Shawn Ryan Show - #317 Johnnie Clark - Surviving One of the Deadliest Jobs During the Vietnam War
Episode Date: June 29, 2026Johnnie Clark is an American author and Vietnam Veteran, best known for his 1984 Vietnam War memoir Guns Up!. Many of his works fall into the genre of non-fiction military and contain a tough, no nons...ense portrayal of combat, courage, and camaraderie. Mr. Clark joined the Marine Corps at 17 years of age after graduating from St. Petersburg High School. He served as a machine gunner with the famed 5th Marine Regiment during the Tet Offensive in Vietnam. He was wounded 3 times, mortar round, grenade, and gunshot. During his rehabilitation from gunshot wounds in Okinawa, Mr. Clark began training in Martial Arts as part of his rehab program. In 2015 Mr. Clark returned from Korea after testing for his 8th Dan in Tae Kwon Do. He was also promoted to 9th Dan in the Ji Do Kwan. Grandmaster Clark owns and operates Johnnie Clark Tae Kwon Do and Judo school in St. Petersburg and has been inducted into the U.S.A. Martial Arts Hall of Fame. Mr. Clark’s books, Guns Up! and Semper Fidelis, are recommended reading by Lt. Col. Madonna, former MCG, to all newly commissioned officers at The Basic School. His books have been required reading in many colleges and high schools around the country as well as the Commandant’s List of suggested reading for all Marines. Many commanders have distributed Mr. Clark’s books to our troops now fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq. He is the recipient of the U.S. Marine Corps Combat Correspondents Association Brigadier General Robert L. Denig Memorial Distinguished Service Award for writing. Mr. Clark has been awarded America’s 3rd highest medal for bravery and gallantry in combat, The Silver Star, 3 Purple Hearts, Vietnam’s highest Medal of Honor, The Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with Palm, The Civil Action Combat Medal, The Marine Combat Ribbon among other decorations. Mr. Clark currently resides in St. Petersburg, Florida with his wife, Nancy, and dog, Gunner. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: Go right now to https://sundaysfordogs.com/SRS50 and get 50% off your first order. Or, you can use code SRS50 at checkout. Ready to upgrade your eyewear? Check them out at https://roka.com and use code SRS for 20% off sitewide. Our listeners get the Harry’s Plus Trial Set for only $10 at https://www.Harrys.com/SRS #Harryspod New customers get 15% off Ultra Pouches with code SRS at https://takeultra.com! #UltraPouches #ad Sign up for your $1 per month trial today at https://shopify.com/srs Johnnie Clark Links: FB - https://www.facebook.com/authorjohnnieclark IG - https://www.instagram.com/johnniemclark Website - https://johnnieclark.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Johnny Clark, welcome to the show.
Thank you, Sean. I'm really excited about it. It's a great honor. It's my honor. Thank you for being here. You know, I say this to all you guys, but, you know, the Vietnam generation is what motivated me to join the military and do what I did. And I was just infatuated with you guys from a very young age. And really into GI Joe's, as we'll get into later.
I got a story about Gio.
I've heard.
I've heard.
And, but yeah, it's truly an honor for you to be here.
And I was a machine gunner too for a little while.
Yeah.
That's cool, man.
What kind of, what was your machine gun?
What was it?
Well, we started with the M60, and then it went into the, then they converted it to what the, I think they called the,
Bravo 248.
Yeah, the 240, twin 240s on top of a Humvee are fucking amazing.
Couldn't get any Humvees where I was.
But yeah, it is.
It's an honor to have you sitting here.
Thank you.
Thanks.
This is really fun for my whole family,
because my son, my son's lieutenant with the fire department
at Sun Coast Indian Rocks,
out on Indian Rocks,
and the whole fire department are huge fans.
Really?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
They found out it's Shunner.
goes in, he goes, my dad's going to be on this podcast, you know, and he said,
if you guys ever heard of Sean Ryan podcast, do they all wait crazy?
What?
And then they yelled, who the hell is your dad?
We'll have to load them up with some stuff to take back to the department.
Yeah.
Well, let me give you an introduction here.
Yeah.
Johnny Clark, you joined the Marine Corps.
It's 17 years old, straight out of high school in St. Petersburg, Florida, a
arrived in Vietnam at 18, assigned as a machine gunner to the 5th Marine Regiment in the middle of the Battle of For Hugh City.
You were wounded three times in combat, a mortar, a grenade, and a gunshot,
and were awarded the Silver Star Three Purple Hearts and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with Palm.
You have written nine books and off-Broadway played Guns Up in Gunner's Glory are suggested breeding at the Marine Corps School of Infantry in Guns Up.
sits on the commandant's reading list, recommended to every newly commissioned officer at the basic school.
Wow. You recovered from your wounds in Okinawa, where you began martial arts,
as physical therapy, and spent more than 50 years at it.
You are now an 8th Dan Grandmaster of Taekwondo, a member of the USA Martial Arts Hall of Fame,
and you have taught hand-to-hand combat seminars at West Point and the Naval Academy.
Academy in Annapolis.
Johnny, welcome home, brother.
Thanks, buddy. Thanks.
Okay, so before we get too crazy
and do your life story here,
I have a Patreon account.
It's a subscription account
that's turned into quite the community,
and they're the reason that I get the opportunity
to sit down here with you today.
And so they get the opportunity
to ask every single guest to question,
and this is from a woman named Amber.
First off, thank you for your service.
What prompted you to write the memoir of your military experience,
and can you give any advice to a daughter wanting to preserve
with her father's story and or encourage him to write it?
I wrote guns up out of anger.
You know, when I came home from NOM, I was, I mean, my first,
I had gotten healthy in Okinawa in rehab there,
been training in martial arts,
And I thought it was going back to NOM, but anyway, I came home and they threw tomatoes at us, El Toro.
I got off in El Toro, and I was greeted with guys throwing tomatoes and eggs at us.
And I was pushing a young guy off the plane who he probably wasn't going to live.
A lot of these guys were pretty shot up.
I'd had time to get healthy, so I was healthy.
But some of these boys were a mess.
And they had a red carpet, and they were playing the Marine Corps ham force, and it was fun until we got down the carpet.
It was at El Toro, and there was a big chain-length fence.
And on the other side of the fence, protesters were throwing tomatoes and eggs and stuff at us.
And that was my greeting home.
And they had a bunch of MPs there.
We thought to protect us, but it was to keep us from getting to these guys.
And so they wouldn't let us get to them because I tried.
And then I went into town, and I was in town.
My first right away, I got a, I went to a bar like most Marines, me and a kid from California.
And there was a sign on the bar that said, no Marines or dogs allowed in the bar.
Are you serious?
I'm dead serious.
And I got angrier.
And, you know, I'd already been diagnosed with severe combat fatigue.
I'd take it back.
That came, they diagnosed me later.
But I was, you know, I was a little antsy and an angry guy because of the way we were being treated.
But then we went into, this guy from California says, hey, let's go to my hometown.
And, you know, I live down the road here.
We'll catch a Greyhound bus.
They won't be like L.A.
You know, we'll get out of here.
And so I said, let's go.
We go to the Greyhound bus station.
And I'm standing there with my Seabag and in our dress greens, you know.
I've been on American soil for about 11 hours.
something like that.
And these two guys come up,
they had on fatigues, you know, army fatigues,
and they rainbow patches,
I don't know what they had all over them,
but peace signs.
And they made a couple of comments,
and one of them spit on my shoes.
Anyway, I decked this guy.
Well, there were some cops there arresting an old wino
at the bus station, and they dropped the wino.
I'm home, I'm just home just a few hours,
and I'm on my way to jail.
And it got me cuffed.
They drive down the street.
and I see him look in the rearview mirror and they go,
Fifth Marines, huh?
Well, I knew right away I was safe
because only another Marine would know that Poggy Rope, you know.
And said, yeah, and they said, yeah, we were in two five.
So then I knew I was safe.
They brought me to a bus station,
got my sea bag out of the trunk,
took the cuffs off me, put me on a bus back to El Toro.
And I never got to see anything.
That was my welcome home.
So then I, yeah, that was.
my welcome home. But it got worse and worse as I tried to go to college. And down the line,
I became a mailman, and I got injured on the job. And I lost my job as a male man with a back injury.
That came out of Vietnam. I had to jump out of a chopper. The pilot got killed. And anyway,
so I lost my job as a mailman and my job at teaching martial arts at the University of South
Florida. So my wife said, hey, you can, you kind of make a living another way here. And I said,
oh, yeah, I think you're right. So I took this creative writing course at St. Pete College,
and I kept taking the same course over and over again because they would critique 10 pages
a week. So it was non-credit course, you know, at night. I took this course like, you know,
15 times to get the book published. Because they critique my whole book. But that's how I wrote a book.
I'll tell you the rest of that story later.
We can talk about other stuff.
But I wrote that book out of anger because it came from people saying,
you need to tell what the Marines were really doing and know them.
You know, they weren't killing women and kids.
And, you know, and that's what they were,
the American people really believed that.
And so I wrote it out of anger.
And, but God took that and turned it completely around.
But I learned, I learned that if you wanted to write,
something. The most important thing I got out of all those creative writing courses was write
like you talk because I barely got out of high school. I had a D-minus average. They only kept me in
a couple of classes because I was on a really good football team. And I was no superstar, but they
needed me. So they didn't want to flood me. So I got like a D-minus in English and I took the easiest
math you could take. I took
what was it, math,
business math.
It was the easiest you could take.
I mean, even the word algebra
scared me, so I stayed away
from anything like that. And I had
an old football coach, and
he had played for the Chicago
Bears, and he
picked me up, and he shook me, and he said,
Clark, if we didn't need you on this
team, I'd fail you, but
I'm giving you a D-minus.
So I was least likely to ever write anything, truly.
But I had a real purpose for writing guns up, and I mean, I had an inspiration,
and I had a story to tell, and I really wanted to, I wanted to honor God.
You know, that was a big deal to me.
But I wanted to honor the guys I served with because they were just outstanding.
But if you were going to try to write anything, write like you talk.
Take some creative writing courses.
You're going to learn a lot.
But writing today and getting published, everything's different.
The whole publishing world's so different.
My story is kind of a miracle story.
But I don't know.
Writing today, write it for yourself and write it because you love it.
Don't write it trying to write a bestseller or trying to be a bestseller or trying to
make money off it. If you love writing, write it because you love writing and you want to write it
for family, because that's how I wrote guns up, really. I only wrote it for my kids. I thought they
would at least know the truth. I'm starting to hear a lot of people, kids, not kids, they're not kids
anymore. A lot of the offspring from the Vietnam generation is they want their parents' stories. And it's
It's interesting. This Patreon question just came in because I literally just interviewed a woman here for a job and she had watched all the Vietnam interviews I had done.
And her dad is a Vietnam vet who apparently had him really rough go and is trying to find some healing, has overcome cancer.
And she's worried she wants his memoir before he passes.
and um write it write it not thinking of getting published write it for your family and and if you
write it and rewrite it and eventually if you want to get it published now i mean you can self-publish
on amazon now anybody can yeah well let's get into your story you ready okay yeah it's
actually you get a gift too oh there you go almost forgot oh gummies
Gummy Bill. Libidians League gummy bears. Legal in all 50 states made in the USA up in Michigan. It's just candy. It's just candy. We'll load your son's fire department up with those two.
Love them. Hey, I've got a gift for you. Oh, I love gifts. I've seen some of the gifts people have, I watched Jeremiah Johnson. My wife and I watched it. And when he gave you those gifts, the papyrus, you know, she said, Johnny,
Don't even go.
You've got nothing to give him.
So I had a Bible.
My little Ginnian Bible had a shrapnel hole in it that saved my life.
Wow.
And I said, maybe if I give Sean Nat, it'll be impressive enough.
And my daughter heard this.
Dad, if you give that away, I will slit your throat.
Daughter of a nom vet.
But so I brought something a little less than a Bible with shrapnel hole.
it.
Sweat shirt.
I love it.
Guns out.
And this one.
There's a story behind this one.
Years after I'd been home for many years.
And one of the corpsmen that worked on me at one time or another, his name was Doc Turley.
He's dead now.
I died of age and orange.
But he showed up at my door 30 years.
years after the war. I didn't even know who it was. You know, you don't recognize each other
after all that. Shows up on my door and he pulls out this and he goes, why waltz when you can rock and roll?
Oh, man, that's awesome. So. Thank you. Holy shit. That's amazing. I've had some of those made because
all machine gutters get it. I love that, man. That's awesome. I don't know where they're going to. Oh,
And a couple of books.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Thank you.
All right, Johnny.
