
      My generation of warrior.

    • @user-km4lx9gr4f
      @user-km4lx9gr4f 28 дней назад +1

      Me too! We are PATRIOTS AND Relatives and Descendants of PATRIOTS Jack from Iowa USA

    • @tommywingate7186
      @tommywingate7186 25 дней назад

      There maybe more than any of us know. Only when tested do we find out about ourselves. Only then do we find out who we really are and our capabilities. Eventually everyone is tested.

  • @matson8008
    @matson8008 2 месяца назад +23

    Why do you keep calling that M79 grenade launcher a sawed off shot gun. It's clearly not a shot gun.

    • @bobbyrea5194
      @bobbyrea5194 Месяц назад +3

      Unknown to a lot of people, there were some shotgun shells made to fit the M79 grenade launcher.

    • @stillnessbetween5103
      @stillnessbetween5103 Месяц назад +5

      They probably used the grenade launcher pics since the sawed off shotgun/ scattergun was considered a cruel and unusual weapon by the Geneva Convention and the Armed Forces Command didn't want it to be known they were being used. I was issued a long barrel shotgun, and my SGT. cut down the barrel and told me don't let the photogs take a picture of it.

    • @Tsamokie
      @Tsamokie Месяц назад +2

      @@bobbyrea5194 Shotgun "style" rounds in 40mm caliber.

  • @JPriz416
    @JPriz416 3 месяца назад +507

    Mad Dog would never adjust to life in America.

    • @robertdereski9156
      @robertdereski9156 3 месяца назад +48

      No he wouldn't he was a warrior made for war

    • @rickvia8435
      @rickvia8435 3 месяца назад +50

      No - he was wound way too tight for civilian life.

    • @peterclemmet
      @peterclemmet 3 месяца назад +26

      He would if he joined the local police

    • @BeardedGuy_Tawhid
      @BeardedGuy_Tawhid 3 месяца назад

      some say he defected to north vietnam, he finally saw that capitalism was an infection like a cancer spreading into the world. maybe he married a pretty north viet cong girl and settled down

    • @ibeatyoutubecircumventingy6344
      @ibeatyoutubecircumventingy6344 3 месяца назад +39

      when he was passing through a local sheriff took a disliking to the man!

  • @dougdillon1271
    @dougdillon1271 3 месяца назад +365

    I have a POW/MIA bracelet with his name and info on it. I have worn it everyday, 24 hrs a day. He will not be forgotten.

    • @nadjasunflower1387
      @nadjasunflower1387 3 месяца назад +31

      I picked one of those up of a PFC William D. McGonagill USMC. Never took it off, even after the ends broke off, just filed the sharp points down. eventually it did break, then I found out in the early 00's they'd found his remains, through an outreach that was started between US and Vietnam governments.
      Essentially it allowed doctors and military people to go into places where these ' out of the way ' battles took place and see if there were remains there of people that were listed as MIA. They had plenty of DNA on sample from his surviving family members so ID'd him pretty easily.

    • @christopherlewis1847
      @christopherlewis1847 3 месяца назад +18

      Rest in peace, Jerry. You are respected and definitely not forgotten.

    • @moappleseider1699
      @moappleseider1699 3 месяца назад +6

      @@nadjasunflower1387 Yeah I have a buddy, Army paratrooper/sapper who went to Vietnam to recover remains of fallen US military.

    • @68air
      @68air 3 месяца назад +11

      I had a girlfriend who wore a MIA bracelet. I didn't see her for years until about 10 years ago. She was still wearing it!

    • @nadjasunflower1387
      @nadjasunflower1387 3 месяца назад +6

      @@68air welp, the lore is once you get one, your not supposed to take them off until they are found. Or credible evidence is shown removing them from the MIA list.

  • @JamesKonzek-xr5zy
    @JamesKonzek-xr5zy 3 месяца назад +2

    'His ideas, his methods, became unsound'

  • @georgestrutzel
    @georgestrutzel 26 дней назад

    RIP ALWAYS Sir Thank You

  • @joannegarhart2942
    @joannegarhart2942 3 месяца назад +43

    The only man i ever loved was a two tour of duty Vietnam Veteran who died of cancer from agent orange. He told me some things about that war but not all. It has been forty years every day I miss him and have been alone because any one else would be making do. After his first tour he went into a bar in NY where they heckled him he threw the heckler against the wall dropped him and went and reupped he said "they didn't want us here". till we meet again Vic.

