Posted on Mar 11, 2016
What were your feelings and thoughts when you first opened your draft notice?
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This question is for our Vietnam era Veterans here on RallyPoint. Share with us what your feelings were when you first received and opened your draft notice.
The Comments Here are Historical and Awesome!
What was your stance on the war? Explain your opinion
Did your parents put ideas into your head about the war that you didn't nessisarly believe in?
The Comments Here are Historical and Awesome!
What was your stance on the war? Explain your opinion
Did your parents put ideas into your head about the war that you didn't nessisarly believe in?
Edited 4 y ago
Posted 8 y ago
Responses: 917
Got drafted 1966 married less then a year. Was in boot camp Fort Knox in the winter those hills were rough
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I never got one. I enlisted in the infantry and volunteered to go to Vietnam in late '69. Funny thing is, my recruiter kept trying to talk me out of it because the draft gave the army plenty of cannon fodder. However, my GT score was 138 and I was qualified for a number of hard-to-fill specialties.
I wanted none of it. He finally leaned back in his chair and threw up his hands saying: "They taught me in recruiting school that if someone throws you the ball, you'd better be able to catch it. Fine. You wanna go airborne infantry and go to 'Nam, it's on you. Don't ever tell anybody I forced you into it.
Later, while climbing the cargo net obstacle on the confidence course at Ft. Ord, CA--which was about 80 feet high and you had to climb over a large log and then go down the other side, I discovered I was afraid of heights.
The Sr. DS, a Hawaiian built like a fire plug, saw me hesitate at the top and shouted, "You still wanna go airborne, Maggot?"
"No, Drill Sergeant!" I shouted back.
"Report to my office when we get back," he said.
Later, there was a line outside his door with about a dozen guys who decided airborne wasn't for them. The grizzled SFC called us in and passed out "quit slips." . . .
I wound up going to Infantry AIT at Ft. Jackson, SC, in the winter. Hardly the best place to get RVN training. When a recruiter for the Visual Tracker Course came to aske for volunteers to train to become part of a five-man team with four visual trackers and a tracker dog and handler, 15 of us signed up.
While going through the course at Ft. Gordon, GA, they had us do seat and Australian rappeling from 150-feet out of Hueys. I absolutely loved it! Turned out my fear of heights only manifests itself when I'm climbing something.
The only problem I had at tracker school was that I was unable to master the tracking skills and washed out during the fifth week. . . .
I wanted none of it. He finally leaned back in his chair and threw up his hands saying: "They taught me in recruiting school that if someone throws you the ball, you'd better be able to catch it. Fine. You wanna go airborne infantry and go to 'Nam, it's on you. Don't ever tell anybody I forced you into it.
Later, while climbing the cargo net obstacle on the confidence course at Ft. Ord, CA--which was about 80 feet high and you had to climb over a large log and then go down the other side, I discovered I was afraid of heights.
The Sr. DS, a Hawaiian built like a fire plug, saw me hesitate at the top and shouted, "You still wanna go airborne, Maggot?"
"No, Drill Sergeant!" I shouted back.
"Report to my office when we get back," he said.
Later, there was a line outside his door with about a dozen guys who decided airborne wasn't for them. The grizzled SFC called us in and passed out "quit slips." . . .
I wound up going to Infantry AIT at Ft. Jackson, SC, in the winter. Hardly the best place to get RVN training. When a recruiter for the Visual Tracker Course came to aske for volunteers to train to become part of a five-man team with four visual trackers and a tracker dog and handler, 15 of us signed up.
While going through the course at Ft. Gordon, GA, they had us do seat and Australian rappeling from 150-feet out of Hueys. I absolutely loved it! Turned out my fear of heights only manifests itself when I'm climbing something.
The only problem I had at tracker school was that I was unable to master the tracking skills and washed out during the fifth week. . . .
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I did not have those feeling Mike, I was an RA and volunteered for 4 years!
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I'm not sure what my first thought was, but one of them was "I think I'll join the Air Force". When I went to see my recruiter I found out that ordinarily I would not have been able to go that route, but I had previously (like right after high school) gone to see the AF recruiter but hadn't followed up on it at the time. Since I had previously made contact with the AF I was allowed to join and my draft spot went to someone else. Probably. I would have been ok with going into the Army, but I figured that if I didn't have to I wouldn't. Was that a mistake? I don't think so. I probably would have gotten myself killed or captured.
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SFC Chuck Martinez
That's about the truth Robert, gotten killed, wounded or severally disabled! You hit the jackpot!
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Sgt Robert Hellyer
My older brother was drafted, I think in 1966 or early in '67, and was in VN while I was going through AF Basic. I was just about finished when i got the call that he'd been killed. That was probably the hardest day of my life.
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I was in Basic when the Drafts ending was announced and was too young to get a draft card.
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