So where did you grow up?
Let's do.
What do we want to talk about first?
Where did you grow up?
Oh, I'm sorry.
I grew up in South Charleston, West Virginia.
I lived in poverty.
My mom was married before she met my dad.
And her first husband, she had two kids.
with the first husband, and her first husband was hit three times and killed in the battle of the bulge.
And so then she married my dad, and my dad was destroyed in a car wreck and was blind and crippled
for the last seven years of his life, and he was real young. And so she had three kids with my dad,
but one baby died. So anyway, my mom couldn't, she couldn't support us. My dad was totally
crippled and blind and you know we lived on 70 bucks a month we lived in a garage for a long time and
actually first when I was a baby it was a log cabin out in west Virginia hills out in Lincoln County
but then we we lived in a garage in South Charleston one car garage and we had a had a bedroom
that was just curtains for my dad because he was he was in a body cast for a whole year after this
And it's a pretty awful, sad story.
But as a kid, you know, you deal with this stuff.
And so I would bring my little friends in.
I was like about six years old.
So I bring my buddies in to see my dad because he looked like the mummy.
Because he's in a bodycast all the way.
And so we'd go in and I'd charge him like a nickel to come in and see the mummy.
So I bring kids in to see my dad.
But he finally, you know, he finally a year after that, he got out of the body cast.
But he lost his memory for a year.
He didn't know me or my sister.
He didn't know the other kids.
He didn't know my mom.
But he finally got his memory back.
And he lived for about seven years.
And so he died when I was about 10.
But in the meantime, my mom had to give up the kids.
I was the only one she kept because I was a baby.
So she gave my brother and sister from her first husband, Jimmy and Judy, gave them to grandparents in Wilmore, Kentucky.
So they grew up there, and she gave my sister to grandparents out in Lincoln County, West Virginia, out on McCullin Farm.
That was between the Hatfields and McCoys.
And her name was Evelyn Jane.
Well, Evelyn, she grew up between the Hatfields and McCoys.
She's actually married to a McCoy now.
She married Kirby McCoy.
So that hat fills the McCoy state was its own war, buddy.
Yeah.
They're a serious business.
So, but yeah, I grew up.
Then we moved out of that garage.
We moved into a Quonset Hut, which is kind of funny.
Very military.
It was an old World War II Quonset Hut that this old lady named Alice White, she had bought it
and turned it into like a little house and rented it.
and gave us a place to live.
So I lived in that, and then my dad died.
Then we moved to St. Pete, Florida.
When I was 10, just me and mom,
and the rest, the last 65 years, I've lived in St. Pete.
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Did you keep in touch with any of your brothers and sisters?
Oh yeah.
Yeah, we're still close.
Well, my sister Judy died and we had a baby died.
But my sister Evelyn and my brother Jimmy still lives in, he lives in Lexington, and my sister lives in Florence, Alabama.
But yeah, we're still close.
How'd you guys reconnect?
Well, they would send me every summer.
Mom would send me to stay with Jimmy and Judy in Kentucky.
Or else she'd send me out to the hills of Lincoln County to stay on the farm with Evelyn.
And so we stayed close growing up.
So, you know, like every summer I'd spend a month or two in Wilmore,
a month and out in the hills.
They would come to see Mom when they could.
And when they got old enough to drive,
they would come in and come to see Mom.
And I'd see them then.
Sheesh.
Yeah, it was a tough upbringing.
I mean, I literally got my food out of old Army.
They were like C ration cans.
You know, we had these big green.
government cans from World War II that had spam and, you know, various foods.
And that's, Salvation Army would bring us a bunch of that kind of food.
And that's kind of kept us going.
Wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, we, it was poverty.
But, you know, I was such a happy kid.
It didn't bother me a bit.
I was having fun.
What kind of stuff we're into as a kid?
I wanted to be a Marine since I was five years old.
So I put together a group of kids, and I was the leader, and we were the Marines,
and we had a place I named Marine Hill, and we had wars with other kids.
Yeah, you know, BB gun wars, you know, this is back when you got away with that kind of crap.
You know, we'd wear coal miner helmets and goggles, and we'd have a war.
the Blackwell Street gang and we were the Brown Street gang and we'd build forts. They'd
drive by and I invented a machine gun. We would, it was a, when kids used to wear the old
little red handkerchiefs, you know, cowboy handkerchief things. So I would, you'd fill
it full of rocks and you would hold, you'd hold all four corners, but you'd hold the fourth
corner just between there.
And you'd let go, and it would spray rocks.
You could take out three or four kids.
So we invented a machine gun.
That was my machine gun.
But the enemy, you know, stole my design and pretty soon they were using it on us.
And built giant slingshots.
I built a giant slingshot, and they'd ride by on their bikes.
They were buzz bombers, you know, and they'd ride by on their bikes.
and throw rocks had us or hit us with machine guns.
And we'd knock them off their bikes with this giant slingshot.
Yeah, can't do that today.
Well, maybe not in most places.
Yeah.
Around here, you probably can't.
Yeah, you know, Tennessee, you guys.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So what caught your interest is five years old in the Marine Corps?
Pardon?
What caught your interest at five years old in the Marine Corps?
Well, my uncle, you know, like I said, there wasn't too much beautiful in my life.
I didn't have much.
All my toys came from Salvation Army or somebody, you know, or gifts from this group or that group.
And so I had one uncle, I had a few uncles, but I had one who stood out, and he was a Marine.
He had joined the Marine Corps and kind of got out of the West Virginia poverty, you know.
and, you know, one of those no-neck guys, you know,
stood out, knock people out with head butts, you know,
tough, tough Marine.
And I just idolized him.
You're seeing somebody in that Marine Corps uniform.
And he was a tough guy.
Well, they all were.
All my uncles were pretty tough guys.
But the Marine stood out.
And so he'd come home, you know, get liberty and come home and play with me,
do push-ups with me and my buddies on his back.
You know, I just looked up to him, and that was a beginning of it.
But, you know, remember when I was a little kid, the movies were the Sands of Iwo Jima.
You know, the Marines were, they were seen as the best.
And, you know, all my life, I wanted to, I wanted to be in the Marines.
I wanted to be a Marine.
My mom knew it, too.
When I, you know, when I was, I joined when I was 17, I got an early entry.
And when mom found out about that, she was going to let me join anything but the Marines, you know.
She said, no, you'll be the first one killed. You're not going.
And, yeah, my poor mom, six hearts. She had six hearts, you know, three from her first husband.
So she went through that. The guy's coming up to the door with the telegram.
You know, and they don't tell you how the person is. It's wounded in action, condition, unknown.
And she, it was rough for her.
Oh, shit.
How long had the Vietnam War been going on when you decided to join?
I joined in 67.
Okay.
And it had been going on.
I mean, you know, we had guys over there in the 50s.
So, but 67, 68, you know, it got really hot.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I'm just rewinding a little bit.
I've been losing your dad at 10 years old.
Yeah, it was tough, but there's a story, a good story out of that.
My dad wasn't a Christian.
And when he was blinded and crippled, and he finally got his memory back a year being in the ozone,
he was led to Christ by my grandpa and others.
And my dad became a strong Christian.
So that's seven years that he lived.
he lived seven years as a man of God.
And because of that, you know, I came to Christ and my whole family.
So my dad played a role in saving the whole family.
Wow.
Wow.
So, and that might, I don't think that would have happened if he hadn't been blind because he was a hellraiser.
And I don't think that would have happened.
So it took that horrible tragedy to bring my dad to the Lord.
And you know what scripture says.
Be better to pluck out your eyes than the mess.
out on heaven. And in my dad's case, that was the case.
I'll be damned. Man, thank you for sharing that. Thank you for sharing that.
Let's move into enlisting. Yeah. Yeah, I joined it 17, and I had some bad omens right away.
I was going into buddy system, you know, and I had a couple of buddies from, like,
high school football team, we're going to go win with me.
And three of them.
I signed up.
We're going to show up down at the recruiters, get on the Greyhound bus to Jacksonville, you know, and get inducted and do all that.
And I, nobody showed up.
You were the only one?
My buddies disappeared.
So I went by myself.
But it's funny, those three guys, well, one went in the Navy, and one ended up going in the Army and becoming Army Ranger.
And he went to NOM a year later after.
And then the other one went in, and he was in 101st.
And he stayed in.
He went all the way from private to Lieutenant Colonel.
Wow.
Yeah.
So they didn't join with me.
but, and they both went, none of them went in the Marine Corps.
They went in the Army, so.
Right on.
So how was it?
Well, how was booting?
Get to Jacksonville.
Yeah.
And I've said my goodbyes, you know, got a couple of little cheerleaders waving goodbye to me.
It was an important moment of a guy's life.
And so at Jacksonville, they tell me, they four-fed me.
He said, you've got a hernia.
And I said, I don't have a hernia.
And yeah, you know, this is your out, kid.
You don't want to go to Vietnam right now.
And these Navy doctors are telling me this.
And I said, no, no, I want to go.
That's why I'm here.
I want to go.
And he said, no, this is your out.
Don't be stupid, kid.
And it said, you got a hernia.
You can't go.
Well, I started, I said, no way.
And I started doing, I was young and strong.
I started doing one arm push up.
and I'm doing backflips, and I'm saying,
I can do anything.
I say, I'm perfectly healthy.
And one of the guys, one of my buddies from NAM was there that day.
His name was Pat McCrary.
He saw me doing all this.
He's a witness to this insanity.
He said, we thought you were crazy, man.
So he saw all that, so he can verify that this actually happened.
But I did everything to make sure they'd let me in.
well, I'm there.
We're in this Hotel Floridian or something like I think of what it was called.
And first night there, you know, before we're going to go to Parris Island, I go up the stairs,
and some maniac comes in the lobby.
And I'm going up the stairs, and there's where you sign in.
And this guy starts opening fire in the lobby of the hotel.
He's got a 45 cow, and he's blasting away.
And he's shooting the steps under my feet as I'm going up the status.
Holy shit.
And I'm not even there yet.
They're trying to kill me.
And I never did find out what that was about.
But that guy took off.
And a couple of seconds later, these MPs come running in.
And I never heard what that story was about.
But it's a true story.
Never heard.
But that was my welcome to the Marine Corps.
Damn.
Yeah.
And then in Paris Island.
Boy, that was, you know, that was insane.
I was begging to get to NOM just to get out of Paris Island.
I mean, they got my attention.
Yeah, I saw some crazy stuff there.
I was on PT a guy.
He was a fat body.
You know, that your fat body to the end of the line.
Anyway, they were going to drive him out of the Marine Corps.
I don't think the Marine Corps likes fat bodies.
Oh, boy.
You either lose the weight?
It's more of a Navy thing.
They put this guy, they made him do leg lifts until he got a hernia, and he's screaming in agony.
And I'm thinking, this is serious, this is awful.
This guy's in agony.
They cussed him out of our barracks.
The old World War I barracks, the old wood barracks on Paras Island, we're in the upstairs.
We were all in attention as they are watching this, as the D.I.
cursed him. They took him out on a stretcher. The Navy guys came in and put him on a stretch.
They're taking him out. They cursed him all the way to the ambulance. They told you we'd drive you
out of our Marine Corps. Damn. A serious. And then I saw another guy who lost it, and he went up
the water tower at Parris Island. Well, we didn't know. I mean, I never saw this, but all of a sudden,
we're being marched out to the water tower. And we're not allowed to look around. If you even looked,
I looked one time, and I don't cuss anymore, but it was IF in the area.
If you were caught, I.F. in the area, you got hit.
Nate, this, D.I. caught me looking like that because we saw girls.
And he kicked my legs out for many of me.
That was still black and blue when I got the nom.
He kicked me so hard. I thought he broke my leg.
Well, you didn't do that.
You look straight at the guy's head in front of you.
So I didn't know where I was going, but now I know I'm marching on grass.
Pretty soon they tell us we can look up.
And here's all, the whole battalion is around the water tower.
And here's this guy, this poor sap is up on the watertow, screaming.
If you don't let me out of the Marine Corps, I'm going to jump.
Oh, holy shit.
And these DIs down, you know, they've all got their platoons out there.
And they go, all right, we're ready now.
I didn't bring all these marines out here to watch nothing.
Jump.
Holy shit.
Of course, he came down.
And he said, if you come down from there and don't jump, we're going to beat the hell out of you.
Well, he finally came down.
He didn't jump.
And they beat the crap out of that guy.
I know.
They just beat the tore out of that guy.
That probably wouldn't happen today.
Oh, no.
No, it wouldn't happen today, man.
They've got little chits now, I think.
That's a brazo.
