The war between the 1962-1975 which in the history of this time is known as the Vietnam War. This war was a war in which many troops were left with no choice but to attend this war. Left with no choice but to fight in the Vietnam War which left them traumatised affecting everything in which could have been. The impact in which the Vietnam War had on the Vietnam veterans was that they were left Untreated of post traumatic disorders. Returning from the war, the community were not proud of those veterans but if anything made them feel bad and down. They were known as child murderers, their self-esteems were lowered and all pride in which they had was taken. Life would only get tougher on these poor men, but to mountain the pain was that psychological …show more content…
When the children of the veterans attended school, they were mocked and treated nasty because society had placed an image in everyone’s head that any veteran of theVietnam war was a child murderer and this reflected largely on the child as they thought itwas ok to mock the children. Children of the veterans had only the other children of other veterans who were able to connect and really understand the pain that they were going through.This would leave immense pain and pressure on the wife of the veterans. They wouldthen have to fill the two boots of playing the roles of mother and father. Families were affected by the way that soldiers would deal with the aftermath. There was no possible way in which allowed these disturbed and traumatised men, continuously giving them flashbacks and nightmares, eventually becoming too much for the women to handle and in most casesleaving the family behind, to get away from all the depression and paranoia. The impact that The Vietnam war had on the actual veterans was different to each veteran, a veteran who was no longer the same guy is veteran “ MICHEAL SCRASE” “One minute I was in Vietnam and the next …show more content…
Mr Frankie was in the war from 1962-1975. Brett hunts father fell inlove with his mother when they were quite young. Soon after meeting the two got married. The way that bretts parents met was that once while sitting with his mate, Frankie and his mate known and skipper told Frankie to get up and talk to the beautiful looking women in the yellow sunshine dress. Frankie was a soldier in the Vietnam war for 13 years, after returning from the war Frankie and his beloved wife had a family. Upon leaving for the war Frankie was only 19 and his wife at the age of 17. Frankie during the war was upon an attack of which allowed him to be the first patient to try the skin graph operation. In this operation they remove skin from your buttock to help save te part of your body of which is in need of skin. In frankies case he needed this for his leg as his leg was dangling of my shreds of skin. It didn’t work out for Frankie as eventually he lost his lef and was left without a leg. Although this didn’t stop Frankie as he and his wife continued to work. At one point it became abit too much for bretts mother to continue in the relationship, as Frankie was beginning to become too much for her handle. She would be responsible for the kids and now her husband. She shurggled to continue this and as a
Vietnam War where the US intervened in Vietnam to try and stop communism from spreading.
The Vietnam 1 Running head: SOCIAL EFFECTS OF THE VIETNAM WAR The Vietnam War's Effects on American Society Halley E. Moore Metro High School- St. Louis The Vietnam 2 Abstract The Vietnam War had a profound effect on American society. It changed the way we viewed our government, the media, and our Constitutional rights. Because of this shift in perspective, the country was torn apart and yet still came together in new and different ways.
Veterans coming home had to face many different situations. Most veterans who came home did not receive the welcome they had deserved. Some veterans were homeless and unemployed after coming home. An organization called the Vietnam Veterans against the War or the VVAW tried to help the soldiers coming home. The organization allowed veterans to talk about their experiences to them and also tried to get the veterans to talk to the public (Rivers 646-648). The VVAW helped the veterans throughout the war. Many veterans who came home had emotional trauma or Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). The United States citizens did not want to remember the war or the brave men who fought in it (Rivers 646-647). Very few people cared about Vietnam or the soldiers during the war because of the negative views toward the soldiers and the war.
I have learned a lot about what life was like at the time of the Vietnam War by interviewing my grandfather. My grandfather, Franklin Torr, was living in Dover, NH at the time, in his late thirties, married, and had three young children. The Vietnam War impacted my grandfather’s life in a unique way. One aspect of his life that changed at the start of the war was that a lot of his tenants, in the mobile home he owned, were in the New Hampshire National Guard and were stationed in Vietnam, flying missions, and some were advisors. He said the following about them; “Of the tenants that fought in the war, they thought they were doing the right thing at the time” When asked if he could provide a story of one of his Vietnam War veterans, he said that not a lot of them liked to talk about their war experiences in depth, two of his tenants that served in Vietnam died in Vietnam. One of his former classmates was a Marine Colonel, one thing he remembers this man mentioning was; “the troops did a great job while they were there”. The most shocking thing that he remembers from this
Problem that the Vietnamese war veterans faced was the psychological effects which was very common for Vietnam veterans to have. The main cause of this is because it was different compared to other wars in the past like the condition that the soldiers were in. Studies has shown that a World War II soldiers experienced up to a total of 60 days under combat like conditions. A Vietnam infantryman endured on a comparable basis 300+ days therefore Vietnam veterans have more likely to develop psychological problems than a World War II veteran. (POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER (PTSD), 2001)
The Vietnam war was an absolutely brutal time in American history. The war lasted for the majority of the 1960s and left many young men dead. The short story “The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien and the film Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam give us just a glance into the war by giving using the three themes of fear, pressures, and blame/guilt to embody the concept of war and how it absolutely changes a person. War not only destroys countries, but it destroys people.
