Why YOU NEVER Volunteer In War First

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  • Опубликовано: 30 май 2024
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    War in general isn’t a pleasant place to be, however, it's quite clear that there are some jobs that are simply worse than others. While some soldiers may find themselves in unfortunate positions through direct orders of command, there are other roles that people have willingly volunteered for... and then discovered exactly why it was a terrible, terrible idea. Here are some jobs throughout military history you absolutely do NOT want to volunteer for.
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    Credit:
    Show Created by Daniel Turner (B.A. (Hons) in History, University College London)
    Script: Natasha Martell
    Narrator:
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Комментарии • 612

  • @TheBetterManInBlack
    @TheBetterManInBlack 2 месяца назад +3161

    "I need 5 volunteers."
    "what for, Sergeant?"
    "I need 4 volunteers."

    • @amuroray9115
      @amuroray9115 2 месяца назад +78

      😂

    • @macko1416
      @macko1416 Месяц назад +321

      “What did you say sarge?”
      “Make that 3 volunteers”

    • @jaleel437
      @jaleel437 Месяц назад +71

      😂😂😂😂literally how it works

    • @indian8754
      @indian8754 Месяц назад

      😊
      diidieidkdkkd​@@macko1416

    • @indian8754
      @indian8754 Месяц назад +4

      e

  • @GabeMiller2SpoonsOfDoom
    @GabeMiller2SpoonsOfDoom 2 месяца назад +2431

    You never want to be the first attacking wave.

    • @OldMusicFan83
      @OldMusicFan83 2 месяца назад +109

      Not true. Sometimes you volunteer to drive if it’s freezing and you know the vehicle has a heater. You just have to know where to play your hand.

    • @kakashihatake1869
      @kakashihatake1869 2 месяца назад +100

      Ah the first wave or first encounter dudes.
      Poor dudes but a necessary sacrifice to move forward..

    • @lampionmancz
      @lampionmancz 2 месяца назад +29

      Something a person who was blown out of the sky by an alien spaceship after going to a secret research facility as a first respondent to an invasion of said aliens would of course know.
      Isn't that right Mr. Shepard?

    • @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female
      @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female 2 месяца назад +11

      ​@@lampionmancz Being an MTF operative is worse.

    • @John_Smith_86
      @John_Smith_86 2 месяца назад +17

      Well, there is the chance of becoming a nobleman if you actually managed to breech the castle gate. Poor odds of surviving to achieve that though

  • @vsupreme9386
    @vsupreme9386 2 месяца назад +1353

    NAVY = never again volunteer yourself

    • @daemon.mythos
      @daemon.mythos 2 месяца назад +66

      Lived that...also, if you did a great job, the higher ups would get the recognition even if they never even showed up to the jobsite or even if they didn't know what was being done.

    • @memadmax69
      @memadmax69 2 месяца назад +7

      FTN
      =P

    • @reid5885
      @reid5885 2 месяца назад +18

      @@daemon.mythos in any organization that has a complex structure of leadership, good results of a team are seen as the results of good leadership until proven otherwise.

    • @funrun07haan50
      @funrun07haan50 2 месяца назад +5

      😂😂😂

    • @__-tp4tm
      @__-tp4tm День назад

      Been there, done that, am gay now

  • @nsahandler
    @nsahandler Месяц назад +634

    Fun fact:
    Half of this stuff he says "don't volunteer for" is not a volunteer position. It's punishment duty or part of a regular rotating duty that is passed among all members of a unit.
    Latrine duty is rotated or is assigned as a punishment.
    Night watch can't even be volunteered for - its on rotation so that day-time operations aren't hindered by a portion of your force constantly at risk of exhaustion

    • @nyandesu9165
      @nyandesu9165 Месяц назад +15

      Yes, but it's not always like that, there are cases when they may suddenly allocate someone for another duty and they will ask around if anyone is willing to volunteer to take that person's shift plus your own.

    • @nsahandler
      @nsahandler Месяц назад +11

      @nyandesu9165
      "No volunteers, eh? Alright, nyan, you are ordered to volunteer for this vital and thank you for your dedication to unit morale."
      The phrase is *literally called* being "volun-told."

    • @agrandcanyonoffucksgiven2776
      @agrandcanyonoffucksgiven2776 2 дня назад

      Voluntold

  • @tuvoca825
    @tuvoca825 2 месяца назад +801

    "We have reviewed your case and determined your injury is not service related...." 😢

    • @fryyiy1322
      @fryyiy1322 2 месяца назад +32

      Waiiit is this an actual thing like...my leg was blown off due to a bomb or something and they'd view it as not service related????