  • @xjr1618x
    @xjr1618x 3 месяца назад +58

    The best part, he was only 27 yrs old. What a beast! RIP Mad Dog

    • @julianr.7186
      @julianr.7186 3 месяца назад +1

      He joined The 27 Club.

  • @kylen4701
    @kylen4701 Месяц назад

    Wow... great video.

  • @culalquangasultaurthaliond1203
    @culalquangasultaurthaliond1203 Месяц назад

    Thank you

  • @patwxdaddy
    @patwxdaddy 3 месяца назад +382

    As John Plaster's book described it. Most over the boarder missions a SOG Team was facing 100-600 to 1 odds per team member. One particular mission Shriver's team was facing the high end of that scale. Surrounded on a hill top in a ocean of enemy. SOG had a team guy flying on the Foreword Air Control spotter planes (as in the movie BAT-21) to ensure they got the fire missions exactly as they asked for called flying 'Covey'. Because SOG teams would often be surrounded so badly they would give their own position for their air strike and it would freak the pilots out.
    Shriver's team was back to back on the hill top shooting the enemy in every direction at arms reach with one hand! Each time they dropped an enemy they would grab them and pile their dead bodies in front of them for cover as human sand bags with the other hand. 'Covey' looking down at the team surrounded by thousands of enemy, told Jerry he was not trying to be a downer but was not sure what he could do to help his situation. The commanders listening to the radio in the rear HQ all gasped hearing the situation. Jerry said something like "Thats OK man, I got them right where I want them, Surrounded from the inside! Just give it to me [ the airstrikes] like I tell ya."" Covey replied "Ahhh...Roger?" Everyone listening was stunned at the reply to a team facing a certain death???
    With the aircraft stacked in the sky above, Shriver ordered a swath of Napalm to cut a strip through the enemy on one side of the hill. As soon as soon as Jerry seen the jets come over the horizon he told his team to get down pulling the stack of dead bodies down on top of them. The bombs scorched a bowling ally through the enemy. The team then busted out of the pile of dead bodies and ran down the path of burnt human remains it made. Once the team was clear of the hill, Jerry wail running radioed Covey "Now hit them with the B-52s!"
    B-52s then carpet bombed the entire hill turning the tightly packed enemy into red goo. Jerry intentionally got thousands of enemy against him tightly packed together in order to blast them all at once. This became one of Shriver's signature moves and famously became known as the "Surrounded from the Inside" maneuver.
    It was said that even when an experienced Green Beret came into SOG, they had to have five cross boarder missions before anyone wanted to hear what you had to say. If you had 10 cross boarder missions you were then a trusted team member. If you had 15 missions you were probability a Team Leader. with the 100%+ casualty rate of SOG, if you had 20 missions it was hard to explain how you were still alive. Jerry Shriver had 52 missions when he went missing after going back to get one of his downed Montanyard team mates.
    100%+ casualties meant; Killed, Wounded or Missing in Action, men in SOG had to have been wounded several times in order to hold that statistic. To back-fill their losses they took volunteers from other Special Forces Groups as temporary fill in's, Called 'Operation Snake Bite- One and Two'. My friend 20 year old 'Gonzi' came from 1st Group in Okinawa. Gonzi said Billy Waugh had eight tours in Nam and never finished one, got shot out every time. A SOG Recon team was Two Americans and 6-8 native Montanyard Tribesmen. These guys were not told where they were going, only given a small map sheet of 4x4 kilometers to patrol. When the helicopter dropped them in, Gonzi's more senior Team Leader who had been to Vietnam a couple of tours looked at the Map and looked around in a panic recognizing the terrain . "HOLY SHIT, WE ARE IN THE G-DAMN A Sầu Valley!!!" The most dangerous place on Earth at the time, "They gave us their shit missions!" Shortly after they were in an Ambush and Gonzi was shot in the knee and his TL shot through the chest. The only reason they survived was because their experienced Montanyards were so fast on the M-79 Grenade Launcher that they had three 40mm rounds aloft in a continuous stream of return fire. Allowed him to tape a plastic chest seal on his Team Leader and heave him on his back and run with a bullet in his knee. Unfortunately the tape slipped off and his Team Leader died on his back as they were running to the extraction point.

