A Vietnam Vet. 20 Million Viewers Watched His Story Start To Finish

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  • Опубликовано: 18 июл 2018
  • My team and I did almost 200 interviews in 1989 with folks remembering what had happened to them in the 1960s. This man has garnered among the highest views from all the interviews I have thus far posted. He is clearly a great storyteller which is why so many have stayed to watch his story as it unfolds.
    William Ehrhardt is a Vietnam War veteran, author, and poet. He served in the United States Marine Corps during the Vietnam War, and his experiences during the conflict have heavily influenced his writing. After returning from the war, Ehrhardt began writing poetry as a way to process and express his emotions about the war and its impact on his life.
    His work often reflects the raw emotions and harsh realities of war, exploring themes like grief, loss, and the struggle to adjust to civilian life after serving in combat. Ehrhardt's writings have been praised for their honesty, emotional depth, and ability to capture the complexities of the Vietnam War and its aftermath.
    In addition to his writing, Ehrhardt has participated in various panels and discussions about the Vietnam War and its effects on veterans, helping to raise awareness about the challenges faced by those who have served in the military.
    Here is his background of service - W. D. Ehrhardt served with 1st Battalion, 1st Marines, from early February 1967 to late February 1968. His service number is 2279361. He holds the Purple Heart Medal, Navy Combat Action Ribbon, Presidential Unit Citation (2), Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Republic of Vietnam Service Medal, Cross of Gallantry Meritorious Unit Citation, Civic Action Meritorious Unit Citation, Vietnamese Campaign Medal. The last three were all awarded by the now-extinct government of the Republic of Vietnam. He received the PUC and the two Vietnamese unit citations as a member of 1st Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment. You can find more at his website -www.wdehrhart.com. #vietnam #marine #ehrhardt
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Комментарии • 43 тыс.

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  2 года назад +3228

    If this interview has meaning for you or interest you you might want to look at another gentleman from the same war whose perspective is different but whose storytelling abilities are off the charts as well. ruclips.net/video/SRR2eQn6pRg/видео.html
    David Hoffman filmmaker

    • @BostonBlues
      @BostonBlues 2 года назад +62

      thanks for the recommendations

    • @cavelion84
      @cavelion84 2 года назад +80

      This is what happening now in Ukraine. Russian soldiers became Americans, Ukrainian soldiers and civilians became Vietnamese.

    • @alliswell-dl7nb
      @alliswell-dl7nb 2 года назад +33

      @cavelion84, exactly, i was thinking the same thing, few years from now random russian soldier do interview, then 30 years after my grandson watch the old youtube video

    • @janaprocella8268
      @janaprocella8268 2 года назад +19

      I can't find this guy's name and I can't find the link to his book.

    • @Onefourtyfour
      @Onefourtyfour 2 года назад +80

      Where is the rest of this interview?

  • @shottec3327
    @shottec3327 4 года назад +52985

    This gentleman was my history teacher in highschool. Incredible teacher! It was an honor. Difficult class, not because of the grades, but because of the realities he made students contend with. More professors and teachers should be like him.

    • @hiroshi138
      @hiroshi138 4 года назад +1668

      Unfortunately for our kids...there probably are none.

    • @asnfhtmlzxsje274
      @asnfhtmlzxsje274 4 года назад +1394

      @@hiroshi138 those who went fighting in afgan and iraq war can be good teachers too

    • @kevinpaul1847
      @kevinpaul1847 4 года назад +1202

      Man i wish this guy was my history teacher.

    • @asnfhtmlzxsje274
      @asnfhtmlzxsje274 4 года назад +207

      @@nathanb.8114 soldiers retire early. Its gobernemts scheme to provide them job post retirement i guess.

    • @9pathNick
      @9pathNick 4 года назад +300

      You’re a lucky individual!

  • @mcafeex311
    @mcafeex311 2 года назад +4506

    “I’m wasting your film” 🥺
    Meanwhile he speaks more truth in 15 minutes than what’s come out of Washington for the last 6 decades.

    • @nofoo
      @nofoo 2 года назад +88

      25 decades*

    • @mcafeex311
      @mcafeex311 2 года назад +68

      @@nofoo if ya wanna get technical, Philadelphia was the US capital 25 decades ago

    • @nofoo
      @nofoo 2 года назад +30

      @@mcafeex311 my point still stands ✌️

    • @coleworld5010
      @coleworld5010 2 года назад +18

      It’s an experience vs an agenda. We will never know the “truth” when it’s told to us by truth makers.

    • @illuminati7767
      @illuminati7767 2 года назад +11

      Truth seems to be, what you wanna hear a vet say and not what you dont want him to say. As long as it doesnt hurt your sensibilities its a "good truth" "thee truth".

  • @tayzonday
    @tayzonday Год назад +3325

    11:30 “I’m wasting your film” - No. This is amazing. Every word.

    • @nerd2544
      @nerd2544 Год назад +82

      hi chocolate rain man

    • @tommybilinglys1661
      @tommybilinglys1661 Год назад +20

      ChOcLatE RaIn 🌧 💙 ily man keep being amazing and stay safe especially with all the gun violence outside shits making me introvert lmaoo

    • @samdustinchris
      @samdustinchris Год назад +8

      Absolutely. All of it.

    • @BrandonBuckingham
      @BrandonBuckingham Год назад +16

      LOOK ITS TAY ZONDAY

    • @Queef_Chief
      @Queef_Chief Год назад +5

      legend

  • @ghaven1929
    @ghaven1929 9 месяцев назад +1168

    He really painted a picture. The mustache, the hair, the big frame glasses, his cig, his accent, his storytelling. Wow

    • @davidhenschel1990
      @davidhenschel1990 4 месяца назад +15

      @ghaven1929 Many baby boom guys fit the description you have provided. It is not exactly a Vietnam vet description.

    • @user-ln4zr4pz4f
      @user-ln4zr4pz4f 4 месяца назад +7

      Easy. We all looked like tjhat and pulled a litttle tail.

    • @alexpetrov8871
      @alexpetrov8871 3 месяца назад +13

      I'd say the picture is what he actually said, not how he looked. Every word he said is a picture. No wonder - he is a damm writer, a man who weild words.

    • @gary9933
      @gary9933 3 месяца назад +15

      These are boomers in their prime during the 80s. Yes they were young once too.

    • @fingerprint5511
      @fingerprint5511 3 месяца назад +3

      Because war is about fashion trends. wow.

  • @samreagan6292
    @samreagan6292 2 года назад +12834

    “The longer we stayed in Vietnam the more Vietcong their were, because we were creating them” that is a really powerful and important quote.

    • @creamythroat
      @creamythroat 2 года назад +361

      Situation with russia and ukraine too, their troops were told go there for military practices, didn’t know it meant full out war.

    • @khabibmcgregor3592
      @khabibmcgregor3592 2 года назад +78

      There*

    • @samreagan6292
      @samreagan6292 2 года назад +6

      @@khabibmcgregor3592 no, the US military created the Vietcong

    • @khabibmcgregor3592
      @khabibmcgregor3592 2 года назад +42

      @@samreagan6292 Their - There*

    • @khabibmcgregor3592
      @khabibmcgregor3592 2 года назад +10

      @Shredneck Aaaaa ok

  • @incendiarybullet3516
    @incendiarybullet3516 4 года назад +5291

    RUclips recommendations have gotten much better lately.

  • @MrPaeper
    @MrPaeper Год назад +1326

    I have told this same story for 55 years now. And now the Afghanistan guys are telling it again. I spent months in hospitals from injures sustained Jan 31st, 1968 and no one cared. Thank you for letting me know I wasn't the only one that questioned our objective.

    • @j.n.4806
      @j.n.4806 Год назад +77

      I care. Thanks for your service. Shame on the government for using our young mens for their sick purposes. My only child being in the CAF (canadian army), I have a deep hate toward my country for using him like if he's nothing more than an object.
      I hope you are ok. Take care, and have a nice day xx

    • @MrPaeper
      @MrPaeper Год назад +38

      J.N. I sit here misty eyed as I read your reply over and over. You have no idea how much your words meant. I needed them today. Thank you!!!

    • @j.n.4806
      @j.n.4806 Год назад +5

      @@MrPaeper Can I ask for what injuries you were hospitalised, have you fully recovered from that??

    • @montanagal6958
      @montanagal6958 Год назад +7

      no one cared? so awful to risk your life for a cause and come to the conclusion no one cares...so sorry

    • @MrPaeper
      @MrPaeper Год назад +44

      @@j.n.4806 Injuries involved the abdomen, right thigh, resulting in perforation of small bowl, laceration of the urethra,and injury to the right sciatic nerve. Fragments still in body making MRI's impossible and forever limp etc. etc, etc. Thanks for caring

  • @homer5802
    @homer5802 5 месяцев назад +1925

    Fallujah vet here, what I've learned over my 60 years of being alive is that America hasn't had to defend our freedoms since the 2nd World War. We go into these countries where we know nothing about their culture, and try to force our lifestyle into them. We are the bully of the world.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  5 месяцев назад +183

      Falluja. I have heard stories from vets I have interviewed. What a hell hole. I don't disagree with what you're saying but statesmanship and diplomacy don't always work. I'm sure you agree. And there are other bullies in this world (if we are one) that it seems to me, they accept only "muscle" as a response to what they are doing or planning to do
      David Hoffman filmmaker

    • @christianworkman8108
      @christianworkman8108 3 месяца назад +126

      Gen z guy here, I went to Iraq for a short time myself and I'm a student of history, ww2 was also not what we were told in school or from Hollywood either, the Germans even though they declared war on us were no real threat to anyone outside of Europe, 400k Americans died for what exactly? We're taught the good vs evil narrative but the Holocaust was only discovered in the last year of the war so what was the motivation? Or what about ww1, the Lusitania was loaded with weapons and ammunition for the British and French and for that ship getting sunk we lose 120k in 110 days and for what? There's a lot more to question than the last 60 years

    • @neferpoyaz4037
      @neferpoyaz4037 3 месяца назад

      @@christianworkman8108 There is tons of shit in this shithole man.