    • @silverhawkscape2677
      @silverhawkscape2677 2 месяца назад +50

      ​@@fryyiy1322 It's based on the fact they seem to try to get out of paying your benefits. 😂😢😢😂

    • @demarcusfaulkner7411
      @demarcusfaulkner7411 2 месяца назад +32

      ​@@fryyiy1322 yeah because essentially they are trying not to pay your claims so as to save the government money as if the government needs money to be saved. Troops are expendable that's the way they see it.

    • @walnzell9328
      @walnzell9328 Месяц назад +27

      Countless veterans have been left destitute since the VA refuses to pay for medical treatment.
      This is why the stereotype of the homeless population consisting of mostly old man hobos all being war veterans exists.

    • @Numl0k
      @Numl0k Месяц назад

      @@fryyiy1322Maybe not that extreme. If you get a leg blown off in combat, they can't really fight that. But for things like hearing loss, joint damage, respiratory damage due to asbestos and Agent Orange, etc, the VA will try to do everything they can to deny your claim and keep you under a certain percentage of disability. My dad is fighting it right now after serving our country in Vietnam. Thankfully there are a lot of resources now that try to counter the VA's bullshit.

  • @SenorGrandePP
    @SenorGrandePP 2 месяца назад +886

    In Chess you send the Pawns first♟ ♟ ☠️☠️

    • @LocalHeretic-ck1kd
      @LocalHeretic-ck1kd 2 месяца назад +20

      Wise words.

    • @Textago
      @Textago 2 месяца назад +27

      You can also send the knights too but yeah.

    • @joe7573
      @joe7573 Месяц назад

      Knights are better equipped and have the option to retreat​@@Textago

    • @benedictjajo
      @benedictjajo Месяц назад +27

      ​@@Textagoknights=modern cavalry 💀
      Survival chance lower than infantry if sent first.

    • @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378
      @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378 Месяц назад +3

      Second Rook.

  • @hectorheathcote9495
    @hectorheathcote9495 2 месяца назад +393

    Mustard gas would also cling onto uniforms so when a soldier went from a cold environment such as out in the trench, where the mustard gas is a light fairly harmless powder, to a warmer environment such as oh, say a bunker where it's nice and warm, chaos ensues. Upon warming, the powder reverts back to a gas thus causing casualties amongst the bunker dwellers. Nasty, insidious stuff.

    • @derchozenvun83
      @derchozenvun83 2 месяца назад +8

      On top of that it's my understanding that it was a more lethal response to the French implementing chlorine gas which was meant to maim; while mustard gas would also leave some lingering effects. I'm unfamiliar with the more toxic gases mentioned and always heard of mustard gas as being the deadliest in use at the time.

    • @z-man1237
      @z-man1237 2 месяца назад +4

      Damn I didn’t know about that. Scary stuff

    • @Trebor74
      @Trebor74 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@derchozenvun83 The french first used tear gas. Gas warfare developed after that.

    • @derchozenvun83
      @derchozenvun83 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Trebor74 thanks, I understood that the French introduced gas warfare to the front in WWI and that the Germans went for a more direct approach that inevitably wound up being more a weapon of affliction than slaying despite the intent of its creation.

  • @Snuffy03
    @Snuffy03 2 месяца назад +895

    An old Sgt told me, be first in the chow line, first in the pay line, and NEVER volunteer for anything. He also said, never stand when you can sit, never sit when you can lie down, and never lie down without copping some z's. Oh, and always eat all you can. When you can because you may not get another chance.

    • @ismarwinkelman5648
      @ismarwinkelman5648 2 месяца назад +128

      A lot of us have seen ‘The Pacific’ as well, buddy 😂

    • @ballsdeep2520
      @ballsdeep2520 2 месяца назад +69

      ​@@ismarwinkelman5648 I haven't but I'll laugh at plagiarism

    • @MisterDvm
      @MisterDvm 2 месяца назад

      ​@@ismarwinkelman5648bro really tried lol

    • @reid5885
      @reid5885 2 месяца назад +33

      You served with captain haldane? How cool.

    • @Snuffy03
      @Snuffy03 2 месяца назад +44

      ​@@ismarwinkelman5648Actually, my experience is real. 10 years in the Marine Corps. I learned from some salty NCOs. Unlike today's youth, whose life experience comes from pop culture and social media. As to The Pacific, I don't watch such stuff. I have seen the real thing, and no media can duplicate it.

  • @indianheadlogan
    @indianheadlogan Месяц назад +148

    Thanks. I was debating it, but now i know that ill NEVER volunteer for WW1

  • @ajinman3642
    @ajinman3642 2 месяца назад +255

    The Marine Corps taught me never volunteer until you are voluntold 😂😂😂

  • @cattledogjasper1731
    @cattledogjasper1731 2 месяца назад +246

    My friends dad volunteered to join the military during the Vietnam War. His draft number was pretty low so he decided to have a little more say in what branch he'd join and what'd he do. Because of this he was able to enroll in special forces training to become a green beret. He had to remain state side for a bit longer to complete his training and once his training was complete, the war was winding down and he was never shipped over seas.

