No one who has served in the Corp should feel guilty for not doing enough. First YOU were accepted so you are the few, the proud and among the best of the best. You’ve been tested and you passed. You are prepared to be challenged to many employment situations that require lesser skills in which you can exceed against those who haven’t been tested. After the Corp I returned to the classroom, accepted various jobs, got experience and eventually became a Stock broker and the Investment Banker. Straight commission jobs but I exceeded and was able to retire early and wealthy. Now I write books, give seminars and accept new challenges. I am now 80 and perfectly healthy and working full time at new jobs I enjoy. I must keep working in order to stay healthy. I will always be a L/Cpl 2511 as my base. From there I discovered I could do anything I wanted and make millions, have 5 wonderful educated children and always put a Marine decal on the back windows of my cars. Semper Fi / Chuck Salisbury E-3 evolved
Category: Main
less than fit ,
so where do I start , I enlisted shortly after high school . My old man was a mean drunk so when he found out he wan me over with his tractor smashing my right hand . that put my enlistment on hold till it healed . Only thing was the healing was slow and took into winter . I had run away from home and sleeping in an old ’56 ford wagon my sister gave me . Freezing my butt off . They finally let me go in right after Christmas of ’64 . My hand was less that perfect , my feet were flat , short and skinny from being under nurished . The medics had me standing bare foot in my skivies on a cement floor all day . there was some big guy that kept saying do your feet hurt ? Of course they were killing me but NO SIR was all he got out of me . At some point a group of DI’s show up to evaluate me . They told me just say so and you can go home . I broke down with ” I have no place to go . ” There was a chin up bar there and I impressed my Senior DI with a few Chin ups using only 2 fingers on my right hand . I remember him saying ” he’s only using 2 fingers , hell I’ll take him ”. He taught me to eat , walk tall , look people in the eye when I spoke , self esteem …..EVERYTHING . I owe everything I have , everything I am to the Marine Corps .
America Legion Post 143, Auburn Hills, MI.
To all combat Vietnam Vets and to all cops. We all are victims of spineless politicians.
In Vietnam we started out behind the 8 ball.
1 We could not go into N. Vietnam
2 We had too many stand down conditions imposed on us.
3 Jane Fn Fonda and the media turned on us.
4 We rotated troops every year. The NVA didn’t do that crap.
5 As we got more disheartened the enemy got bolder.
End result. The politicians with help of the media and 2 bit actress lost Vietnam.
The same playbook has been and is still used against the cops today.
When dealing with the enemy, the mob, they are told to stand down.
No tear gas, pepper spray, batons, or harsh language can used against the mob.
The cop become disheartened as the mob gets boulder. End result. Cities lost. All demonrats too.
I stand with the cops and law and order. I say vote to protect our 1st and 2nd amendment rights.
It aint about Black and White, it’s about doing what’s right. Vote America 1st.
IN GOD WE TRUST
Mike Giles
USMC 1965-1969
D/2/12 with the Walikng Dead.
Semper Fi.
Slip of the tongue
Returning from a Med Cruise in the fall of 1962 My unit was part of BLT 2-6 and instead of pulling into Morehead City N.C. we pulled into Norfolk Va. and sitting on the pier along with fresh food and other supplies was a recoil system for a 105 mm cannon which was for my sections gun which went out in Sardinia. While there I got to call home and spoke with my mom and she asked what’s going on and I replied” I don’t know but tomorrow morning we have a “F”ing pack and rifle inspection!”
My Marine Vocabulary Story…
On my return from a tour in Vietnam, my Mom met me at the airport. When we got to the car, she asked me if I wanted to drive home. I accepted and began the 60 mile trip from Milwaukee to our home town in central Wisconsin. As I was merging onto the 4-lane, another driver cut me off and I yelled “you non-driving f**k” at him as I maneuvered to avoid a collision. A few minutes of silence followed, broken my my Mom saying “I wish you wouldn’t use that word”. I said “but Mom, it’s so dirty”. She responded, “well yes, when you use it like that”. I apologized for my language and gained a new perspective on my mother.
