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  2. Myth of the spat-on Vietnam veteran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myth_of_the_spat-on...

    [47] David Cortright, a Vietnam veteran, professor emeritus at the University of Notre Dame, and the preeminent scholar on GI resistance during the Vietnam War said, the "unrest and dissension undermining American forces throughout the world surged together and were magnified in the crucible of Vietnam combat, effectively crippling U.S ...

  3. Soldiers in Revolt: GI Resistance During the Vietnam War

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldiers_in_Revolt:_GI...

    As surprising as it might seem for a book first published 50 years ago, Soldiers in Revolt is still the definitive book on the opposition and resistance to the Vietnam War within the ranks of the U.S. military. Further, because the book makes the convincing case that the U.S. military "ceased to function as an effective fighting force", it ...

  4. The Spitting Image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Spitting_Image

    The Spitting Image: Myth, Memory and the Legacy of Vietnam is a 1998 book by Vietnam veteran and sociology professor Jerry Lembcke. The book is an analysis of the widely believed narrative that American soldiers were spat upon and insulted by anti-war protesters upon returning home from the Vietnam War. [1]

  5. Moral Injury: The Grunts - The ... - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/moral-injury/the-grunts

    And it worries people like Marsha Four, who was a combat nurse in Vietnam and knows war trauma intimately. She eventually found purpose and solace running a veterans center in Philadelphia, before she retired last year to work with the Vietnam Veterans of America. Vietnam veterans like Four have their own struggles. But most of them served only ...

  6. Moral Injury: The Recruits - The ... - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/moral-injury/the...

    The entire military is “a moral construct,” said retired VA psychiatrist and author Jonathan Shay. In his ground-breaking 1994 study of combat trauma among Vietnam veterans, Achilles in Vietnam, he writes: “The moral power of an army is so great that it can motivate men to get up out of a trench and step into enemy machine-gun fire.”

  7. Homecoming: When the Soldiers Returned from Vietnam

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homecoming:_When_the...

    Homecoming: When the Soldiers Returned From Vietnam is a book of selected correspondence published in 1989. Its genesis was a controversial newspaper column of 20 July 1987 in which Chicago Tribune syndicated columnist Bob Greene asked whether there was any truth to the folklore that Vietnam veterans had been spat upon when they returned from the war zone.

  8. Meet the Vietnam War-era veteran who refused to be ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/meet-vietnam-war-era-veteran...

    Regen mostly operated on sailors who got injured in accidents stateside, but now and then, he treated those who had been wounded in Vietnam. After exactly two years, Regen left the military and ...

  9. Project 100,000 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_100,000

    U.S. Marine Corps mortar platoon in April 1969, the month when U.S. presence in Vietnam peaked with 543,000 deployed troops. While the project was promoted as a response to President Lyndon B. Johnson's War on Poverty, it has been an object of criticism. [11] Regarding the consequences of the program, a 1989 study sponsored by the DoD concluded ...