    • @wavebuilder14udc75
      @wavebuilder14udc75 3 месяца назад +117

      @@christianworkman8108 Thank you for your service. But world war two is a rather complicated conflict isn’t it. France (ally and republic) had been overrun and taken over by germany.. same with Czechslovakia, Poland, Denmark, Norway, Austria, Romania, Greece… to name a few.. I can definitely see how important it was for the US to go fight in that war.. and also defend itself against the attacks from Japan. I don’t think ww2 was a twisted narrative.. they were actually fighting for survival. You say the nazis weren’t a real threat but part of the reason for that is because we went to fight them in the first place. If no one stood up to them they surely would take over as much as they could.

    • @byngostar6895
      @byngostar6895 3 месяца назад

      @@wavebuilder14udc75u mean Hitler and his brainwashing of the German people, right? It wasn’t just the Nazis ideas. However, if Hitler had been killed early on or halfway through, what would the rest of the military had done? I wonder who would gave taken over, and possibly not lasted, without the same insane zeal as H. Just sayin..

  • @AndrewDaniele87
    @AndrewDaniele87 5 лет назад +3235

    When RUclips recommends something good

    • @christhomas1289
      @christhomas1289 5 лет назад +1

      AndrewDaniele87 ikr

    • @hoytsigman5435
      @hoytsigman5435 4 года назад +1

      Very rare footage of RUclips recommendations

    • @paddysdaddy553
      @paddysdaddy553 4 года назад

      I was just thinking that. This has been a recommended video on my feed for a while and I kept skipping over it. Now I'm sorry I waited so long to watch it. The things he said were right on point with some of the things my dad rarely talked about.

  • @Dominicanizado
    @Dominicanizado 3 года назад +5340

    No Sir, you didn't wasted this film. This is not in the books, this is history straight from the horse's mouth. Respect for you mister.

    • @bloodgush25
      @bloodgush25 3 года назад +82

      Why you have to cal homie a fuckin horse tho.

    • @jordanabeaulieu2530
      @jordanabeaulieu2530 3 года назад +38

      America loves war, every war they've been involved in could have been avoided. The government always managed to sell war to the citizens under false pretense, with the exception of the war on the Taliban in Afghanistan.

    • @MM-pl6zi
      @MM-pl6zi 3 года назад +25

      @@jordanabeaulieu2530 That war is to control the opium.

    • @myramedicinewindkay813
      @myramedicinewindkay813 3 года назад +19

      @@jordanabeaulieu2530 You may not have any Afghani friends. When I lived in NYC, I found them to be courageous, forgiving, Godly ( They actually practice what they preach), unpertable, & resilient. You get a different story from them, about first being invaded by Russians, then US, under guise of helping. I heard that CIA agent Osama bin Laden was not religious til after he witnessed the hell we put these Afghanis through ( and still are).Just like what this man is saying about "fake news" stories about Viet Nam War. (Watch the once banned 70's movie "Wag the Dog" to get some idea what the Biltaberger owned media started doing & is now in complete control of all major media in US. You may not ever hear anyone else say this, but:we got the Afghani poppy fields & China got Tibet. My dreams of making a living as an Investigative reporter evaporated in 1983 when I found out you can't print the TRUTH, only what the owner of the newspaper wanted. Now we have Internet, which was hard to control our free speech on, but now they've gained ground by calling popular channels "fake news" such as Corbett Report; Julie Eisenhower; Woke Societies; SGT Report; dahboo77; Viable TV; bpearthwatch; & many, many more ! Homage to these Truthers that risk their lives to inform us. I believe Assange will be the hero of our age for disclosing Killory Clinton's emails, & so much more. I've only had Internet since January, because 4g was hurting my body. Cant stand it now, so will be giving up my phone soon. It will kill us.

    • @mtjanglefins781
      @mtjanglefins781 3 года назад +13

      No kidding. I wish we had another 15 minutes.

  • @christopherbubb2890
    @christopherbubb2890 7 месяцев назад +190

    I, like many others, first heard his story in the Ken Burns documentary. One thing I admire about him is he sugarcoats nothing. He is 100% real. He says he doesn't want to be thanked for his service, so instead I thank him for being brave enough to share his story with us. And I thank you, David, for sharing his sharing his story.

    • @cyclingtripsandticks2777
      @cyclingtripsandticks2777 7 месяцев назад +7

      Here here, for sure....he is almost wiped from search results, surprise, surprise....

    • @christophlieding734
      @christophlieding734 2 месяца назад

      Ken Burns = very good. I hope we will be able to learn and be good to each other for change. Best wishes and little prayers >> oh ja and peace from Germany. & Gesundheit.

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 Месяц назад +1

      All the soldiers they chose, from both sides of this war, were just a constant reminder that none of them wanted that war and were manipulated by their leaders into fighting. It's so frustrating to see so much heartache and there's never any real accountability. You murder one person you're a terror to society. You murder a million and you're either a general or government suit.

  • @Jennifer-zb4dq
    @Jennifer-zb4dq Месяц назад +32

    When my grandpa came home from Vietnam, he REFUSED to speak to anyone about it until the day he died. Thank you to this man for letting us in to the experience.

  • @evantugby
    @evantugby 2 года назад +6842

    I listened to a North Vietnamese soldier decades later say: "who won or who lost is not even a question. In war, no one wins. There is only destruction. Only those who never fought like to argue about who won and who lost.”

    • @lynnbaker9264
      @lynnbaker9264 2 года назад +124

      so true.

    • @booragg8305
      @booragg8305 2 года назад +11

      Oh, I suppose someone who had the Nazi take over their village might care just a little bit.

    • @DMTandSHROOMS
      @DMTandSHROOMS 2 года назад +69

      Damn right.

    • @pinkzweibel985
      @pinkzweibel985 2 года назад +138

      My father was a ww2 veteran , he said the same..

    • @lennarthagen3638
      @lennarthagen3638 2 года назад +116

      US lost everyone knows this wtf

  • @stephenc.4319
    @stephenc.4319 2 года назад +12694

    His uninterrrupted 15 minute monologue is more interesting than most full budget documentaries.

    • @MrMatenizer
      @MrMatenizer 2 года назад +184

      He's in a full budget docu called "The Vietnam War" which is incredible. Absolute recommend

    • @kennethocongerskin9460
      @kennethocongerskin9460 2 года назад +56

      @@MrMatenizer Incredible but also haunting. Certainly the best US documentary series I have seen. ❤️🇬🇧

    • @gianmarcocampo2099
      @gianmarcocampo2099 2 года назад +2

      @@kennethocongerskin9460 link please ?

    • @kennethocongerskin9460
      @kennethocongerskin9460 2 года назад +8

      @@gianmarcocampo2099 I didn't see it online, I saw it on PBS America. It might be on RUclips?

    • @gianmarcocampo2099
      @gianmarcocampo2099 2 года назад

      @@kennethocongerskin9460 i don't know, i was asking

  • @user-cn6ql2wz6f
    @user-cn6ql2wz6f Год назад +168

    My uncle described the daily stuff he did on the river boats. I understand why he hated himself so much. It was either reinforce your presence with violence or possibly die, I never judged him for the things he did, but he sure did. When he got back, everyone hated him, and he just went back. He drank himself to death, and when we tried to help him, he said he'd rather die. My heart goes out to every single one of you who served in ANY war.

  • @tamimfares3020
    @tamimfares3020 Год назад +183

    Stunning to me, looking back now at interviews like this, that what was happening in Vietnam was almost exactly what I witnessed in Iraq and Afghanistan. We created an endless line of recruits for the insurgency through the vicious way we interacted with the local population. We were Infantrymen, trained from day one to be a violent and unforgiving. When friends were getting killed and we barely saw the enemy, our frustration became too great and the locals suffered.

    • @maxwinter5629
      @maxwinter5629 10 месяцев назад +21

      And it's sad as in all of these situations, Americas involvement really wasn't necessary in the first place.

    • @liangjiang3122
      @liangjiang3122 7 месяцев назад

      After American soldiers murder enough people, they go back home as war heros and record memorials like this video.

    • @Braveheartman123
      @Braveheartman123 3 месяца назад +5

      The frustration must have been incredible, and yes the things young soldiers end up doing because of the lack of support makes perfect sense to me. At least the liberation of France in WWII brought smiles, hugs, and appreciation from the civilian population. Vietnam and the Middle East aren’t like that at all. They are a lose-lose proposition.

    • @plamenstoyanov7685
      @plamenstoyanov7685 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@@Braveheartman123"Aren't like that at all" There is a huge difference in situations don't you think?

    • @_Fighta_
      @_Fighta_ 2 месяца назад

      @@maxwinter5629depends if your saying before the death of Saddam I would say there was a reason which was to end him anything after I saw no point. Anyways don’t fucking include all of America that was just almost mainly all president bush that was doing that extra shit.

  • @TheWarriorSongProject
    @TheWarriorSongProject 5 лет назад +24694

    he did not waste one frame of this film.

    • @shrek3714
      @shrek3714 5 лет назад +189

      The Warrior Song Project That is exactly what I thought

    • @dueyfuckuey
      @dueyfuckuey 5 лет назад +380

      The Warrior Song Project > No doubt. I didn't take my eyes off the screen or miss a word. These types of interviews are so interesting. The Vietnam war is not talked about enough, the only people that know how it was are the vets and they usually aren't forthcoming because of the stigma. They came back from a country that hated them to a country that shit on them and looked down on them.

    • @rifles_up2263
      @rifles_up2263 5 лет назад +99

      Yea,agreed..idk why he said that cause I was hanging on every word he said

    • @fixsalot7133
      @fixsalot7133 5 лет назад +60

      it shows the thought process back then. people were taught to look at perspectives differently as such you don't see many people have those type of responses in old documentaries.

    • @matthewemery4205
      @matthewemery4205 5 лет назад +22

      @@dueyfuckuey sad how they were treated matt from canada

  • @guywithopinions6081
    @guywithopinions6081 4 года назад +3569

    My grandpa was in nam was shot multiple times, went on missions and was the sole survivor not once, not twice but three times...he was a very disturbed man but never exposed us to that side. When he’d wake up screaming he would say “just makin sure I can still sing like I used to” I miss that man very much.

    • @nathanc7905
      @nathanc7905 4 года назад +144

      Guy With Opinions damn I wish I could have met your grandpa, What a selfless man that’s awesome.

    • @guywithopinions6081
      @guywithopinions6081 4 года назад +74

      Nathan Craig thanks man that honestly means a lot. He was happy to serve

    • @cerny4444
      @cerny4444 4 года назад +26

      A true hero

    • @ryanhoward9757
      @ryanhoward9757 4 года назад +15

      Hats off True Americans

    • @mstelios4259
      @mstelios4259 4 года назад +3

      @@nathanc7905 How do you know?

