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skyguy78

Famous Celebrities that have served in the Military...

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Random thoughts:
Famous celebrities - is that redundant?
I noticed half the people mentioned in this thread are not what I would consider celebrities, but politicians.
Are politicians more celebrities than politicians?



I've heard it said that politics is show business for ugly people.
Anyhow, it's mostly the same, at least above the local level: products manufactured, bought, paid for and sold like detergent.

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I'm sure some of these are covered elsewhere.

Alec Guinness - Royal Navy
David Niven - Lt. Col. (Sandhurst), British Commandos
Desi Arnaz - US Army
Martin Balsam - USAAC
Lloyd Bentsen - USAAC
David Brinkley- US Army
Mel Brooks - US Army
Lenny Bruce - US Navy
Art Buchwald - US Marine Corps
James Doohan - Canadian Army
Don Adams- USMC
Peter Sellers - RAF
Ian Fleming - Royal Navy
Christopher Lee - RAF
Donald Pleasance - RAF Pilot/POW
Charlton Heston - USAAF
Charles Durning - US Army Ranger
Charles Bronson - USAAF Tail Gunner
Eddie Albert - US Navy
George C. Scott - USMC
Brian Keith - USMC
Robert Ryan - USMC/OSS
Tyrone Power - USMC Pilot
Alan Alda - US Army
Dennis Franz - US Army Airborne
Jay North - US Navy
John Russell - USMC
Don Bellasario - USMC
Hugh Hefner - US Army
Sid Caesar - US Coast Guard
Art Carney - US Army
Johnny Carson - US Navy
William Casey - OSS US Navy
Warren Christopher - US Navy
Lee van Cleef - US Navy
Carroll O'Connor - Merchant Marine
William Conrad - US Army Air Corps
Ken Curtis - US Army
Jack Dempsey - US Coast Guard
David Dinkins - US Marine Corps
Buddy Ebsen - US Coast Guard
Norman Fell - US Army Air Corps
Gerald Ford - US Navy
John Ford - US Navy
Daryl Gates - US Navy
John Glenn - US Marine Corps
Barry Goldwater - US Army Air Corps
Joseph Heller - US Army Air Corps
William Patrick Hitler - US Navy
William Holden - US Army Air Corps
Rock Hudson - US Navy
E. Howard Hunt - US Navy and US Army Air Corps
Daniel Inouye - US Army
Chappie James, US Army Air Corps
Lyndon B. Johnson - US Navy
Russell Johnson - US Army Air Corps
James Jones - US Army
DeForest Kelley - US Army Air Corps
George Kennedy - US Army
Jack Kerouac - Merchant Marine
Hank Ketcham - US Navy
Henry Kissinger - US Army
Werner Klemperer - US Army
Jack Klugman - US Army
Ted Knight - US Army
Don Knotts - US Army
Ed Koch - US Army
Nancy Kulp -, US Navy
Burt Lancaster - US Army
Tom Landry - US Army Air Corps
Frank Lautenberg - US Army
Norman Lear - US Army Air Corps
Roy Lichtenstein - US Army
Charles Lindbergh - flew 50 combat missions as a civilian (was a combat ace...)
Norman Mailer - US Army
Walter Matthau - US Army Air Corps
Joseph McCarthy - US Marine Corps
Robert McNamara - US Army Air Corps
James A. Michener - US Navy
Zero Mostel - US Army
Paul Newman - US Navy
Tom Poston - US Army Air Corps
Mario Puzo - US Army Air Corps
Tony Randall - US Army
Carl Reiner - US Army
Gene Roddenberry - US Army Air Corps
Andy Rooney - US Army
Telly Savalas - US Army
George Schultz - US Marine Corps
Charles M. Schulz - US Army
Rod Serling - US Army
Alan Shepard - US Navy
Deke Slayton - US Army Air Corps
Robert Stack - US Navy
Charles Thone -, US Army
Leon Uris - US Marine Corps
Kurt Vonnegut -, US Army
Mort Walker - US Army
George Wallace - US Army Air Corps
Sam Walton - US Army
Jack Warden - US Army Airborne
Jack Webb - US Army Air Corps
Caspar Weinberger -, US Army
Charles Willeford - US Army
Jonathan Winters -n, US Marine Corps
Ed Wood - US Marine Corps
Howard Zinn - US Army Air Corps

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Ronald Reagan.....well, sorta..... he had an EYE PROBLEM and didn't go to fight with the men, he sat home with the bitches and made military training movies.

GWB...... oh yea, he was able to play stateside and just walk away.



Well, at least you have come to accept the FACT that RR did have poor eyesight.

GWB served stateside. GHWB flew in the Pacific.



GHWB was the only ho0norable serviceman in a long time, I never brought that in. I'm sure he personally and privately disowns his drug addicted draft-dodging kid.