I even heard that the obstacle course that was, I heard the obstacle course, you know, that we had to do.
It's now for display only.
What?
That's what I was told.
My A. Gunner Chan, now talk about Chan, remarkable guy.
He went back to PI and he said, yeah.
He said the obstacle course is for display only.
Wow.
And he was told, it could make some people mad with this one,
but he was told that, you know, a lot of the women Marines,
they couldn't do that obstacle.
And they got rid of it.
I don't know if it's true.
Wouldn't be far out there.
Man.
So how was the rest of Basic?
I went to, from there, went to machine gun school.
Is that what you wanted to do?
No, they just put me there, you know, and you had to shoot all the weapons, and I shot really well with the machine guns.
So they threw me in machine gun school.
I think that's how they figured it out.
And I was too dumb to have an MOS doing anything else.
All right.
So they put me in machine gun school.
And, you know, then I start seeing the recon Marines here, you know, and I came up with this
brilliant idea.
But Chan and I, he was this Chinese, Chan was with me all the way from P.I.
From the day we joined, alphabetical, Chan and Clark, you know, and we got stuck together
all the way through the Marine Corps.
And Chan was Chinese American men smuggled out of red China as a baby.
His dad was a doctor, got him out of China.
you know, he was a genius.
He, and he had a minor in ministry.
And I think from the University of Tennessee.
And so, Cham was going to be an open-heart surgeon.
Now, you hear one guy say that, and you think, yeah, me too.
But, you know, this Chinese guy was, he was a giant brain, you know, and for me to get stuck with him, you know, I had that IQ of zero, zero.
I'm stuck with this giant brain, and he had this giant vocabulary,
and he'd use words.
I didn't even know what the hell he was talking about.
I said, what are you saying?
But Chan was, he wanted to join the Marine Corps.
He wanted to pay America back for taking his family in.
I mean, how do you not love a guy like that?
That's cool.
Yeah, it's cool.
I mean, if only some of the immigrants felt that way today, man.
I mean, you know, really.
But Chan wanted to join the Marine Corps.
He could have been an officer.
He didn't have to be a dumb PFC machine gunter.
I mean, he, you know, he had a college degree.
He was, he was as smart as heck.
So, Chan and I were in machine gun.
We both fired an expert with the machine gun.
And we're, I came up with this brilliant idea.
We, I want to go recon.
Because I'm telling him, the recon guys get to where there's little gold wings, man.
It's a chick magnet.
I mean, we're going to, we'll pick up girls everywhere.
So he goes, Clark, do you ever think of anything else?
You know, and he gives me some big, you know, 10-cent word to describe that I'm not being right.
And I said, come on, Chan, go with me, man.
You don't want to leave me alone.
You know, we've been this far, and he goes, all right, so we put in our request to go to recon.
And one night, this is a true story, this is right out of a movie, but we had this old sergeant,
I think it was a master sergeant, but he lived in the barracks with us at Camp Lejeune,
the Machine Gunn School barracks.
Well, he got all these racks, you know, regular barracks with all these machine gunners.
And he had an office at the end, and about two in the morning, he comes out, takes one of those old metal garbage
cans that we had. We didn't have the plastic garbage. And he heaves this metal garbage can
down the squad bay. And he hits the lights and starts screaming, guns up, guns up, guns up.
So everybody out of the racks, standing at attention at the end of your rack. And he's got a
fifth of booze in his hand. And he's angry. He's an angry Marine. And he's got a bunch of orders.
He's got orders in his left hand. And so, and it was transferred. My transatlose.
for us to go to recon and chans.
And I guess maybe a couple of the other guys wanted to go recon.
And so he says, Clark gives me a piece of chalk.
He says, draw a line down the center of the barracks.
Everybody put your toes on that line, you know.
So we all line up on this line.
And he says, okay, all you Marines, all you gunners,
at first he tells us how bad we need gunners.
And we did.
You know, we really did.
In the Fifth Marines, when I got there, they told me every machine gunner in the Fifth Marines
have been killed or wounded.
So we really needed machine gunners.
And he knew that.
He had got all the battlefield casualty list, and they knew all that stuff.
And so suddenly machine gunners kind of a critical MOS, but even though you could be as dumb as a stump
and still be one.
And so he says, okay, all you Marines to join my Marine Corps to kill the enemy, stand still.
And all you Marines that join my Marine Corps to find the enemy and tell us to go kill them, step over that line.
And nobody stepped over the line.
And I mean, it was like I stood there.
I mean, he shamed us.
It was like being in the alamo.
Wow.
Step over the line if you want to leave the alibi.
And, but it worked.
Not one guy tried to go to recon.
We all just stayed in machine guns.
No shit.
I saw my little gold wings flying out in Paris.
I really wanted those wings, man.
Wow.
But, yeah.
So we got to Nam, and, you know, I thought it was baloney.
But, because they told us in machine gun school,
seven to ten seconds after a firefight begins.
And we thought that's, you know, that's baloney.
It can't be true.
Then we get there and all the machine gunners have been killed or wounded.
Man.
I mean, so you went to the Battle of Hugh immediately?
That's where you showed up.
The Battle of Hugh.
That's where you went.
Okay, Way City.
Yeah, Way City.
Yeah, I, no.
Way City.
That's a little wrong because, I mean, I got there for Way.
And I got there when Way was ending.
But I just was at the very end of Way City.
All I did in Way City is step in a pungy pit.
You know, pungy pits with the, I stepped in it, and it broke.
It didn't go through my boots.
You know, God saved me.
First week of numb, and he's already saving me.
So I, but I just did patrols trying to, you know, get the NBA that were trying to get out away at the end there.
but yeah, I didn't really fight in Way City.
I mean, you went, but you went straight from machine gunner school to Vietnam?
Yeah, no, no, I, then I went to Camp Pendleton.
Okay, would you do?
For a jungle warfare school.
Gotcha.
Yeah.
And, you know, the little POW thing, the school they give you, and, yeah, jungle warfare,
that was eye-opening, too, but, you know, I mean, after Paras Island, everything was duck soup.
But then there in Jungle Warfare School, after it was over, they gave us, I think it was 24, 48 hours liberty.
And so I talked Chan, I had a way of talking Chan into trouble.
So I talked Chan into going to Tijuana.
You know, I said, we...
What were you doing down there?
I wanted to go to Tijuana.
So I talked Chan into, we got to go to Tijuana, man, all these.
I hear...
Lots of things.
Yeah, lots of things.
So I talked to him to go to Tijuana.
So we'd go to Tijuana and we're in one of those really seedy bars, you know,
and there's a bunch of Marines in there, of course, and there's activity going on.
It was pretty despicable.
But they'd bring us over a bunch of drinks.
And we'd order, it was four of us, four Marines, and we'd ordered four drinks.
This big Mexican guy comes over with a tray full of drinks.
and I said, we don't, we only won four, and he expects us to pay for him.
And, well, that led to a confrontation.
And so a big brawl start, a big huge fight.
And I realized this is getting ugly.
Let's get out of here.
So me and Chan are trying to crawl out because bottles flat everywhere.
People fighting all over the place.
And we got to the door.
and the Tijuana police were there.
And then everybody said,
he started it.
I didn't do anything.
But I was almost innocent.
They put you in the clink?
Yeah.
Well, they,
Tijuana police threw us into Tijuana Briggs,
jail.
And then the Shore Patrol came and got us out of there
and threw us in the Navy Brig.
And then they took me into San Diego,
me and Chan.
And, oh, he was so mad at me.
because Chan would never do any of the stuff.
So we were in,
that was the last time I saw it, San Diego was Tijuana Brig.
But then the Marines came and got us,
they threw us in a Red Line Brig.
Camp Pendleton.
If you ever heard anything about those?
I haven't.
Oh, they're awful.
Yeah, the Red Line Brig,
you stand in attention,
and it was a big wall.
Of course, you know, there's a war going on.
They take, some guys would get in trouble like this
and think it was going to keep him going to Dom.
But, you know, I wasn't doing that.
I just, I mean, I just, I hit this guy because he was trying to extort money out of us.
So, so anyway, we got our face up against the wall.
She'd stand in attention.
And if you had to go to the head, you know, you had to, they had the MP jailers.
They're marching up and down behind you.
And you got your face up against the wall.
And if you move your face away from that wall, they hit the back of your head.
And it drives your face into the wall.
And that's why it's called a red-line brig.
There's bloody red where everybody's faces would be.
There's a red line and there's just drips of blood all the way down this wall.
Yeah.
The red line brick.
So that was, yeah, those guys, they didn't play games.
And I wanted out of there.
But I had orders for NOM like the next day.
So we didn't, we only, I don't know, we might have spent eight hours in that redline bridge.
and they said, you got orders for NOM, you're out of here,
and they took us out of there and put us on the Brandef,
old Braniff Airlines and flew us to NOM.
Oh, wow.
So what was it like when he landed at NOM?
Was it what you expected?
It was, I didn't know what to expect.
I mean, I'll be honest with you.
I was such a kid.
I looked back at it and I was such a gung-ho, dumb kid, you know.
But Chan had been reading about Way City.
He read newspapers.
And he's telling me, yeah, you know, there's a lot going on in a way C.
I think we're going to be going to Way City.
And I said, oh, okay.
So we get off the plane, and then we file through this.
And as soon as we got off the plane, you know, that heat from Vietnam hits you.
And you're going, whoa, you know, I'm from Florida, but this was a different kind of heat.
And we see the phantoms jetting down the air.
and taken off, and we could hear artillery.
And all of a sudden, you're going,
crap, it's a real war, man.
I've been in a real war here.
So we filed through, they're giving us our orders.
And I always remember the sergeant,
he'd go through and hand him your orders,
and he'd stamp it, big red stamp.
Fifth Marines, next.
Fifth Marines, next, Fifth Marines.
And everybody was getting sent to the Fifth Marines.
And I said,
damn, why, you know, why is everybody going to the Fifth Marines?
And he goes, didn't you read in the newspapers I've been given?
The Fifth Marines are taking Way City.
And I said, oh, they need guys.
And he goes, yeah, stupid, they need guys.
So Fifth Marines it was.
But Way City was really ending.
And I, you know, I really didn't do anything away except patrols around it.
I didn't do anything.
So I really wasn't in a way.
How long were you there?
In NOM?
And Way City.
Oh, and Way?
Oh, geez, just a couple of days patrols.
And then they brought us back to Fubai.
And then they sent us down to a place called Troy Bridge.
And, yeah, things started getting hot there.
Right on.
Yeah.
Right on.
You didn't have any, did you know anybody?
that had been to Vietnam before you or...
No.
You were just right...
You just plopped right in there.
Yeah.
I didn't know...
I didn't know anybody.
Shit.
Were you nervous?
I...
You know, I was, you know, like, super excited.
I mean, the...
Pretty soon, you know, you mean,
you can't tell nerves from fear.
Yeah.
But I...
Yeah, I was kind of still...
It was a great adventure.
And I was so young that I just...
saw it as it's, you know, right now it's a huge adventure. But, you know, once you, once you got out in the
bush, yeah, the adventure's over. And this is, uh, this, it's good, it got, it was hard. It was hard.
You know, I, first time I got hit, I, I lost, uh, well, I went over there at 160 pounds.
And, uh, first or second time I got hit, I was, uh, they sent me to a hospital when, uh,
They sent me to Danang, but there was so many wounded Marines that they didn't have any beds.
They got guys laying in blood all over the floors.
So they threw a bunch of us on a C-130 and flew us down to an Air Force hospital.
And Cameron Bay.
And, you know, after six months in the jungle, getting the Cameron Bay, the Air Force.
The Air Force.
They live a different life.
They, air-conditioned hospital.
They ate off plates and trays, and they had flushing toilets.
And I went into the head once I was able to walk.
And there's these crazy Marines, these stupid Marines in the bathroom.
And he's going, Clark, come here, man, listen to this.
He flushed the toilet.
Oh, my God.
When you're entertained, when you're flushing toilet, I mean, I'm sorry, but it's true.
Oh, man.
In that hospital, when all the guys started coming out of the morphine and stuff,
where you wake up and you're going, hey, who you're with, man?
Seventh Marines.
Hey, who you went?
26 Marines.
And I'd say, you know, fifth Marines.
And so the whole hospital is filled with wounded Marines.
You know, it's a tad offensive.
And so this one kid, a couple of beds down where I was, but the other ward, it was the same story.
And so this one kid, he wouldn't say anything.
I think, yeah, you know, he's still in shock or something, you know.
And a couple of days later, he was the same thing.
Hey, who are you with, man?
Hey, who you, well, you're 26 Marines?
Who's that guy with?