    • @bradsanders407
      @bradsanders407 3 месяца назад +5

      And if you believe that you believe in the tooth fairy

    • @christopherdrzik6784
      @christopherdrzik6784 3 месяца назад +43

      I'm glad you took the time to explain what really happened in Vietnam and how brave some of my brothers were. I'm saddened every day by the way the Veterans are treated inthis Republic we call home. The cost was high and today's youth doesn't have a clue.

    • @eazyridin7283
      @eazyridin7283 3 месяца назад +11

      You ever thought of writing a book?

    • @eazyridin7283
      @eazyridin7283 3 месяца назад

      @@christopherdrzik6784 thank you for your service 🫡

    • @toddianuzzi9296
      @toddianuzzi9296 3 месяца назад +8

      Thanks for this

  • @kenlandon7803
    @kenlandon7803 3 месяца назад +42

    A man among men. God Bless you Jerry Shriver.

  • @connorhart7597
    @connorhart7597 3 месяца назад

    That is a cooooold line, bro. "Call an ambulance, call an ambulance! But not for me 😈" type of vibes

  • @seannicholson8498
    @seannicholson8498 2 месяца назад

    Great episode!!!

  • @imochiexe5056
    @imochiexe5056 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for your service ❤🤘🙏💯💪🫡🇺🇸

  • @toben42
    @toben42 3 месяца назад +411

    That was a grenade launcher, not a sawed off shotgun. My dad was in Vietnam and told me one time 30 guys went out on patrol and only 4 returned. He's seen some awful things that still haunt him.

    • @kdbghost23
      @kdbghost23 3 месяца назад +24

      My DaD went to Vietnam He passed last year in Oct. I miss hiM 🙏🏽

    • @72marshflower15
      @72marshflower15 3 месяца назад +8

      They must have clipped in the incorrect footage.

    • @em..657ifusayso
      @em..657ifusayso 3 месяца назад +1

      so fun. yw85 dad's an asshole also.
      who won. not Marion morrison (John wayne)
      What idiot would call your male son Marion. ha ha ha😅

    • @MrAndrewAllen
      @MrAndrewAllen 3 месяца назад +30

      Most of the weapons they showed were not what the narration said.

    • @dougkal8706
      @dougkal8706 3 месяца назад +20

      They got clips of different scenes from different movies and not applicable to what the narrator is babbling about lol

  • @MyTube4Utoo
    @MyTube4Utoo 3 месяца назад +70

    When Shriver wasn't training, he spent his spare time training.

    • @paulsnyder2736
      @paulsnyder2736 7 дней назад

      “The more thou sweateth in training, the less thou bleedeth in battle.” - Richard Marcinko,
      founder of Seal Team Six.

  • @PiKapp707
    @PiKapp707 3 месяца назад +2

    He would get home from patrols and then basically sneak out and go help on other patrols ... holy shit. Dudes basically irl MasterChief

  • @armybeef68
    @armybeef68 Месяц назад +7

    1:08
    "Born Jerry Michael Tate, he was a military brat. His biological father, Henry A Tate, Jr., was in the Air Corps and Air Force. His parents married in 1941 and his father served during WW II in Italy. After the war, the family spends time in Germany and Bermuda. By the time he was 12, Jerry had three younger siblings and his parents had split up. Soon afterwards his mom "Doll" marries another career Air Force man, Dale L Shriver. Jerry and his siblings all take the Shriver surname. Three more siblings were added to his family"
    "In Dec 1958 - 17 year old Jerry Shriver drops out of South Fork High School (Miranda, CA) to join the Army. He is listed as living in Weott, Humboldt County, California. His mom and step-father live in Sacramento"
    If you need help with the big words let me know.

  • @hairydogstail
    @hairydogstail 3 месяца назад +328

    Thank you for bringing attention to this amazing soldier who served his nation..The German Shepherd story was a little wrong..The German Shepard went to the bathroom in the bar and they rubbed the dog's nose in it..After hearing this, Mad Dog went into the bar, pulled his pants down and left a big one. He pulled up his pants and asked if anyone wanted to rub his nose in it?? No one dared to even give him a look..It is time to remind the young generation the caliber of people who made this nation, instead of propping up criminals like George floyed..Thanks again..This and many other true stories are in John L Plaster's book SOG..If you can find it, it is worth the read, amazing..