    • @mkanderson2000
      @mkanderson2000 Месяц назад +56

      Same exact thing happened to my step-father. He knew he was doomed when they pulled a super draft low number for his birthday (I believe it was #12), so he choose to volunteer instead, knowing he would get a much greater say in what he did and where he was deployed. Because of that he was able to showcase how smart of a young lad he was and ended up getting assigned to a (relatively) very comfy missile base in (what was at the time) Eastern Germany for the entire duration of the war. Crazy to think about what would have happened had your friend's dad and my step-dad not had the wisdom and foresight to volunteer instead of letting themselves get drafted...

    • @Warentester
      @Warentester Месяц назад +3

      Eastern Germany was Russian controlled at the time of the Vietnam War. I'm calling BS in this one.

    • @kaiserthescouser8067
      @kaiserthescouser8067 Месяц назад +7

      @@WarentesterMaybe he meant Berlin. Surrounded by the GDR but still with allied bases

    • @Warentester
      @Warentester Месяц назад +3

      @@kaiserthescouser8067 That would still be West Germany. But this said, the United States Army Berlin had no missile base in Berlin.

    • @Lollaksyotuube
      @Lollaksyotuube Месяц назад

      How?

  • @beepboop204
    @beepboop204 2 месяца назад +215

    during my brief stint as a reservist, my section commander openly told me he didnt like me and if we didnt know where we were taking fire from, on exercise, it was me and my fireteam partner who were told to go first while everyone else would watch where we got shot from. good times?

    • @amuroray9115
      @amuroray9115 Месяц назад +2

      Wtf????

    • @mrj8166
      @mrj8166 Месяц назад +26

      ☠ Hurt him back by saying, he's the weakest link himself and you'd never want to deploy with him

    • @berniegores2083
      @berniegores2083 Месяц назад +42

      id tell him make sure i never get issued frag grenades

    • @CakeMaster47
      @CakeMaster47 Месяц назад +2

      lmao god speed you magnificent man

    • @knmaherijayatp8181
      @knmaherijayatp8181 Месяц назад +21

      let me guess.. a stray grenade enter his tent when he was sleeping?

  • @jamesboyle6134
    @jamesboyle6134 2 месяца назад +81

    My grandfather (who was in the British Army) always told my father, who told me: "Never volunteer for *anything*." He knew that when somebody starts asking for volunteers, it is almost always for a job that is dangerous, unpleasant, or both. Why else would they have to try to find people to do it?

  • @anthonyfoutch3152
    @anthonyfoutch3152 Месяц назад +34

    My father was a WWII combat vet Silver Saar Bronze Star and 3 Purple Hearts. When I joined USAF in 1972 he said never volunteer for anything. He said his unit had been in combat for weeks when they got to rest. The Lt. said we need volunteers for truck drivers. Lots of the guys said great and volunteered. Later my father saw them using wheelbarrows hauling dirt and rocks. These were the only storied my father told about the war.

    • @seanpaulmagbanua745
      @seanpaulmagbanua745 Месяц назад +1

      wouldnt they just lose trust to the superiors if they got treated like that?

    • @anthonyfoutch3152
      @anthonyfoutch3152 Месяц назад +6

      @@seanpaulmagbanua745 it's the military. You must not ever been in military. lol

  • @TheRealForgetfulElephant
    @TheRealForgetfulElephant 2 месяца назад +82

    The US government testing mustard gas on active servicemen and not continuing the long term research is a classic government move.

    • @johnumukoro1244
      @johnumukoro1244 Месяц назад

      YOU want them to continue the research😳

    • @TheRealForgetfulElephant
      @TheRealForgetfulElephant Месяц назад +10

      @@johnumukoro1244 they didn’t follow through with the long term research. Due to the unpopularity of the program they essentially stopped conducting observations and allowed for the damage to the soldier’s health without gaining the most out of the research. I’m not saying they should have used more subjects, but rather follow through on the ones who were already tested on.

    • @B0K1T0
      @B0K1T0 Месяц назад +1

      Bit of a mild one though, compared to what they did with those nuclear tests etc.

    • @Fuzznator
      @Fuzznator Месяц назад

      Mustard gas tests are not mild but yes they did worse with the nuclear tests or with what they did to everyone in the last years

  • @VikingHawk125
    @VikingHawk125 2 месяца назад +178

    Being a tunnel rat would be the worst. I think they wanted them to be 5’5” at the most? Thank god I’m 5’6”.