Yea, FR had poor eyesight, but it was good enough to enlist in the guard/reserve in 1937, wasn't an issue until the pussy was called to WWII to fight.

Oh and GWB played around with fighters stateside, he never even almost went to Nam.



I think you are dead wrong about GHW's opinion of his son. But we'll never know for certain, will we?
RR held down a desk. It doesn't take very good eyesight to do that.



It's my opinion vs yours, but GHWBnever brags him up, so the silence is deafening - acquiescence.

No, doing a desk job or making movies requires little eyesight, but whne he was guard/reserve for 5 years before, gotta wonder how he slid past that. Quite obvious his eyesight was sufficent, when it came to going to war to perhaps die, the men go, the cowards flee. And this wasn't VN, this was where the greatest generation saved our asses. With all the proxy wars over ideological disputes, this one was actually over freedom and these were really tough guys stepping up. My dad's brother died in Germany in WWII, my dad served in Korea, well, in that period in N Africa. Reagan's a cunt, even if you like his failed politics and failed economic policies, he's a cunt.



Maybe if you actually knew something about how the military was run in those times and the sequence of events that led to him getting into the service you wouldn't sound so fucking stupid when you accuse people of dodging military service when the FACT is that physical disablities stand in their way.
My father served in the Merchant Marine and i woanted very much to join the Navy, but this little thing called spina bifida made me ineligible.
Reagan actually volunteered for active duty and was at first turned down, then accepted for non-combat duty only after he insisted on a second physical.
But I, nor anyone else here, expects you to pay any attention to the facts. Your too busy watching Perry Mason and Matlock to take time and actually learn anything.
HAMMER:
Originally employed as a weapon of war, the hammer nowadays is used as a
kind of divining rod to locate the most expensive parts adjacent the
object we are trying to hit.

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I don't think the Kent State killers were very honorable.



Concur. They should have been prosecuted, but I would refuse to condemn an entire profession because of the acts of a few of its members. If we did, we would also count medicine (Josef Mangele), KFC franchisees (John Wayne Gacy), university professors (Ted Kaczynski), and the music industry (Rick Astley) as less than honorable pursuits.
Shit happens. And it usually happens because of physics.

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I don't think the Kent State killers were very honorable.



Concur. They should have been prosecuted, but I would refuse to condemn an entire profession because of the acts of a few of its members. If we did, we would also count medicine (Josef Mangele), KFC franchisees (John Wayne Gacy), university professors (Ted Kaczynski), and the music industry (Rick Astley) as less than honorable pursuits.



Concur, and equally we shouldn't hold an entire profession as honorable on account of the heroism of some of its members. Honor/dishonor goes with the individual, not with the profession.
...

The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.

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Membership in the National Guard is an honorable form of military service. To imply it is not, at any level, denigrates thousands of members serving today.



I don't think the Kent State killers were very honorable.



Neither were the less-than-intelligent students who threw rocks at them and got innocent people killed.
HAMMER:
Originally employed as a weapon of war, the hammer nowadays is used as a
kind of divining rod to locate the most expensive parts adjacent the
object we are trying to hit.

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Neither were the less-than-intelligent students who threw rocks at them and got innocent people killed.



That is as morally abhorrent a stance as talking about women who get themselves raped by wearing short skirts.:|
Do you want to have an ideagasm?

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Membership in the National Guard is an honorable form of military service. To imply it is not, at any level, denigrates thousands of members serving today.



I don't think the Kent State killers were very honorable.



Neither were the less-than-intelligent students who threw rocks at them and got innocent people killed.



The President's Commission on Campus Unrest concluded that "the indiscriminate firing of rifles into a crowd of students and the deaths that followed were unnecessary, unwarranted, and inexcusable."

Are you sure you want to go there?

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Membership in the National Guard is an honorable form of military service. To imply it is not, at any level, denigrates thousands of members serving today.



I don't think the Kent State killers were very honorable.



Neither were the less-than-intelligent students who threw rocks at them and got innocent people killed.



The President's Commission on Campus Unrest concluded that "the indiscriminate firing of rifles into a crowd of students and the deaths that followed were unnecessary, unwarranted, and inexcusable."

Are you sure you want to go there?



I will reply to your post and lucky's at the same time.
My comments are based upon the events of those days as told to me by people who were there. One man was a teacher of mine in high school, the other a close friend of my family. BOTH of them have said the same thing, that the students who were the first to start throwing things at the NG that day had went to that area with the intent of inciting a violent reaction from the NG.
Well, they got what they wanted. Unfortunately the troops that were sent were mostly undertrained and unsure of what to do. Even more unfortunately, students were killed who had nothing to do with the protests other than being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
What happened that day would not have happened had the government sent troops who were more experienced with crowds. They should also NOT have been given live ammo. That was a stupid thing to do.
It also would not have happened had the protesters not started throwing objects at the troops. It is a pretty stupid thing to throw rocks at men armed with rifles.
Argue what you will, my opinion of what happened is shaped by two men who were there and watched it happen. They, as well as myself, agree with the statement you quoted from the Presidents Commision. What most people don't acknowledge is the fact that the protesters were not innocent little angels. They went looking for trouble, they found it, and they got people killed.
HAMMER:
Originally employed as a weapon of war, the hammer nowadays is used as a
kind of divining rod to locate the most expensive parts adjacent the
object we are trying to hit.

