Тёмный

Deadliest Jobs in Military History 

Sideprojects
Подписаться 1,1 млн
Просмотров 321 тыс.
50% 1

Опубликовано:

 

27 сен 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 494   
@LittleBallOfPurr
@LittleBallOfPurr 2 года назад
Simon: "Everybody has a price..." Raid Shadow Legends: "We know..."
@leholen381
@leholen381 2 года назад
But they’re not willing to pay it
@V1CT1MIZED
@V1CT1MIZED Год назад
RU-vid user: sponsor block
@wolvves4293
@wolvves4293 2 года назад
I'm a welder, and have put thought into underwater welding. The issue with it is; you can only do it for a few years. The constant compression and decompression takes a toll on your lungs over time.
@kieronparr3403
@kieronparr3403 2 года назад
I'd be more put off by the fact that it's bloody terrifying
@Sideprojects
@Sideprojects 2 года назад
@@kieronparr3403 I made a video about something called the Byford Dolphin accident. And yeah..... no thanks.
@kieronparr3403
@kieronparr3403 2 года назад
@@Sideprojects that's what scared me off it!
@wolvves4293
@wolvves4293 2 года назад
@@kieronparr3403 Most of the work is in the Gulf of Mexico, and ive heard that most guys will be sitting there welding, and then they'll look up and there will be Barracuda swimming overhead watching. They're attracted to shiny stuff so obviously the arc draws a lot more attention xD
@wolvves4293
@wolvves4293 2 года назад
@@Sideprojects I will be watching that next!
@thepyrokitten
@thepyrokitten 2 года назад
I don't think you can emphasize enough just how crazy brave the PJs are. They willingly run and drop into situations that other special forces already got their asses kicked in. They are the absolute unequivocal baddest of badasses.
@matthewcox7985
@matthewcox7985 2 года назад
"These things we do, so others may live." Badass of the week, month, and year.
@WALTERBROADDUS
@WALTERBROADDUS 2 года назад
I would ask you to consider one of the more dangerous occupations was being non-military. The role of the merchant seaman. They died on all sides without glory.
@Genesh12
@Genesh12 2 года назад
I once read the US Merchant Marines had the same fatality rate in WW 2 as the US Marines.
@ltkreg
@ltkreg 2 года назад
Well put, they died without glory.
@TGP109
@TGP109 Год назад
True, dat. My Uncle Bob was a MM in WW II.
@grapeshot
@grapeshot 2 года назад
Yeah my dad's first Tour of Duty in Vietnam he was a flamethrower operator. And he talked about how dangerous they were. My dad also told me about the flamethrowing tanks and APCs they had also. My great uncle said the same thing he was a Montford Point Marine and he served in World War II in the battles of Pelelu and Okinawa. As well as serving in the Korean War.
@tanderson6442
@tanderson6442 2 года назад
My dad barely told me about his time in Vietnam. But one thing he did tell me was after a fire fight they would sometimes go collect trophies. And seeing the enemy that you are forced to dehumanize out of necessity dead didn’t bother him cause it was kill or be killed. but seeing the pictures of their family and loved ones really messed him up. It really blew me away. The fact he actually talked a little about it with me and I would have never thought of that aspect of war.
@chimpinaneckbrace
@chimpinaneckbrace 2 года назад
My grandfather was awarded the Silver Star for his work at the Battle of Guam during WW2. He trained guys and developed new techniques using flamethrowers. He died before I was born. I can’t even imagine the things he experienced.
@jeffersonott4357
@jeffersonott4357 2 года назад
I can’t believe u have two close relatives who did that insane job. I only ever did a job, not including fire in my combat tour… flipping wow. Bless ‘em both.
@christopherengel7436
@christopherengel7436 2 года назад
My best to everybody's fathers, uncles, & grandfathers for there service. Thanks for sharing there stories.
@kieronparr3403
@kieronparr3403 2 года назад
@@tanderson6442 by collecting trophies you mean desecration of bodies
@ignitionfrn2223
@ignitionfrn2223 2 года назад
1:35 - Chapter 1 - Mobile radio operator 4:35 - Chapter 2 - Pararescue 7:05 - Chapter 3 - Flamethrower trooper 9:35 - Chapter 4 - Explosive ordnance disposal technician 14:10 - Chapter 5 - Infantry
@Ti-sq8jm
@Ti-sq8jm 2 года назад
Thank you!
@mikejohnson5900
@mikejohnson5900 2 года назад
Thank you for posting this.
@BrianPseivaD
@BrianPseivaD 2 года назад
Globetruckers U.K. help injured truck drivers, we’ve lost 59 truck drivers in the U.K. this year alone, and it’s not over yet, it’s really dangerous, I broke my back doing it, thanks Simon.
@calendarpage
@calendarpage 2 года назад
My late husband was a LRRP (Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol) in Vietnam. My understanding is that they went in and located the enemy. I'd think that was pretty dangerous work. I met him after he returned from combat. The whole time we were married, he'd say "Today's a good day. Nobody's shooting at me." Jeez.
@TheBooban
@TheBooban 2 года назад
Makes me think of all the vets returning from Afghanistan and Iraq only to get shot and die in the US.
@tanderson6442
@tanderson6442 2 года назад
My father did that as well, he just called then patrols, basically walk thru a jungle until you make contact, in other words keep walking til one of you is shot. Some patrols came back with less then 1/2 the men, he told me after a patrol he would be awake for at least 2 full days sometimes 3 basically from a huge adrenaline dump.
@NotHPotter
@NotHPotter 2 года назад
That does sound like a good day.