    • @ballsdeep2520
      @ballsdeep2520 2 месяца назад +12

      Thank god I'm full sized

    • @zachlagrange4999
      @zachlagrange4999 2 месяца назад +22

      I’m 6’ 2”, so I’d be out of that duty thankfully! All the power and respect to the soldiers who had to perform that task though 🫡 🇺🇸

    • @kotzpenner
      @kotzpenner 2 месяца назад +3

      Another Shorty L

    • @VikingHawk125
      @VikingHawk125 2 месяца назад +19

      @@kotzpenner sure, whatever you say man.

    • @anauthor3330
      @anauthor3330 2 месяца назад

      @@kotzpenner Taller people more likely to die than shorter people due to blood circulation and bone support.

  • @MichaelGibbons-uk2mc
    @MichaelGibbons-uk2mc 2 месяца назад +53

    I was new out of basic training assigned to the engine room on an oiler in 1968. The NCOS thought they'd screw when they asked me to volunteer to look for some "shore line". It was 120 degrees in the engine room, but above deck, where I looked for the remaining 3 hours of my watch it was only mid 80s. When I went back they thought it was funny

  • @DrEtzor
    @DrEtzor 2 месяца назад +32

    Knowing how military works, if they don't want you to sleep on duty, then they should let you sleep properly to begin with.

    • @user-hj4hg5cy6g
      @user-hj4hg5cy6g Месяц назад +1

      You don’t always get to sleep on a battlefield

    • @ReikerForge
      @ReikerForge Месяц назад +11

      @@user-hj4hg5cy6g Soldiers get rotated on a weekly basis even in the worst parts of the front in WW1, no excuse for making your troops sleep deprived when they've got a war to win

    • @mirroredvoid8394
      @mirroredvoid8394 Месяц назад +3

      @@ReikerForge Forget rotation and sleep, Nazl scientist literally invented the captain America super soldier serum at the end of the war. Good ole Chocolate bar mixed with a improved recipe of Speed, Pure Columbian Chalk and rocks from Afghanistan. According to the old research this stuff will having you running 40 miles in four hours while carrying 40 kilos (80 pounds) of gear.

    • @samfkt
      @samfkt Месяц назад

      @@user-hj4hg5cy6g Yes, but only once....

  • @koulikov4163
    @koulikov4163 2 месяца назад +41

    The fastest way to clear a room in the army is for someone saying "I need 4 volunteers"

  • @robertkarp2070
    @robertkarp2070 Месяц назад +33

    I'm suffering chemical poisoning. "Oh we're sorry, here have a glass of milk, it will make you feel better."

    • @MsTheShit101
      @MsTheShit101 Месяц назад +3

      Dairy fat actually cleans and heals the lungs, welders used to always drink a lot of whole milk to clean the lungs

  • @devinraber5208
    @devinraber5208 2 месяца назад +30

    Well, if I'm ever at Passchendaele during WW!, I'll make sure to not volunteer

    • @AbsoluteMrGamer
      @AbsoluteMrGamer 15 дней назад

      you forgot . at the end and 1 after WW, you forgot your home keys at weed shop.
      you welcom3:*

  • @bravotangosierra6518
    @bravotangosierra6518 Месяц назад +12

    The first time that mustard gas used in combat wasn’t in Ypres in 1917, as stated in the video. It was during the second battle of Ypres in 1915. What you guys mentioned is the third battle of Ypres and by then mustard gas had been used quite a lot of times. Should take more time double-checking these things, being a history channel.

    • @Footsteps123
      @Footsteps123 11 дней назад

      The first use of mustard gas was in 1917, 1915 was the first use of chlorine gas and poison gas in general. I don't know why, but if you google "first use of mustard gas" all of the sources talk about the first use poison gas in general even though you asked about mustard gas specifically, and they don't even say that they are talking about chlorine gas so it's easy to get it mixed up with mustard gas since that's what you looked up. You have to actually click the links and read the articles to realize that they are talking about chlorine gas instead of mustard gas.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mustard_gas#History it says "Mustard gas was first used in World War I by the German army against British and Canadian soldiers near Ypres, Belgium, "on the night of July 12, 1917.""
      www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK236059/ it says "As outlined above, prior to the actual use of sulfur mustard as a war gas in 1917, the substance was little more than an interesting compound produced,"
      These were the first 2 sources about mustard gas that I checked.

    • @Lionmonkey4real
      @Lionmonkey4real 2 дня назад

      Well, it is simple history made by simple people who don't fact check

  • @haarlequ1n0110
    @haarlequ1n0110 2 месяца назад +5

    good luck mate, have enjoyed watching your content for quite some time!