And he wouldn't say anything.
Finally, the guy started rast and he was saying,
Who are you with, man?
And he goes, I'm in the Air Force.
So all these Marines go, what?
Then you see these wounded guys sit up and go,
what did you do, step on a nail?
He's like, no, it was a thumbtack.
He says, he goes, no, it's my mom's fault, man.
He was a nice young guy.
He goes, no, it's my mom's fault, man.
He said, my brother's a Marine, and she kept sending me letters,
and she'd been contacting my CEO telling him to make me go check on my brother
and see how he's doing.
So I finally said, okay, and I hopped a ride up to Danang,
and then they threw me in a chopper and flew me out to Anwa,
and while a combat base.
And he said, I got off.
I didn't even walk off the tarmac and they got hit.
And I got wounded and I got a purple heart.
Holy shit.
Damn.
So every morning, all the Marines, we'd wake up.
And we'd sing this kid awake with,
off we go into the wild blue yons.
Oh, shit.
We made his life.
Although he grew to love us, you know.
It was all in good fun, but pretty funny.
On that note, before we get into the thick of it, let's take a quick break.
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All right, Johnny, we're back from the break.
We're getting ready to get into Vietnam.
Where do we go from here?
Well, I got to Troy Bridge.
Troy Bridge, really the story about Troy Bridge that I wrote in Guns Up is, it's about Big Red.
I put it in there because Big Red.
I, when I first got there, you know, when we got the Fubai right before we went up to do a round way,
there was one guy in this big tent where we came into.
And he was coming back from the hospital.
He'd been wounded, coming back from NAS.
And so Chan and I, you know, we wanted to pump this guy
because tell us what we're walking into here.
And his name was Richard Weaver, but I never knew his real name.
I didn't know his real name until 30 years after the war.
No shit.
And nobody had a name.
You know, I'm, and I've always been.
been awful with names, but it's like everybody had a nickname.
You know, I mean, I'm sure a lot of the guys, they knew me as a crazy gunner.
But, you know, I didn't think I had a name sometimes.
But he was just big red.
He was just big red-headed guy, and he was good-looking, you know.
Looked like the Marlboro man, you know, in the old Marble cigarette commercials.
And big, and strong.
He had been a bouncer in one of the toughest bars in Cincinnati, Ohio, when he was 15.
When he was 15?
That's what, yeah, I found all this out way, way later.
Did you imagine getting bounced out of a bar by a 15-year-old?
Think about, well, listen to the rest of this.
He was raised, his bad upbringing, you know, I think his parents basically, I don't know the full story, but he didn't grow up with his parents.
They kind of abandoned him.
Gotcha.
And I don't want to hurt anybody's feelings that might hear this.
But, you know, that's just the story I got.
But he didn't really grow up with his folks that much.
And I think there were reasons.
Maybe not their fault at all.
Kind of like my mom.
My mom had to give up the kids, you know, and she didn't have any food to feed them.
So, anyway, he grew up with this old guy who, an old Marine, who had served under Admiral Halsey in World War II.
And he raised big reds.
I had, you know, like as a Marine from birth.
I mean, from the time he was a little kid, he was...
Holy shit.
He brought him up a Marine.
And, uh, anyway.
How did they get connected?
I mean, how did they, how do they run into each other?
Do you know?
I don't know.
I mean...
That's interesting.
I don't know.
But he, he, uh, he, he, he, he became my big brother.
And chans, too, uh, because, you know, we're, we're boots, you know?
I mean, you got two new boots walking in.
We don't know what we're walking into.
And first time we met him, you know, he says, trying to get us ready for this.
He goes, okay, at first he didn't want to be bothered.
Then we go, come on, man.
You know, and then he found out we were 03-31 machine gunners.
And he goes, yeah, it perked him up.
He goes, oh, boy, they're going to be glad to see you, man.
And, you know, we've been told that seven to ten second crap, you know, and we didn't believe it.
And he said, you know, there's probably, I didn't see, I don't know of any gunners left when I got wounded in way.
I don't think there's any machine gunners left.
He said they were given the M60 to Mortarman and, you know, bringing up guys, whoever,
and handing them in the gun and saying, you're the gunner today.
And nobody liked it because it was like a target on your back.
but and let me explain that real quick you know we're fighting at war at night all the time
and the m60 has a trace around every fifth round's a tracer round well it looks like a laser beam
of course i know you know that but i don't know who's listening to this but it looks like a laser
beam so you see it in all the movies and you see the lasers well that's a whole bunch of bullets
where the tracer round is every fifth round and and so we we had to have that
that to point out the enemy.
They had to have that to know where you're shooting.
We used it for calling in air strikes, you know, with pointers, you know.
And forgive me.
So for those that don't understand what he's saying, a trace around is basically, it, it,
for America, it's red.
Was it red back then?
Red.
The NBA were green.
Yeah.
So it's a round that kind of burns red as it's going out of the barrel.
And what people will do is exactly what Johnny's saying.
They will mark, so if a airplane helicopter, somebody who's going to drop some ordinance close to your position, you mark enemy territory where you want them to hit with tracer rounds.
Right.
And so they see where the tracer rounds are going, and then they know exactly what they need to hit.
Yeah.
And we used it, you know, when you're calling them Phantoms.
I mean, there were a few times we had a, Phantoms had to drop neighbor.
palm like really close to us.
And if I didn't show them where to drop that, we could be frying like eggs, you know.
So, but it, you need to.
I mean, even, even though we had lasers when I was in, I used to carry an extra mag of
all tracers.
I mean, I, oh, in that way, if whatever, if the laser didn't, if the laser went down or
whatever, then I could throw in a mag tracer and mark target.
Yeah.
When I wasn't carrying my 60.
Yeah.
But.
Well.
So I
Yeah, so anyway, big red.
Oh, sorry, go ahead.
I was just going to say, use tracers for a lot of things.
I mean, I remember, too, they probably don't do this shit anymore either.
But, you know, for a dummy like me, I'd put the last five rounds of my magazine as Tracer
because when you hit that, you know, hey, I'm getting ready to run out of ammo here.
Start thinking about a mag change.
That's a smart move.
Yeah, I know, no.
I never did that.
And our rifleman, see, only the guns.
had the tracers, only the M-60s.
Oh, no shit?
Yeah.
None of the M-16s, you know, they didn't have tracers.
Gotcha.
So it was all up to me.
I mean, it was all up to a machine gun.
So, but anyway, so Big Red's telling us that, you know, every, because of that
tracer round, because it points out who, you know, there's the machine gun.
You'd only see that the M-16s and AK-47s going off like muzzle flashes.
It looked like a bunch of lightning bugs and a big shootout.
And the only steady target you saw was the NVA 30 cows.
You know, they'd shoot green tracers.
So it was like Christmas time out there, you know, green and red criss-crossing each other.
And we were the only targets.
And every good army's taught the same thing.
Knock out the machine gun first.
Back then, anyway, I assume it's the same.
So anyway, machine gunners didn't last long.
If you laid on the trigger very long,
that's why it was 7 to 10 seconds.
If you laid it on that trigger very long ago, it was 20 round burst.
We were told, unless you're being overrun, unless there's no choice, 20 round burst.
Don't be laying on 100 rounds.
You'll never finish that 100 rounds because some rifleman's going to pinpoint where your machine gun is
out of the jungle when you're dead.
Well, that's the reason.
You became such an obvious target in a, in a,
battle where everybody else has a lightning bug flashing on and off, that gunners didn't last long.
And but you got no choice. You got to use the tracers. It's crucial. And it shows the infantry
where to fire, you know, where's the enemy, etc. It shows you where your rounds are going.
You know, shooting without tracer rounds. You don't know. All your rounds could be running into a tree.
I mean, it's really interesting because the M60 machine gun wasn't just a weapon. It was also
a communication device.
Yeah.
You know, because you, it, just like all the stuff we were just talking about, you know what I mean.
And then you're marking targets for your own guys.
I mean, you really got to be switched on.
Well, some gunners, I don't remember doing this, but I know, I know some gunners and
they would talk to each other, you know, you'd be mountains apart.
I think I'm saying.
Yeah, it just, you know, five round burst, five round bursts, you know, and, and, and
They talked to each other, to kind of let each other know where they were out and out in the, you know, the big mountains in what, like, you know, thong duck and places like that.
You know, when you get near the Cambodian border and everything, you know, we're talking big freaking mountains, you know, it wasn't, it was a flat jungle.
It was straight up, straight down.
And so you can't see each other.
You don't know where the other platoon might be.
and but old red try to tell us that no that that that wasn't bull crap you know uh seven to 10 seconds
it's about right and it goes if you lay on that trigger more than 20 round burst yeah you're
going to be you're going to be dead and uh he said as a matter of fact there's as far as he knew there were
no gunners left in the fifth marines they had all been killed and wounded and i mean what's that like for you to hear
that shit. You're brand new.
Hadn't fired around yet.
And this is your welcome brief.
It's real now. You know, I mean, all of a sudden,
you know, where it was a big adventure
and I'm not all that scared, I'm just kind of excited.
It dawns on you.
Man,
yeah, I might not be alive next week.
You know, this is going to
get in badly.
But, yeah, you've got no choice.
You know, you're there. You've got no choice.
You've got to do it.
And so that
woke me and Chan up, but he was great about everything. Big Red was, he was like a big brother.
I mean, he was like, you know, bend those pins on your frags. You know, we're right off the plane
from Danang, you know, and they've given us all this equipment. We got grenades where the pins
aren't even bent, and we got, and we had at that moment, we had M16s. And, you know, he's
telling us what to do with the M16s, you know, we had 20 rounds in each clip. Well, you know, you
only one 18. Because the old M16s, it would weaken.
And, I mean, the magazine would weaken if you kept it filled with 20-round max all the time.
And it's going to jam, because as a spring gets weak, it's not going to feed the bullet.
You know that.
I hate to talk to you about this stuff.
Oh, it's a...
Equipment has changed over the years, too, so...
Yeah.
Well, true.
Yeah, no kidding.
But anyway, yeah, you had to take...
Knock a couple of rounds.
So he took our magazines, took two rounds out of every, I mean, out of every magazine and threw it back at us.
And then he told us about taking all your, anything of value that you're going to try to hang on to that's paper.
You know, anything.
IDs, your MPC, your military payment certificate, your money, anything you got that you want to try to keep dry.
And, of course, I have my little Gideon Bible, and I want to keep it dry.
and you get hold of plastic bags.
There were a lot of them around.
You get them from the cormon a lot of times.
So you'd wrap everything in plastic.
And I like my little Bible.
It was wrapped in plastic, so it was real thick, but it was in my pocket.
And I had a flackjacket on, you know.
But we had the old Korean-era flack jackets.
So, you know, they're panels.
Bullets could go between the panels.
You know, shrapnel could go between the pants.
But, yeah, we had Korean-era blackjackets.
Now, the Army got the nice new ones.
And, of course, it was every Marine's duty
to steal anything from the Army.
So we were always trying to steal from the Army.
If we went into Fuguay, as soon as the Army heard,
those Marines are coming in out of the jungle
from, they'd try to hide all their equipment
because we were going to steal, we stole everything.
But they had all the good stuff.
You know, like our M-79 guy, our Bluperman,
The Army had these blooper rounds that are nothing today.
I mean, I know they got everything today.
But back then, the blooper round was still, it was pretty new.
All we had was E.H.E.
The concussion, little grenade.
Colden eggs.
Yeah.
But the Army had, they had the buckshot blooparounds,
and they had blooper rounds that would be like a flare.
And I forgot what else they had.
So our blooper man, who was insane,
I called him Sam the Blooper Man in Guns Up
and he's a big favorite of all the fans of that book
but Sam was
Sam was
he was a character
he was a total character
but God he was good with that
M-79
Real quick, I'm just curious
Would you read your Bible out there?
Or was it with you to say that again?
Did you read your Bible out there?
Would you unwrap it and read it?
Oh yeah
Oh yeah
Yeah, I, you know, yeah, I started reading it a lot.
And Chan, I had Chan there with me, you know, and Chan started, like I said, he had a minor in ministry.
So I had a Bible teacher with me, you know, and you'd ask, and that's why he played such a crucial role.
And it's why he's a main character in Guns Up.
That's interesting, too, that he came from China as a Christian.
Yeah, I know.
It's fascinating.
I know.
And the fact that he should have been an officer.
He should have been a doctor.
And his story, you know, at the end, I mean, you know, he got blown up with me.
He got shot up pretty good, too.
And he had to have like 17 surgeries on his arm.
And so he couldn't tie surgical knots.
So at the, you know, and he went through a serious depression for a while.