@vegan-cannibal714
@vegan-cannibal714 2 года назад
Sorry for your loss I was part of the last jungle warfare class in Panama. When I got to my first and sadly last blues platoon all my senior NCOs were Vietnam era lrrps. I thought the learning part of my training was complete. I was mistaken hardest and best job I had. We were dispanded just before ODS. 1st CAV was happy to get us minutes before we deployed. It was like being a highly trained redheaded step child.
@gregbailey1753
@gregbailey1753 2 года назад
@@vegan-cannibal714 my BN (2-187 IN) was at Sherman 2AUG90 when Iraq invaded . We were back to Ft. Campbell in 2 days.
@d4mdcykey
@d4mdcykey 2 года назад
_"The less desirable a job is the more money it's likely to pay"_ I think this is a common adage that is repeated but not really thought-out to its conclusion, i.e. I spent many years in various forms of home construction before moving on to other employment and I can assure you there few jobs as undesirable, hard, and unrelenting hours on the clock as outdoor construction, and yet the pay is crap. On the other hand I've worked in jobs that were very easy physically and mentally and the pay was ridiculously high, with no overtime, full benefit package, and climate controlled.
@maplobats
@maplobats 2 года назад
Where I live, that type of construction pays around $40/hr.....and I wasted years getting a useless biochemistry degree so I could get slightly more than half that.
@WaddedBliss
@WaddedBliss 2 года назад
You're right.
@QBCPerdition
@QBCPerdition 2 года назад
Yeah, Simon was going through the jobs, starting with garbage man and fire fighter, and then listing off very low pay. I'm a low level employee doing work on a computer, and I get paid well more than those jobs.
@Murderface666
@Murderface666 2 года назад
Its about the military, not the civilian world. One of the least desirable jobs in the US Army is Field Artillery. This is why when it comes to bonuses for this job, its typically huge in comparison to others to keep the ranks filled. Im assuming it consists of long, boring hours in the field. Plus once you're spotted, you're as good a dust.
@SuicideJones
@SuicideJones 2 года назад
that's because you're (all) doing it wrong...... you build wrong so of course it's horrible... you don't deserve good pay or benefits for "home construction" is essentially gluing together popsicle stick houses and adding a bunch of matches and methanol just for fun.. serious, don't brag about "homebuilding", every engineer everywhere hates you.. they patiently wait and sit and laugh at construction site fail videos as they arise..
@NotHPotter
@NotHPotter 2 года назад
Holy shit. Thank you, Simon, for opening the list with the job I actually had my first deployment. EOD et al get all the limelight, but there aren't many jobs where you're required to carry probably the most important piece of equipment on a foot patrol while also having a giant beacon pointing you out to snipers. ETA: lol, ok, it's gotten a little better than it used to be, but I was still lugging 40 lbs of radio and batteries plus a meter long antenna on my back.
@eliminshrintar
@eliminshrintar 2 года назад
I was an RTO myself last half of my first Iraq tour. I became one when our last original RTOs from stateside was killed by a sniper. My platoon lost all three starting RTO's in 2 weeks time. Since I was a "smart" infantryman, I was thrown a manual, told to read through it, collect a PRC-119A radio and extra batteries and be ready to step off in one hour. Not the best entry into a job world I had gone through.....
@NotHPotter
@NotHPotter 2 года назад
@@eliminshrintar Yeah, that sounds familiar, although at least I got 5 months of training after the ran three of us fresh from basic through putting together and programming a radio, and I happened to do it fastest.
@lanceferraro3781
@lanceferraro3781 2 года назад
Simon, I salute you. I spent 22 years in the Navy and taught history for another 22 years. I have also read a lot of military history in my 70 years. You do good work, well presented and, seemingly, well researched. I have watched near 100 of your episodes and hardly ever find a hole in them, and when I do it is insignificant. As far as many of the other channels, well.....clueless.
@ericdreblow8564
@ericdreblow8564 2 года назад
Pretty similar in quality. Simon has some really god writers and other staff, all doing great work
@DIDYOUSEETHAT172
@DIDYOUSEETHAT172 2 года назад
There are a couple other channels that are as equally well researched, and presented. There is no need to present a blanket put down (which is inaccurate) on top of a complement for this channel.
@7thhokage87
@7thhokage87 2 года назад
Check out mega projects and biographics. I love those channels of his. Geographical is good too but I’m more of a history, projects, and biographics kinda guy
@lanceferraro3781
@lanceferraro3781 2 года назад
@@7thhokage87 Been watching all his channels. Good stuff.
@Russia-bullies
@Russia-bullies 2 года назад
Surely,you were not referring to The History Guy:History Deserves To Be Remembered.
@joshcurtis386
@joshcurtis386 Год назад
The craziest thing with the PJs is that they don’t just get called for “regular” rescue missions. If they get sent out, it could very well be another special operations unit like the SEALS or Rangers they’re going to save. They’re being called to rescue some of the baddest men on the planet 😮
@DIDYOUSEETHAT172
@DIDYOUSEETHAT172 2 года назад
I served in the Special Forces, happy you pay tribute to the infantry. Courage and fortitude to spare these often unsung hero's.
@herrhaber9076
@herrhaber9076 2 года назад
Ah, Special Forces :) Those guys that kindly left a pickup truck for my father (working with CAT at that time: 60's). My father was pretty unhappy when after a few hours of driving on African "roads" he noticed that the bag on the passenger seat was not only full of C4 but they had put the detonators in there aswell ! It's best to keep those appart :) CAT then became Air America and rescuing pilots, transporting people (Special Forces, CIA), rice and "hard rice" (ammo!) became his job. He talks more now about these days and the more he talks the more I am surprised I was even born.