  • @amou8779
    @amou8779 2 месяца назад +36

    Don't be first, never be last, and never volunteer for anything!

  • @NCR-Veteran-Ranger
    @NCR-Veteran-Ranger 2 месяца назад +10

    04:41 in combat/war you have to take shifts on night duty, this is called 'Stag'
    00:14 they kept on doing this until recent eras called 'Forlorne Hopes', meaning 'Abandoned Hope' because there was no/little chance of survival

  • @Imgunnabenicer
    @Imgunnabenicer 2 месяца назад +19

    Instructions unclear now im yellow and somehow working in a latrine in 1916 in france.

  • @billyjoel7409
    @billyjoel7409 Месяц назад +24

    correction: first use of poison gas (chlorine gas) was in the second battle of ypres in 1915, not 1917.

    • @owenpook2262
      @owenpook2262 Месяц назад +3

      He never said poison gas was first used in 1917. He said specifically mustard gas was.

    • @billyjoel7409
      @billyjoel7409 Месяц назад +1

      ⁠@@owenpook2262"using weapons LIKE mustard gas" I took that as gas in general. Would be a weird phrasing if he specifically meant mustard gas. But to be fair to you and the video, after listening to it again, I'm splitting hairs

  • @AudieHolland
    @AudieHolland 2 месяца назад +195

    Average Japanese Kamikaze:
    'First time?'

    • @RussianNationalist
      @RussianNationalist Месяц назад +4

      Whos asking them?

    • @jpowens2253
      @jpowens2253 Месяц назад +5

      ​@@RussianNationalist the ones that had "engine problems" on the first run.

    • @foxymetroid
      @foxymetroid Месяц назад

      ​@@jpowens2253Or couldn't find a suitable target before fuel levels became too low. Even these extra-expendable pilots were deemed too valuable to simply waste.

  • @uknwarrior7980
    @uknwarrior7980 26 дней назад +2

    @08:48 Honestly considering the sheer level of destruction and death, only 128 nurses dying in WWI shows how chivalrous the sides were when it came to targeting Healthcare

  • @user-kr7yh8vw9m
    @user-kr7yh8vw9m 2 месяца назад +2

    This was a very interesting video, well done Simple History. That's why some soldiers never considered volunteering for these duties because they were either deadly or simply unpleasant. It also pains me of the suffering those people went through and how it affected them for the rest of their lives😔.

  • @kakashihatake1869
    @kakashihatake1869 2 месяца назад +42

    Im 💯 % sure this video thumbnail is based on the scene where Blythe got shot when he volunteered to scout the farmhouse at the tv series Band of Brothers!
    I read this somewhere probably a WW2 US Army quote:
    Never volunteer
    Never be the first
    Never be the last

    • @ghost28896
      @ghost28896 2 месяца назад +5

      Unlike as shown in show, he actually survived the shot and went on to live a long life.

    • @kevinmackay5233
      @kevinmackay5233 2 месяца назад +4

      @@ghost28896long life is a bit of an overstatement. He served in Korea after the war but died in the mid 1960’s to my knowledge

    • @Mechanized85
      @Mechanized85 2 месяца назад +2

      yeah, then you still gonna die for sure.

    • @kakashihatake1869
      @kakashihatake1869 2 месяца назад +5

      @@ghost28896 he lived a mid life.
      Age 44, Albert Blithe died in 1967 while on active duty at Germany due to a perforated ulcer.
      What happened on the tv series is most easy company guys have not been in touch with Blithe since he got shipped off due to his injury. So most likely they thought he died.
      Also a fault on the writer of the tv series as well for not fact checking with the Army if he really died. Atleast we know he lived on as an Army man till the end. RIP Albert!

    • @angeloluna529
      @angeloluna529 2 месяца назад +2

      @@ghost28896 unless you want to live on with long term disfigurements

  • @alanroberson9749
    @alanroberson9749 2 месяца назад +1

    Excellent work dudes!!

  • @arthurbalourdos4212
    @arthurbalourdos4212 Месяц назад +4

    Army joke: Captain received news that Pvt Kowalski's mother had passed away. The Captain and his Lieutenants talked about how they should tell him. They decided it best that the First Sgt should do it. Off he went and he gathered the platoon. The First Sgt had everyone fall in. The First Sgt said "Everyone who has a mother raise your hand". Then said "Not you Kowalski"

  • @anoplolepisgracilipes
    @anoplolepisgracilipes 2 месяца назад +10

    I learnt 75% of history from Simple History. Thank you.

  • @bigbossimmotal
    @bigbossimmotal 2 месяца назад +8

    I have not so fond of my CO regularly walking in and saying "I need 3 volunteers, You, You, and YOU. Let's GO!". WE didn't volunteer for nuttin'!