    • @robertdereski9156
      @robertdereski9156 3 месяца назад +18

      John plaster book is the best book about sog I read it so many times already a movie or series needs to be done not alot of people know about sog

    • @22espec
      @22espec 3 месяца назад +3

      I prefer Hugh Thompson Jr, one of the few that tried to do the right thing in one of the darkest days of that war.

    • @georgeisboard
      @georgeisboard 3 месяца назад +5

      Mad dog was upset they got his German shepherd drunk

    • @maxpayne2574
      @maxpayne2574 3 месяца назад

      Criminals like the 2 time draft dodger Trump

    • @hairydogstail
      @hairydogstail 3 месяца назад +3

      Robert Howard and Larry Thorne were some of the other many members of SOG, that never received the recognition or honors they so richly deserved..Hugh Thompson was not part of SOG, which is what the focus of this vidio is..@@22espec

  • @jamesbaine580
    @jamesbaine580 3 месяца назад +538

    Kids today have no idea how many brave men gave their lives to save their freedom to act like idiots

    • @davethompson3252
      @davethompson3252 3 месяца назад +39

      Kids are supposed to act like idiots, just like you did as a kid. That’s because they are kids. Nobody has to die for kids to do what nature intended.

    • @furthereast6775
      @furthereast6775 3 месяца назад

      This guy was a great warrior but face the 20-20 hindsight facts: Vietnam was no threat to the US, we had no interest there, the entire war was a complete waste, even if we had won. But we lost, with the result that Vietnam is now a peaceful capitalist country, safer to visit than many parts of the US. Facts.

    • @gtpflug2987
      @gtpflug2987 3 месяца назад +58

      Yea, if the US did not go to vietnam they would still be free! Cmon now, lets not be foolish.

    • @SinOjosWeb
      @SinOjosWeb 3 месяца назад +5

      ​@@gtpflug2987 Bullshit

    • @SinOjosWeb
      @SinOjosWeb 3 месяца назад

      @@gtpflug2987 The US was asked by the South Vietnamese Democratic Government to assist with stopping the Communist attack.
      I suggest you research & learn the real history. Rather than the BS you have been fed.
      You are either an unwittingly player or either a whitting player. Either way. Against freedom of choice.

  • @jakefo449
    @jakefo449 3 месяца назад +255

    My father officially served 3 tours of duty in Vietnam. But he was gone for over ten years. He told me few stories here and there but I didn’t care. I was a little kid. I miss him very much.

    • @ThisIsNotYourFriend
      @ThisIsNotYourFriend 3 месяца назад +3

      I miss my father very much as well. Your dad was a good man. Hope you're doing OK.

    • @chrisolson1900
      @chrisolson1900 3 месяца назад +8

      He probably told you those stories so you truly knew what war was like. He knew that sons will often join if males in their family have, especially fathers. Based on how you responded to his stories with boredom and being less than interested, he knew you weren’t going to join. He most likely blew a sigh of relief and was proud of you in all your decisions. God bless your father, and all his service.

    • @MarquisDeSang
      @MarquisDeSang 3 месяца назад +1

      We all did the same when we were kids.

    • @sandguyman
      @sandguyman 3 месяца назад +5

      its so sad to grow up and realise how valuable the stories you were told are, and you just didnt know.

    • @user-vq8vr3uw6n
      @user-vq8vr3uw6n 3 месяца назад +2

      Thanks to men like your dad we live how we live, we thank your dad for his service

  • @RobinSMoody
    @RobinSMoody День назад

    Thank yall whoever posted this info From Buddy Moody Poplaville Mississippi

  • @kingmajin
    @kingmajin 20 дней назад

    this man is such a legend that i've been humming the music from this video for weeks...but i just now remembered it was from this video. lmao

  • @KnawedOne
    @KnawedOne 3 месяца назад +20

    Thank you for shining a light on guys who need to be remembered.

  • @the_hwyman
    @the_hwyman 3 месяца назад +22

    Much like a claymore mine, you pointed Mad Dog Shriver towards the enemy.