  • @andieland0
    @andieland0 5 месяцев назад +140

    i’m 50, and just realizing growing up there were dozens of dads all over with PTSD, and we never realized it. I worked with a few vietnamese ladies in their 70’s and realized they lived through this too. thank you for your story. never forget. never repeat. war is hell

    • @CC-kl4nh
      @CC-kl4nh 5 месяцев назад +11

      People forget that the Vietnamese went through as much PTSD as did the soldiers.

    • @VeneficiumX
      @VeneficiumX 4 месяца назад +5

      I didn't even know my father was a veteran until I was about 17 and received my own diagnosis (unrelated).
      He still does not speak about it, and I don't blame him.

    • @joe579003
      @joe579003 3 месяца назад

      @@VeneficiumX Ok, uh, what the fuck has his job been since then?

    • @user-lr2lt7qf8e
      @user-lr2lt7qf8e 2 месяца назад

      @@joe579003why does it matter

    • @commonsense571
      @commonsense571 Месяц назад

      🌹never forget 🌹

  • @jasonmccann257
    @jasonmccann257 Год назад +1466

    I had a childhood friend, and his Dad got drafted into the Army right out of high school. His Dad ended up over in Vietnam as an 11 Bravo in the MeKong Delta. He came home a 20 yr old with white hair. His boots and his helmet hung on nails in the garage, right next to a faded picture of him and a bunch of other guy's standing on top of a bunker, shirtless holding guns. Every time we asked his Dad about being in the Army, he would change the subject FAST! When we were 17, his Dad finally told us why he never talked about the Army. His Dad told us they were on a patrol and a kid crawled out of hole to throw a grenade at them, and he shot and killed that kid. To make things worse, some lady ran over to the kids' body, and tried to pick the grenade up and finish what the kid started, and he ended up killing her as well. He told us having to kill that kid really messed him up, and that no matter how hard he tried to do the right thing in life, he couldn't get that scenario out of his head. He said he spent every day since that happened, wondering if and when he died, if he was going to meet that kid in heaven or hell, so he could apologize and tell him he was sorry and that he didn't want to do that. What do you say when a grown ass man tells you that!

    • @PaulNelson980
      @PaulNelson980 Год назад +32

      When my dad was in Viet Nam I heard of this happening with children and such.I asked how this could happen and soldiers killing children.To me children were playmates and life in military is diverse even back then,and despite many deferences you found some common ground and made friends.So if meet these children I could make friends of them.Do the killing of them upset me a bit.My Mom cleared my mind quickly so of this and other things done from the kids put grenade with a rubber band in fuel tanks of trucks etc.Then asked if a. child approached my father in this way with a grenade or pistol would I want my Dad to kill the kid or let the kid kill.With amazing clarity and speed.I thought yeah have my Dad smoke this kid instantly.It helped though the war and protesters such.The lesson has stayed with me my whole life.

    • @danandlaura707
      @danandlaura707 Год назад +10

      It isn't your fault xxx

    • @DamnThatsFunny308
      @DamnThatsFunny308 Год назад +32

      You tell him welcome home soldier

    • @balsham137
      @balsham137 Год назад

      Tell him if the kid was throwing grenades at that age imagine the psychopath he would become in a couple of years time. That's a fact.

    • @dundeeutility4899
      @dundeeutility4899 Год назад +5

      Crazy story jason ! God bless them all involved 🙏 love from Scotland bro 👊 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @oliverslinger5074
    @oliverslinger5074 3 года назад +9805

    That cigarette burned for 8 minutes 40 seconds... they don’t do that anymore

    • @dankernuggets7
      @dankernuggets7 3 года назад +863

      American Spirits do

    • @ralfkleemann4325
      @ralfkleemann4325 3 года назад +415

      The zoom into the man's face was almost as long. Smooth camera operator, that is.

    • @kylewalker9007
      @kylewalker9007 3 года назад +193

      Fire safe cigarettes were developed in 1932.

    • @tb-cg6vd
      @tb-cg6vd 3 года назад +36

      @@ralfkleemann4325 Yeah I had to rewind to watch it again with what he was saying - brilliant doco guys.

    • @MrEazyE357
      @MrEazyE357 3 года назад +91

      Pall Malls and American Spirits both do. I mean they will go out for safety reasons but they will at least last that long.

  • @warrioroflight6872
    @warrioroflight6872 3 года назад +4499

    "I'm wasting your film."
    Buddy, the only problem with this video is that it isn't long enough.

    • @Edward_242
      @Edward_242 3 года назад +67

      Check out Ben Burn's "The Vietnam War" tv series, he's in it and there's a lot of interviews like this. It's a 10 part series.

    • @andyshannahan
      @andyshannahan 3 года назад +16

      @@Edward_242 Watched this recently, absolutely incredible series. A shameful episode in American history and almost noone has a clue what happened. Also highly recommend anyone watch this absolutely comprehensive take on the war.

    • @BlackEagle352
      @BlackEagle352 3 года назад

      What he meant is, he wanted to be on radio instead.

    • @bradhaines3142
      @bradhaines3142 3 года назад +11

      this is the kind of thing that should never get lost in time

    • @tiredowalkin
      @tiredowalkin 3 года назад +9

      I am glued to this computer and this man's story.

  • @timburr4453
    @timburr4453 10 месяцев назад +89

    This really needs to be shown in schools, shown everywhere. His story needs to be heard...and a humble down to earth guy. He's concerned about wasting David's film...not a second of it was wasted

  • @scottfoster2639
    @scottfoster2639 3 месяца назад +37

    What's crazy is that interview was conducted 21 years after Hue City. Fallujah One was only 20 years ago. I can remember clearing buildings, squad by squad. I can feel exactly what this guy is feeling. It seems like yesterday. I am older now than my HS history teacher then in 11th grade, who was a pilot in Vietnam. War is a generational cycle of madness.

    • @6Jenne6La6Flaca6
      @6Jenne6La6Flaca6 2 месяца назад

      What year was this interview done?

    • @shaunwheldon190
      @shaunwheldon190 2 месяца назад

      Respect my brother. Those of us who were cognizant back then no the insanity you all faced. You guys were my inspiration for joining the military in 09 and I still serve to this day.

  • @misingleter3119
    @misingleter3119 Год назад +2652

    When he said “im wasting your film” I was shocked. Does he not know how important his words are. Love this guy

    • @thurst0n
      @thurst0n Год назад +82

      I think he sort of realized he had made his point and was becoming redundant. I would have liked to hear more examples but the point was clear already so that's my interpretation of why he said that. He had other points to make so didn't want to keep on explaining how the propaganda was different than reality.

    • @TurtleBar
      @TurtleBar Год назад +37

      Pretty sure he was just gathering his thoughts and the wasted part was cut from the video

    • @deathstramy7272
      @deathstramy7272 Год назад +16

      To be fair they did cut to that so he may have been rambling a bit

    • @Noface206
      @Noface206 Год назад +6

      Thank you for mentioning this I wanted to talk about it too, I think he was becoming very aware that he was starting to repeat his point, that the war wouldn't end. And he didn't want the interview to end like that, he was trying to move to the next part in his story but the war was so traumatic it was hard to move past it, hence the "I'm wasting your interview"

    • @Noface206
      @Noface206 Год назад +2

      @@thurst0n I agree

  • @johntrains1317
    @johntrains1317 5 лет назад +8865

    5:40 "the longer we stayed in Vietnam the more vietcong there were' because we created them". Powerful statement.

    • @jeremygarza5726
      @jeremygarza5726 5 лет назад +566

      It's sad we learned nothing from Vietnam....The longer we stay in middle east the more we radicalize it

    • @flexchains3166
      @flexchains3166 5 лет назад +292

      Duke fool.

    • @yourjunes
      @yourjunes 5 лет назад +336

      @Duke if you're not aware people aren't too fond of committing genocide

    • @spicybrown3
      @spicybrown3 5 лет назад +30

      Jeremy Garza u have it right and wrong. Right in that that’s what’s happening in the ME, but wrong in the sense that our govt doesnt know. In fact, that’s the reason for being there.

    • @joey1998jt
      @joey1998jt 5 лет назад

      What does that mean? I didn’t catch that.

  • @bea78tles
    @bea78tles Год назад +133

    This young man gave one of the most incredible recounts I have ever heard. I am very thankful that he chose to tell it.

  • @Destromaugh
    @Destromaugh 3 месяца назад +22

    This man is incredibly self-aware. I haven't been through a fraction of what he has, yet he is more conscious of his thoughts and actions in wartime than I am of my choices at the grocery store.

  • @stuffylamb3420
    @stuffylamb3420 2 года назад +2105

    11:33 - "I'm wasting your film". If only he knew 13 million people would view and deeply appreciate his words decades later.

    • @serveroliviacvhh7443
      @serveroliviacvhh7443 2 года назад +13

      how old do you think this man is now

    • @v1p1991
      @v1p1991 2 года назад +34

      @@serveroliviacvhh7443 70-ish. Depends on the age he was signed on.

    • @GodIsAmazing33
      @GodIsAmazing33 2 года назад +29

      @@v1p1991 Yeah, coming back in 1968, he might already be almost 80.

    • @nadaherepce
      @nadaherepce 2 года назад +1

      I can't even imagine

    • @giuseppeminervini9381
      @giuseppeminervini9381 2 года назад +8

      @@GodIsAmazing33 he's 72

  • @sweswirl7455
    @sweswirl7455 2 года назад +3744

    As he said, “I’m wasting your film…”, I realized I had barely blinked for the past 10 min.
    I can certainly understand why vets don’t want to talk about their combat experiences, but it is so important. Absolutely invaluable. Thank you!

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  2 года назад +168

      Thank you for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that RUclips is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

    • @gutshot300mag
      @gutshot300mag 2 года назад +39

      A close family friend passed 2 years ago, Vietnam vet, decorated, lots of stories, I can sit still forever as long as he spoke. My cousin’s wife’s WW2 father passed last year, same thing, when he talked about being BAR certified it rang my bell as I’m a gun nut. If you are lucky enough to meet a Vet that will share anything about their service, listen.