  • @illegalmeme860
    @illegalmeme860 2 месяца назад +11

    I’d volunteer for AWOL

  • @_Imperium_7
    @_Imperium_7 2 месяца назад +13

    Ernst Jünger: “Lol. Lmao, even.”

  • @Daniel4646
    @Daniel4646 Месяц назад

    Nice touch with the subtle movie references at the beginning of this clip.

  • @Solarfox55
    @Solarfox55 Месяц назад +5

    First guy: “I’m not going out there.”
    Second guy: “I’m not going out there.”
    Third guy: “I’m not going out the- oh. I’m last. Well, god preserve me.”

  • @JohnGriffith222
    @JohnGriffith222 Месяц назад +3

    I never volunteered for anything but i was voluntold quite a bit.

  • @ArcherAC3
    @ArcherAC3 Месяц назад +4

    0:18 yet in every movie the main actor is always the one to climb first while also magically coordinating the whole platoon somehow

    • @TitanKaempfer
      @TitanKaempfer Месяц назад

      Probably because it makes for some quite unheroic scenes if the so heroic protagonist is sacrificing his own people to ensure his own safety in battle.

  • @ProfessorDreamer
    @ProfessorDreamer 2 месяца назад +3

    Simple History can you a video on the worst military despots in history.

  • @yurungkepsel7079
    @yurungkepsel7079 2 месяца назад +10

    You should never start a war first

    • @visual7150
      @visual7150 Месяц назад +4

      You literally have the Isreali flag as yout profile pic 💀

    • @Dommie222
      @Dommie222 29 дней назад

      Tell that to Putin...

  • @kyledunn6853
    @kyledunn6853 2 месяца назад +7

    0:06 Saving Private Ryan

  • @NotreDame4_Life-jk2gh
    @NotreDame4_Life-jk2gh Месяц назад +2

    Could you do a video on the Irish Brigade or the Royal Catholic Army of Vendée France; both have interesting and extensive history

  • @austind9675
    @austind9675 Месяц назад +4

    In a perfect world, the children of leadership and politicians would require to serve first in any major conflict or declaration of war. That of course would never happen, thus is the world.

    • @robplazzman6049
      @robplazzman6049 Месяц назад +1

      Stalins son was captured. The Germans offered to trade him and Stalin refused. His died in custody in Sachsenhausen camp. So it doesn’t necessarily work.

    • @austind9675
      @austind9675 Месяц назад

      @@robplazzman6049 Oh man I remember that story from history class! Yeah…cringe…….

  • @grajor7890
    @grajor7890 2 месяца назад +2

    I remember being in crap situations and they would ask volunteers. I always did thinking it would be better then the current situation. It never was and I never learned lol.

  • @molybdaen11
    @molybdaen11 Месяц назад +2

    This reminds me of Tanya the devil where she send some nobles to a „safe” observation post.
    They were happy to be going there - until the enemy artillery killed them all as easy targets.

  • @justameme7599
    @justameme7599 Месяц назад

    When i was younger in school, i saw my seniors watching simple history. And as a young junior, I hoped that would happen to me too, but it uh never happened sadly.

  • @matthewfontaine4940
    @matthewfontaine4940 Месяц назад +2

    That was the first thing I picked up on in basic lol I use to be back head down and all allowing the high speed soldiers do the dirty work like it was going to get them anywhere lol Good times

  • @sowiwiody3681
    @sowiwiody3681 Месяц назад +1

    I remember watching as a kid "The Greatest Tank Battles in History" on Discovery. The show featured context explanation, 3D battle animation, and it was told not from the POV of generals, but common soldiers, who were guests talking themselves. To this day I remember what one American or Brit said: "I've learned that #1 rule in war is to NEVER volunteer for anything. You get an order, then you do it, but as long as it's not an order, always refuse, no matter how trivial or safe it seems".
    More or less like that.

  • @milan6441
    @milan6441 17 дней назад +1

    If they Come to my country i'm signing up straight away

  • @Marcus.junius.brutus
    @Marcus.junius.brutus Месяц назад +1

    6:16 the Connaught rangers I recognise the cap badge as I own an original

  • @ccpljager424
    @ccpljager424 2 месяца назад +2

    The Australian and New Zeland nurses were tough as nails in WW1 and WW2

  • @marti1226
    @marti1226 10 дней назад +1

    In fact, I would volunteer. What do you prefer, fighting with someone who wants to fight or with someone who doesnt want to?

  • @Anonym-yr4qn
    @Anonym-yr4qn Месяц назад

    4:15
    Speaking of which....
    This rarely ever gets mentioned when history is talked about.