@DIDYOUSEETHAT172
@DIDYOUSEETHAT172 2 года назад
​@@herrhaber9076 The two can travel fairly safely together. The detonators need to be inserted to exert the combination of heat and shock needed to initiate an explosion in C4. You an drop that shit, or even light it on fire it won't explode. However to the uninitiated I can see how the discovery could strike a nerve. 😁 Your dad sounds like a gentleman worth having a beer with. 😊👍🙏🙏
@herrhaber9076
@herrhaber9076 2 года назад
@@DIDYOUSEETHAT172 +1 on the "fairly". It should not be done though if you are driving through bush pass :) I've seen duds and partials even with properly installed detonators specially in cold weather. And yes, my dad has quite a few eye widening stories to tell. It just took a very long time for him to talk about them. Not because he felt bad or unhappy. I think he just wanted time to pass for some events to be less "classified".
@DIDYOUSEETHAT172
@DIDYOUSEETHAT172 2 года назад
​@@herrhaber9076 Just sayin', but Yup safety first, why invite disaster? I worked in a coal mine at 16, first day on the job I was introduced to a foreman who handed me two sacks, one contained dynamite, the other detonators. "You gotta be shitting me!" we spent the day a mile or so underground blasting obstructions. In the tunnels feels like your head's an accordion and your brain is being sucked out your ears. 😁
@lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
@@DIDYOUSEETHAT172 uh.... keyboard division?
@fireforger9192
@fireforger9192 2 года назад
I was an infantryman in the UK armed forces in the mid 80s. My unit was posted to Germany and when we arrived received a briefing about the Warsaw Pact particularly USSR troops and had the grim news if the WW3 started we could expect to have 75-80% casualties with 48 hrs. Most likely to be from the use of tactical nukes/chem weapons that we knew they used liberally in their plans. To make matters even better I was in the MG platoon and was a high priority target along with radio ops and officers for the oppositions snipers. However I was always in awe of the medics and Arty Forward observers as they were an even higher target.
@jwenting
@jwenting 2 года назад
sounds something like the casualty rate of my grandfather's unit defending the Dutch Grebbe line from the German assault in May 1940. Out of his unit of about 200 men only 20 made it out alive after 3 days of fighting, only to be taken as prisoners of war and sent to German labour camps, my grandfather was one of them. They were fighting with bolt action rifles and semi automatic pistols against German tanks and dive bombers.
@ravanpee1325
@ravanpee1325 Год назад
There was no reason to fight anyway, becaus the common soldier know the NATP troops in Germany would not hold against the Warschauer Pact tank troops..so they would nuke everything with tactical nuclear weapons...expected live expectancy was 15mins for pilots according to what I heard
@chrislong3938
@chrislong3938 2 года назад
My father-in-law was a Marine in the Pacific and we used to sit around at night having beers and talking about the war. I once asked about the flame thrower tank that they used and said that the guys on those things were all lunatics and the other Marines tended to stay away from them. They ate their chow next to the track and mostly kept to themselves. They always smelled of napalm and that it would sometime leak all over the track! He was amazed that they never set fire to themselves! I suspect that that happened on occasion though...
@jackstuttgart8386
@jackstuttgart8386 2 года назад
I was a Marine grunt for 24 years... thank you for remembering "the poor bloody infantryman." As an aside, most flame thrower men were infantrymen and there is something particularly brave about employing a weapon with a maximum effective range of 20 meters. To put that in perspective, a pistol has more than twice that range meaning you are damn near in hand to hand combat when using the weapon. As soon as the trigger is pulled everyone knows where you are... (no signature reduction here) and everyone is trying to kill you. I have always considered flame thrower operators to be among the bravest of the brave. Our last surviving WWII Medal of Honor recipient, CWO-4 Hershel Williams, USMC, earned the medal as a flame thrower operator in WWII.
@chrisd4749
@chrisd4749 2 года назад
Hvac guy trusted in not blowing your home up, or poisoning you allegedly...priceless
@Beryllahawk
@Beryllahawk 2 года назад
My stepfather's dad was EOD just after WWII. The stories he told were some of them amazing but just as often, terrifying and tragic. I'll never forget him showing me a scar on his arm and telling me how it was from shrapnel - an unexploded shell in a German farmer's field. They'd removed five out of six of the damn things, but the last one went off. He told me he was lucky to be alive, that his CO pushed him over and put his own body between him and the explosion. The CO didn't make it. Even decades later, that old man had nerves of pure steel.
@elfpimp1
@elfpimp1 2 года назад
As a 24 year veteran and a Military Working Dog handler, I can tell you - I didn't care a lot about my pay. It was a lot to me as I came from a very poor home. But I loved the work. And the free benefits I received on top of my pay were top notch. Full meals three times, sometimes four if I got up for midrats. Full medical and dental. NO CO PAY... Free meds when prescribed. A place to live. Free legal advice. Reduced veterinarian bills at base pet hospital. Free schooling while active duty. And on top of that I had the GI bill I used for college after I retired.. so, dint just look at the money we get in our paycheck. Add in the cost of what we get for being a service member and you get a much more realistic idea of what our compensation REALLY was. Working with a Dog was a BONUS!!
