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The Greatest Generation? Overrated?


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19 minutes ago, row_33 said:

 

Air Force was the immediate choice, but they winnowed out people quickly for any possible flaw.

 

 

  Too young to have been drafted for Vietnam but I remember the discussion going around that if you wanted to get ahead of the draft a person should enlist in the (US) Air Force or Navy.  Better chance of being in a rear area or out of the theater altogether.   Waiting for the draft just about always meant being assigned to a ground force and being in combat.  I don't remember too many being turned down for the Air Force or Navy and being Cold War era you could have gone to West Germany or Norfolk.

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10 minutes ago, RochesterRob said:

  Too young to have been drafted for Vietnam but I remember the discussion going around that if you wanted to get ahead of the draft a person should enlist in the (US) Air Force or Navy.  Better chance of being in a rear area or out of the theater altogether.   Waiting for the draft just about always meant being assigned to a ground force and being in combat.  I don't remember too many being turned down for the Air Force or Navy and being Cold War era you could have gone to West Germany or Norfolk.

 

Ok Boomer, but we're talking about the Greatest Generation.  

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1 hour ago, LeviF91 said:

The best film directors and trumpet players are heavy smokers.

 

Most people are just not willing to come to Terms with this.

 

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My father went through 3 packs of Camel a day and insisted it wasn't an issue because Camel was pure and clean tobacco, and didn't pose a health risk.

 

He lived to be 92, much to everyone's chagrin.

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Just now, IDBillzFan said:

 

My father went through 3 packs of Camel a day and insisted it wasn't an issue because Camel was pure and clean tobacco, and didn't pose a health risk.

 

He lived to be 92, much to everyone's chagrin.

 

Like my grandmother, who lived to 98 on a diet of jelly beans and Bailey's Irish Cream.

 

When she was 95, she went to the doctor for a check-up, and asked him if she should be worried about her cholesterol.  He laughed at her, and told her she could start smoking for all it mattered at her age.

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11 minutes ago, DC Tom said:

 

Ok Boomer, but we're talking about the Greatest Generation.  

 

This reminds me of the time OCinWherever "Ok Boomer"ed me before "Ok boomer" was a thing.  A man truly ahead of his time.

3 minutes ago, IDBillzFan said:

 

My father went through 3 packs of Camel a day and insisted it wasn't an issue because Camel was pure and clean tobacco, and didn't pose a health risk.

 

He lived to be 92, much to everyone's chagrin.

 

Dude I get making the jump from CA but why Idaho?

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1 minute ago, IDBillzFan said:

 

What is it about Idaho that makes you think it wouldn't be a good idea?

 

Serious question.


Oh nothing.  I was wondering why.  I imagine climate is completely different depending on what part of the state you're in.

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7 minutes ago, IDBillzFan said:

 

What is it about Idaho that makes you think it wouldn't be a good idea?

 

Serious question.

 

It's fun to make fun of Idaho but it's a great state (I lived near Sandpoint for 3 years)

 

You need to check out if you haven't Shoshone Falls and Thousand Springs.

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1 hour ago, LeviF91 said:

The best film directors and trumpet players are heavy smokers.

 

Most people are just not willing to come to Terms with this.

 

960x540.jpg

  George Burns and character actor Charles Lane smoked very heavily and lived into extreme old age.  You never know but I know it worked just the opposite for my maternal grandfather.  

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15 minutes ago, LeviF91 said:


Oh nothing.  I was wondering why.  I imagine climate is completely different depending on what part of the state you're in.

 

 

We're north Idaho, about 30 minutes east of Spokane, just outside Lake Coeur d'Alene. I can run my company from anywhere, so we sold virtually everything in CA and bought five acres overlooking the city. We have my son in one of the top 10 charter schools in the country. Business regulations are very lax here, taxes are very low, people are ridiculously friendly and neighborly, we're three minutes from a boat launch at Spokane River into the lake, and we're genuinely living our best life right now.

 

That said, I grew up in the Catskills just below Windham Mt. Ski Slope. I spent most of my life believing I needed to be as far away from mountains and snow as possible, and it turns our I was desperately wrong for most of my life. We're much happier around the mountains and lakes and hills and snowmobiling and boating and skiing.

 

10 minutes ago, Gary Busey said:

 

It's fun to make fun of Idaho but it's a great state (I lived near Sandpoint for 3 years)

 

You need to check out if you haven't Shoshone Falls and Thousand Springs.

 

Both of those are on our radar. Sandpoint is just north of us (we're in Post Falls). The whole area is beautiful.

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8 minutes ago, IDBillzFan said:

 

 

We're north Idaho, about 30 minutes east of Spokane, just outside Lake Coeur d'Alene. I can run my company from anywhere, so we sold virtually everything in CA and bought five acres overlooking the city. We have my son in one of the top 10 charter schools in the country. Business regulations are very lax here, taxes are very low, people are ridiculously friendly and neighborly, we're three minutes from a boat launch at Spokane River into the lake, and we're genuinely living our best life right now.

 

That said, I grew up in the Catskills just below Windham Mt. Ski Slope. I spent most of my life believing I needed to be as far away from mountains and snow as possible, and it turns our I was desperately wrong for most of my life. We're much happier around the mountains and lakes and hills and snowmobiling and boating and skiing.

 

That sounds nice.  Another one to add to the list of "places I'd rather live than where I do now."

 

But hey, Albany's getting a Costco.  Small victories.

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