He came home and the girl he thought he was going to marry, that kind of ended.
They, that had gone away while he was in Nam, I think, and I don't know all the details, but that and now his dream of being an open heart surgeon, that was gone.
But Chan went on to become the leading cardiovascular profusion expert in the world.
Are you serious?
Yeah, a dumb machine gunner.
Yeah, and I know.
And I had to go through a war with this guy and his giant vocabulary.
He was maddened.
It was pretty funny.
You know what I mean?
He would do things because he was so smart.
And I was, I barely got out of St. Pete High.
And still, I'd be eating sea rations.
And he'd go, you know, Clark, those sea rations,
they were put in that can when you weren't even a glint in your father's eye.
And I'd go, what?
And I'd look at the date.
Did you try to find the date?
God, yeah, 1944.
Oh, man.
Damn.
Yeah, I know.
Anyway, he could be a pain in the butt, but, you know, we're still together.
Yeah.
Yeah, we're still together.
He came to see me in Florida not long ago.
His wife had recently died.
And, yeah, I came down and took him out on my pontoon boat and drank some wine.
Nice.
You guys are still buddies.
Yeah, yeah.
Where's he at?
He's in New York in Oyster Bay, New York.
Right on.
Yeah.
Right on.
And he's got a place on Nantucket that we've been to once.
And so.
Nice.
Yeah, it's pretty sweet.
So where do you guys go from here?
Vietnam.
Oh.
Vietnam.
Oh.
Well, in Vietnam, we went, let me take it, Troy Bridge.
It got overrun.
Hold on.
What was Troy Bridge?
Okay, it was.
Why was it so important?
What were you doing that?
You know, later, you look at, there's pictures in that book, and there's pictures of Troy Bridge.
As a matter of fact, I'll show you real quick.
Oh, wow, it doesn't show the bridge here.
But that's me on Troy Bridge.
Yeah, look at that.
Yeah.
Great Corruding picture right there.
But Troy Bridge was, it was like an old, I think it had originally been an old train trestle bridge, you know, but it was on Highway 1.
And it had, like I said, this part of the story really in Gunz, this is about Big Red.
Big Red was a hero on Troy Bridge.
You know, I didn't do much.
I didn't do, you know.
What were we, what was, why were we there?
What did we want to do?
Okay, it was on Highway 1, which is the most important route in Vietnam.
All of our supplies went up and down Highway 1.
So the NBA, Viacong, they're always trying to do something to stop Highway 1.
Blow up the bridges along Highway 1 was a big deal.
And so bridge duty, though, was a good deal for Marines because it meant you weren't out in the bush.
You got to come in.
When you're on bridge duty, there would usually be a little will there.
you might even be able to eat something besides sea rations.
And I did that a couple of times.
But, you know, there was always critters going through your rice.
You'd be eating and they borrow through your rice.
And you close your eyes and keep eating.
But yeah, so anyway, it was an important bridge.
It got hit with, they said over 400 NVA.
And they sat.
sappers finally, you know, got onto the bridge and suicide guys.
They had all kinds of satchel charges tied to them and TNT tied to them.
And they were all doped up, you know, you'd shoot them and they didn't even know they were dead.
They kept coming sometimes.
But they, yeah, they got out to the center of the bridge and, you know, they had to break through the wire on the other side,
killed the machine gun team on the other side.
But got it, got under the bridge, hugged onto it.
And the bridge blew up and came down on top of another machine gun team that was on the center span.
It was a big cement thing in the river that held up the center of the bridge.
And anyway, those guys didn't die right away.
And during the battle, during this whole thing, Red didn't stop firing the whole time.
I mean, he just fired, I don't know how many rounds, you know, just.
And that meant everybody knew where he was
And everybody tried to knock out Red in that gun bunker
But Red was a hero
He should have gotten crap
You know, he could have been put up for the Medal of Honor there
But he didn't get anything
Zippity doodaw
30 years later
When people read what he did
And my boy in guns up
A congressman
and a couple of good friends of his that went to high school with him
caused a stir, and they finally gave him the Bronze Star.
You know, he'd been dead for 30 years.
He was killed beside me on May 20th, 68.
But anyway, Red was a hero.
What he did that night was amazing.
And a couple other guys were heroes that night.
We had two guys that Tedesco and Rosalie, both corporals.
And Rosalie had been put up.
in Way City. He had been put up for
promotion to lieutenant, got battlefield
commission, and he turned it down. He wanted to go home.
And so he turned it down. And they came out to say goodbye
to the platoon. So they
hopped a ride from Fubai, which is between
Way City, Fubai and Troy Bridge. They hopped to ride from Fubai,
which is a great big army base. And that's where the Fifth Marines
were, too, whenever we went back, but we never went back.
But they hopped to ride down Highway 1 to come out to Fubai,
I mean, come out to Troy Bridge and say bye to everybody.
Well, they were there that they picked that time to say bye to everybody,
and the bridge got overrun, blown up.
Machine gun team was out there screaming.
They hadn't died yet, and they were in a lot of agony.
And Tedesco and Rosalie tried to get out to those guys and got killed.
And they should have been on a, they were due for a flight back to the world the next day.
They should have been in Denang.
They came out there to say bye, and they died heroes.
Yeah, they didn't get anything either as far as I know, yeah.
But, yes, a lot of brave guys.
What did you see there?
I mean, this is your first.
I was just an A-gunner, just, you know, just feeding the gun.
I didn't do anything.
I didn't do anything.
It's still significant.
I mean, I've never seen in combat in your life.
I saw more later after the bridge have been blown up.
The next day, we started sending out three-man killer teams.
So I volunteered for these three-man killer teams.
And those were pretty fascinating.
These three-man-killer teams, they, I keep wanting to call them, you know, we call them
gooks.
All right, we called them gooks.
I think everybody knows that.
Okay.
Anybody that's watched any Vietnam movie ever?
Well, it came from Korea, you know, that term.
I mean, you probably already know that, but yeah, it was Marines in Korea picked that term up,
and that's what the Koreans called peasants.
And so we picked that term up from the Koreans, brought it to Vietnam, and they were gooks.
But anyway, so the NBA would send out killer squads.
They'd send out a squad of guys to go into a ville.
And if theville wasn't supplying the communist with rice and supplies,
they'd find out who the village chief was and his family.
And they would come into that ville and they'd get that, like, let's say he had a couple of kids.
They'd get one of his kids cut off their head, put it on a bamboo steak in front of the, right in the center of the bill, and then leave.
and that was there either start supplying the commies or, you know, we'll be back.
And they would.
They'd come back and excuse me, they'd kill a member of his family and finally him or his wife or whoever.
And until that village started supplying them with rice and whatever they needed.
Well, our job on these three-man killer teams was to, because if you went out there with a platoon, you couldn't get them.
You know, they would, you made too much noise, you know, it's jungle and rice patties.
And you had to be quiet.
And so I would go out on these three-man killer teams.
And that's before I started carrying the 60.
So I didn't carry, I mean, I was just an A-gunner.
I didn't carry the 60 until Red got killed.
Gotcha.
Once in a while, I would.
But a lot of times I didn't carry it until Red got killed.
Unless he'd be gone for this or that, you know.
And then I was the 60 guy.
But so these three-man killer teams, you'd ambush these guys.
You'd try to pick them off when they came into aville.
And one of these things, I mean, we were successful a couple of times.
But one of these three-man killer teams I was on, I was out there with this funny black guy.
I got him, I called him Jackson in the book.
I didn't remember his real name.
But he was, he always smiled.
He was white teeth, boy.
He'd smile, we don't smile out in the bush, you'll get us all killed.
So we were laying in wait.
And right at the edge of a, it wasn't really a rice paddy.
A rice paddies out there, but this was kind of just a lot of brush.
And then there was real heavy jungle over maybe 75 yards away.
And we were behind a big bush.
And we see some guys come out of the jungle, just two or three of them.
And we thought, the killer team.
So we get set up.
You know, we're going to blow these guys away.
And halfway across this open area, a platoon comes out.
These guys are just to point two or three guys.
They were just point men.
And pretty soon, they're getting closer and closer.
And we're going, I don't know if we should open fire on a whole platoon.
You know, there's only three of us.
And so pretty soon.
It's not a platoon.
It was 2 over 200 NVA came out, and they walked so close to us.
They walked, I mean, they could have stepped on us because we couldn't do anything.
We couldn't run.
We couldn't move.
We just had to stay still.
And we're getting eat up by ants and mosquitoes.
You know, the mosquitoes isn't on with God the worst.
But we're just getting sucked dry with mosquitoes and getting eaten up.
And you can't move.
And I tell that story sometimes to other Marines to tell them
this is why Parasilin was so horrible.
All those stories of a Marine slapping a sand flea on PI
back when I went in.
If you did that, you were going to be tortured.
I mean, they tortured guys.
They'd make you dig a six-foot grave with an et-tool.
Then they'd make you have an official burial for the sand flea.
And then they'd say, what sex was that sand flea you killed?
and you'd say, it was a guy, all right, this is a female, dig another grave.
I mean, they torture you, but you were scared to death to move, you know, like I was scared
to death to even look.
It worked.
They had my attention.
And Buddy had worked.
I got to know him.
You know, I had discipline, and all of us did.
We laid there.
It wouldn't matter.
I had snakes crawling over me.
I wasn't going to move.
if you moved, you're going to get everybody killed.
So, you know, you just didn't make that mistake.
We were well trained.
It was torture, torture training, but it worked.
And this night, 200 NVA went plodden by our noses.
I mean, we could smell the garlic.
I saw their little hochi men's.
That's these sandals they wore.
They made them out of tires, American tires.
But they'd walk by their little hochi men's flopping right by our nose.
and we're just going, it was never going to end.
200 guys, and they're kind of spread out.
It went on forever.
I mean, it felt like forever.
When they finally got away from us,
I had, no, it wasn't me, one of the guys, one of the guys,
there was three of us.
I don't know which one it was, but somebody had pulled a frag.
He pulled the pen on the frang,
thinking, you know, that we've got to do something to get out of here
and squeezed it that whole time.
the spoon in, squeezed it,
and he was so relieved when these guys went into the jungle.
He went, oh, God, and let go on the spoon.
And now we got a live, Frank.
And he goes, Frank.
And we all dive flat down.
Boom.
A grenade goes off right by us.
Nobody got hurt.
We didn't catch any shrap or anything.
And now we're scared to death.
You know, he's getting it.
And another guy, then Jackson says, oh, I peeve my brain.
pants. I peeing all over myself.
Holy shit. And I did, too. I was
peeing. I'm going, oh, my God, we're the worst ambush in history.
So we got out of there. But that's what three-man killer teams could be like.
You didn't know what you were going to run into.
I mean, you think you're going to knock on them. Huh?
They didn't come back for you guys?
Oh, no, because soon we heard artillery going off out of Fubai.
Now, I don't know if somebody else spotted all these guys.
And they may have.
But somebody started calling in artillery.
It wasn't us.
I mean, if I called in artillery, I'd kill the wrong team.
I couldn't call it artillery.
You wouldn't have a sense of direction.
If I'd ever walk point, we'd still be there.
So what were some of the success stories with the three-man killer teams?
Oh, well, there were times where, you know, they'd only send in a squad.
and you would, yeah, we had a couple of times where, you know,
we killed three or four of them and the rest would get away.
But what would happen, they'd stop going back to the bill
because, you know, they'd leave the bill alone.
And now you were heroes to the village.
And now they're on the allied side.
I mean, they're on the American side again, you know.
It's, yeah, it's, yeah.
Do you want to talk about the first time he killed somebody?
Yeah, I want to talk about, yeah, I want to talk about, yeah, it was an ambush.
And I killed this NBA officer.
And I guess, you know, it stays with me.
Yeah, you know, the shooting was at night.
I killed him at night.
So I, but we stayed in that position all night.
And we stayed there longer than we usually would.
We'd count the bodies, you know, and stuff like that.
And so I don't know why we'd stay there.
Nobody told me I was a PFC, but we hung around a little longer.
And so I had time to, you know, go up on the trail where I'd kill this guy and, you know, and look at him.
And it's just always stayed with me.
I mean, I remember a smell.
It was a hot, sunny day, but it wasn't, you know, it wasn't 110 degree hot, but it was hot and sunny, and it was grass. It was like tall grass. It was flowing because there'd be some breeze. And here's this guy laying on this trail with, you know, a breeze going by. And, yeah, I think of that a lot. I think of that. I think of this.
this woman, I guess she was an NVA nurse.
We never, I never knew, but there's a chapter in the book about that.
It was called Mercy Killing.