    • @thehangmansdaughter1120
      @thehangmansdaughter1120 2 года назад +21

      If vets don't talk how are we to learn? Through yet more bitter experience? I understand why someone wants to turn their back on such devastation, such disillusionment, such pain. But in doing so we aren't learning from our mistakes, so we repeat them again and again. As much as it hurts to talk, and frankly to hear, it's invaluable human experience that shouldn't be lost. I can't thank you enough.

    • @thehangmansdaughter1120
      @thehangmansdaughter1120 2 года назад +16

      @@gutshot300mag When I was a young girl my Grandfather, a WWII vet, told me the greatest respect I could show a service member was to listen when they talked about what they experienced. He wasn't wrong.

    • @nikeunicorn9580
      @nikeunicorn9580 2 года назад +6

      I read this then look at the video and he blinks hellas bro what are you talking ab😂

  • @lost4468yt
    @lost4468yt 3 месяца назад +19

    "that woman, that girl had ceased to become the focus of my life while I was in Vietnam. She had ceased to be this real person. She had become his icon. And then of course, she had said take a hike"
    This guy is one of the realest people I've ever seen. Even his add in take at the end is so relevant to today, in terms of the prevalence of online parasocial relationships.
    It's rare to see someone who sees what their situation was so objectively. It's even rarer to see someone who seems to be able to see even secondary concerns like this. Especially seeing such a one sided relationship before they were then part of the common culture.

  • @teddyg210
    @teddyg210 Год назад +200

    My Dad served in Vietnam and was there during the Tet offensive in 68. He was an MP and hardly spoke of his experience there. I asked but he only spoke of having to run through crossfire. He said he didn’t even feel the ground beneath his feet he was so scared. Most recently before he passed he spoke of the first day he arrived, his base was shelled and the bunker next to his was hit. Many casualties in that bunker. 18 years old, from a small town in Texas. I can’t imagine how scared he was.

    • @m1n5dmcs
      @m1n5dmcs Год назад +8

      my grandpa he is same,he with a sks shot dead 3 guys,1 arvn and 2 american soldiers,he lost 3 fingers at right hand because it got shooted(sry im bad eng)

    • @mamacat63
      @mamacat63 5 месяцев назад +4

      My dad was there for Tet in 68, too. Never knew that until after he passed in 96. He refused to talk about it at all.

    • @sassycat6487
      @sassycat6487 2 месяца назад +2

      A mistake so many of us make is we don't ask our parents many questions and then they pass and we realize we hardly knew anything about their lives before us. Very lucky you don't have to wonder. I've been talking a lot to my dad recently about him and his relatives and what their lives were like. I don't ever want to have any unanswered questions about my beloved dad.

    • @cheribee968
      @cheribee968 11 дней назад

      68, 69 the worst loss of life

  • @chompytv8591
    @chompytv8591 2 года назад +4118

    The way he says, “I’m wasting your film.” Breaks my heart. Not a single piece of film was wasted filming this. This is vital information and insight, it’s a shame he felt he was wasting this pocket of time telling his story.

    • @TheThatoneguy12121
      @TheThatoneguy12121 2 года назад +132

      I think he might have paused for a moment to think about what he wanted to say next so he felt like he was wasting time not saying anything. I only assume because of the cut in the filming.

    • @barryallenflash1
      @barryallenflash1 2 года назад +93

      He's not wasting ANY film, in fact in the 15 minutes he spoke, he told MORE about Vietnam than the government did the ENTIRE time it was happening!! NOT a waste of film at all!!!

    • @mariabrown0326
      @mariabrown0326 2 года назад +28

      I agree, it pulled at my heart as well.it is yet another testament as to this young man's consideration of others. And the way he puts value on every moment not taking for granted that the next moment is guarunteed. Appreciating and savory and utilizing every moment that he has because it might be his last. These are lessons that people nowadays just do not grasp. we are spoiled getting worse as time goes on. I want to know if he is still alive. He was so intuitive,and empathetic . I wish we still had men and women like him.I am 60 years old and I still am confused about this war hell I'm confused about all wars. But I do remember that men were spit on. soldiers returning home in wheelchairs expecting to be greeted by family and loved ones we're first met by droves of anti-war activists shouting spitting at them even those who were up there their age their own peers we're doing this.! And this was the peace and love era. Of course not all of them were. But this was the time of Make Love not war. And they were treated like filthy monsters and they had no choice in what they had to do. I remember when my brother was drafted I was just a little girl maybe 6 years old. I was so afraid ,so very afraid. My brother wasn't the type that would have made it even if he had tried, even if he really wanted to be a soldier, even if it was another war. I'm not ashamed to say that I'm glad he didn't pass the physical. .

    • @keroleena1
      @keroleena1 2 года назад +13

      That comment truly broke my heart man.

    • @shauncampbell8516
      @shauncampbell8516 2 года назад +11

      dude I agree... In a day and age where phone videos of dumb people doing dumb stuff (admittingly! I have my own videos...) isn't considered important, this comment from the guy struck me also. Any form or record of the past seems so much more important (and rightly so) by todays standards.

  • @s.c.8296
    @s.c.8296 Год назад +543

    "Im wasting your film".
    His interview was one of the best part of the entire documentary. I could literally listen to this man for hours, no lie.

    • @desm2358
      @desm2358 11 месяцев назад +22

      Yea he has a cool voice and I feel the sincerity from him. Somethin about his voice makes him really interesting

    • @masneri97
      @masneri97 2 месяца назад +2

      The documentary is the one made by ken burns ?

    • @s.c.8296
      @s.c.8296 2 месяца назад +1

      @@masneri97 i think it was. "The Vietnam War"

    • @masneri97
      @masneri97 2 месяца назад +2

      @@s.c.8296 yeah it's that one tyty

  • @MarkJones-n
    @MarkJones-n 4 месяца назад +81

    “Fog of war”- certainly not in this man’s mind. His clarity is astounding. The fog comes from the war-hawks, perpetuated via the media.
    “Stop children what’s that sound? Everybody look what’s going down “ - Buffalo Springfield 1968 anti war movement, Vietnam

    • @jackcoleman1784
      @jackcoleman1784 2 месяца назад +5

      That isn't what "fog of war" is. Fog of war isn't related to PTSD. Fog of war is a term that refers to the confusion caused during battle that can cause a soldier to commit a mistake and/or do something they wouldn't normally do and/or had been trained not to do which may result in their death/casualty and/or the death/casualty of a fellow soldier/s. One example is in the Soviet-Afghan war a CIA supplied Mujahadeen heavy mortar loader forgot in the confusion of battle i.e. fog of war that he had already loaded a shell despite being heavily trained to keep track of said loading. He then proceeded to load another shell on top of the already loaded shell believing he had not yet loaded said mortar tube. The tube exploded when the lower shell tried to fire with two heavy mortars detonating in close proximity to the crew killing the entire crew. The entire crew was KIA as a result of fog of war.

  • @angryVnoodle
    @angryVnoodle 11 месяцев назад +98

    To anyone who has not read Perkasie, Vietnam, it's an amazing book written by this gentleman. It's a memoir but reads like a novel and is incredibly insightful in lending perspective to this conflict.

  • @pdxorbust27
    @pdxorbust27 3 года назад +4053

    my father fought in Vietnam. he was about 24 when he was drafted. my parents were divorced, so I was never told about it. he had been exposed to agent orange, had night terrors and returned home addicted to heroin, which ultimately led to his death at the age of 54. I was told he was a gentle, kind man. he didn’t have any way to cope with what had happened, what he saw or did while he was there. I found out when I was in my 30’s, just after he died. it’s interviews like this that give me a greater insight to what he experienced and why it destroyed him. I was told he never spoke about it. The Vietnam war killed my father, just not while in combat.

    • @sblack48
      @sblack48 3 года назад +278

      it seems like your Dad`s story was repeated 1000s of times. Army`s are really good at killing people, but useless at looking after them. And after Vietnam nobody wanted to remember the war or its soldiers. The war was lost (it was never winnable in the first place), it was an embarrassment and politically nobody wanted to touch it. I don`t think Americans started to recon with it until Hollywood started making movies about it. I am sorry for your loss and your Dad`s suffering and that it was for nothing.

    • @pdxorbust27
      @pdxorbust27 3 года назад +33

      @@sblack48 me too.

    • @jasonmiles302
      @jasonmiles302 3 года назад +97

      I was told and found it to be true that the guys who were in the shit never spoke of it. Had one uncle who was a cook in the army and je spoke often about it. Had another uncle who's ear drums were busted from so much shooting. He never said a word about it. This guy is an exception I believe. He was getting it off his chest and good for him. War is a business and its disgusting.

    • @sblack48
      @sblack48 3 года назад +70

      @@jasonmiles302 it is one thing to have gone to Europe or the south Pacific to fight a brutal enemy that was threatening your country, an enemy you could see and fight, for a cause that was obviously just and for which you 100% support at home. But Vietnam was none of those things. It was based on lies, there was never a hope of winning, the guys didn't know why they were there and the people back home were against them. This guy realized after a year that all his friends died for nothing and all the combat survivors were slowly killing themselves because of it. He was deeply angry but he decided to confront it. Maybe that is why he didn't kill himself like so many others

    • @mrnelsonius5631
      @mrnelsonius5631 3 года назад +81

      Your fathers generation grew up coming out of the WW2 era. America was the Good Guys. No dispute. I can’t imagine what it had to be like for a young person to find themselves in that situation (a terrible morally ambiguous war) and realize they had been lied to and couldn’t do anything about it. It is a very noble thing to serve your country. It’s a tragic disgusting thing for your country to lie to you, especially when you’re one of the ones fighting for it

  • @LukeGreen1231
    @LukeGreen1231 3 года назад +3840

    This man taught me history in high school. He is a genius, filled with compassion, wisdom, and a fantastic and strange sense of humor. He once asked me, “Luke, how come you never smile?”. Of course in the moment I had no idea what he was talking about. But that questioned changed my life. I realized that my stress and anxiety had overcome my joy and happiness to be alive. I am forever smiling because of you, Dr. E.

    • @scottmiceli7121
      @scottmiceli7121 3 года назад +45

      @Bryan Mack yep, same dude

    • @williammunny2799
      @williammunny2799 3 года назад +45

      Is he alive today? what is he up to?

    • @LukeGreen1231
      @LukeGreen1231 3 года назад +207

      @@williammunny2799 He retired from my high school maybe three years ago. He lives in the Philadelphia suburbs.