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I'm sure some of these are covered elsewhere.

Alec Guinness - Royal Navy
David Niven - Lt. Col. (Sandhurst), British Commandos
Desi Arnaz - US Army
Martin Balsam - USAAC
Lloyd Bentsen - USAAC
David Brinkley- US Army
Mel Brooks - US Army
Lenny Bruce - US Navy
Art Buchwald - US Marine Corps
James Doohan - Canadian Army
Don Adams- USMC
Peter Sellers - RAF
Ian Fleming - Royal Navy
Christopher Lee - RAF
Donald Pleasance - RAF Pilot/POW
Charlton Heston - USAAF
Charles Durning - US Army Ranger
Charles Bronson - USAAF Tail Gunner
Eddie Albert - US Navy
George C. Scott - USMC
Brian Keith - USMC
Robert Ryan - USMC/OSS
Tyrone Power - USMC Pilot
Alan Alda - US Army
Dennis Franz - US Army Airborne
Jay North - US Navy
John Russell - USMC
Don Bellasario - USMC
Hugh Hefner - US Army
Sid Caesar - US Coast Guard
Art Carney - US Army
Johnny Carson - US Navy
William Casey - OSS US Navy
Warren Christopher - US Navy
Lee van Cleef - US Navy
Carroll O'Connor - Merchant Marine
William Conrad - US Army Air Corps
Ken Curtis - US Army
Jack Dempsey - US Coast Guard
David Dinkins - US Marine Corps
Buddy Ebsen - US Coast Guard
Norman Fell - US Army Air Corps
Gerald Ford - US Navy
John Ford - US Navy
Daryl Gates - US Navy
John Glenn - US Marine Corps
Barry Goldwater - US Army Air Corps
Joseph Heller - US Army Air Corps
William Patrick Hitler - US Navy
William Holden - US Army Air Corps
Rock Hudson - US Navy
E. Howard Hunt - US Navy and US Army Air Corps
Daniel Inouye - US Army
Chappie James, US Army Air Corps
Lyndon B. Johnson - US Navy
Russell Johnson - US Army Air Corps
James Jones - US Army
DeForest Kelley - US Army Air Corps
George Kennedy - US Army
Jack Kerouac - Merchant Marine
Hank Ketcham - US Navy
Henry Kissinger - US Army
Werner Klemperer - US Army
Jack Klugman - US Army
Ted Knight - US Army
Don Knotts - US Army
Ed Koch - US Army
Nancy Kulp -, US Navy
Burt Lancaster - US Army
Tom Landry - US Army Air Corps
Frank Lautenberg - US Army
Norman Lear - US Army Air Corps
Roy Lichtenstein - US Army
Charles Lindbergh - flew 50 combat missions as a civilian (was a combat ace...)
Norman Mailer - US Army
Walter Matthau - US Army Air Corps
Joseph McCarthy - US Marine Corps
Robert McNamara - US Army Air Corps
James A. Michener - US Navy
Zero Mostel - US Army
Paul Newman - US Navy
Tom Poston - US Army Air Corps
Mario Puzo - US Army Air Corps
Tony Randall - US Army
Carl Reiner - US Army
Gene Roddenberry - US Army Air Corps
Andy Rooney - US Army
Telly Savalas - US Army
George Schultz - US Marine Corps
Charles M. Schulz - US Army
Rod Serling - US Army
Alan Shepard - US Navy
Deke Slayton - US Army Air Corps
Robert Stack - US Navy
Charles Thone -, US Army
Leon Uris - US Marine Corps
Kurt Vonnegut -, US Army
Mort Walker - US Army
George Wallace - US Army Air Corps
Sam Walton - US Army
Jack Warden - US Army Airborne
Jack Webb - US Army Air Corps
Caspar Weinberger -, US Army
Charles Willeford - US Army
Jonathan Winters -n, US Marine Corps
Ed Wood - US Marine Corps
Howard Zinn - US Army Air Corps



James Blunt - British Army, Cavalry (served in Kosovo)

Nick
Gravity- It's not just a good idea, it's the LAW!

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Jimi Hendrix, 101st Airborne

never left the states he claimed for years that he broke his ankle and was medically discharged. but it turns out that he told his commanding officer he was having homosexual thoughts about men in his platoon and was kicked out for being gay.