And that was, that one really stays with me.
And then I was in a little bit of hand-to-hand combat.
And I'll tell you, you want me to tell you, I'm going to tell you that one.
Because it's really unusual.
Not everybody has this war story.
We'd been going for about, if I remember correctly,
it'd have been about 17 straight days.
And you'd be out that long often,
but you didn't make contact with the enemy all the time, you know.
But this time, we'd made contact with the NVA off and on for 17 days.
We kept running into them.
You know, I mean, it would short,
ambushes, big firefights, and it's over.
But then the next day, bam, you're running into them again.
And we were in a real hot area.
It was up near the Cambodian border, if I remember,
early ocean border.
But we were in the mountains at that point.
Or at one point, we started to flatland and be in the mountains.
I never knew what was going on.
But I was going around, we were humping all night,
and we'd been going for 17 days,
and head and had hardly any sleep.
You'd set up an ambush.
I mean, you'd hump all day.
You know, stop maybe for some chowl,
but you were just humping up and down hills all day.
That's how I lost 40 pounds the first time I got a hit.
But you'd just hump all day.
And then at night set up ambushes all night.
So we set up this 17th day of contact with the enemy.
We're going around the side of a mountain.
It wasn't much of a trail, but a tiny, somewhat of a trail around the side of this mountain.
And it was way up in the mountains.
And our lieutenant was as dead as we were.
And we had a great lieutenant.
He didn't make mistakes.
He'd call in artillery on a dime, you know.
You know, Annapolis grad, smart guy.
He went on to, his name was Nelson, Lieutenant Nelson.
He went on to become the head of the FBI in all of the Northeast after the war.
Wow.
Yeah. He was a hero at that Ruby Ridge thing. He was one of the FBI guys at that Ruby Ridge. I think it was called Ruby Ridge. Anyway, but he was a great lieutenant. We were blessed to have that guy. But he, even he was, you know, we didn't know, you were sleepwalking. You reach a point where you just, you know, you just sleepwalking. I got nothing left. Nobody did. So we sat up on the side of this mountain and he put a couple of guys above this tiny trail.
and I should have been ambushing the trail.
They should have had the 60 on the trail,
aiming down the trail one way or the other.
And we always did.
This night, I believe everybody was just so exhausted.
We don't know what we're doing.
And they sent me up on the bottom half of this trail, pointing downhill.
Well, I mean, it's possible that maybe he had a reason to think they were going to come up the hill at us.
But normally, I'd be ambushing that trail.
So me and Channer
We're trying to stay awake and we're I got poncho over the mosquitoes are eating us alive and
So you couldn't use that poncho, you know
Any kind of rain or anything because it makes noise
But wasn't raining
Trying to heat trying to fight off the mosquitoes and I'm hanging over the 60 and I got it here
So if I if I fall forward to sleep it it wakes me up I hit it and it was chance turned to you know
Take an hour sleep
sometimes we do two-hour shifts.
But I think you hear him, we were only doing one hour
because you couldn't stay awake more than an hour, you know.
But anyway, chance, it's his turn to sleep.
And I'm hanging over this thing, and I'm fading out.
You know, I'm going out.
And believe me, you didn't do that.
We were scared to death to fall asleep on lines.
We had an Indian named Swift Eagle.
This is real name.
He's a funny story, too.
His real name was Swift Eagle.
I had to see it on his paycheck to believe it.
I think he had another name, too, but Swift Eagle.
So Swift Eagle, he'd been in Nam, I don't know, a couple of tours, maybe more.
And he would sneak around, and if anybody fell asleep on lines, this freaking Indian would sneak up.
And he'd take a K-bar and he'd reach around behind you and just nick you with a K-bar.
Well, in Nam, that Nick's going to get infected within a few hours.
Everything got infected in Vietnam.
So you learned real quick, don't fall asleep.
I don't care how hard you are.
So I was scared to fall asleep.
He had already nicked me once.
And I almost shot him.
I thought it was, I didn't know who it was.
But anyway, that guy was a hero.
He got hit seven times.
Jeez.
Yeah.
And he kept, he would return down Purple Hearts
because he didn't want to go home.
The Marines were in Nam.
The Marines were his family.
Why would I want to go anywhere else?
My family's here.
He would say stuff like that.
I mean, how do you not love these guys?
So I wasn't going to fall asleep if I could help it
because Swift Eagle would make sure I woke up.
But this night, I'm dozing and I'm dreaming.
And I'm dreaming back home.
You know, we call them world dreams, back in the world.
And I'm back in the world.
I'm cruising, steak and shake.
And I've got my 57 days.
that. And I'm cruiser on stake of cake, and I'm trying to pick up girls, and I'm just, I'm having
a great time in my dream, you know, it's you're out of now. And my favorite band, this true story,
favorite band was the young rascals. I love the young rascals. Well, all of a sudden,
in the middle of freaking Cambodian mountains, Laotian Mountains, wherever the heck I was,
I start hearing the young rascal singing in the midnight hour.
And I'm thinking, oh, my God, this is the best dream I've had since I came to know.
I'm even hearing the music.
And I mean, that's the way my mind was, you know, get it.
That's where my mind was, man.
And then, bam, bam.
And it wasn't M16 rounds.
It was M-14.
14 rounds. And they're slapping through my poncho. And the plastic poncho, the old, we had
Korean-era ponchos, okay? They were plastic stuff. They would rip through that. And it was
cutting my face from the rounds, not the bullets, but the plastic was cut in my face. Bam,
bam, bam, it's going through my poncho. Of course, I was frozen, but I was awake. And I'm still
hearing the music. I'm still hearing the young rascals in the midnight hour. And all of a sudden,
And there's a guy on top of me.
And it was an NVA.
And I, too late to get to the machine gun, too late to get to the 45.
I got to the K-bar.
I got to my K-bar.
And we rolled down the hill.
And, yeah.
So later on, I found out, I found out that we found the body, of course, and he had a boombox.
This guy had a big, shiny boombox.
And the North Vietnamese loved American music, too.
And they would tune in to Armed Forces Radio Network.
Well, every night at midnight, Armed Forces Radio Network played in the midnight hour by the young rascals.
Of course, I knew none of this.
I hadn't heard music since I left America.
And we sure didn't listen to Armed Forces Radio Network.
But they did.
He had a boombox.
he'd been listening to Armed Forces Radio Network,
and evidently it had caught on a twig going through the bush
and turned on his boombox.
Holy sure.
Well, above him was this kid named Alabama.
Actually, we called him Sugar Bear,
but he was from Alabama.
Sugar Bear was, the lieutenant made sure
one guy in every squad or so had an M-14
because the M-16s were crap.
They were plastic.
We called them Maddie Mattel's.
They would jam in the heat and the rice patties,
and, you know, there were episodes like Liberty Bridge.
I had heard the numbers, if I'm wrong, forgive me, but I was told 48 Marines died there.
And mostly because all their M-16s are Maddie Mattel's jammed.
And they ended up using them just as clubs, just, you know, hand-to-hand.
But anyway, so we didn't trust that, Maddie Mattel.
It was plastic, you know.
We trained through all our training with an M-14.
And at the last minute, they throw us these little plastic guns
and say, go to Vietnam with this.
So one guy would carry an M-14 in case these M-16s jammed.
Well, you know the sound.
You know, you can tell the sound.
You know more about guns than I do.
And so we could hear that.
I knew it was an M-14 firing through my poncho.
And sure enough, it was Sugar Bear.
Was the only one who woke up quickly?
as these guys went down through this trail beneath him.
And he had shot the guy, but he wasn't dead.
And he rolled down the hill on top of me, and then it was being him.
And so, flash forward about 10 years ago,
I go to a big party in St. Pete, given by a doctor, and he was wealthy.
And he would have these big, huge parties once a year,
and he would hire old rock and roll bands.
He hired the young rascals,
Felix Cavalary and the young rascals to this party.
I ended up meeting Felix Cavalery,
and I told him this story.
Yeah, I knifed a guy to your song in the midnight hour,
and he goes, oh, oh, God, he goes,
I got to hear this story.
So we spent the night, me telling him this whole story,
but it was his favorite story about that song from that point on.
We became kind of friends, but it's a true story in the midnight hour.
So to this day, every time I hear that song, I mean, I, you know, I'm back in NOM, man.
My mind is back in NOM.
I'm an old man, but some things just don't change.
Wow.
Can I ask a question?
Yeah.
Why does the officer bother you?
Why does it what bother me?
The officer.
The officer?
Oh, no, I, I, I, lieutenant.
Did you say, my lieutenant?
Oh, I liked that guy.
No, I'm not talking about him.
The officer that she killed.
That you went to go see in the grass.
Forgive me, I've lost, I'm not sure.
Tell me again, let me.
We had just spoken about it, and I had asked if you want to talk about the first time
you had to kill somebody.
Oh.
And you'd brought up an officer.
Yeah, he was, I don't know, I guess
I remembered.
I remembered it was an officer.
You know, we didn't, I mean, you went
killing officers every day, you know,
usually it was just peons like me.
Yeah, I think
I think because I stayed around
the body so long.
You know, I, I think
because I had to stay around that body
longer than normal.
And yeah,
it...
I think that's why,
you know, I don't know, maybe just because
it was the first time I saw.
I mean, I had been in
firefights, but you know, you know,
you go out, you find some dead bodies,
you don't know if you got them. I mean, it...
Yeah.
This one I knew, and...
It's different.
Yeah, it's different. It's different.
It's different.
Yeah.
we had some crazy episodes.
I shot a girl up that
once again, we just had
about 20 guys, about 20 Marines, and
I don't know, I don't know what we were doing
that, but we were walking way up in the mountains
and the words coming back that we're near the Ho Chi Men Trail.
Well, you know, I'm hoping
the rest of the battalion's out there somewhere
because 20 guys, you know, there's a lot of
A lot of gooks on the Ho Chi Men Trail.
So, but we came across, we're going up the steep hill, and we came across this
guy who'd been left behind, an NBA soldier.
Well, the guy, they ran into him up at the front of the line.
First, our point man comes across him, and, you know, a butt strokes the guy and kicks him back
to NL all the way down to the hill.
Marines are kicking this guy back down the hill.
And he comes to me, so I didn't hit him.
He was already a mess, but he had been left behind.
He wasn't, you know, been wounded.
His foot was all infected.
And I don't know if it was from a wound or the jungle, you know.
And they had left this guy behind, but we knew they were going to come back for him.
So we, you know, we set up an ambush and it was, I mean, I remember this, honestly,
you know, if I was a good painter, I could paint this.
But it was steep hills, and then there was a little flat area in a little mountain, a stream,
going through this little flat grassy area and heavy woods everywhere else.
But there's one little open area in this stream, and the trail went through this,
and right along that side of beside that stream.
And we sat up on a hill beside it.
We got up on this hill, had an open fire down on this thing.
And I sat the gun up, looking down on this trail waiting for these guys to come back to get that guy.
And sure enough, these little pith helmets, you know, start ditty-bopping out of the bush,
and we'd get them in the open.
And we just open fire, blew them away.
You know, I hit a few of them with the 60.
and, you know, 60 does, it'll put a good size hole in people, you know.
I mean, it made a mess out of people a lot of times.
But a lot of times, you know, people live through incredible crap.
I know one of your guys would show me a guy over there that was shot 20 times or something
and lived, you know, you never know.
So I, after this, during this battle, they were like water bucks.
I mean, really, you're like roaches.
they weren't going to stay around in a fight.
They never did.
And they're gone into the woods.
But one by one, they keep coming out of the woods back into the open.
They're all trying to get to this one guy.
This true story, they're trying to get to this.
We realized it was this one gook laying half in the stream and half out that I had hit.
And they're all trying to get to this guy.
And every time they come out in the open, you know,
we'd kill them.
And finally, it's over.
And we go down to check the bodies.
And we're kicking them over, and we kick over this one in this, laying in the stream,
half in the stream, half out, and kick that pith helmet off.
And it's a girl, it's a beautiful girl.
She's a beautiful Asian girl, beautiful long hair falls out.
And she's pretty.
pretty girl, you know, and, you know, we haven't seen a girl in a long time.
So, and she's alive.
She's alive?
She's alive.
And her eyes pop up in.
And she, she starts saying all that.
Well, Chan had been sent to, because I told you he was brilliant, they sent Chan to, I think it was called
S-5 school or something like that, S-2 school, some S-school to learn the Vietnamese language.
so he could help interpret when we got prisoners and stuff.
So Chan knew a little bit of Vietnamese now.
He had learned enough to figure out some stuff.
And so she keeps saying the same thing, you know, over and over.