    • @colinsmith484
      @colinsmith484 3 года назад +22

      Pretty cool

    • @BuzzsawMG42
      @BuzzsawMG42 3 года назад +18

      @@LukeGreen1231 How old is he?

  • @MercyBot7
    @MercyBot7 2 месяца назад +18

    The calm, cool, collectedness. The articulation. The intellectualisation paired with personal experience. This is one of the most invaluable interviews regarding this war we'll ever get. I understand why veterans typically don't talk, but when they do as coherently as this, it's worth more than they could ever know.

  • @wkmac2
    @wkmac2 10 месяцев назад +43

    First causality of any war is truth. This man is not an outlier, it's just can you get people to open up and talk openly and honestly. I missed Nam by one year but I had an uncle and many friends who went there and as the years went by and they felt comfortable to talk about, the simularities of their story to this man's story are striking.

  • @ultraviolencegaming4155
    @ultraviolencegaming4155 3 года назад +8167

    You know someone is serious when they light a cigarette, and dont take a single drag

  • @James-qn3wi
    @James-qn3wi 3 года назад +1351

    "I'm wasting your time."
    If only this guy knew today that this was worth every single second.

    • @halfalligator6518
      @halfalligator6518 3 года назад +15

      yup. or how incredibly disposable photos & video are now.

    • @Wandering_Chemist
      @Wandering_Chemist 3 года назад

      Worth it only because first hand accounts need to be kept for posterity but this guy is far from a great story teller. Check out Dan Carlin and he never served a day in his life. Hell I could paint a better picture of my time in Fallujah and I didn’t endure half of what that Marine went through, he is a hero but a story teller? Hard pass, but needs to be kept for history’s sake.

    • @halfalligator6518
      @halfalligator6518 3 года назад +21

      @@Wandering_Chemist He's a regular guy being interviewed who has higher ability than the average Joe at keeping people captivated. It's in the voice, and flow. It's not about who can tell a highly refined and educational story better. Dan Carlin is great but that's his damned job and he does loads of planning. This guy is just telling a tale like someone would in a bar. Why so anal?

    • @five1steph
      @five1steph 3 года назад +6

      @@Wandering_Chemist why so anal?

    • @TheDarkSkorpion
      @TheDarkSkorpion 3 года назад +8

      @@Wandering_Chemist I read your comment before finishing watching the video, so withheld any response until completion. Upon further review of your comment, I have only one question for you. Why so anal?

  • @funkdubayous
    @funkdubayous 10 месяцев назад +73

    My dad was in Vietnam. We never spoke about it. To my knowledge he mostly worked as an administrator in an office. The event still traumatized him. Love you dad ❤️

    • @liangjiang3122
      @liangjiang3122 7 месяцев назад

      just know that you love a guy who hurt Vietnamese families by helping America to poison Vietnam.

    • @durinf
      @durinf 3 месяца назад

      That war wasnt popular among most of these vets. Having to kill children.. pretty fucked.

  • @RichardNixonsHippieRemoval
    @RichardNixonsHippieRemoval 6 месяцев назад +36

    To be fair, Sgt. Ehrhardt likely believed this was going to be stuffed in the middle of some PBS thing shown around 10PM on a Tuesday, i.e. not reach that many folks. 30+ years later, over 20 million listeners and another 20 million down the road. I come back to it every now and then, as I'm certain many of you do also.

    • @6Jenne6La6Flaca6
      @6Jenne6La6Flaca6 2 месяца назад +1

      I was born in 1992. I have never seen this until today.

    • @6Jenne6La6Flaca6
      @6Jenne6La6Flaca6 2 месяца назад +1

      Actually, this guy reminds me of how my dad used to look when I was a baby. He had the same hair, mustache, and huge glasses. My dad was born in 1954.

    • @RichardNixonsHippieRemoval
      @RichardNixonsHippieRemoval 2 месяца назад +1

      @6Jenne6La6Flaca6 Yeah. My dad was 1953; pretty sure all those guys in the 80s were rocking the porn-star hair and stache. Now guys are rocking the 80s hair and beard.

  • @amythompson6331
    @amythompson6331 4 года назад +2798

    My father wouldn’t talk about the war. He always said “saw a lot did a lot.” You never ever woke him while he was sleeping. It would be a look of sheer terror. Most of his childhood friends died there.

    • @SldOnEmWithDa45
      @SldOnEmWithDa45 4 года назад +70

      Amy Thompson I mean I completely get why people don’t talk about it, but I would at least open up to my family especially my son, we’ll have the most badass bedtime stories lol...

    • @stevee8472
      @stevee8472 4 года назад +165

      Sounds like he was a remorseful war criminal

    • @RalfYzermans
      @RalfYzermans 4 года назад +89

      @@SldOnEmWithDa45 no you would not talk about it

    • @SldOnEmWithDa45
      @SldOnEmWithDa45 4 года назад +6

      Ralf Yzermans Ehhh I think I would...

    • @Trey_Cole
      @Trey_Cole 4 года назад +107

      Steve Elynuik
      I get trolling, In my 20s I’d call myself one of the best at it honestly, but goddamn man. Shit! Wtf is wrong with you?

  • @ClankBrisk
    @ClankBrisk 3 года назад +2222

    Note to self: if you can’t identify the enemy... get out.

    • @NeillWylie
      @NeillWylie 3 года назад +14

      That was one of the first things I thought too.

    • @jamesanthony5681
      @jamesanthony5681 3 года назад +48

      @Just a girl who loves Jesus There will ALWAYS be an American presence in the gulf region. Why? Oil.

    • @joeym3828
      @joeym3828 3 года назад +9

      Why is the Heroin problem so bad especially since about 06. We been there since 01 02, ... but the opiate problem. Rages on...

    • @bluefletcher363
      @bluefletcher363 3 года назад +14

      James Anthony No you are not correct. America exports nearly as much oil as it imports. 49% of our imported oil comes from Canada. And then some (maybe 12% idk) comes from Mexico. The rest it’s a dozen countries or so below 10%. Saudi Arabia is at about 6% of our imports. Stop spreading fake news and lies. The Americans do not profit much at all off of oil from the Middle East.

    • @triciamyles7258
      @triciamyles7258 3 года назад +2

      And how do you suggest he do that?

  • @PJV1990
    @PJV1990 5 месяцев назад +32

    This interview is so real and brutally honest that watching it & understanding what is being said and implied is like a lead weight in your stomach, a knife through your heart and a shadow cast upon your soul. It's devastating.

  • @michaelwilliams3138
    @michaelwilliams3138 2 месяца назад +7

    “I’m wasting your film” (Literally the most well spoken guy in history)

  • @karlluppold240
    @karlluppold240 2 года назад +976

    “I’m wasting your film”… no sir, you are articulating our overall experience in Vietnam better than anyone else I’ve ever heard

    • @carmelvalleykiwanisclub8626
      @carmelvalleykiwanisclub8626 Год назад +6

      I’ve heard others speak and tell their stories well too.

    • @Mornepin
      @Mornepin Год назад +3

      there was a cut before

    • @AlSherman47
      @AlSherman47 Год назад +2

      Absolutely!

    • @karlluppold240
      @karlluppold240 Год назад +6

      @@carmelvalleykiwanisclub8626 I have too, I didn’t mean that his was THE best, but he summarized up everything very well

    • @konradd7596
      @konradd7596 Год назад +1

      Yes. It's right!

  • @jubjub7101
    @jubjub7101 4 года назад +2031

    I can’t believe he says “I’m wasting your film” while I’m hanging on his every word. Damn, this is well said.

    • @Johnny-sj9sj
      @Johnny-sj9sj 4 года назад +21

      I was hanging onto his every word too, And I watched it through twice. I think it was a disgrace the way they treated US servicemen when they came home, and I’m a limey. If it were not for US servicemen, we would all be speaking either German or Japanese. Vietnam was wrong, we all know that now, but the squaddies were kept in the dark.God bless America. Best wishes from 🇬🇧

    • @d4n4nable
      @d4n4nable 4 года назад +3

      @@Johnny-sj9sj What's wrong with speaking German?

    • @DeathToTheDictators
      @DeathToTheDictators 4 года назад +12

      He meant 'he was just sitting there thinking and not saying anything' (which was edited out)....'just some dude sitting there thinking for a minute' isn't really compelling footage (and IS a waste of film). I guess maybe film was pretty expensive back in 1990? Nowadays it's all digital, and there's no such thing as 'wasting film'.

    • @briancritchley5295
      @briancritchley5295 4 года назад +3

      We humans have so much to learn but we are being held back by greed & power..

    • @johnbaugh2437
      @johnbaugh2437 4 года назад +2

      I was thinking the same thing

  • @siriosstar4789
    @siriosstar4789 Месяц назад +5

    i was in the Air force from 66 to 68 but luckily never went to Nam or Cambodia . i've noticed a number of the standard but nauseating , " Thank you for your service " comments in the thread as if those commenters understood nothing that he said .
    Service is something you bet in a restaurant.
    blowing people's faces off, hardly qualifies as a service .

  • @kalmanto
    @kalmanto 9 месяцев назад +16

    This is honestly the best Vietnam Vet story I've heard. You're correct, He's a great story teller.

  • @FreetimeReport
    @FreetimeReport 5 лет назад +1711

    I think this 15 minute segment of interview just taught me more about the Vietnam War than all my years of schooling.

    • @eacey
      @eacey 5 лет назад +36

      I was never taught anything about vietnam

    • @kcbh24
      @kcbh24 5 лет назад +8

      That's sad. True.

    • @julianbright2736
      @julianbright2736 5 лет назад +5

      Eric TheRed me either I had to do the research myself

    • @eddieclark933
      @eddieclark933 5 лет назад +32

      You don't know anything until you know how dark the jungle can get. Until total silence can break into minutes of extreme fear of a ambush. Until you realize everything you do to stay alive depends on your brothers around you and they on you. Until the smell of copper ( blood) and powder fills the air. Until you lose friends. How hard the hot air is to breath and how much you can sweat and how thirsty you can get.
      You can't understand Vietnam until you experience it. You fought ghosts !

    • @julianbright2736
      @julianbright2736 5 лет назад +6

      Eddie Clark your absolutely right I salute to the men who served Vietnam

  • @christinaford3634
    @christinaford3634 Год назад +2541

    My grandfather got drafted into the Marines. Before he went he taught Sunday school, never drank a drop or smoked. He came home a haunted man. He drank himself to death. I never got to meet him. My grandma used to say... I sent them my wonderful, caring husband and they sent me back a broken, angry and changed man.