@patrickscalia5088
@patrickscalia5088 2 года назад
I was a reserve infantryman between wars and never deployed, never saw combat. I guess I still felt like I had something to prove to myself so when I graduated college I went to work as a police officer in the second most dangerous city in the the most violent state in the country. I worked in uniform patrol because contrary to what the various dramatic TV shows would have you believe, the most dangerous job in police work isn't any detective or investigative job, nor is it any of the quasi-elite positions like SRT. No, simple uniform patrol is the law enforcement version of the infantryman and they provide the lion's share of people on the casualty list everywhere in the country simply because no matter what crazy sh!t was going down, the first one to encounter it was always a uniform officer. The pay we received was laughable and any of us could have quite literally doubled our pay by going to work nailing boards together in a construction job. For most of us who were really enthusiastic about it, the pay was irrelevant. We didn't do it for the pay. We did it because we liked the job and there was nothing like it anywhere else in the professional world. We did it because we had to face things that other people only ever watched on TV, we measured ourselves against things that would have killed us just as casually as putting out a cigarette. Believe me, there's nothing else in the world like facing something like that and learning you're not a coward; that no matter what the risk you step up and do whatever needs to be done. It's something about yourself you simply can't learn any other way. It's a lesson you can't learn except by literally putting your life on the line in the defense of others. And if you pass that test -- and most of us had to pass it again and again practically every day -- there's no feeling like it in the world. Like I said, I've never been to war but it's probably the closest thing in the civilian world to having to serve in combat as a soldier. Pay? Sure, we'd have loved to get rich off it if we could. But most of us were going to do it regardless, until it chewed us up and spat us out in a condition that meant we couldn't do it anymore. Not that we considered ourselves heroes, or the baddest MFs in the city. No, we reserved that opinion for only one other profession: Firemen. As the saying goes in police work, when you don't get the acclaim you feel like you should have gotten for doing something brave: "If you wanted to be a hero, you should have joined the fire department." I don't say that cynically at all. I couldn't tell you how many times I had to go to the ER to get sewed up after something bad happened on a call. I was as brave as any of the people I worked with. But I have seen with my own eyes firemen going in the front door of a house where it looked like the air itself inside was on fire; where the heat was so powerful that even standing two hundred feet away it was almost enough to raise blisters on my skin. And in they went. Geared up for it, no doubt, but I wouldn't do that, not in a million years. What kind of man does such a thing? I'll tell you: someone more courageous than me. I doubt that many of them do it for the pay either.
@elfpimp1
@elfpimp1 2 года назад
@@patrickscalia5088 Amen brother.
@hometown687
@hometown687 Год назад
My great grandfather, who passed away this year. Was a flame thrower in the Pacific theater during World War II. He’s told us he was the only man who volunteered, and he on more than one occasion ripped packs off of other men who were cowering in fear. In one of the photos in this video, you’ll see a guy wearing a beret instead of a helmet. My grandpa said nobody wore their helmet because it would clink against the tanks like pots and pans. We still have his Purple Heart and bronze star he was awarded.
@davidbofinger
@davidbofinger 2 года назад
Another issue that made flamethrower operator a particularly dangerous job was the tendency of enemy soldiers to hate them so much they declined to take them prisoner.
@BenSwagnerd
@BenSwagnerd 2 года назад
My husband's grandpa was an officer in the Army (edited: originally said marines but my husband corrected me) in the Korean War, also a pilot. A big part of his job was to fly in after a bombing and determine the scale of the damage. They knew the dates and times through whatever espionage means they were going to happen, but one time he went too early. He got there and didn't see any damage and called to check in. They'd told him the wrong time. So he had to get back in his plane and get away, but because the airports weren't planning on his return yet he ended up nearly running out of fuel in the process of finding a runway he could land on. There was also fog, which complicated things. Finally managed to land with barely any fuel left. Like seconds before needing to glide which- you don't get to glide far. Anyway, TLDR my grandfather-in-law was a bomb surveyor, but was accidentally sent before the bombing once and missed its arrival by mere moments. The survey was never done.
@TheBooban
@TheBooban 2 года назад
Get back in his plane? Wut? He god damn _landed_ in enemy territory before the enemy was knocked out? Wtf.
@BenSwagnerd
@BenSwagnerd 2 года назад
@@TheBooban and he's still alive to tell the tale at almost 90!
@MinistryOfMagic_DoM
@MinistryOfMagic_DoM Год назад
Important note: The US military doesn't only have EOD in the Navy. The USAF and Army do as well. Not sure about the Coast Guard, but I expect they probably do.
@marcmcfarland1153
@marcmcfarland1153 2 года назад
You forgot RAF bomber command and the 8th air force in WWII. Bomber crews suffered a shockingly high rate of attrition.
@junebegorra
@junebegorra 2 года назад
Y'all should do a video on the 2020 Nashville bombing, the most considerate terrorist attack in history.
@w13rdguy
@w13rdguy 2 года назад
Thank you, veterans and active duty!
@austinwagner3231
@austinwagner3231 2 года назад
I wish you shared the mortality rates of these roles, puts things more in perspective
@fangslaughter1198
@fangslaughter1198 2 года назад
We were still using that radio in Canada's infantry in the 80s. No one ever wanted to get put on a radio tech course
@TheBooban
@TheBooban 2 года назад
I found it funny they were called radio technicians. What? It’s not just a button you press?
@fangslaughter1198
@fangslaughter1198 2 года назад
@@TheBooban Every thing is a tech in the military. We called ourselves Death Techs. Lol. It’s actually a 6 week course. And a high pressure position when the shit hits. Lots of learning. And that’s just the basics, you teach a grunt.
@douglassauvageau7262
@douglassauvageau7262 2 года назад
ROMAD (radio operator maintainer and driver). Jeep-mounted Air Traffic Control teams eventually eclipsed through electronic solid-state miniaturization by JTACs (Joint Terminal Attack Controllers).
@douglassauvageau7262
@douglassauvageau7262 2 года назад
On April 11, 1966 Airman First Class William H. Pitsenbarger's valorous sacrifice energized a growing school-of-thought within the United States' military. Emphasis upon 'Joint' (Army, Navy, Airforce, Intelligence, etc.) operational doctrine and the establishment of 'Special Operations' teams in support of conflicts which might be surgically resolved short of conventional war eventually evolved. Pitsenbarger was awarded the Medal of Honor on December 8, 2000.
@douglassauvageau7262
@douglassauvageau7262 2 года назад
Brains and Guts are far more effective when the blood-stream remains intact.