And so, hey, Chan, what's she saying, man?
And he goes, she's saying, Marines, Marines, you're evil.
Marines are devils.
Marines are devils or something like that.
You know, something like that they'd been told about Marines.
And the neat part of the story is, after that shootout was done,
we're real close to the Ho Chi Men Trail that everybody said so.
And I already, I mean, you don't have to, you know when you're an engine country.
I mean, nobody has to tell you, this is a real dangerous zone here.
I mean, you'd see where they'd worn down a path where they were even pulling.
you know, box carts full of crap, you know, and, you know, bicycles loaded down with ammo.
And, you know, you could tell.
And we were in a place where there were a lot of NBA.
And we only got 20 Marines, if that many.
We called in a chopper to come get this wounded girl.
Now, there's huge trees, this one little open area, you know, where we got them.
but all around it's these giant trees.
And here comes, it's Jolly Green that usually would carry 105s, you know, one of those great big choppers.
And usually you don't use that for, you know, medevacs, but I don't know if that's all they could get.
I don't know if it's because of where we were.
But Jolly Green shows up and starts lowering the basket to get this girl out.
And we rescued this girl.
And she's cursing us and doing everything.
saying stuff about us the whole time.
The corpsman did what he could, patch her up.
We got her in this basket,
and that chopper almost crashed.
It's hitting the treetops and everything,
trying to hover and get this thing out.
We could hear artillery.
You know, you could hear, I mean, we know we're in a bad zone.
I always, I think of that, and, you know, you come home
and the Americans are calling you a bunch of baby killers and this and that,
and you go, if only they do, we risk all those Marines to get this wounded girl out of there.
We risk everybody's life.
And I know it, and the guys with me knew it.
And that chopper pilot, those guys, crap, they're hitting tree limbs and stuff.
I mean, they could have gone down at any time.
And they didn't take off.
And they got that girl out of there.
And I don't know if she ever lived, but we tried.
And I always remember that.
And I always, when we talk about girls in infantry units, I'm real against girls in infantry units.
I won't change.
I know I'm old.
Maybe that's it.
But I'm against that.
And I watched that wasn't the only time.
I saw it another time where there was an NBA nurse with, and this girl was probably an NBA nurse.
You know, she didn't even have a weapon, I don't think.
But we had a
We ran into a bunker
And we
It was an NVA
We just saw three
Three go in this bunker
And
Of course we were open fire
We move up on it
Start throwing frags
And
And
Frags are coming back out
They're throwing them back out before they go off
You know
But finally
You know
flipping in.
And anyway, finally, there's no way they could be alive.
And so we sent a guy in to pull out the bodies,
and he didn't come back out.
The smoke from the grenades, it got him.
And so we dragged him out.
It sent in another guy, and he starts dragging out the bodies.
Well, he only dragged out two bodies.
We saw three go in there.
And eventually, we know there's...
a third one in there. We don't know it, you know, and we couldn't find it. And finally, I think it was
Corporal Houston. Corporal Houston. It was another brave guy. I can tell you a story about him, too.
But Houston goes in, and there were wood planks inside this bunker, and they had taken, it was a
girl, and they buried her under the wood planks so she could survive the grenades. And he found her,
he drags her out. Well, she didn't really survive. And her. And her.
skull is cracked open and we're in we're in combat we can't we can't get any we can't get anybody to
it's way too late to try to save her and so and you can literally see her brains you know from the
concussion there's skulls cracked up and we can see the brains and i mean she no way she was
going to live and that's why i titled it mercy killing but it doesn't matter you never forget that
you never
so somebody said
hey you know come on
put her out of her misery man
you know because she's gasping and everything
you know but she's still gasping
and so a guy
shot her with an M16
a round or two
and we're ready to walk away
and but we've got to
search the bodies for papers
so
she didn't die
and then somebody
hit me and I you know
This is where I, this is, this is where, like knife and the guy, you know, some of this,
I think my mind tries to protect me.
We don't have to go here if you.
Yeah, you know.
And so, yeah, I don't, I don't, I remember somebody hit me and saying, shoot her with a 45, you know, shoot her with a 45.
You know, Matt even tells, shoot her with a 45.
And, of course, machine gunner, right, I cared to.
to 45 and uh um yeah so you live with that uh you know you don't i don't forget that one and uh 30 years later
at the big red memorial thing when when they're giving him the bronze star 30 years late and all
that stuff a bunch of the guys showed up and uh one of the guys was uh uh sergeant oh crap hey he's in that
he's in guns up there's a picture of him holding the flag
from Way City. It'll come to me, but anyway,
Desartes was there, and he
pulls out at this reunion. You know, we're having a few beers
in a hotel, kind of
trying to come down from a pretty emotional time.
And I had to give a speech at Reds High School
and tried to tell what he was, who he was. These kids knew
nothing. But anyway, so now we're trying to come down, drink a couple of beers
and see if we can chill. And
Stacey Watson, Sergeant Stacey Watson.
So Sergeant Stacey Watson goes,
he opens, he had a little briefcase or something with him,
and he goes, do you remember this gunner?
And he, he's got that girl.
He had to search the bodies that day.
He had her full ID.
And I mean, it's a full ID.
And he made copies of it.
I've still got it.
I don't know if that's morbid, but I do.
But with her name,
where she was born.
I mean, all these details,
a full ID on this girl that we had to kill.
And boy, that one, you know, that one sent me,
that one sent me real in after that.
And that's, you know, I, real close to that is when they,
you know, they found out I, all my records have been blown up.
A 122 Chinese rocket had hit.
hit ANWa combat base.
And for those who don't know,
122 is about the size of a telephone pole.
I mean, it's a big old freaking rocket.
And it hit the record shack at ANW
and killed all the guys in the record shack
and blew up all our records.
Well, I...
There'd been a shoot-down in a graveyard,
and it's okay, Jolly.
Let's take a break.
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please support our show and tell them we sent you what do you think son
anyway it's been a pretty pretty big shootout in this graveyard and i do want to tell you about that
because it's it's another incredible hero i mean i think he was probably the bravest guy i i knew
through the whole war and i knew some i knew some guys that you could make a movie about i mean
they were, these guys were, some of them were like, I mean, Swift Eagle, we had a gunnery, Sergeant
Gunnery at McDermott. He'd been put up for the Medal of Honor. I mean, he, and he didn't
get it because he hit, he punched an army officer and they knocked it down to a silver star.
Anyway, I mean, these guys were warriors, man, and, I mean, way, they all did way more
than me. But anyway, I, this, this, this graveyard incident, uh, they'd
I found out I'd been put up for the Silver Star.
They told me that night, you know,
they'd seen something I did,
and they wanted to put me up with the Silver Star.
And I, you know, 30 years passed.
Wars way over, but I always wondered about it.
You know, was that true, you know,
because all the guys came up and told me.
And so 30 years later,
they find out all the records have been blown up.
And so, you know, I looked up
the old gunnery sergeant,
and I didn't know him.
And it was Gunny Researcher Portner.
And he was the, I knew my company Gunny was McDermott.
So I thought it was him who put me up for it, but it wasn't him.
But it was Portner.
So I got a hold of Portner.
He lived in Virginia.
And I said, Danny, I don't know if you're going to remember this, you know.
And I said, but I told him the story.
I said, do you remember the graveyard that night, you know, when the Undemstock got killed
and Sunny got hit 11 times.
I said, do you remember what?
And he goes, I remember every minute of it.
And I said, well, look, the guys told me you put me up for a Solar Star.
And she said, I did.
So, well, okay, well, I never got it.
You know, and I just always wondered, was it true?
You know, and I thought it ended there.
But when he found out the records of him blown up,
and listened out, they found out, Pat McDermic,
the guy who saw me in Jacksonville,
and the one our push-ups and the backflips to get in the Marine Corps.
He got shot that night in the graveyard.
And so he wanted a Purple Heart.
And he still lived in Jacksonville, and he wanted a Purple Heart license tag.
Because they'd just come out with the Purple Heart license tags.
And he wanted one.
And they wouldn't give him one.
And he goes, and he goes, he shows him the bullet hole.
And he goes, it's not on your DD-214.
Well, nothing was on our DD-214s.
Crap, I didn't have anything.
I had good conduct.
I think.
I had nothing, you know, nothing.
So, so he says, I got shot, you know, and then when he, August 3rd, 68, I can tell
you, you know, well, he started the investigation that found out that all the records
have been blown up.
Oh, shit.
And because of Pat McDermott wanting that Purple Heart license tag, he, he's the reason
I got the Silver Star, you know, because McDermin, I mean, Gunner found out about it.
And one thing led to another.
Gunny Portner wrote the whole thing up again.
Other guys
doctorily
wrote up a thing
about it and others did. They're all dead
now. But Portner died
two weeks after rewriting me up for that.
And so I got it.
But
that
particular night,
that
bringing back
that getting the Silver Star, you know,
All that stuff comes back on you.
And then I go to, that's when Big Red,
they gave him the bronze star.
He deserved a silver star way more than Johnny Clark.
He deserved a freaking metal of honor.
But anyway, all that happened,
and we went to that reunion,
and that's when he shows me the picture of this girl we had to kill,
and kind of sent me over the edge.
Why do you think he showed you that?
Oh, we all have been having it.
We had a few beers and, you know, and I don't know.
Some guys handle it better than others.
And he was his job to search all the bodies.
And that's how he had the flag that we read,
the Fifth Marines raised over the Citadel at Way City.
He still had it.
I got a picture of it in guns up, him with the flag.
But, yeah, he didn't mean anything bad by it.
I don't, I'm not mad at him about it, but it, yeah.
I kind of, you know, I was diagnosed with.
severe combat fatigue.
And that was a rough ride sometimes.
You know, all my hair fell out one night.
And up to that point, they had diagnosed it with mild combat fatigue.
And then I went to the VA and I said, hey, I'd catch something in nomad.
All my hair fell out in one night.
And, you know, my wife's screaming.
And I'm freaking out.
And I said, oh, you've been misdiagnosed.
You have severe combat fatigue.
So, yeah, it was, it's been a bumpy ride at times, you know, it really has.
All your hair fell out in one night.
Pardon?
All of your hair fell out in one night?
Yeah.
I've never heard of that.
Well, it grew back.
You know, it was, it was a shock.
I mean, you know, I don't know.
I don't know why your body does that.
But, yeah, I'd gone through, I couldn't get out of nom.
You know, it's when I first came home.
I was like 20, 21 years old.
I don't, yeah, maybe 21.
I didn't even know if I was 21, but around there.
And here's what made it really devastating to me at the time.
I mean, it crushed me.
That was when, do you remember the musical hair?
No?
Hair, beautiful hair.
Anyway, long hair became this incredible rage in America in the early 70s.
And there was a giant musical called Hair.
And I think they made a movie out of it even.
But anyway, hair became this.
Everybody had long hair.
And I didn't like that.
You know, I'm a long hair guy.
But everybody had long hair.
And so if you didn't, I already came home looking, you know, here I've got a Marine Corps
haircut.
So I already looked out of it.
And you don't fit in with all your friends because now you're 20 years older than
them, even if you're the same age.
And so you don't fit in anyway.
But now all your hair falling out one night.
And it was shocking.
You know, it really threw me over the edge there for a while.
And, and, and, but the VA, you know, oh, yeah, they diagnosed severe, you got severe combat fatigue.
But anyway, enough of that.
I, uh, but all that came about from Pat McCreary wanting a Purple Heart license tag,
the Silver Star and all that stuff.
It all came out of that.
But that night that I, that I got that Silver Star license tag, I, that I got the Silver Star.
it was that night in the graveyard,
I wrote that story because of a guy,
a kid named Undumstock.
We had a kid with us that was so terrified, Sean.
He, we don't know, nobody could figure out how he got through boot camp.
I didn't exaggerate boot camp.
It was hell.
So we didn't know how he got through boot camp,
but somehow he got through.
He was a Hollywood Marine.
I know that boot camp's easier.
the Paras Island.
So he got through Hollywood Marine, but he got through boot camp.
He was so scared that if we go on an ambush, you could hear his teeth chattering.
And you can't shake.
He would shake.
And he would make noise.
And he would urinate on himself all the time.
Now, we all smelled horrible anyway, but, you know, that makes it even worse when somebody,
you're in a hole with a guy and he's peeing all the time, you know, all over you.
But he was absolutely terrified and shouldn't have been there.
And it became obvious.
You go out on an ambush or an LP with this guy.
And, you know, he's just making noise shaking.
He's going to get everybody killed.
So we, the lieutenant finally knew and came to him.
So we're going to give you an out.
We called him Cowboy.
