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Why the Greatest Generation was so Small

Posted by Bob on October 14th, 2005 under History


They called themselves “dog faces.”

The reason they were called “dog faces” was because they were put through the Basic Training of World War II. Basic Training made them obey their masters like dogs.

The British Army had a slogan for recruiting:

“It’s a MAN’S Life.”

If Basic Training made a man of you, it was a failure. The purpose of Basic was to make you perfectly obedient.

It takes generations of breeding and training besides to make a dog perfectly obedient.

The Army had eight weeks.

Four years of Obedience Training. That was World War Two in America. You had to unlearn everything our ancestors came here for.

But it got WORSE.

There was the GI Bill of Rights.

Over fifty percent of those who proudly called themselves GIs, “Government Issues,” took advantage of the right to go to college free.

After four years of Obedience Training, their professors taught them that only professors knew how to rule the world. They called it Progressive Thinking, they called it Liberalism.

I have lived a lifetime hearing people call slavishness heroism and hearing people call hatred humanity. So I am not the least surprised that the group that called itself The Greatest Generation called abject, groveling obedience “Being Realistic” and “Being Tough.”

They thought they were mature. They thought they knew what the world was all about.

So when I said they should fight back, they laughed and said I did know the world the way they did. They had learned that the sergeant was meaner than they were. They had learned that you have to “go through channels.”

Above all, hey learned that “You can’t beat Town Hall.”

In the American Revolution, everyone of them would have been a Tory.

That was just from Basic Training. Everybody who got Basic Training in World War II would have been a Tory in the Revolution. They were obedient dog faces and proud of it.

But Basic Training was followed by Politically Correct Training.

After Obedience Training the Dog Face went to college for the “education” they had earned. At the universities they were dog faces again:

At the universities the dog faces learned there that there were Authorities in the world. The Authorities knew what was best.

If you didn’t believe it, the Authorities would flunk you.

Once again, if you didn’t obey, the Authorities would squash you like a bug.

That generation, the people who called themselves dog faces, were convinced that believing professors made them Real Men.

Real Men knew the Real World.

They were Real Men.

They knew how to Obey.

You are now living in the world the Greatest Generation made for you.

Mondo cane, the world of dogs. You are living in the world the dogs made for you.

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  1. #1 by Anonymous on 10/14/2005 - 4:56 pm

    I seem to recall Monty Python scetches of “It’s a DOG’S Life.” making fun of that very recruitment campaign you mention.

  2. #2 by joe rorke on 10/15/2005 - 4:49 pm

    Typical example of a great piece by Bob Whitaker. I wouldn’t miss this blog for the world.

  3. #3 by Elizabeth on 10/16/2005 - 3:20 pm

    It’s even worse when you have to deal every day with that generation’s
    slightly younger contemporaries.

    They didn’t go through basic training and they weren’t old enough
    to participate in that war, but they absorbed the same type of
    thinking — go along to get along — and start squawking when
    their kids (me, for example) let them know they don’t
    believe that kind of thinking is valid.

  4. #4 by Trager Smith on 10/17/2005 - 10:38 am

    A new “greatest” generation is coming up, Bob. It’s called the Millennials, those born after 1981. U.S. history moves in four generational cycles: Civic (i.e., GI or self-styled Greatest), Adaptive (Silent), Idealist (Boomers), Reactive (downbeat, like the Lost Generation and Gen X).
    The basic idea is that America is not a static society and that each generation reacts to the way it was brought up. In timeless societies, this is not the case. I look upon my race, not for specific “traditions” to uphold, but as having a capacity to create.
    William Howe and Neil Strauss did not intend a racist gloss on their book, Generations, which ranks along with The Might of the West, The Passing of the Great Race, A Plague on Both Your Houses, and Atlas Shrugged as the ten books that have influenced my thinking the most.
    The civic generation previous to the GI generation was that of Mr. Jefferson. The war was so devastating the a whole generation was skipped, the only exception to the Strauss-Howe theory.
    If you google the four words you can get all kinds of stuff.

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