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Jimi Hendrix, 101st Airborne

never left the states he claimed for years that he broke his ankle and was medically discharged. but it turns out that he told his commanding officer he was having homosexual thoughts about men in his platoon and was kicked out for being gay.



So maybe the lyrics really were, " 'scuse me while I kiss this guy"? :o
HAMMER:
Originally employed as a weapon of war, the hammer nowadays is used as a
kind of divining rod to locate the most expensive parts adjacent the
object we are trying to hit.

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but the primary purpose is to kill "enemies".

my primary purpose is to pull a trigger on my gun... When you'll see me shooting, you'll understand that ANY kill would be a collateral damage :D

(actually it's not true, I was an artillery officer)
scissors beat paper, paper beat rock, rock beat wingsuit - KarlM

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It also would not have happened had the protesters not started throwing objects at the troops. It is a pretty stupid thing to throw rocks at men armed with rifles.



The intent and intelligence of the protestors is completely irrelevant - they did not make the National Guard start shooting, they did not get anyone killed. The men who fired (at people who were mostly hundreds of yards away) were the only people present who were responsible for getting anyone killed.

To repeat myself, it's like saying women who dress provocatively are responsible for provoking their rapists.
Do you want to have an ideagasm?

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James Blunt - British Army, Cavalry (served in Kosovo)



The title says celeb not twat:P


I hope your not showing somebody who has served his country any disrespect;)

Depends on what is defined as "Famous Celebrities", but the current Miss England, Katrina Hodge is currently serving.

Nick
Gravity- It's not just a good idea, it's the LAW!

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Jimi Hendrix, 101st Airborne

never left the states he claimed for years that he broke his ankle and was medically discharged. but it turns out that he told his commanding officer he was having homosexual thoughts about men in his platoon and was kicked out for being gay.



That's not really substantiated. Fuller details from Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimi_hendrix#In_the_Army

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In the Army
Hendrix got into trouble with the law twice for riding in stolen cars. He was given a choice between spending two years in prison or joining the Army. Hendrix chose the latter and enlisted on May 31, 1961. After completing boot camp, he was assigned to the 101st Airborne Division and stationed in Fort Campbell, Kentucky. His commanding officers and fellow soldiers considered him to be a subpar soldier: he slept while on duty, had little regard for regulations, required constant supervision, and showed no skill as a marksman. For these reasons, his commanding officers submitted a request that Hendrix be discharged from the military after he had served only one year. Hendrix did not object when the opportunity to leave arose.[32] He would later tell reporters that he received a medical discharge after breaking his ankle during his 26th parachute jump. The rock music journalist Charles Cross contended in his biography of Hendrix, Room Full of Mirrors (2005) that Hendrix faked being homosexual—claiming to have fallen in love with a fellow soldier—in order to be discharged, but did not produce credible evidence to support this contention.




Anyhow, the dude had 26 jumps. Scuze him while he kisses the sky.

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James Blunt - British Army, Cavalry (served in Kosovo)



The title says celeb not twat:P


I hope your not showing somebody who has served his country any disrespect;)

Depends on what is defined as "Famous Celebrities", but the current Miss England, Katrina Hodge is currently serving.



I wish I would have been able to serve with Katrina Hodge, she is beautiful. Thats one thing I do notice, the Brits do represent, regardless of status.
There is a fine line between being a hopeless romantic and a stalker

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It also would not have happened had the protesters not started throwing objects at the troops. It is a pretty stupid thing to throw rocks at men armed with rifles.



The intent and intelligence of the protestors is completely irrelevant - they did not make the National Guard start shooting, they did not get anyone killed. The men who fired (at people who were mostly hundreds of yards away) were the only people present who were responsible for getting anyone killed.

To repeat myself, it's like saying women who dress provocatively are responsible for provoking their rapists.



So, what you are saying is that these kids weren't at fault, in any way, shape, or form.

I also conclude from your responses that you would just stand there and do nothing if someone starts throwing stuff at you. That would be an interesting experiment . . . we should see what response that brings.
I'm not usually into the whole 3-way thing, but you got me a little excited with that. - Skymama
BTR #1 / OTB^5 Official #2 / Hellfish #408 / VSCR #108/Tortuga/Orfun

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I also conclude from your responses that you would just stand there and do nothing if someone starts throwing stuff at you. That would be an interesting experiment . . . we should see what response that brings.



I wouldn't shoot other people who weren't throwing things. I'm fairly certain of that.

The Kent State thing was a giant cock-up, and there really is no excuse for the actions of the National Guard soldiers that day. And I'm talking from the Governor all the way down the chain.

- Dan G

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The job requirements of people who carry weapons for a living includes the ability to withstand
provoking.

Wendy P.
There is nothing more dangerous than breaking a basic safety rule and getting away with it. It removes fear of the consequences and builds false confidence. (tbrown)

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