  • @ives3572
    @ives3572 Месяц назад +2

    "War's tragedy is that it uses man's best to do man's worst." - Harry Emerson Fosdick

  • @strikeforce1500
    @strikeforce1500 2 месяца назад +1

    Like the phrase goes: 'Every rule/warning have its history'. Volunteering,especially at war, is something you should do only when you are very, very, sure what you are getting into. Especially if it's involve government stuff.

  • @scasey1960
    @scasey1960 2 месяца назад +3

    Were not most victims of WWI men who were drafted for military service? When do women register for the draft today?

  • @A.Martinez152
    @A.Martinez152 Месяц назад

    A couple of years ago I mixed cleaning products while doing the bathroom. I realised i shouldn't have done that quickly enough and flushed the toilet and left ASAP, but now I'm paranoid that I might devellop something. But I went to the doctor, asked about it and told me not to worry, that if something should have happened, it would have been more inmediate, but she even checked my resporation, but still, I'm paranoid

  • @princessmarlena1359
    @princessmarlena1359 2 месяца назад

    My dad says the same thing. He was a CO in ‘Nam.

  • @gjghjhkkg
    @gjghjhkkg 2 месяца назад +9

    I've never been here this early before

  • @trevorphillips2250
    @trevorphillips2250 Месяц назад

    My great great grandfather said about the great war you don't volunteer for different places you are needed like night watch or something else. If you refuse. You get shot, or if lucky enough you had to crawl on no mans land to place mines or do things

  • @luggilu7864
    @luggilu7864 Месяц назад +1

    I volunteered to go get water when we did an assault. Nearly got blown up for it.

  • @sgtjohnnywallsmith8720
    @sgtjohnnywallsmith8720 2 месяца назад +1

    Yeah, in my time in service, we didn't have volunteer. We had voluntold!!

  • @AproposDare
    @AproposDare День назад +1

    When a draft is in effect, you _actually_ want to volunteer by joining the Coast Guard. Stay home and protect our waters while everyone else gets drafted onto the frontlines.

  • @stonedforfun6110
    @stonedforfun6110 Месяц назад +4

    My great grandfather fought the Japanese in the Philippines and sadly died there..! BUT; not before he left behind my great grandmother with a family of 14 that’s multiplied into the 100s now , all the men who never made it back would do it again in a heartbeat if they were to see the fruits of all their sacrifice!!

  • @MrTsiolkovsky
    @MrTsiolkovsky Месяц назад

    Read about the Edgewood Experiments. Happened in Edgewood Arsenal, Maryland.

  • @amp120voltage
    @amp120voltage Месяц назад +5

    Can we please acknowledge how much more advanced this guys animations have gotten

  • @papidamuddafucare4699
    @papidamuddafucare4699 Месяц назад

    "he(she) needs some milk"- meme should have popped up somewhere at around 7:35!

  • @silvereagle1944
    @silvereagle1944 2 месяца назад +12

    Night watch would be perfect for me, I'm like a mega night owl

    • @Lambo_567
      @Lambo_567 2 месяца назад +2

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @panos617
      @panos617 2 месяца назад

      Like me

    • @silvereagle1944
      @silvereagle1944 2 месяца назад

      😐 guys, This is my 5917 night on night watch, I'm not gonna make it (28373 days later) 😐

    • @Baconcatboy
      @Baconcatboy 2 месяца назад

      Until a massive attacking wave comes 🫥

  • @giraffesinc.2193
    @giraffesinc.2193 Месяц назад

    I was just talking about NOT volunteering to a new(er) nurse on my unit, who 'volunteered' for temporary charge nurse. Never volunteer!

  • @RinnzuRosendale
    @RinnzuRosendale 18 дней назад

    Did anyone else get a Frenchs mustard commercial durring the mustard gas part? 😅

  • @notthefbi7932
    @notthefbi7932 2 месяца назад +4

    The Forlorn hope 😬

  • @CruTemlar75
    @CruTemlar75 Месяц назад

    You also wouldn’t ever want to be a tunnel rat or other similar job in a confined space I would think, love the vids, keep up the good work!❤❤

  • @AWFULWORKPLACES
    @AWFULWORKPLACES 2 месяца назад +5

    You never want to be in GTA5 Online 10Th Wave gang attack

  • @rayphillups1384
    @rayphillups1384 Месяц назад

    " I could take a walk on the wild side sir" - Ray Phillups 2003.

  • @elorenzo98
    @elorenzo98 22 дня назад +1

    It’s a matter of respawning in a closer place

  • @dominiquebolduc3598
    @dominiquebolduc3598 2 месяца назад +1

    Unfortunately, it doesn't work that way. Either there's volunteers, or there'll be "voluntolds"...