@Rusty513
@Rusty513 2 года назад
Just a couple of notes on the PJ section. 1.) They are airmen, not soldiers and 2.) Chief Master Sergeant Hackney should not be referred to as simply Sergeant Hackney. If you wish to shorten it, use Chief Hackney. Same goes for any USAF Chief Master Sergeant.
@UNUSUALUSERNAME220
@UNUSUALUSERNAME220 2 года назад
Mention rank to a Navy man and they quickly snap RATE at ya right quick!
@alancox5777
@alancox5777 2 года назад
Even now ground role radios are not exactly small or light. Nor is the ecm (which look like radios to normal people)
@wolfgangholtzclaw2637
@wolfgangholtzclaw2637 Год назад
Former Infantryman, Vietnam Era. They told us; you are 10% of the Army and 98% of the casualties. And my Drill Sergeant always saying: "the infantry is dirty, grimy, and lethal". I joined for a four year hitch and got a 2 thousand dollar bonus. I earned every cent of that 2 thousand dollars.
@kiriuxeosa8716
@kiriuxeosa8716 2 месяца назад
You're underpaid 🫡
@wolfgangholtzclaw2637
@wolfgangholtzclaw2637 2 месяца назад
@@kiriuxeosa8716 2K looked good at the time though! LOL!!!
@JackBWatkins
@JackBWatkins 2 года назад
How about a Bio on General Haig. He killed more British troops than the Germans in WWI. Having never actually visited the front He was fighting with tactics from the 1890’s. Britain called him a hero and erected statues of him. However General Pershing would not allow American Forces to be under a joint British and US Command because of the incompetence of General Haig and his strategy of going over the top with bayonets only, no ammunition. He did not want the smoke from black powder rounds to hinder the German Machine Gunners from mowing down almost an entire generation of young Brits. He represents the worst of the isolation of British nobility from working class people.
@cynthiasimpson931
@cynthiasimpson931 2 года назад
My dad was a pay officer during Vietnam. He was stationed in Thailand, and he was the one who passed out the money and kept the books, plus did all kinds of administrative jobs. When I was a teenager I happened to overhear him talking to another Vietnam veteran, and the gist of their conversation was that my dad was also an extra set of hands at the base he was at. Among a lot of other things, he also helped carry deceased soldiers. As for explosive retrieval, the town I lived in as a teenager, plus another close-by town contracted with the local Air Force base's EOD team to deal with bomb threats, bomb retrieval, rendering bombs inert, and other related jobs.
@RowanRedbrush
@RowanRedbrush 2 года назад
Simon, I love your videos. They are always very informative and professional, yet fun and educational! I would like to suggest a peculiar place I recently vacationed to this summer, and it was so profoundly weird, wonderful, cursed and creepy, I can not stop thinking about it. It has even haunted my dreams for a month since. The location is called House on the Rock in Spring Green, Wisconsin, USA. Supposedly it began as a man, names Alex Jordan Jr.'s, ambitions to build a house to spite Architect Frank Lloyd Wright after Jordan showed Wright his plans for the building, and Wright told him "I wouldn't hire you to design a cheese crate or a chicken coop. You're not capable." He hand built it atop a pinnacle rock overlooking the countryside, and it devolved from there into an unsettling macabre collection of allegedly real ancient artifacts, dolls, weapons, instruments and so much more crammed into a literal maze of buildings. It has an "infinity room" hanging precariously off the tiny rock the hobbit-like house is perched on, a massive carousel room boasting to be the worlds largest, surrounded by mannequins dressed as angels suspended from the ceiling, an indoor street of yesteryear, countless automatons that play eerie music, a five level doll carousel, a three story fiberglass whale, a warehouse-sized pipe organ... the list goes on and on. It may just be a throw away American roadside attraction, but the whole place gives an extremely unsettling vibe, especially since the place has grown increasingly dilapidated over time. There are rumors of the place being associated with a cult by people, and there are secret areas that tourists are not allowed to tread. If anything, it's worth a look into because this place really can not be described in words, and story behind the place is just as bizarre as the exhibits themselves. It seems perfect for one of your channels. Cheers!
@YeeSoest
@YeeSoest 2 года назад
I read an eyewitness report from a german infantryman in ww2 who had never heard of the flaming tank and encountered one on the battlefield so terrified as he was he yelled what he saw The two german words i will never have to translate FLAMMENWERFER PANZER
@fuckYTIDontWantToUseMyRealName
@fuckYTIDontWantToUseMyRealName 2 года назад
I was in a squadron with a guy who failed out of the pararescue pipeline. We was really far along but ended up with brain damage after drowning. We called him "twitchy" because he would involuntary nodd in a strange, jerky fashion when he was trying to concentrate on something.
@turtlezeus1610
@turtlezeus1610 2 года назад
combat engineers deal with a lot of unexploded ordinance (uxo) and all mines at least in the US marine corps. Combat engineers are also the ones who primarily find ieds and deal with land mines.
@adilachahbar3154
@adilachahbar3154 2 года назад
War is good for business selling weapons, but it's bad for a soldier and sometimes bad for poor civilians too
@hansangb
@hansangb 2 года назад
@2:25 I don't know if that was true back in the days. But for the modern US Army, RTO's were well 11B's. Signal Corps troops setup Single Side Band and satellite trucks well behind the FEBA. And @3:28 the T in the rank is Technical Sergeant. (Modern day Specialists track that never really took off). So I guess Signal guys did follow around Infantry units? Or the guy using the radio had a fedora cover so maybe this was well behind the lines. Ah. You mentioned the Infantry. There's a reason why the US Army has a special blue Infantry chord as part of the uniform. Follow Me!
