MLU FORUM  

Go Back   MLU FORUM > 'B' ECHELON > The Sergeants' Mess

Notices

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 12-07-05, 18:26
Alex Blair (RIP) Alex Blair (RIP) is offline
"Mr. Manual", sadly no longer with us
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Ottawa ,Canada
Posts: 2,916
Default VD and scar....

In the good old days a dose of clap could be fixed by the tiffy and pennicilin...
Not today.....

Letter to the editor - RE: Canadian War Museum (CWM) statistics on VD flawed
OTTAWA, July 12 /CNW Telbec/ - One of the several items for concern in
the exhibits in the new Canadian War Museum states that, in the Korean War,
41.4 percent of Canadians who served in that war contracted venereal disease.
Confronted with the information by officials of The Korea Veterans
Association of Canada, Joe Geurts, CEO of the CWM, agreed to remove the
offensive description. On examination, the government officials covered up
only part of the sign with the offensive statistic.
It is known, for example, that, although there was some VD, much of it
was due to prostitution while the veterans were on leave in Japan. Dr. Victor
Rabinovitch, President of the Museum of Civilization Corporation which
operates the CWM, states in a letter to the publisher of the Manitoba Korea
Veterans Association newsletter that the VD information "was taken from solid
scholarly sources, notably the work of Brent Watson."
Watson wrote a 180-page book titled The Far Eastern Tour. He quotes
Private Jacket Coates, whose comments, according to Watson, came from the war
diary of the 2nd Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry.
Our research indicates there was no such person in the entire Canadian
Army by the name of Jacket Coates. He appears to be a figment of the
imagination of Rabinovitch and was invented in a novel by the late Lt-Col Herb
Wood, who commanded a battalion of the PPCLI in Korea. Quotes, according to
Rabinovitch, also come from a book titled The Private War of Jacket Coates.
Irrespective of whether Rabinovitch's sources are correct, we must be
critical of the CWM in posting the information in the first place. The
publisher of the Korea Veterans Association web site states that the statistic
is "disgusting, false and maligns every soldier who served."
The matter has reached high echelons. A Past President of KVA wrote to
the Korean Ambassador in Ottawa. We learned that the Korean government,
quietly, we suppose, is raising the issue with the Canadian government.
Retired Major Jacques Boire of the Royal 22nd Regiment wrote to Heritage
Minister Liza Frulla, stating that the signage was "an offense to the courage
and integrity shown by Canadians."
Korean veterans are demanding that the signage be eliminated in its
entirety. As Chairman of the 52-member National Council of Veteran
Associations, we go one step further. There are grounds, in our view, for the
Canadian government to offer an apology.
This kind of scurrilous attack, on extremely weak (if not nonexistent)
evidence of those who have written books on Korea, stands as a significant
insult not only to Korean veterans but to all Canadians who served. To have
contracted venereal disease is hardly concomitant with the purpose of CWM,
which is to tell Canadians the full story of war.
We cite no less an authority than Rudyard Kipling, famous British poet.
He is generally thought to be the author of the description that soldiers are
not plaster saints, but they take up the world's most dangerous profession: to
fight for their country against dictators who would take great joy in
criticizing those of us who are willing to lay down our lives.

Yours sincerely,
(signed)

H. Clifford Chadderton, CC, O.Ont., OStJ, CLJ, CAE, DCL, LLD
Chairman
__________________
Alex Blair
:remember :support :drunk:
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 12-07-05, 21:20
Jon Skagfeld's Avatar
Jon Skagfeld Jon Skagfeld is offline
M38A1 CDN3
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Owen Sound ON
Posts: 2,190
Default

Alex:

I've read that the 41.4% figure of reported VD occurrences was a compounded statistic.

i.e., if Pvt Bloggins reported to the MIR with a dose, and did so 10 times, that would be a hellishly high reported rate of infection.

However, if Pvts A, B,C,D,E,F,G,H, I and J reported to the MIR each with a dose, that would produce a totally different set of stats.

This is all notwithstanding the fact that the VD rate in any war has anything at all to do with the conduct of the war.
__________________
PRONTO SENDS
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 13-07-05, 15:51
Vets Dottir
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Hi,

I personally think that VD's in troops (whatever) are irrelevant to report ... unless of course some miltary/group actually deliberately uses women and men as infected biological weapons of war to deliberately infect their enemy troops or groups/society (I often wonder about HIV again!)

Thats my opinion, and I'm sticking to it

Karmen
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 13-07-05, 16:32
Jon Skagfeld's Avatar
Jon Skagfeld Jon Skagfeld is offline
M38A1 CDN3
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Owen Sound ON
Posts: 2,190
Default

BTW Alex:

I'm sure you're familiar with the expression...

"I'd rather have a VC and Bar instead of VD and scar".
__________________
PRONTO SENDS
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 13-07-05, 16:36
Alex Blair (RIP) Alex Blair (RIP) is offline
"Mr. Manual", sadly no longer with us
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Ottawa ,Canada
Posts: 2,916
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Jon Skagfeld
BTW Alex:

I'm sure you're familiar with the expression...

"I'd rather have a VC and Bar instead of VD and scar".
Yes Jon..I would...
But I was never in the situation to win a VC....VD ..???
Lucky I missed that too....
__________________
Alex Blair
:remember :support :drunk:
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 13-07-05, 18:41
Gunner Gunner is offline
T' Guns thank God t' guns
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Near Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 776
Default Soldiers, Sinners and Saints

The VD statistic quoted in the CWM exhibit is a prurient "I'm holier than thou" judgement by some display designer who has likely never worn a uniform.

I've soldiered now for 30 years in some 24 countries, many of them unpleasant... yes my soldiers (and I) could get into trouble when we weren't under arms, yes we looked for "entertainment" (read: girls and booze) where we could find it... for example, the long term dangers of smoking looked like a pretty low risk when you were being shot at!

There is no doubt that some soldiers catch VD... they also catch dissentry, the flu, mumps, measles, flak from the Brass and lead from the enemy. Is it important to the story being told in the exhibit, NO. Show us the stats on all the other illnesses and injuries before you highlight the VD rate. Tell the problem in context and let it educate... don't use a SWAG (scientific wild ass guess) to cause titters from teenagers and gasps from left leaning liberals about licentious soldiers!

As part of our lecture series today we highly recommend "My Story", the autobiography of Gen Chris Vokes, for its amusing account of his trying to convince the parson's son, Montgomery, to allow for field brothels with proper medical inspections so he (Vokes) could lower the VD rate in the 1st Canadian Division. Monty's reaction was worth buying the book for!

Mike
__________________
Mike Calnan
Ubique!
("Everywhere", the sole Battle Honour of the Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery)
www.calnan.com/swords
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 13-07-05, 20:24
Geoff Winnington-Ball (RIP)'s Avatar
Geoff Winnington-Ball (RIP) Geoff Winnington-Ball (RIP) is offline
former OC MLU, AKA 'Jif' - sadly no longer with us
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 5,400
Default Re: Soldiers, Sinners and Saints

Quote:
Originally posted by Gunner
As part of our lecture series today we highly recommend "My Story", the autobiography of Gen Chris Vokes, for its amusing account of his trying to convince the parson's son, Montgomery, to allow for field brothels with proper medical inspections so he (Vokes) could lower the VD rate in the 1st Canadian Division. Monty's reaction was worth buying the book for!
LMAO!!!!!!!!

Note that Fred Cederberg (THE LONG ROAD HOME) was very clear that they had army-supervised brothels in Italy...
__________________
SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS
:remember :support
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +2. The time now is 12:01.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Maple Leaf Up, 2003-2016