  • @Wombraider744
    @Wombraider744 Месяц назад +1

    If you ever hear a knock never open the door, if you do make sure you have a beer in your hands or else you’ll be sweeping the barracks hallway

  • @edwardchong7212
    @edwardchong7212 Месяц назад

    "Hey, Beckett! You said we are going to pull a quick job!"

  • @batboylives
    @batboylives 2 месяца назад +2

    Great, Great Uncle was in WW1, enlisted and was a Sapper. Survived the war, was hospitalized 6 times for gas shelling. Spent two weeks on furlow in Liverpool. England and returned two weeks later. Reason for discharge: Demobilization

  • @Khvostovz
    @Khvostovz Месяц назад +1

    Most practices in this video are no longer in use in current day war zones

  • @jeffreyayscue2425
    @jeffreyayscue2425 2 месяца назад

    Hey can you please make a video of the gun truck of vietnam war please and thank.

  • @DarkMeyer777
    @DarkMeyer777 7 дней назад +1

    You volunteer for war at the end.... For the side that is winning. This way, you can live to tell the tale, get medallion, get respect, get money(maybe).

  • @derkaiser420
    @derkaiser420 Месяц назад +1

    Before I went to Navy boot camp I was told to never volunteer for anything in the military. They want volunteers because no one else wants to do it.

  • @nematolvajkergetok5104
    @nematolvajkergetok5104 2 дня назад

    00:19: Ladders were hardly ever used to scale walls. Our ancestors (or anybody's, really) weren't such idiots, they understood what a "bottleneck" means. They were to bridge ditches and other obstacles. They only stormed a wall after it was brought down by artillery, tunneling, or some other means.
    1:05 Mustard gas isn't actually a gas. It's a viscuous, oily liquid that sticks to everything, and even the tiniest, microscopic amount can cause severe chemical burns. It evaporates so slowly that pools of it buried in 1918 are still dangerous. So the statement that it "causes severe respiratory injury" isn't really true, unless you were super-duper unlucky and inhaled it right when it was sprayed everywhere from an exploding grenade. Phosgene and chlorine were much more dangerous to the lungs, being actually gases.

  • @RobertHawkins-rh9su
    @RobertHawkins-rh9su 9 дней назад

    Dang, not even 30 seconds in and we have a scene from saving privet Ryan

  • @thunter1111
    @thunter1111 Месяц назад

    The way the decorated that black guys house 🤣 they gone do my boy like that?

  • @voshadxgathic
    @voshadxgathic Месяц назад

    Night watch is the only role I'm fit for. Exceptional low light vision and hearing. My only problem would be staying entertained without being distracted.

  • @mke_lil8pe395
    @mke_lil8pe395 Месяц назад

    I’d fall for the night watch.

  • @angelosusa4258
    @angelosusa4258 Месяц назад

    I served in navy and one thing navy and marines have taught me is don’t do anything unless told too 😂 of course volunteering is better than draft because you pick what MOS you want and a chance to go where you want too

  • @josephvonmeisthal275
    @josephvonmeisthal275 Месяц назад

    Latrine duty in pow camp, according to my grand father, was a sentence of death

  • @johncrocker4209
    @johncrocker4209 8 дней назад

    My father was a Sergeant in the Army. One of the best pieces of advice he ever gave me was "Never volunteer."

  • @user-wn1ty8mk1s
    @user-wn1ty8mk1s 2 месяца назад

    Can you make a video on John rabe or Oskar Schindler, I feel like they are neglected for their humanitarian acts of saving thousands of lives during WW2 and their selflessness that were demonstrated in doing so.

  • @curtisberard7831
    @curtisberard7831 Месяц назад

    My childhood friend and I has the following artituse. 'Nwvee volunteer for anything unless you know EXACTLY what you're volunteering for.'

  • @northernshield5414
    @northernshield5414 Месяц назад +2

    Shoutout to the women who worked in place of the men during wartime. Without them, the war would be lost

    • @robplazzman6049
      @robplazzman6049 Месяц назад +1

      Not in Nzi Germany, they used slave labour.

    • @foxymetroid
      @foxymetroid Месяц назад +1

      ​@@robplazzman6049They taught the world a valuable lesson: Never "employ" people who have everything to gain from your defeat and everything to lose from your victory.

  • @blakegoulds8313
    @blakegoulds8313 2 месяца назад +6

    SOMEONE HAS TO WALK POINT. You do it because if you don't your brother has to.

  • @TheTrevelyansway
    @TheTrevelyansway 2 месяца назад +11

    US men died WW1 = 115,000. US women = 500.

    • @WilliamCis99
      @WilliamCis99 Месяц назад +15

      Sounds like a death gap, gotta bring those numbers up 😤

  • @Orolandes
    @Orolandes Месяц назад

    My Da always said never be the 2nd guy through a hedgerow