@johnwethekylow
@johnwethekylow 2 года назад
A family friend fought on the western front of WWII and I interviewed him for a project in middle school, that was probably too early for all the things he was about to tell me, and show me; his grenade shrapnel scars, which were far away from his vital organs, bc of that radio on his back. He actively turned away from the blast hoping that giant of a contraption would save him and surely it did.
@travisj8091
@travisj8091 Год назад
Have you shared his interview? I'd like to read or listen ext
@ethanhoier9931
@ethanhoier9931 2 года назад
*us signal Corps gets mentioned in a side projects video* HELL YEAH
@stephendrobinski2426
@stephendrobinski2426 2 года назад
Fact boy! You missed talking about the Combat Engineer, which is the merging of EOD and Infantry. While in Iraq my unit disarmed and safely disposed of IEDs as our 9-5
@awkc63
@awkc63 7 месяцев назад
There's something so beautiful about Flame Troopers
@Fuchswinter
@Fuchswinter 2 года назад
In Europe, especially Germany, it’s also pretty normal to find unexploded bombs in the ground. There’s literal tonnes still left, not to speak of high amounts of phosphor crystals in e.g. the Baltic Sea (which can get mistaken for Amber by amateur collectors at beaches) There was an excavator operator a few years back that was killed when he hit a bomb during road construction.
@Echo4Sierra4160
@Echo4Sierra4160 Год назад
I was a USMC scout sniper. Radio operators are your #1 target.
@crazyjoeshorts5256
@crazyjoeshorts5256 2 года назад
I would like to add that the point man on patrol or the man taking up the rear is also a dangerous job due to ambush tactics.( Kill the first man, then the last man, then kill in the box) The point man usually is selected at random, or there is a schedule, so its not the same poor guy every time. I was told by a man who was there that in Vietnam, they did it by schedule, so that you only had to do it two times per deployment, upping your odds of going home.
@nicklovell5872
@nicklovell5872 4 месяца назад
"Making sure the troops had all the up to date information they needed to carry out their mission..." Oh Simon, my sweet summer child... If only.
@timegerton1308
@timegerton1308 Год назад
Excellent video.My Dad was in the army (REME) in WW2 & for a number of years afterwards. In 1946 he volunteered to do mine-lifting in Scotland. Many UK beaches had been hastily mined in 1939-40. Because they had been in the ground so long & often underwater many of the mines had corroded making lifting them even more dangerous. The men would be spaced out along the beach at distance of 100 yards. One day the soldier 100 yards from my Dad was attempting to lift an anti-tank mine when it exploded. The biggest part of his body they found was on of his thighs. As he had volunteered for this work my Dad received extra pay - a shilling a day.
@Indyofthedead
@Indyofthedead 2 года назад
You forgot one of the most deadly and unglamorous jobs: surveyor. When an army plans to mobilize through unfamiliar terrain through thick jungle like in Vietnam or plan to attack an island that is heavily fortified like Iwo Jima, they need information about the terrain so they can plan their routes and avoid disaster from getting important supplies or vehicles stuck or troops bottlenecked in an opportune ambush point. How do they get this information? Surveyors. Surveyors will go in small groups, usually in enemy territory, to map out the field. Since they are a precursor to mobilization, enemy troops learned quickly that these surveyors were a prime target to prevent a coming army.
@danielberglv259
@danielberglv259 2 года назад
The biggest issues with Smartphones and Tablet, are software. Often you switch a phone or tablet to get the newest software rather than getting a new device. A desktop PC or laptop can last most people for many years, simply because you can install new software on it easily. Even when it gets to old for daily use cases, you can install something else and put it to work on other tasks. On handheld devices however, there is lack of standards for drivers, boot loaders and such, and you are forced to rely on the manufacturer to provide a device specific version of some software for it, which they often won't do after a short period of time, forcing people to upgrade the entire device.
@TidusX16
@TidusX16 2 года назад
A childhood friend of mine immigrated from Cambodia to the US. I remember as a kid (4 maybe 5) that we were with our moms and playing in a park. We were in a sandbox and he froze up and held me back because he saw a round shape in the sand. I knew it was frisbee but I didn't know until my mom explained to me that he was afraid it was a landmine. Caught up with him a few years ago and he moved back to Cambodia to help his uncle with removing landmines in Cambodia.
@TankCpt66
@TankCpt66 2 года назад
Tank crewman is actually a more dangerous job than Infantryman. If you doubt it, check the percentage of US Army Tankers killed vs Infantrymen killed in Vietnam.
@dsnitris2007
@dsnitris2007 2 года назад
I remember reading many years ago that the life expectancy of a flame thrower operator on Iwo Jima was 90 seconds. My dad's friend was a tail gunner in a Halifax bomber and he said that to bail out, you would have to climb back into the fuselage to get your parachute, put it on and make your way to the door to escape. All the while the plane could be enveloped in fire that would have incinerated your parachute, or in a flat spin that would press you against the wall, or a nosedive that would produce G-forces that would keep you glued inside the turret. Or the plane could just explode with him trapped inside a glass coffin. Basically, he said if the plane went down, you went down with it.
@pollauritsabrahamsenjq1618
@pollauritsabrahamsenjq1618 Год назад
Being a civilian in a war zone is worse than all the listed jobs in this video.
@Grimnir_x
@Grimnir_x 5 месяцев назад
Womp womp
@Nipplator99999999999
@Nipplator99999999999 2 года назад
Spec ops soldiers chest thump about how much better we are than another branch's ops units, but if a PJ walks into a bar filled with the best ops soldiers, I guarantee they will not have to pay for a single drink that night.