Honoring my Marine Dad
I have more of a question than a story which I hope somebody can answer. My father was a corporal in the 4th marine division his name is William G Kraemer and died in 1987 and thru the years after his death i always intended to make a flag box memorial out of his burial flag but always had things to do. Between working and family .I finally retired and set up a little wood shop and intend that to be my first order of business as I gathered the things I needed I noticed I did not have his Purple Heart from when he was wounded on the first day of fighting on Iwo Jima . I called my older brother and he informed me that Our dad never received the medal. We reminisced about the old man and both realized that he never spoke about his time in the marines or the battles he was in the only two things I remembered him saying to me were when both he and myself were eating lunch in the extreme heat onetime I had the audacity to complain and he told me to shut up and if I would feel better if I had to eat lunch by a pile of dead japs .the other time was I cut myself bad and needed stitches and me that when they were loading him on to the Amtrak after he was wounded the guy next to him was squirting blood out of 2 bullet holes in his chest so bad that he stuck his 2 fingers deep in the holes and the bleeding stopped. My brothers only story was that he got in bad trouble one time after dad told him not to do what he got in trouble for that he told him he’d gouge out his eyes and skull f—- him if he got in trouble like that again and I never heard him use that language at anybody ever.So getting back to the question does anybody out there know how I can get his Purple Heart. I have his discharge papers and an article in the local paper about him being wounded. Thx to all our brave vets out there. Ron
Not a Sailor
In ’74 I was a young L/CPL serving on a carrier with the Marine Detachment (MARDET). I let loose a few expletives thinking I was an old salt in the halls of the ship. Later in the afternoon my CO called me into the offices where he very nicely said. One, you’re a Marine not a sailor. Two, prove you have a bigger vocabulary. I replied with an “Aye, Aye Sir” and walked out of the office. Can’t say I never used certain words again but it most definitely made me think about what would forever come out of my mouth from then on. Damn, I loved the MARINES! Oorah!
Grandson visits IWO in 2018
My Grandson is in the Navy & he is a air combat rescue swimmer. In 2018 his unit had exercises on the Island and he stated that it was a very hard island to run around on due to the volcanic sand. He sent me a jar of the sand and pictures of WWII relics still visible to this day. Even though I was a grunt in Vietnam and was wounded & medically retired from the Corps because of combat wounds, I wouldn’t have wanted to be in the boots of our Marine ansestors who fought in that that terrible campaign! I am so very proud of their sacrifices that they made for our country & Corps
Exactly my story!
So after going through boot camp at P.I., ITR at Camp Geiger and “A” school at Memphis, Tennessee, I went home for the first time at Thanksgiving. My Mother decided to have a big turkey dinner for all the Aunts and Uncles and cousins. So as we’re all sitting around the table passing the food around, people are talking and having a good old time. That is until I blurted out “Could someone pass me the f**king mashed potatoes”. All of a sudden it was dead quiet and everybody was staring at me. I just then realized what I had said. A little awkward. My father (an Army WWII vet) and my Uncle (a Navy Korean vet) were trying not to laugh out loud but my Mother and Aunts weren’t all that amused! After a long (at least it seemed long) silence, my cousin passed me the potatoes and I just went to work eating with my head down. My Mom never said another word about it!
Sgt. Wild Bill Faulk
Leave after boot camp, after leaving PI I went home on leave to visit the folks. Mom had cooked all my favourites. In attendance was my mom, dad(a Raider WWII Gunny, Last action was Iwo Jima. My baby sister and her best friend (my soon to be wife, though I did not know it at the time). Well we sat down to eat and after the blessing, I looked over at my mom and said, This is great mom, please pass the f**kin salt. Out of no where mom slaps me up side the head, an action that illicts the response from me of, what the f**k was that for? followed by another slap upside my head. I turn to dad who is rolling in his chair about to fall on the floor laughing and said, dad why the f**k is mom hitting me? followed by another slap. Now on the floor, barely able to catch his breath, dad replies, son it’s your booney talk. I turned three shades of red and turned to mom and said, shit mom, I’m so f**kin sorry. Mom stands up looks at dad and says, he’s your son alright. dinner was over. Years later we are having dinner with friends and my wife starts telling our friends about that night, I looked at her and said, how do you know about that? She then tells me she was the friend of my sister eating with us that night. I was awed, twenty years later and I did not know she was the friend staying with my sister that night until then.