  • @ronaldwaters.1827
    @ronaldwaters.1827 12 дней назад

    Thank YouMad Dog For Your Sacrifice and Service

  • @TJohnson-cq9cs
    @TJohnson-cq9cs 4 дня назад

    Im not a war monger at all but this is an example of what America is missing currently in order to recover from the mess we are in today. Everybody forgot and lost their way. Thank you for this piece.

  • @alsmith6470
    @alsmith6470 3 месяца назад +28

    Thank you who ever took the time to put this on youtube...

  • @dajo2824
    @dajo2824 3 месяца назад +175

    Any guy that protects his dog like this, he is good people.

    • @raygon8
      @raygon8 3 месяца назад +3

      there is a good Marcus Littrell and his dog story

    • @alaricgoldkuhl155
      @alaricgoldkuhl155 3 месяца назад +5

      Upheld the dog covenant.
      "I got your back, you've got mine."

    • @joshashe2087
      @joshashe2087 3 месяца назад +4

      Dog never judges you by your appearance and more you love them, the more they love you back. It only makes sense.

    • @Leo-ng6bo
      @Leo-ng6bo 3 месяца назад

      Hitler loved his dog too.

    • @BrrrtReynolds
      @BrrrtReynolds 3 месяца назад +5

      The whole story of Mad Dog threatening the people who mistreated Klaus goes as such:
      Jerry had given Klaus a whole bunch of beer which gave the dog the shits in the clubhouse, so they rubbed his nose in it and roughed him up before kicking the dog out. Upon hearing of this abuse,
      Jerry walked into the clubhouse with a .38 and his infamous smoking jacket. He put the pistol down and dropped his pants. Shit on the floor and dared anyone to do anything about it. 💀
      No one did.

  • @typoking
    @typoking 2 часа назад

    dude was one dead doge away from being John Wick.

  • @pkt1213
    @pkt1213 3 месяца назад

    Reading accounts of the SOG operators and missions are just incredible.

  • @joeswampdawghenry
    @joeswampdawghenry 3 месяца назад +44

    R.i.p. mad dog.. Glad u stood up for claus

  • @radwanderer6165
    @radwanderer6165 3 месяца назад +179

    I think he couldn't fit into a "normal" live back home anyway...

    • @hairydogstail
      @hairydogstail 3 месяца назад +16

      I don't know, this society has become anything but normal..

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 3 месяца назад +8

      A live? Are you don't good the English?

    • @radwanderer6165
      @radwanderer6165 3 месяца назад +12

      @@slappy8941
      Pardon me, could you repeat that in English, please? Since I don't understand your request 🤷‍♂

    • @reven-docta79
      @reven-docta79 3 месяца назад +12

      As a combat vet and researcher, I can confirm your assessment. Your assertion has validated by the psychiatric community inside and outside of the military. For some people, combat suits their personality more than anything in civilian life could. Whereas it’s the exact opposite opposite for the majority of the civilian population.

    • @92camarodragcar73
      @92camarodragcar73 3 месяца назад +6

      ​@reven-docta79 my cousin came back and was never the same

  • @user-kj8ys1ys1c
    @user-kj8ys1ys1c 3 месяца назад

    Now that's a man's man. Thank you all for what you've done for me and my family and this GREAT COUNTRY. RIP Mad Dog. 💯❤️🇺🇸

  • @TheMarineDoctor
    @TheMarineDoctor 3 месяца назад

    Surrounded from the inside.....classic!!!!

  • @marmalade6681
    @marmalade6681 3 месяца назад +78

    Often quoted, but so true.. "Hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times." the circle continues.. Stronger people are just around the corner.

    • @waynehajek6346
      @waynehajek6346 3 месяца назад +4

      @marmalade6681 Excellent quotation!

    • @gregdowd939
      @gregdowd939 3 месяца назад

      And now we have men that wanna be girls and blue haired freaks that wanna be called "they"them"......boy are we in trouble

    • @malcomwalters9439
      @malcomwalters9439 3 месяца назад +2

      Yes yes! I like that quotation!

    • @jrr7031
      @jrr7031 3 месяца назад +2

      Well were definitely in the weak men create hard times.

