User Panel
Posted: 1/5/2012 11:14:14 AM EDT
I've seen that "Red Tails" commercial a few times now and couldn't help but notice the wording used.
Not to denigrate their service but isn't that overstating things a bit much? |
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I don't know but I wonder how that movie will compare to The Tuskegee Airmen
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No.
They fought like lions and were heroes in every sense of the word, but they did not change the war. The P-51, which they flew, did change the war though. P-51's were able to escort bombers to their targets and back, which made bomber strikes more effective and increased bomber survival. |
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Quoted: I've seen that "Red Tails" commercial a few times now and couldn't help but notice the wording used. Not to denigrate their service but isn't that overstating things a bit much? They changed quite a few things, but not the war. |
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No to your first question and yes to your second.
I had the honor of meeting one of the Tuskegee airmen at an airshow in 1999 and got him to sign my book of P-51 artwork. |
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Maybe not the war although I think they did help lots of bomber pilots return home. They did change the military and it's views that blacks were not suitable for anything but grave detail and support functions.
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It might be overstating to say that any one unit changed the outcome of the war, but one might say that the Tuskegee Airmen changed as much as the 100th Infantry Battalion or the 442nd RCT did, insofar as they challenged the sort of horseshit racism then prevalent in American society and institutions.
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Redtails is going to be HORRIBLE
first off, P51s were not F22s second, the CG looks cheap and crappy the best thing to note about the tuskagee airmen is that they didnt lose a single bomber |
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Considering how well they performed their duties, I'd say a lot of targets were hit that otherwise wouldn't have been.
Depending on the importance of those targets, they may very well have changed the war. |
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Redtails is going to be HORRIBLE first off, P51s were not F22s second, the CG looks cheap and crappy the best thing to note about the tuskagee airmen is that they didnt lose a single bomber I've heard from several sources that the myth of 'not losing a single bomber' isn't true. added: "MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — At least 25 bombers being escorted by the Tuskegee Airmen over Europe during World War II were shot down by enemy aircraft, according to a new Air Force report. The report contradicts the legend that the famed black aviators never lost a plane to fire from enemy aircraft. But historian William Holton said the discovery of lost bombers doesn't tarnish the unit's record. "It's impossible not to lose bombers," said Holton, national historian for Tuskegee Airmen Inc." USA Today |
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Quoted: Quoted: Redtails is going to be HORRIBLE first off, P51s were not F22s second, the CG looks cheap and crappy the best thing to note about the tuskagee airmen is that they didnt lose a single bomber I've heard from several sources that the myth of 'not losing a single bomber' isn't true. There isn't much they could do about FLAK. |
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I've heard from several sources that the myth of 'not losing a single bomber' isn't true. Indeed. From wikipedia: The Tuskegee Airmen were credited by higher commands with the following accomplishments: *15,533 combat sorties, 1578 missions *One hundred and twelve German aircraft destroyed in the air, another 150 on the ground *Nine hundred and fifty railcars, trucks and other motor vehicles destroyed *One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire *A good record of protecting U.S. bombers,[53] losing only 25 on hundreds of missions.[54] |
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Quoted: Redtails is going to be HORRIBLE first off, P51s were not F22s second, the CG looks cheap and crappy the best thing to note about the tuskagee airmen is that they didnt lose a single bomber Sure they didn't. Not while "under their care" anyway, but they flew P-40s, P-47s, and P-51s, and on many missions could not escort the bombers all the way to the target or back. I'm sure scads of bombers were lost on every mission the Tuskeegee Airmen participated in. I'm not sure historical record would bear out their perfect win record if it was scrutinized carefully anyway. |
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*One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire
How in the fuck does one go about sinking a destroyer with a machine gun? Lucky hit on the magazine somehow? |
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Quoted: I've seen that "Red Tails" commercial a few times now and couldn't help but notice the wording used. Not to denigrate their service but isn't that overstating things a bit much? You ain't gonna sell a movie without using superlatives and hyperbole. "The feel reasonably ok movie of the year!" |
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They kicked some ass and did their job just like every other serviceman in WWII, but they didn't "change" anything. They took pressure off other resources. Anything else is revisionist history.