    • @CANEYEBALL
      @CANEYEBALL Год назад +104

      So sorry.

    • @RichardC313
      @RichardC313 Год назад +162

      Happend to my grandfather too. Heard he was a good person/nice man. He got drafted into the marines and came back mentally sick, paranoid and disturbed. She's baffled to this day about what happened to him.

    • @atomlotus9698
      @atomlotus9698 Год назад +32

      The same thing happened to my grandfather he was in the army in ww2 jumped out of planes and fought on the ground .

    • @iscreemz4494
      @iscreemz4494 Год назад +88

      My uncle Reg was on a submarine during World War II that was captured by the Japanese.
      He never spoke of his experiences in captivity, but even as a child I realized he was different from other adults.
      One New Year's Eve my mum and dad had a party and, late that night after many drinks, Uncle Reg ran down the garden and was clinging to the washing pole for dear life, wailing as tears streamed down his face.
      I can only imagine what he experienced during the war.
      I'm so thankful that we've opened up about PTSD, and that the men and women who serve their countries now have access to proper counselling and understanding.

    • @arealhuman826
      @arealhuman826 Год назад

      the true victims of war are the women who sit at home.

  • @JimmyS.25
    @JimmyS.25 Год назад +21

    One of my favourite videos on RUclips. Play this in every history lesson.

  • @NewKanyeFan
    @NewKanyeFan 11 месяцев назад +32

    This man was also featured in either Vietnam in HD or the Ken Burns' documentary series on Vietnam. Much older in the documentary but just as articulate and aware.

  • @KMACKTIME
    @KMACKTIME 3 года назад +9427

    I wanted this to continue so badly. He’s so well spoken with outstanding insight. I could listen to him for hours.

    • @arclight4625
      @arclight4625 3 года назад +100

      Yeah, same here.

    • @lauraellen122
      @lauraellen122 3 года назад +256

      It's not that the guy is exceptionally articulate. He isn't. It's that you probably spend far too much time on social media. You also probably surround yourself with uneducated, inarticulate and uninformed morons. Yeah. That's it.

    • @brmillgr
      @brmillgr 3 года назад +150

      Ken Burns: The Vietnam War

    • @lauraellen122
      @lauraellen122 3 года назад +39

      @@patrick5034 It should be "educating". You want the verrbs to match. I think this is usually covered in junior high.

    • @patrick5034
      @patrick5034 3 года назад +32

      @@lauraellen122 🤣🤣👏👍

  • @niall287
    @niall287 3 года назад +3178

    "I'm wasting your film"
    No sir, you are not.

    • @johnpears9558
      @johnpears9558 3 года назад +1

      @The Revirantless what’s that supposed to mean?

    • @michaellewis242
      @michaellewis242 3 года назад +3

      He did

    • @ilillililil5042
      @ilillililil5042 3 года назад +1

      @@Revirantless ?

    • @cosmoray9750
      @cosmoray9750 3 года назад +31

      That is exactly what the US government is doing today. They create and produce their own enemy. "The terrorist were created by the pentagon and the next enemy is China. Why do you think the Trade war was started.
      "We created them, we produce them"

    • @bimoketileng6240
      @bimoketileng6240 3 года назад +4

      @@cosmoray9750 i really really agree with you

  • @dippydoo1000
    @dippydoo1000 7 месяцев назад +12

    brave man, think one of the worst parts for him was knowing he was hated

  • @penguinboy561
    @penguinboy561 Год назад +16

    "I'm wasting your film" just painfully drives home the fultility of the war that this man feels, and the longing that things could have been different.

  • @sha2143
    @sha2143 Год назад +2441

    11:30 "I'm wasting your film" This man is so considerate while talking about such atrocities. The sheer amount of self reflection and personal growth this man must have undergone is astounding, truly admirable.

    • @VictorRice
      @VictorRice Год назад +113

      this guy is EXTREMELY articulate, it's encouraging to know that some people made it out of there with their minds still intact.

    • @sha2143
      @sha2143 Год назад +75

      @@VictorRice Or were atleast able to piece themselves back together.

    • @JC-lx7uu
      @JC-lx7uu Год назад +26

      its funny because that is also the bit they cut so he was 100% right lmao

    • @jrstocker3
      @jrstocker3 Год назад +34

      My response to that statement was 'No sir, you are most decidedly NOT.'

    • @checkle1
      @checkle1 Год назад +16

      that's what stood out to me right away. I was like "noooo, the details and the emotion really matter, we all appreciate it now"

  • @kimjasso9953
    @kimjasso9953 5 лет назад +3140

    "We created the Vietcong, we produced them". This is so powerful. This man is a truth teller.

    • @Efreeti
      @Efreeti 5 лет назад +99

      If only we learned from this re: the Middle East.

    • @saftovooey4569
      @saftovooey4569 5 лет назад +18

      my eyes glanced over this comment the very second he said it......CREEPY.

    • @Riccardo-kw5dc
      @Riccardo-kw5dc 5 лет назад +38

      @Chester Smith Yeah, they I guess why they did see you as an "invading force"... Maybe because you were "invading" them?
      Maybe because stable, rich of resources and relatively developed countries (for their regions of course) were left to ashes?
      Maybe because you literally created, armed, trained, terrorist groups in order to fight the Soviets in your dirty proxy-wars?
      Maybe that's why. But you did better than previous times, that's true. No atomic bombs and napalm aimed at civilians like in Japan, Korea or Vietnam, maybe some lead like in Jugoslavia but who knows, we will discover the truth when it will be convenient for the USA, like the absence of WMD in Saddam's arsenal...

    • @Riccardo-kw5dc
      @Riccardo-kw5dc 5 лет назад +7

      @Chester Smith yeah, because of your support in the region of terrorist groups "needed" to fight the Soviets and because Churchill's mad division of countries in that part of the Asia.
      Moreover, that "law of the jungle" stuff Is horrible for a men in 2019 and doesn't really is in USA propaganda, I would at least appreciate the brutal honesty.

    • @mastertomolo8904
      @mastertomolo8904 5 лет назад +17

      Chester Smith Iraq under the rule of Sadam Hussein was actually a lot better that after the US decided the country needed some good ol' peaceful and democratic bombings; indeed, women could dress how they wanted, study like any other person. Now, once the US came and left, it's a fucking mess.

  • @jjpenny1384
    @jjpenny1384 Год назад +15

    Probably one of the most REAL interviews I have ever watched. Good one.

  • @AlbertHoffman-mb6tv
    @AlbertHoffman-mb6tv 3 месяца назад +8

    You are not wasting his film! Man wish it was longer. It's like the world has amnesia and we're doing the same thing over agin. Wish i could speak with u.

  • @matthewforeshew9366
    @matthewforeshew9366 4 года назад +1436

    I hope the guy who filmed this realised that it's not a waste of film. He's telling stories that would have been forgotten by time otherwise ❤️

    • @jack-dh9hs
      @jack-dh9hs 4 года назад +28

      Matthew Foreshew im 90% sure this is from the tv documentary series “Vietnam: A Television History” it’s 13 episodes and each episode is an hour long. i highly recommend watching it. last time i checked it’s on netflix

    • @joelhellman8746
      @joelhellman8746 4 года назад +5

      @@jack-dh9hs it's the same guy from the documentary, but this looks older than those interviews. I think he tells the same story in the docu. Really good documentary though, I've seen it almost 5 times. It is heartbreaking listening to all the stories from those involved in this conflict, vietnamese and americans alike, veterans and civilians.
      Edit
      Sorry, thought you were talking about the more recent documentary by Ken Burns. Simply named The Vietnam war. It's on Netflix..

    • @brennencox516
      @brennencox516 4 года назад +3

      This was one person's opinion. Not to say what he observed was wrong, but... It was his observations.

    • @matthewforeshew9366
      @matthewforeshew9366 4 года назад

      @1manuscriptman hey buddy. Shut up. 😘

    • @zombi3907
      @zombi3907 3 года назад

      @@brennencox516 I mean, other than pointing out an obvious thing, that these are his observations, do you have any other thing to actually say? Its a strange thing to write if you don't want to imply something, such as that he might be wrong and the Vietnam War was some heroic effort. All those involved in getting us into Vietnam were the worst kinds of lying bastards, this is historically well-documented. In fact as I write this I am baffled at the notion that someone could disagree with that statement, like, this is pretty much the consensus.

  • @drby0788
    @drby0788 4 года назад +429

    "I'm wasting your film."
    No, you're making it timeless.

    • @NinjaBusCow
      @NinjaBusCow 4 года назад +4

      It was honestly eye opening.
      I loved every minute of this man speaking.

    • @konradwolczyk2364
      @konradwolczyk2364 4 года назад +1

      you’re

    • @drby0788
      @drby0788 4 года назад +1

      @@konradwolczyk2364 corrected

    • @konradwolczyk2364
      @konradwolczyk2364 4 года назад

      haha fuck you’re fast dude

  • @DecoyAUT
    @DecoyAUT Год назад +11

    In war, truth is the first casualty.

  • @Jazzycat47
    @Jazzycat47 10 месяцев назад +22

    I had orders to go to Vietnam in 1969, but the Army apparently forgot it had sent me to Germany (Soviets had invaded Czechoslovakia). The orders were changed, and I didn't go to Vietnam. I felt guilty for years; it was like I had 'finagled' my way out, even though I had nothing to do with it. It was a very weird time for all of us in the military.

    • @slick-px4pq
      @slick-px4pq 22 дня назад

      Similar thing happened to my uncle. Spent the war in Germany. Was never in danger. He had a psychological breakdown last year. I think it might be survivor guilt of sorts. When he got home, he was treated horribly by his country even though he had no part in the war. I think I'll give him a call.

  • @mattmorgan5073
    @mattmorgan5073 2 года назад +4611

    Bill Earhart is the guy’s name. He ended up being a poet and writer.

  • @LeeFerikson
    @LeeFerikson 4 года назад +1153

    I can't really describe how valuable this is. This will be in museums.

    • @TheWorld_2099
      @TheWorld_2099 4 года назад +3

      LeeFerikson - this is the museum.
      And it is SO valuable.

    • @TheWorld_2099
      @TheWorld_2099 4 года назад

      OctopusMusic - nah, don’t already censor yourself.
      You fight for what’s right.
      Period.