@kinguchiha6212
@kinguchiha6212 Год назад
Those EoD guys are no joke, I was a radar repairer and there a few EiD trainees there too for some reason and they would tell me what they’re training consisted of and I always said their job was ten times as badass as my boring ass technician job
@keirangrant1607
@keirangrant1607 2 года назад
The military pays you well IF you volunteer for special duty programs. I signed up for 2 while I was in and got paid and war zones are also tax-free zones
@danielbigham6290
@danielbigham6290 2 года назад
There's a second combat engineer MOS that's lesser known. 12F, Engineer, Tracked Vehicle Crewman. Even training could be deadly. A fellow soldier shattered his foot while removing a breech block from the cannon on a CEV (M728 Combat Engineer Vehicle). He hadn't attached the block properly. Explosives, tank operations and everything that an engineer does, all in one dangerous yet thrilling job.
@Svensk7119
@Svensk7119 Год назад
Infantry. I became an infantryman in late 1990 AD...
@rcisneros8567
@rcisneros8567 Год назад
For reference, Air Force personnel are NOT Soldiers. They are Airmen and women. Marines are Marines and the Navy are sailors or submariners.
@exactinmidget92
@exactinmidget92 2 года назад
i feel that you need to clarify what era Infantry was the deadliest. i was a grunt from 2011-2017 and i still believe truck drivers had it worst. there is a reason why we call them IED detectors, mine detectors, and mine clearers.
@TheBooban
@TheBooban 2 года назад
Saw a vid where a driver in convoy got hit and ambushed. His escorts just left him.
@andrewnicholson4811
@andrewnicholson4811 2 года назад
02.00 apart from jus radio, almost every invention is militarised in one way or another, a great example being super marines racing plane ......
@thurin84
@thurin84 2 года назад
interestingly what we would today call a walkie talky, the bc-611, was called the "handy talkie" during ww2.
@gregh7457
@gregh7457 2 года назад
ENEWETAK atoll cleanup in the 70's was a deadly job. There are firsthand accounts of guys picking up chunks of plutonium with their hands. As usual no proper protection or training for those poor enlisted souls. An australian documentary of it is on youtube
@derwolf3006
@derwolf3006 2 года назад
Being an NCO with obvius insignia is also very dangerous
@walpolescrew
@walpolescrew 2 года назад
I was an M-60 gunner. (No combat) I was always told I had about 6 seconds after I first fire and they figure out I’m the machine gunner.
@haggis525
@haggis525 2 года назад
Yes, some militaries pay an "alarmingly average" salary for dangerous jobs. In the Canadian Armed Forces, however, while a newly minted Corporal earns a base pay of about $5K monthly a SAR Tech Corporal (similar to the PJ's of the USAF) earns a starting base pay of $9K monthly which rises to $12K monthly over several years. At $12K the SAR Tech is still a Corporal... his pay will rise to over $15K per month if he advances in rank through Sergeant and Warrant Officer grades. A dangerous job, sure - but rather well paid. To put the $12K in perspective in our armed forces.... that is the salary of a full Colonel or Navy Captain and at $15K the SAR Tech will be earning the same salary as a Major General or Rear Admiral. Not bad!
@Jayjay-qe6um
@Jayjay-qe6um 2 года назад
Thank goodness for the invention of Flash bang, Smoke Grenades, and Sonic weapons.
@michaelgwfrogwelge
@michaelgwfrogwelge Год назад
Cannot believe you left out Combat Medic. Like radio operators and flame thrower operators, they were highly visible targets, even wearing a red cross for fire direction. The Nazis and Viet Cong were especially avid in targeting medics.
@theofficialken1755
@theofficialken1755 6 месяцев назад
Sgt. Hackney was awarded a silver star, a commendation and 2 wheel barrows for his giant balls.
@Vikanuck
@Vikanuck Год назад
3:00 - “I’M GOING ON AN ADVENT… BLEH!”
@fuckYTIDontWantToUseMyRealName
@fuckYTIDontWantToUseMyRealName 2 года назад
Thank you for getting the SCR300 being called a walkie talkie right. I hear so many people calling the handhelds walkie talkies and not the packs.
@EOD423
@EOD423 2 года назад
I was gonna be mad if I didn’t see EOD on this list thank you and respect to all my brothers and sisters out there
@Xanderviceory
@Xanderviceory Год назад
I'm curious if landmines can be set off from a distance with vortex cannons or subwoofers, very very large ones
@RealMoukeycat
@RealMoukeycat 4 месяца назад
15:10 "heavily armored" shows guy wearing only a helmet.
@robertwalker-smith2739
@robertwalker-smith2739 2 года назад
My father told me that as a newly minted Army infantry private in WWII, he was offered a promotion to second lieutenant if he transferred to the Signal Corps. He asked around and found out that the Signal Corps was in North Africa getting shot to pieces, hence the need for butterbars. He stayed a private in the infantry, which is why he got shot on Peleliu instead of in Libya.
@pattaccone
@pattaccone 2 года назад
Hackney is a total badass 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@2AVET
@2AVET Год назад
Maybe in the past, but with current advancements, vehicle crews are up there in the top as the hardest to hide. Also, while logistics units aren’t seen as combat soldiers, they’re the ones most targeted BY special forces on the battlefield. Also, artillery is extremely dangerous due to counter fires. The ones on this list may be the ones doing most of the killing, but aren’t the most likely to BE killed other than SF, infantry and pilots. EOD was heavily used in the war on terror but in full scale warfare, booby traps are typically just shot by maneuver elements instead of calling eod in.
@herrhaber9076
@herrhaber9076 2 года назад
About the flamethrower, the comparison with a bomb is a bad one since the fuel and the propellant are separated. It's more like carrying a Jerry can on your back. It can still leak and catch fire but only in Hollywood movies do gas tanks explode. For an explosion you need a mix or air and gasoline vapors. Which you dont have in your car since the tank is made to crumple on impact. And you dont have it either in the flamethrower since well... you said it: the only void space in the fuel tank will be filled with the propellant: nitrogen
@damion9742
@damion9742 2 года назад
When i was in the Army, my MOS (job) was the second most stressful MOS behind the #1 EOD. My MOS was 92R Parachute Rigger. Edit: words
@zarasbazaar
@zarasbazaar 2 года назад
My husband's father handled flamethrowers in WWII. He cleared German machine gun nests during the battle of Monte Cassino. I have no idea how he made it back alive.