  • @williamhealey1223
    @williamhealey1223 3 месяца назад +100

    My Uncle was Force Recon in Vietnam and told me many tales of his brothers in arms. He told me about this guy. I didn't know it was him until you said "Mad Dog".
    He told me about how he came to his platoon with their interpreter as an "Special Auxiliary" and during their mission volunteered to go with their tunnel rat into a partially cleared tunnel to clear it.
    Said that he was "enthusiastically vicious" and lived up to his handle.
    My Uncle didn't remember his real name but described him perfectly. After the mission the guy vanished and my Uncle never met him again in 3 tours. He liked him. Said he was quiet and reliable.

  • @darrellmoorefield6778
    @darrellmoorefield6778 2 месяца назад

    The Courage and No Fear is amazing

  • @BilleEliott
    @BilleEliott 3 месяца назад

    Excellent!

  • @indraotsutsuki7681
    @indraotsutsuki7681 3 месяца назад +67

    That my friend is a 40MM grenade launcher known as the China Lake, not a “sawed off shotgun”

    • @rickojames
      @rickojames 3 месяца назад +4

      We Marine grunts called the M79 a "Blooper" because of the sound it made when it launched a grenade.

  • @jillthompson1248
    @jillthompson1248 3 месяца назад +21

    Never met a Vietnam vet that would tell stories about their time there. Maybe with other vets but not civilians

    • @sal8354
      @sal8354 10 дней назад +2

      Most Vietnam Vets if they care to share anything. Only to other Vets, Combat Veterans

    • @travismiles5885
      @travismiles5885 4 дня назад +1

      My dad was in Vietnam 68 to 69 during Tet. He didn't talk about it too much unless one of his buddies came to visit and they would stay up late at night trading war stories. And I would lay in bed and listen to them because I was just a little kid. I ended up joining the military and when I came home after my first deployment to Bosnia was when my dad finally talked about his experiences to me. I was not only his son, I was his brother in arms at that moment. We stayed up late that night trading stories just like he and his buddy did when he visited. My dad and I did a lot together but that night is cemented in my memory.

  • @bevo65
    @bevo65 3 месяца назад

    Godspeed, Mad Dog Shriver!

  • @magnussmendiola2536
    @magnussmendiola2536 2 месяца назад +2

    Mad dad was called the knife man I still have both of his knives

  • @JRotten
    @JRotten 2 месяца назад +1

    This guy might have been the original "Florida man."

  • @Halfdanr_H
    @Halfdanr_H 2 месяца назад +1

    This man reminds me of a British soldier in World War II, a chap named ‘Mad’ Jack Churchill. He was a legend, too.

  • @fredrikjaensson7350
    @fredrikjaensson7350 3 месяца назад +38

    Someone need to do a movie about this legend👍

    • @maximilianozapata6632
      @maximilianozapata6632 12 дней назад +1

      No se debe hacer ninguna película sobre un criminal así.

    • @marianotalavera8494
      @marianotalavera8494 11 дней назад

      ​@@maximilianozapata6632✝️ In future generations, Military Historians will keep REMEMBERING his service for his Country 🇺🇸 🪖 🛐
      WHO THE FK IS GOING TO REMEMBER YOU!?!?!?
      HOW MANY ➡️ FACTUAL HISTORICAL DOCUMENTARIES FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS, WHERE YOU ARE MENTIONED BY NAME, VALIDATING THE MULTITUDE OF BRAVE AND COURAGEOUS ACTS YOU PERFORMED IN THE SERVICE OF OTHERS HAVE YOU BEEN PORTRAYED IN?!?!
      EXACTLY!!!! THE WORLD WILL NEVER KNOW YOU EXISTED 🤣
      YOU DIDN'T COUNT 🤣🤣🤣🤣
      "It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; BUT WHO DOES ACTUALLY STRIVE TO DO THE DEEDS; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat." Theodore Roosevelt: ➡️ SOLDIER 🪖 🛐 statesman, conservationist, naturalist, and writer. Who also served as the 26th president of the United States of America from 1901 to 1909
      🙌 God Bless America 🙌
      ✝️ 📢 Forever Amen!!!!
      🤚 American Pride World Fking Wide!!!!!!!!!!!777

  • @Anglo_Saxon1
    @Anglo_Saxon1 3 месяца назад +12

    "I dont want support,ive got them right where i want them.Surrounded - from the inside" f*cking brilliant.