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gmc's avatar

Most people raised by good Parents , Grandparents etc. would never be a Clockwork psycho, I'll assume. I too had a few few Arvn acquaintances in Saigon when I went back in 2019. One was my moto driver and we would hook up eveyday for some cruising. At night we would go to the street food place near Ben Tranh { sp} market - there they have a lot of tables and I could see what foreigners were touring in Vietnam - interesting to see round eyed women in Saigon . During my tour I only saw 2 round eyes. Just something that aways stuck out , I guess. Anyways, after a couple beers Chanh tran would open up about his 8 years in the re education camps. That'll bring tears to anyones eyes. I could talk and trust these guys-- not to BS me because they still remembered our military camps and their english words was another unique trait - their scars too.

I met another older Vietnamese Arvn DiWei { Captain} in Cozumel in 2001 and he was in the Delta where I was too. He said he esscaped the re education camp and made it to Thailand - where he used the names of some Americans he had worked with. Those again were very intersting / heart breaking conversations. He was schooled as a cartographer and all the time in the Arvns, didn't think that the NVA would ever win.

Sorry for rambling on Mr. Dinh- I have no one to discuss this with , here in Crimea. You can probably understand why. Ca'm on !

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Tom's avatar

That's a nice smile in the first picture. This is becoming rarer in the West, where you have mostly forced smiles to customers in shops, but, everywhere else, most people walk around with a mix of tension and frustration, or digging their face into their phones, trying to avoid any contact with other humans. I know, I do it too.

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