@dcriley65
@dcriley65 2 года назад
That was then, today anybody in Special Ops starting pay is at least 200K per plus preps.
@harrywilford3032
@harrywilford3032 2 года назад
Ammo Tech in Marines in EOD department.
@charisanna4914
@charisanna4914 6 месяцев назад
I wonder if the flamethrower and radio operators had a higher mortality rate
@foxxoboxxo1611
@foxxoboxxo1611 2 года назад
Bullets won't actually ignite a flamethrower's tank, not unless they're a particular incindiary load, even then its unlikely unless it hits the central aerosol/pressurization tank in which case that could rupture and kill the wearer but not in the fiery deathly explosion so many depict.
@bugstomper4670
@bugstomper4670 Год назад
Vietnam Era radio equipment , could do one thing good. It was impervious to an EMP. ... The new radio equipment will be fried if an EMP (tactical nuke) explodes near it. Unless it's shielded?
@fordisfurious
@fordisfurious Год назад
You should do a video on WWI explosives demining which is still going on today.
@georgejones3526
@georgejones3526 2 года назад
And there is not a CEO in the world who is worth what they’re being payed.
@doilyhead
@doilyhead 2 года назад
Can't believe you left out ball turret gunner...
@JPriz416
@JPriz416 2 года назад
I think a great video would be MAC-V- SOG. the most dangerous job in the army.
@mikedotson5548
@mikedotson5548 Год назад
YOU FORGOT THE CHEMICAL RECON UNITS, they have not needed to be used ( to a full force) but they have a horid job
@ashleybrown4754
@ashleybrown4754 2 года назад
My grandpa was a tail gunner in WW2. He had some stories.
@tanderson6442
@tanderson6442 2 года назад
Those must of been amazing stories. My old man fought in Vietnam for almost 3 years and in my lifetime he only spoke of it a handful of times.
@ashleybrown4754
@ashleybrown4754 2 года назад
@@tanderson6442 I can't even imagine being that young and forced to walk into hell like that. Vietnam was on some other shit though.
@tanderson6442
@tanderson6442 2 года назад
@@ashleybrown4754 ikr, drafted a month after he graduated high school, 3 months after he turned 18. He was 19 when deployed and came home at the age of 22 with 3 Purple Hearts and a bronze star. It took me until my mid 20’s to realize how amazing of a man he was and is even tho throughout my childhood he was kind of a tyrant.
@Pally604
@Pally604 2 года назад
The firefighter one was horribly oversold. 51k a year.. because of over time not pay rate
@billd2635
@billd2635 6 месяцев назад
I expected a mention of the German U-Boat crews. They had a 25% survival rate by war's end.
@PetrSojnek
@PetrSojnek 2 года назад
Well actually in todays warfare it's even worse for radio operators. I was taught as radio operator: "Send your message, preferable with antenna being as far from you as possible and get the hell out of there... there is high chance by the time you finish sending, there is a guided missile flying towards your position locked on your radio signal."
@Themuffinman1820
@Themuffinman1820 2 года назад
I was a Stinger gunner in the army..our life expectancy after engaging an aircraft was roughly 3.5 sec
@EricScott-jr8wl
@EricScott-jr8wl 2 года назад
Simon, I really enjoy your videos. ONE BIG QUESTION: Why didn't the Allies on the D-day landing, 6 June 44, carry shields to protect themselves from the German machine gun fire pouring down on them. Humm ??? Thanks, SGT DOUG
@WALTERBROADDUS
@WALTERBROADDUS 2 года назад
How you going to carry a shield when you're already carrying 60 lb of gear?
@dinkydoo69
@dinkydoo69 2 года назад
What about "Tunnel Rats" in 'Nam?
@DeliveryMcGee
@DeliveryMcGee 2 года назад
I'm assuming the ranking is counting up, bc radio guys and flamethrower guys were infantry with big "Shoot me first!" flags on their backs. My father was a Green Beret radioman in Vietnam -- he enlisted to avoid being drafted into the 11B line infantry meatgrinder (if you enlisted, you could choose your job, if drafted, you went to whatever job needed more men) bc 18E SF radioman had the longest non-medical stateside training time and thus shortest time Over There -- with the minor downside that the VC had a year's wages bounty on his head and the big "shoot me first!" antenna on his back, with the plus side of being able to talk to his wife via a civilian radio hobbyist on the other side of the world.
@DeliveryMcGee
@DeliveryMcGee 2 года назад
Dad mostly got his bonus pay by jumping out of airplanes every chance he got at Fort Bragg, it was like $50 per jump, which was a lot of money in the early '70s.
Далее
History's Most Incredible One-Man Armies
16:03
Просмотров 238 тыс.
5 Weird Military Inventions that Did NOT Work Out
19:09
5 American Military Defeats
16:49
Просмотров 140 тыс.
Some of the Strangest Japanese Weapons From History
18:58
War Myths You Believe Because of the Movies
11:08
Просмотров 2 млн
5 of the Craziest Navy Seal Operations
17:35
Просмотров 286 тыс.
5 Wars Started for the Strangest of Reasons
16:55
Просмотров 199 тыс.
Is the British Military Ready for a Major War?
22:56
Просмотров 827 тыс.
5 of the Craziest SAS Operations (REUPLOAD)
16:29
Просмотров 576 тыс.
Embarrassing Military Fails in History
20:16
Просмотров 2,1 млн