The Vietnam War holds its place in history as one of the most devastating wars for the
The Vietnam War was the first major war American’s had suffered defeat. The Vietnam war was a war of confusion, competition and biasness. The outcome of the war was far greater than an upset American nation, but a severe breakdown of the Vietnamese culture, economy, environment and government. It also had a tremendous impact on American society even up to present day. It was unclear from the beginning of the war if the American’s should even be involved. It was a war between Northern and Southern Vietnam but the U.S saw it as an indirect way to challenge the USSR’s sphere of influence in Southern Asia and to prevent the domino effect and the further spread of communism. The Vietnam War completely changed the way the United States
The Vietnam war today is considered one of the most traumatic but important events in the United States history. The war was between the North and South Vietnamese however the United states got involved to help the South avoid falling into the communist ways just as the North did. There were some positive aspects in the war, however there seemed to be more negative situations and opinions that overpowered the good. Opposition grew as the result of; the Gulf of Tonkin, the John Kerry testimony and the Tet Offensive. These aspects along with many others allow many to come to the conclusion that the war was fatalistic thing.
A general unpopular opinion swept through America and intensified through the twenty years of the Vietnam War. In past wars, a soldier’s friends and family looked forwards to seeing their loved one return home. Up until the Vietnam War, veterans were treated with an immense amount of respect for the sacrifices they made for their country. However, the Vietnam veterans were received with resentment, and were often left to readjust to society alone. The veterans were isolated from the rest of society, leaving them without a community to provide support economically and emotionally as they transitioned back to civilian life
Many are called terrible names, spit on, and generally discriminated. Maurice Robinson commented on this time during a recent festival commemorating the Vietnam War. “No respect for what you did. Nobody wanted to talk to you or congratulate you- sometimes not even your family. So a lotta guys got rid of their uniforms, threw ‘em in the closet and went on with their lives. A lot of ‘em are still trying to get their lives together today” (Sherr 22). Veterans were not thanked for their service and many are looked down upon by their participation in the Vietnam War. This treatment had a huge impact of the Vietnam veterans and their families. Pervis Crowe reflects upon this in Vietnam: Homecoming. “If we’d come home in different circumstances than we did, my life wouldn’t be the way it is now.”
The impact of the Vietnam War upon the soldiers who fought there was huge. The experience forever changed how they would think and act for the rest of their lives. One of the main reasons for this was there was little to no understanding by the soldiers as to why they were fighting this war. They felt they were killing innocent people, farmers, poor hard working people, women, and children were among their victims. Many of the returning soldiers could not fall back in to their old life styles. First they felt guilt for surviving many of their brothers in arms. Second they were haunted by the atrocities of war. Some soldiers could not go back to the mental state of peacetime. Then there were soldiers Tim O’Brien meant while in
This shows the effects of the Vietnam War and how it can cause separation between the family not just physically but also mentally.
For many Americans it is common knowledge to know about the Vietnam War; however, for some Americans the Vietnam War is ancient history, dishonorable, but irrelevant nonetheless. If people do not physically see the many horrors of war it is easy to forget; although maybe it is something we try to forget. However, there are some who may be able to forget there will be some, like politicians, that will not forget. The Vietnam War had a terrible impact on both the United States and Vietnam, and more importantly it would affect foreign policy for many years to come.
The Vietnam War was one of the most hated wars in United States history, for the primary reasons that we did not win and the draft destroyed countless men, physically and mentally. The end result of the war did not justify the means and this made a lot of people very upset. This war was also the most televised war, showing incredibly gruesome, uncensored images on the evening news at dinner time. The political protest for the