The best thing to come out of Tuskeegee is still peanut butter! |
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Redtails is going to be HORRIBLE first off, P51s were not F22s second, the CG looks cheap and crappy the best thing to note about the tuskagee airmen is that they didnt lose a single bomber I've heard from several sources that the myth of 'not losing a single bomber' isn't true. added: "MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — At least 25 bombers being escorted by the Tuskegee Airmen over Europe during World War II were shot down by enemy aircraft, according to a new Air Force report. The report contradicts the legend that the famed black aviators never lost a plane to fire from enemy aircraft. But historian William Holton said the discovery of lost bombers doesn't tarnish the unit's record. "It's impossible not to lose bombers," said Holton, national historian for Tuskegee Airmen Inc." USA Today IIRC, the Army was pushing the myth during WW2 for morale purposes and was then accepted as fact. \/\/ Uh, lots of white pilots would've probably been racist. That would've been the prevailing mood of the time, after all. It doesn't make those pilots "bad", just the environment they were in. |
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I'm just hoping they don't portray white pilots as inept or racist
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*One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire
How in the fuck does one go about sinking a destroyer with a machine gun? Lucky hit on the magazine somehow? Are you questioning the prowess of the P-47 Thunderbolt? |
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Quoted:
*One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire
How in the fuck does one go about sinking a destroyer with a machine gun? Lucky hit on the magazine somehow? Are you questioning the prowess of the P-47 Thunderbolt? |
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*One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire
How in the fuck does one go about sinking a destroyer with a machine gun? Lucky hit on the magazine somehow? Not the only time. Some navy pilot (from Enterprise, I think) sank a destroyer the same way. His report over the radio: "Sighted steamer. Strafed same. Sank same. Some sight! Signed, Smith" Yes, I'm serious. ETA: I think he managed to blow up one of the boilers but not sure. |
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*One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire
How in the fuck does one go about sinking a destroyer with a machine gun? Lucky hit on the magazine somehow? hits on torpedoes or depth charges |
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I have all the respect in the world for what the Tuskegee Airmen did, and they are true heroes, as all are vets are. But this film ( the way the TV ad portrayed it) seems like a blaxploitation remake. I hope i am wrong, cause it would be very wrong to take the tale of some very brave men, and turn it into a black pride parade.
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Quoted: They kicked some ass and did their job just like every other serviceman in WWII, but they didn't "change" anything. They took pressure off other resources. Anything else is revisionist history. The best thing to come out of Tuskeegee is still peanut butter! This. Brave men and a talented squadron, facing a lot of bigotry and preconceived notions, but they did not alter much in terms of the struggle against the Axis powers. The movie looks like a steaming pile of dogshit, and I will cringe in embarrassment the first time some ruh-tard chimes in on ARFcom and calls it "mindless entertainment". |
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*One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire
How in the fuck does one go about sinking a destroyer with a machine gun? Lucky hit on the magazine somehow? Are you questioning the prowess of the P-47 Thunderbolt? Serious answer (limited by my knowledge of period naval architecture, however): Destroyers tended to not really have ANY armor (see USS Laffey, "The Ship That Would Not Die," 5-inch 38-caliber guns in twin turrets...with non-armor sheet metal plating). So a .50 bullet (or 8) would probably zip right through the decking and maybe some of the hull, too. Get a squadron of P-47s making continual gun passes on the thing and you could probably poke enough holes in it to overwhelm the pumps and sink it. |
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It's hard to say whether any one unit changed the war.
What can be said for sure is that they fought the hardest they could. They fought, bled, and died for their country. And that is enough to know they're heroes. |
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*One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire
How in the fuck does one go about sinking a destroyer with a machine gun? Lucky hit on the magazine somehow? Are you questioning the prowess of the P-47 Thunderbolt? Are we really going to argue about movie special effects and there validity in the real world ? What was the gun Al Pacino used ? Where is my mega mag with unlimited rounds ? |
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I've heard from several sources that the myth of 'not losing a single bomber' isn't true. Indeed. From wikipedia: The Tuskegee Airmen were credited by higher commands with the following accomplishments: *15,533 combat sorties, 1578 missions *One hundred and twelve German aircraft destroyed in the air, another 150 on the ground *Nine hundred and fifty railcars, trucks and other motor vehicles destroyed *One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire *A good record of protecting U.S. bombers,[53] losing only 25 on hundreds of missions.[54] Trying to find reference now, but, along with the bogus claim of never losing a bomber while they were tasked with escort, the ship they claimed destroyed was not a Destroyer supposedly. That info was the subject of an article in a British aviation magazine a month or two back, and they even ID'd the Italian ship that was sunk, but for the life of me I cannot find the article and I tossed the magazine. |
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Didn't make a difference if they had been there or not. If not someone else would have taken their place and probably done close to, if not just as good of a job doing it as they did.