    • @BillyJack85
      @BillyJack85 4 года назад

      And heard nor seen by NO ONE. This tale is as old as time. We're about due for another one. Perhaps our turn to be democratized. The show's coming to a close soon tho. We're coming back around to where it all started, as in the days of Noah, end of days territory.

    • @joelhammer3538
      @joelhammer3538 3 года назад +1

      Not in any trump-era museum it wont. It was a terrific war. Terrific.

    • @nick8339
      @nick8339 3 года назад

      What state was this in?

  • @tdavani
    @tdavani Год назад +4

    I come back to this interview again and again just to see how an honest man can help make this world better. I hope all people all over the world would watch this and all soldiers of all military all over the world would understand that most wars are done for profit of a few .

  • @RedDread_
    @RedDread_ 3 года назад +2385

    "I'm wasting your film" no sir, you most certainly are not

    • @kashwalton-tewes4624
      @kashwalton-tewes4624 3 года назад +6

      stfu

    • @user-tw1pm6nr5e
      @user-tw1pm6nr5e 3 года назад +7

      ok

    • @teppovaisanen5807
      @teppovaisanen5807 3 года назад +44

      I liked his humility. He actually thought that. But uttering the truth he was - definitely not a waste of film.

    • @gatitocafe1251
      @gatitocafe1251 3 года назад +7

      Might have been thinking for a moment while they were rolling and they cut out the dead air. I notice they readjust the camera when he says that.

    • @humanchannel7825
      @humanchannel7825 3 года назад +11

      @@kashwalton-tewes4624 why would you say that. Just why.

  • @SuperThatguylol
    @SuperThatguylol 5 лет назад +601

    "We created them, We produced them." This guy was way ahead of the curve.

    • @tomat6362
      @tomat6362 5 лет назад +31

      He still is ahead of the curve in 2018. Hopefully the curve is catching up a little.

    • @sirsenior1861
      @sirsenior1861 5 лет назад

      @@250txc what?

    • @argophloia703
      @argophloia703 5 лет назад +31

      Fly in from a million miles away for a fake reason, burn someone's village, slaughter them and rape them...the survivors become militant. Is that what you wanna know?

    • @AvidiaNirvana
      @AvidiaNirvana 5 лет назад +1

      Do clarify how we created and produced these retards?

    • @osbaldofernanez8359
      @osbaldofernanez8359 5 лет назад +6

      Can we use this same quote and apply it to the underprivileged minorities in America.

  • @Frankcastlepunisher74
    @Frankcastlepunisher74 2 месяца назад +4

    Much love and respect for this gentleman! He tells it like it was. Thank you, Sir for telling us your story! God bless our, Vets from 'Nam. Semper Fi!

  • @Superchickenman159
    @Superchickenman159 8 месяцев назад +4

    this guy is so well spoken, no two ways about it
    i admire his position and his speech and his storytelling ability
    a beautiful person i wish well

  • @Jake_Ro_X
    @Jake_Ro_X 3 года назад +1056

    "I'm wasting your film."
    He did not waste the film. This was an excellent and accurate historical view of the Vietnam War. I wish more people would watch this. The truth.

    • @MrHelp-yd4kn
      @MrHelp-yd4kn 3 года назад +13

      Like fuck off... This guy is speaking the the truth

    • @marybrown7203
      @marybrown7203 3 года назад +5

      @@MrHelp-yd4kn Listen to the film again. You might want to apologize. @11:33

    • @Raellives
      @Raellives 3 года назад

      You were there, I presume?

    • @bkackmagic555
      @bkackmagic555 3 года назад +5

      Literal film. Film reel. They have limited amounts of actual film to shoot with

    • @colinellesmere
      @colinellesmere 3 года назад +2

      Mr Help. Why so aggressive. Do you really think the Vietnamese wanted the Americans in to prop up something akin to French colonialisation. The Vietnamese are hugely independent and have struggled for their identity for two thousand years. I bet you don't know they defeated the Mongols three rimes. Three times. Try to get that into some perspective. The whole of Europe was not conquered save for the luck that Ghengus Kahn died when the money were in Poland.

  • @biharilaszlo2410
    @biharilaszlo2410 3 года назад +2799

    "Ahhh I'm wasting your film..."
    More than 8 million people disagree

    • @well_as_an_expert_id_say
      @well_as_an_expert_id_say 3 года назад +33

      Literal film in the camera, with the pauses. Christ

    • @dynamo5326
      @dynamo5326 3 года назад +4

      @@well_as_an_expert_id_say ok

    • @gatheringleaves
      @gatheringleaves 3 года назад

      Are you from Hungary?

    • @Hungrydawgsrunfaster
      @Hungrydawgsrunfaster 3 года назад +13

      @@well_as_an_expert_id_say go fuck yourself

    • @The1stLumiens
      @The1stLumiens 3 года назад +24

      @@well_as_an_expert_id_say It's hard to believe that we have access to such incredible accounts of unedited, unfiltered interviews. Good thing this isn't Hollywood - right?

  • @MrCombatmedic00
    @MrCombatmedic00 10 месяцев назад +76

    Did a tour in Iraq back in 2003, invasion phase into the first insurgency. Her name was Karen, the girl I made into a goalpost in the end zone. My entire purpose to stay alive was so I could continue being with her. When I got back, I immediately went to see her and found her with another guy. I didn’t flip out like I thought I would, but something broke that day and took a long time to fix.

  • @user-cc5od3zk4p
    @user-cc5od3zk4p Год назад +3

    What an incredible man. It is tragic what war does. I wish we could all live in peace. Thank you for this wonderful piece of history.

  • @mickles1975
    @mickles1975 3 года назад +1259

    "I'm wasting your film"
    Not in the slightest. Utterly fascinating.

    • @bigmantingyeh656
      @bigmantingyeh656 3 года назад +1

      9 xx

    • @HouseholdDog
      @HouseholdDog 3 года назад +4

      Fascinating enough for us to be transfixed. Decades later.

    • @daveslyker4431
      @daveslyker4431 3 года назад +5

      Film is very expensive. Especially back then

    • @mickles1975
      @mickles1975 3 года назад +3

      @@daveslyker4431 Yeah but it was worth it.

    • @daveslyker4431
      @daveslyker4431 3 года назад +3

      @@mickles1975 not saying it wasn't. But we would never think of that because of digital cameras. He's a thoughtful man and considers something like the cost of film.

  • @deejo2
    @deejo2 4 года назад +2752

    I could've listened to this guy for hours.
    I was newly married to a guy who joined the army at 18 yrs old. We were just 2 kids in love who only cared about being together. Then he was shipped out to Viet Nam - Infantry division. I wrote to him every single night. My main goal was to make sure he got a letter every single time they had mail call. He returned after 9 LONG months. Ecstatic to be together again, I assumed everything would be wonderful. I was still the same young girl he'd left safely at home. After the initial excitement of our reunion, I began to feel like I was with a stranger. I didn't have a clue what he had been through. Even though I asked, of course he didn't tell me. How could he begin to describe his thoughts & experiences to someone who couldn't possibly understand? He mostly only felt comfortable around other soldiers who had been there & returned. This guy who had only wanted to be with me & our baby son before he left didn't seem to know how to be with us anymore. I knew he looked like the same guy but something had changed....a lot. Being naive, I assumed he didn't want to be with me. I never knew that maybe he didn't know how to be in his own skin. Eventually our marriage didn't make it. Now that I've learned so much more than I ever knew then, there have been sooo many times that I've wanted to go back & talk with him. But I can't. He died at only 31 years old & it wasn't until much later that I began to understand him again. I wish so badly I could tell him so.

    • @lioneloconnor4785
      @lioneloconnor4785 4 года назад +34

      Deejo2🌹

    • @JohnDoe-ky9yn
      @JohnDoe-ky9yn 4 года назад +171

      Hey, it's okay. You didn't choose the war for him, and you weren't able to grasp the implications. He probably wasn't either. Don't beat yourself up over this. The reflection alone tells me that you're a good person. I know a lot of Viet veterans, and i have lived in Vietnam for years, it takes decades to understand what happened here. Nothing is black and white here.

    • @marnel7787
      @marnel7787 4 года назад +62

      This is what people couldn't understand. How can you go through those experiences, and come back to what we know as normal life, and still see things the same, and try and be a" normal person", or take anything seriously? I'm sorry for how it turned out for you, and understand what he must have been going through.

    • @jessica_jam4386
      @jessica_jam4386 4 года назад +46

      Reminds me of an old movie “The Best Years of our Lives”, except that film was about WWII vets returning home and all the implications that brought to them and their families. Very good but sad movie.

    • @stephenfitzpatrick9189
      @stephenfitzpatrick9189 4 года назад +18

      Feel his love. In the end that's what's left, doesnt that feel good? 💖 .

  • @michelle60134
    @michelle60134 10 месяцев назад +10

    I’ve watched this a half a dozen times and find it just as interesting as the first time I saw it love the vet even if you hate the war

  • @johnbedolla5096
    @johnbedolla5096 8 месяцев назад +5

    Respect to this veteran for his service.

  • @endistherenown776
    @endistherenown776 4 года назад +2585

    War is young men dying and old men talking -Odysseus

    • @keithhaycraft3765
      @keithhaycraft3765 4 года назад +64

      Thomas, it is my belief that one way to stop wars is making those who start them fight them. We might not lose so much of the flower of youth.

    • @bluesyjazzy-ish3489
      @bluesyjazzy-ish3489 4 года назад +25

      @@keithhaycraft3765 Agreed my friend. The youth who fight the wars are often the pawns of those who wage them.

    • @endistherenown776
      @endistherenown776 4 года назад +4

      @@keithhaycraft3765 Well put. Even when the youth have lost friends and are likely to never be the same again, they are mistreated by the men that sent them there.

    • @Mike-ie8np
      @Mike-ie8np 4 года назад +36

      Generals gather in their Masses just like witches at black masses.
      .. Ozzy Osbourne

    • @Mike-ie8np
      @Mike-ie8np 4 года назад +20

      @@bluesyjazzy-ish3489
      Politicians hide themselves away,
      They always start the wars
      Treating people just like pawns in chess..wait till their judgment day comes...yeah...
      Black Sabbath

  • @savageproduction186
    @savageproduction186 4 года назад +939

    Those little pauses he takes, it’s like he goes back just for a second

    • @nowthisis2stupid
      @nowthisis2stupid 4 года назад +34

      That exactly what he is doing.