The difference is, they were there and they did do it. In the grand scheme of the war they were just another cog in the US war machine. On a personal level it was a whole nother story. I suppose that could be said of any war. |
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*One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire
How in the fuck does one go about sinking a destroyer with a machine gun? Lucky hit on the magazine somehow? Are you questioning the prowess of the P-47 Thunderbolt? For a real answer: evidently the ship sunk, TA-27, was really what we at the time would call a "destroyer escort" (plus a Destroyer today does not equal a destroyer of WW2. Today they're way bigger). http://www.german-navy.de/kriegsmarine/captured/torpedoboats/ta/ta27/index.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariete_class_torpedo_boat http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torpedoboot_Ausland So I'd guess not that heavily armored. And Italian built. Part of the problem with what "type" it is probably has to do with translations. You could call the ship a "torpedo boat" but in Italian (the guys that made it) destroyers are called "cacciatorpediniere" which from google translator is from the words "hunter" and "torpedo". I figure thinking of it like a DE is probably the best. |
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I've heard from several sources that the myth of 'not losing a single bomber' isn't true. Indeed. From wikipedia: The Tuskegee Airmen were credited by higher commands with the following accomplishments: *15,533 combat sorties, 1578 missions *One hundred and twelve German aircraft destroyed in the air, another 150 on the ground *Nine hundred and fifty railcars, trucks and other motor vehicles destroyed *One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire *A good record of protecting U.S. bombers,[53] losing only 25 on hundreds of missions.[54] Trying to find reference now, but, along with the bogus claim of never losing a bomber while they were tasked with escort, the ship they claimed destroyed was not a Destroyer supposedly. That info was the subject of an article in a British aviation magazine a month or two back, and they even ID'd the Italian ship that was sunk, but for the life of me I cannot find the article and I tossed the magazine. it was an Ariete class torpedo boat destroyer. Smaller than our DE's at the time |
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Not at all. By the time they were in it, they were facing complete rank amateurs who were vastly outnumbered flying inferior machinery. Any other group regardless of color would have achieved the same.
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I've heard from several sources that the myth of 'not losing a single bomber' isn't true. Indeed. From wikipedia: The Tuskegee Airmen were credited by higher commands with the following accomplishments: *15,533 combat sorties, 1578 missions *One hundred and twelve German aircraft destroyed in the air, another 150 on the ground *Nine hundred and fifty railcars, trucks and other motor vehicles destroyed *One destroyer sunk by P-47 machine gun fire *A good record of protecting U.S. bombers,[53] losing only 25 on hundreds of missions.[54] Trying to find reference now, but, along with the bogus claim of never losing a bomber while they were tasked with escort, the ship they claimed destroyed was not a Destroyer supposedly. That info was the subject of an article in a British aviation magazine a month or two back, and they even ID'd the Italian ship that was sunk, but for the life of me I cannot find the article and I tossed the magazine. It was TA-22 Giuseppi Missori, a torpedo boat, and they didn't sink it. It was badly damaged, and never fought again, it was scuttled in February 1945. The other claim is that it was TA-27 Aurige, however that ship was sunk off the coast of Elba June 9th, so it could not possibly be the ship that was claimed to have been sunk on June 25th. |
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Any other group regardless of color would have achieved the same. I doubt that. And there's a simple explanation as to why, and to why they would be 'better' than a lot of groups. Originally, the military took all the eligible black pilots, which was selectively picked to begin with, and then put them through a training program designed to make them fail. A lot of people didn't want black pilots at all. And then put them into one fighter group. Basically they ended up with a single fighter group made up of the best black pilots available. It's simple statistics. With more white pilots needed you're simply going to get more 'average' guys because of the need to keep numbers up. |
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Change the war? No.
But to say that they "did their part" would be a vast understatement. |
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No, they didn't. They participated, fought hard, and fought well. But they made no bigger of an impact then hundreds of other units.
The movie looks like a complete sham. Just for one small example, I don't think the pilots would have talked "ghetto" in the 40's. |
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One decorated "white pilot" who was there (and who later shot down migs as well), a friend of the family type, got pretty riled up just at the mention of the TA.
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Rewrite history, dare anyone to raise a peep, count on your audience believing every single scene.
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Considering my grandfather was protected by them they potentially changed my life, thats for sure.
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The movie looks like a complete sham. Just for one small example, I don't think the pilots would have talked "ghetto" in the 40's. It's George Lucas. Of course it's a sham. Also, every scene will be chock full of stuff filling the screen. ALL OVER. |
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I'd rather see a movie about the Tuskegee Experiment. That might open up some eyes.
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no, they did an excellent job and were brave and deserve recognition for bravery. But did not directly change the war
Sounds like someone's agenda is reflecting through the big screen again. another movie I have no desire to see. kinda like warhorse. |
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I'm just hoping they don't portray white pilots as inept or racist they will, it's the new "military movie" way Hart War, Wintalkers, Tears of the son, just off the top of my head. those guys did their job like anyone else in WW2, it's Americans that won the war, but the movie will show that a persons race won the war this is why i prefer WW2 movies in black and white, the older movies made it ok to pull for America, feel good about our country, and didn't have all the PC crap in them, it was ok to hate the enemy back then. |
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Looks like revisionist history in the service of identity politics.
But then again, history's primary purpose these days is to make minorities and special interest groups feel good about themselves. |
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I'm just hoping they don't portray white pilots as inept or racist You can relax. It's not just the pilots. It's every white person is a racist. |
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It might be overstating to say that any one unit changed the outcome of the war, but one might say that the Tuskegee Airmen changed as much as the 100th Infantry Battalion or the 442nd RCT did, insofar as they challenged the sort of horseshit racism then prevalent in American society and institutions. Is there a like button I can click? |
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