    • @Babybugex
      @Babybugex 4 года назад +22

      @@nowthisis2stupid Very brave. My uncle never said a word about Nam and died at 38 from pancreatic cancer. the Nam killed him it just took 15 years..

    • @OSleeperTactical
      @OSleeperTactical 4 года назад +4

      You hear how his voice is forced back into professional normal, but that's not what's going on under the surface.

    • @reinerbraun3446
      @reinerbraun3446 4 года назад

      @@Babybugex Can't even comprehend what he went through and the atrocities he witnessed.

    • @DIVISIONINCISION
      @DIVISIONINCISION 4 года назад

      @@Babybugex Pancreatic cancer can always happen. How are you sure he got it from Vietnam?

  • @richotter
    @richotter 3 месяца назад +1

    I am very glad to hear 20 million people were able to and did sit down and listen to this man tell his story. Very important for people to understand a human experience such as this. Thank you again. 🙏

  • @michaelnewman6936
    @michaelnewman6936 4 года назад +758

    "I'm wasting your film.."
    Nooooooooo. Keep gooooooing

  • @ConstantGoddard
    @ConstantGoddard 5 лет назад +1553

    this was quite randomly recommended. captivating interview!

    • @OrphanPipe
      @OrphanPipe 5 лет назад +12

      I agree... Totally unexpected to see this as a suggestion while watching Steve Vai guitar videos...

    • @vivianstanshall8121
      @vivianstanshall8121 5 лет назад +4

      More weird that this was recommend to me on Pornhub

    • @pzooka
      @pzooka 5 лет назад +4

      Orphan Pipe haha I was just also watching Steve Vai videos. I guess RUclips has got its shit together....scary

    • @OrphanPipe
      @OrphanPipe 5 лет назад +1

      @@pzooka Rigging of some algorithms, or honesty of algorithms???

    • @pzooka
      @pzooka 5 лет назад +3

      Orphan Pipe my skepticism tells me rigging, but my skepticism of my skepticism tells me honesty haha

  • @StalkTheHype
    @StalkTheHype Год назад +4

    One cannot thank you enough for uploading this and exposing this man's eloquence to the world. Thank you Mr.Hoffman, happy new years!

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Год назад

      Thank you for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that RUclips is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

  • @Whatinthefdoyouwant
    @Whatinthefdoyouwant Год назад +5

    " the more we stayed, the more enemies we created". That's deep.

  • @LastCommodore
    @LastCommodore 3 года назад +1980

    No, you weren't wasting film. Stories like yours need to be told.

    • @lotusinmud56
      @lotusinmud56 3 года назад +21

      speaking the truth
      is never a waste of time, those that hear it now have a greater understanding
      thank you for making this available

    • @rioleo533
      @rioleo533 3 года назад +26

      He doesn't mean it like that. Back in those times cameras had a limited reel of film. They didn't have easy digital storage and you'd have to replace the film if you ran out.
      The guy was concerned they would run out film while he was pausing to think about his time in Vietnam.

    • @thecoobs8820
      @thecoobs8820 3 года назад +5

      @@rioleo533 yeah not only that, he was going in circles a little bit, if I was telling the story, I would feel the same way, when telling a story of one of your experiences, it's easy to dance around a point that stands out to you, it's probably something that surprised you the most, we certainly all forgive him, but I understand why he's thinking that way

    • @aloe.0v0
      @aloe.0v0 3 года назад +1

      @@rioleo533 To add onto that, it also costed more. Time was literally money when recording. Unknown to him though, it was all worth it! Tangents and all.

    • @lingardhino1068
      @lingardhino1068 3 года назад +2

      I read your comment as he said that- woah.

  • @tombixler3512
    @tombixler3512 5 лет назад +537

    God bless this dear man. He says he's wasting film!! No, buddy, no you're not!! We're listening 28 years later!! We LOVE you.

    • @toomaskotkas4467
      @toomaskotkas4467 5 лет назад +3

      I hope he is burning in Hell where all 'Merican soldiers belong.

    • @wtfisditvoorbullshit
      @wtfisditvoorbullshit 5 лет назад +2

      28 years later? Is that a sequel to 28 days later?

    • @koffieverslaafde627
      @koffieverslaafde627 5 лет назад +7

      Alan Shore is it the soldiers that were wrong? Or is it the people behind all it

    • @daslickkiffer6702
      @daslickkiffer6702 5 лет назад +2

      Lol what a troll

    • @53Betsy
      @53Betsy 5 лет назад +3

      Alan Shore - Your channel has no content....and neither do you.....

  • @CJ-py6tk
    @CJ-py6tk Год назад +2

    Perhaps the most interesting VN Vet interview I have every heard. Thanks for posting!

  • @allenhall9728
    @allenhall9728 5 лет назад +447

    What a powerful fifteen minutes. Dr. Ehrhart is thoughtful, brave, wise and honest. Two of my sons were fortunate to have him as a high school teacher. He had an enormously positive impact on them, as you can imagine.

    • @FeverMutt
      @FeverMutt 5 лет назад +4

      Is he still alive?

    • @Qapital_J
      @Qapital_J 5 лет назад +1

      That’s amazing

    • @jacksonwheeler4731
      @jacksonwheeler4731 5 лет назад +1

      the dude in the video?

    • @patrickreilly2338
      @patrickreilly2338 5 лет назад

      Nice xusn

    • @allenhall9728
      @allenhall9728 5 лет назад +6

      @@jacksonwheeler4731 Yes. I encourage you to go to his website and keep digging around for more interviews. An amazing man.

  • @monamarie2006
    @monamarie2006 4 года назад +354

    Magnificent storyteller, fabulous hair, epic mustache. Respect sir.

    • @joshuat3902
      @joshuat3902 4 года назад +14

      Firm handshakes all around gentlemen

    • @220SeaChaser
      @220SeaChaser 4 года назад +4

      You forgot the glasses

    • @pungisotu
      @pungisotu 4 года назад +5

      @@220SeaChaser not everyone can rock the aviator style.

    • @benjaminkinslow5393
      @benjaminkinslow5393 4 года назад +3

      He is a whole decade in one man ...FROSTY

    • @flowerpower1577
      @flowerpower1577 4 года назад +1

      Sgt.Gecko RIGHT ON

  • @chris55529
    @chris55529 10 дней назад

    Sometimes honesty is hard-earned, and sometimes it's fearless. When it's both, it counts the most. This guy is exactly that. May God himself bless him and all others like him.

  • @WayneSawyer-bc6jd
    @WayneSawyer-bc6jd Год назад +3

    Thanks David for posting this a piece of history will last a lifetime

  • @dylanpond8618
    @dylanpond8618 3 года назад +2146

    Dr. Ehrhart was my senior year of highschool history teacher, unbelievable man who has lived a full life and certainly has seen all the sides life has to offer. Lost one of my good friends during highschool, and the advice he told me afterwards still lingers with me.

    • @M0butu
      @M0butu 3 года назад +56

      what did he say?
      asking for a friend... 🤓

    • @leesimon4290
      @leesimon4290 3 года назад +4

      .

    • @andrewgarner2323
      @andrewgarner2323 3 года назад +33

      If this is true, can you please tell us the advice he gave you? Recently lost someone close to me. Any advice is appreciated.

    • @FFXI_Addict
      @FFXI_Addict 3 года назад +159

      @@andrewgarner2323 I'm just a guy on the internet, but I lost my father recently after being his primary caretaker for 11 years. That was a lot of time I invested, and that was one of the bigger challenges I faced and still am dealing with; you feel cheated. What do you do with all that time and all those memories? You've spent so much time being accustomed to their presence that their absence won't even fully-calculate in your head. For the first year, I kept passing by his room expecting to see him in bed like always. Ever single time I would have to catch myself, remind myself "oh, right..."
      Be good to yourself right now. Give yourself a LOT of love, care, and SLACK. Dealing with loss is never easy, and frankly doesn't "get easier" unless you get good at lying to yourself--which I do not advise.
      You need to heal, but in order to do that, you need to get through each day. To get through each day in the military, we looked forward to each meal; breakfast lunch and dinner. To get through each week, we lived Sunday-to-Sunday. It's true what that say... enter the military as an atheist, and you'll leave as the most-vocal Christian. Jesus Christ helped me. I didn't pay a church $20,000, or do some ceremony or anything. I just prayed and talked to Him directly, as though He was sitting right beside me. Changed my life. Didn't make dealing with loss any EASIER mind you, but it DID make it bearable and tolerable.
      Like I said though, give yourself slack right now. It's really important. You are not operating under normal conditions. Be real with yourself foremost, and you'll be just fine.

    • @anthonyroperto8428
      @anthonyroperto8428 3 года назад +13

      The Legend of Leviathan I’m sorry for your loss mate, thank you for sharing these stories ❤️

  • @owefay1
    @owefay1 2 года назад +1566

    Only thing my father mentioned about his time in Vietnam was "all my friends died, but I lived". He was kinda unsure to why he lived and his friends died. I never asked another question. He died in 17' and here I am living my best life. Thanks for being a survivor, dad.

    • @yahmutha
      @yahmutha 2 года назад +65

      My dad was very similar to yours. He opened up to me about his time in Vietnam one time and one time only. He finished it by saying the whole thing was just one big lie and the horrors and damages from such a pointless war live with him every single day both mentally and physically. He ended up passing away in 2014 from liver, lung, and lymph node cancer from agent orange exposure. Looking at present day, i fear the US hasnt learned much (if anything at all) from our time spent there.

    • @tstuff
      @tstuff 2 года назад +20

      Many people come back from wars with that feeling, called survivors guilt. It also affects people in tragedies like plane crashes, fires, tornadoes, mass shootings.. It must be a horrible feeling trying to wonder why it was you and not someone else and then the pressure of trying to justify why to survived. Trying to make a life mean more than you can ever realistically expect because you did survive.

    • @kevinschroeder3889
      @kevinschroeder3889 2 года назад +19

      @@yahmutha If you don't learn from history, you tend to repeat it. Yup we're pretty stupid.

    • @renejustice6460
      @renejustice6460 2 года назад +5

      ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

    • @dezluna9557
      @dezluna9557 Год назад +3

      Rest in peace ✌️ ☮️ 🕊