He was from Oklahoma.
And we called him Cowboy.
and he had his out from Vietnam.
Now, look, a lot of the guys at that point,
they weren't letting us win the war.
We knew that.
It was clear they weren't going to let us win the war.
They weren't going to let us ever go across that river
and invade the north.
You know, none of that was ever going to happen.
We were just going to play this stalemate game
and ended up like Korea.
And that doesn't do anything for the guy's morale.
So you come to a bunch of guys to put it,
to put in a tour, maybe two tours, some of these guys.
And you say, okay, here's your ticket home.
Back to the world.
We don't let you go back to the world.
That a lot of guys would get me out of here.
You know, I did my time.
I'm ready to go home.
And here's a guy who's the most terrified Marine I ever saw, I ever met.
And he tells a lieutenant, I ain't going home.
to all the Marines go home.
Fuck, man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, flash forward.
They put him with my gun team.
And that's a funny story.
They put him with my gun team.
I got hit again.
And I was coming back to the unit.
And they were flying me back from a hospital.
And they tried to land me with the guys.
And the guys were under,
real intense fire. They were in a big shootout. And so they couldn't get me, the chopper couldn't
bring me in. And so they dropped me on an artillery base. And so it was all these, they were Marines.
It was a Marine artillery base. One, I think there were mostly 105s. It might have some one-five-fives,
but it was, this arty base, these guys live behind barbed wire and bunkers and, you know,
and various grunt units down there in the jungle to keep you.
people away from this Artie base, but it still is no picnic. They got hit and stuff. I'm not saying
these guys, but they lived a different life than the grunts out in the bush. And I, I never saw,
you know, if you even smoked a cigarette in the bush with the guys I served with, you might get
yourself killed. I mean, there were some mean people. They might kill you for something. You know,
you're risking their life and everybody's life.
So you just didn't do crap like that, you know?
And the idea of smoking pot, you know, I came home and everybody's going,
oh, how good was the pot over there?
I'm going, you've been watching too much TV, bro.
I don't know.
You've been watching the Air Force over there or something.
Because, no, there weren't no pot where I was.
And so I landed on this artie base.
And I'm still 18 years.
salt. I've never smoked pot. I don't even know what it was. If I saw it, I wouldn't even know what it was.
So, uh, the chopper drops you off with these arty guys to try to, we'll come back and get you,
you know, when the heat goes down on your unit. And I say, oh, okay. So I get off and I'm standing
alone as like a guy in a desert, you know, because they're all in their bonkers. So I, finally,
I see one of them come out. I think he had a Hawaiian shirt on.
And he comes out there.
He goes, hey, come on.
So I go, and I plod over to this bunker.
And they go down in, and they've got like beads over their bunker and stuff.
You know, like a little door.
And I go down in the bunker.
They've got music playing, you know, the Armed Forces Radio Networks on.
And they're drinking.
They got whiskey.
And they're smoking pot.
They had pot.
and they offered me some,
and I, you know, I've never smoked.
And they said, hey, you might go back out in the bush
and get killed tomorrow, man.
At least know what pot tastes like.
Okay.
So I tried it.
And then I get stone.
You know, I'm stone.
And now they're giving me whiskey, shots of whiskey.
And I'm thinking, this is a pretty good way to spend the war.
I think I'll, I think, I'm just going to sign up for artillery here.
Well, about that time, I hear this scream and, hey, where's Ed Grunt?
His rides here.
And I go, oh, God.
So I stagger out of this bunker in a, like, oh, no, this is going to be bad.
And I get over to this chopper, and I'm thinking, oh, my God, get in the chopper.
You know, and I'm like hanging out thinking, I hope I don't throw up in the chopper.
And they lift off and they bring me back to my unit.
And I'm thinking, well, the shootout's over.
You know, they'll drop me in.
They're in a perimeter.
Shootout wasn't over.
So this chopper comes in and there's all kinds of fire.
And there's bullets smacked it through this chopper.
And they let me out.
And I'm like, I'm half buzzed.
And I'm standing in the middle of a shootout.
And the Marines are all firing around the perimeter.
And I'm standing in the oven.
And the gun, he's going, get down, you idiot.
You know, and so I, where's my gun to you?
And he said, your gun's over there, Clark, take over the gun.
So I make it back to my gun.
Well, it was during that firefight that, you know, I finally have time to square away
because it went on for a while.
And so they, I mean, we had to call in phantoms.
And they're dropping napalm.
Oh, geez.
couple hundred yards outside our perimeter, you know.
I mean, it's not a perimeter like a build-up area.
We're just in an open area, you know, we're behind trees and dug some holes, foxholes,
you know, but we've got a perimeter set up.
And so, but about 200 yards out in front of me, a lot of the fire's coming from.
And so I got a pinpoint, we're calling in napal, man, over there, and the lieutenant tells me.
So I show them where the napole.
And just the second I open up to show them where it's at, man, these phantoms ripped by.
I mean, you could see the pilots.
They're so low.
You know, and that sound.
And you see these canisters tumbling real slow.
And then suddenly it all goes up in flames.
And, of course, you know, Marines are cheering.
This is great, you know.
And a couple of gooks ran out of it on fire.
And so we shot them.
But this went on for a while.
this big shootout.
And well, later on, we're not going anywhere.
Clearly, we're not going anywhere.
And nobody's coming to save us.
So we just hunkered down, you know.
And so I, and choppers can't get in.
You know, that chopper almost got shot down.
So nobody's coming.
So we've been there.
This is going on for hours.
And Chan and I are behind this tree that's been,
knocked down and we're behind this tree and we got a hold I got and he says so uh you want some coffee
and I said oh man I really need coffee he says yeah you smell like you need coffee
and I go well it wasn't my fault it was he's already guys you know and he goes yeah all right
let's just so we you know break out a C ration can and we'd take a C ration can you know we
had these old C ration cans we punched holes in it and you put a little piece of
C4, plastic explosive, for those who don't know.
So we peed a piece of C4 in the bottom of the can, light it, and heat your food.
So we heated up some coffee.
So we're sitting back, leaning against this tree, and there's still lead flying over,
but there's nothing we could do.
And I don't have any targets.
Nobody's saying guns up.
So it's like to have some coffee.
And Chan says something funny, and we were always saying something.
I mean, you know how everybody deals with this crap a different way?
And, you know, I'm not pretending we weren't scared or any of that kind of crap.
But you deal with fear your own way and, you know, it's like you can't do anything about it.
Yeah.
So, yeah, yeah, so we're having a cup of coffee.
And he said something funny to me.
And I started laughing because I was still kind of out there.
And the lieutenant and a gunny hear us over there laughing.
and then the word gets around the perimeter
Clark and Chan are having coffee
oh well
pretty soon
pretty soon to Gunny
McNermott we called him Gunny Magdardt we called him
Gunny Magid because he drew so much lead
Gunny Magnet comes sliding in like he's stealing second base
and he's going
what the hell are you guys doing you know
and I said oh Gunny we don't have any targets
you know we're kind of running out of ammo
I thought you're like, I'm drunk, I'm high, and now I'm fucking caffeinated.
Let's go to war.
Just need it.
We want to have a cup of coffee.
And he goes, he goes, oh, gosh.
You know, he says, you know, lieutenant's talking about a section 8 for you, you guys.
And I go, oh, man, it's not that bad.
So, flash forward after all this is over, here's Undenstock, the kid that's so terrified.
And the gunny and the lieutenant walk him over to us.
You know, the shootouts over, and they walk him over to me and Chan, and they said,
listen, we're going to put him in with your gun team.
Yeah, you need another guy anyway.
And, of course, a machine gun team is supposed to be five guys.
A lot of times it was just me.
You know, I didn't even have an A-gunner sometimes.
So now we have three guys with this kid, you know, being dropped in.
And so that was good news.
But once we realized it was him, we're going, oh, God, you know, he's so terrified.
You know, this is going to be rough.
But then the lieutenant came and told him, he said, look, I'm putting him with you guys to see if you can make him laugh.
See if you can chill him out a little bit.
Otherwise, I've got to send him home.
And so, Chan and I took him in and tried to mother him a little bit.
and started giving him Bible passages.
And we started teaching him the Bible a little bit.
Well, we gave him a, there's a verse in there.
It's out of Romans.
I think it's Romans 8.
This is where I get mad at myself.
I should know these verses.
And normally I do.
I just a little excited about being on the show and stuff.
But anyway, it was out of Romans 8.
What's it about?
The one about war and famine and pestilence and all that might rise
against you and your parents might, your parents might, you know, dump you, but I never will,
you know, at that verse. And I, and I, I, I, here I got to slow down on the story because I didn't
got to be careful what to say about it. But he, he had problems when he joined the Marine Corps.
That's one of the reasons he joined Marine Corps, because evidently his family didn't, that
They thought it was a joke, him trying to be a Marine, and that he could never hack it.
And anyway, he had some issues, but everybody's got issues with their parents.
I'm not nailing them, but he felt sort of, I think he felt sort of abandoned or something by his family in the sense that they didn't support him.
I don't know all the details, and I'm not going to pretend to.
But I know he needed that verse.
and we prayed with him and we did what we could, you know, to try to, you've got to lean on the Lord here.
You know, all of us are scared.
And he'd say, you clowns aren't scared.
You look at you.
And I said, oh, no.
So this is just the way we deal with it because everybody deals with it differently.
And I go, everybody's scared.
It's guys dying out here, man.
Of course, we're scared.
And we'd tell him, you know, hey, let's just pray about it.
Every time you get like that, you know, we tell him out of prey.
And he started getting a little better.
Well, right before we went into that graveyard, it was a big, big operation.
It was a place called Dodge City in the Arizona Territory.
Outside of Amwa Combat Basin, it looked like Arizona.
That's why they called it the Arizona Territory.
You know, it looked like out in the desert in Arizona kind of looking.
And, but one part of it was called Dodge City.
If you went in there, you were going to be in a shootout.
You always knew it.
Everybody knew it.
Well, we knew when we were doing an op in Dodge City, we knew we're going to see some crap today.
And we did.
But they took him out of our gun team right before that and put him in Corporal Hewtsen's, H-U-T-E-S-O-N,
Corporal Hewtson's squad.
And Corporal Hewtson, he was already a hero in Way City.
I mean, the guy, kind of corporal you want, you know.
I mean, anyway, he, we started off when we made this up,
we started off, we ran into three gooks had come out of the brush,
oh, 50 yards ahead of us, you know, and we saw them.
It was open area up to some brush at trees kind of.
And Sam the Bluperman.
boom, with this blooper, they take off running and he hits one square in the back and he flips,
but he's not dead.
And the other two grab him and they pull him into the trees.
And I shot one and he starts limping in to the trees.
So we know what we've wounded to.
And they go into this tree line.
Well, the whole company, we got a whole company with us this day.
And I guess there were even more than that out there.
but this spot we had Alpha Company, Fifth Marines 1-5,
we're going up to this thing.
And we didn't have, usually we were out there with 20 guys.
This time we got a whole company,
so we knew they're expecting some big crap.
And we get up to that tree line,
and we see them dragging each other into the tree line across.
It's about 75 meters across, and it's graveyards.
And, you know, the Vietnamese graves,
with these little round mounds
that it was
significant
they were sent in the back into the womb
you know when they were buried
you're going back into the womb or something like that
and so anyway
there were little round mounds
a couple of feet off the ground
usually maybe foot and a half
I don't know it depended
and that was
that was the graveyard
but there wasn't any other cover other than that
it was open
and so
they told me
recon by fire
I was ordered out so I
go out in the graveyard and
I recond by fire now at this
point another gunner
had been killed and they gave
Chan his gun so now Chan
and I aren't together
and Chan's got a gun
I got a gun so I sent
Chan out too so me and Chan go out and we just
spray the other tree line
across the graveyard
we just open fire
maybe 100 rounds
and
nobody fires back
so
they send across
Corporal Hewtson's squad
and now his squad
you know he'd
we'd taken some hits
and I forgot how many
guys were in his squad
you know maybe
8 or 10
I don't even maybe
but anyway
they go across
and they're spread out
going to you know
going slowly because it's open area
but they suddenly, when they're halfway out there,
everything opens up.
And we found out later, it was it, we ran into a battalion.
Holy shit.
And, I mean, they had, they had mortars,
they had mortar teams back there.
They had everything.
And three 30 caliber machine guns opened up from fixed position.
They were in bunkers on the other side, spread out, but three of them.
And then there's fire coming from our right flank.
across the graveyard all on these the squad out there because we're still behind the tree line the
rest of the guys and uh and these guys hit the dirt but i saw a kid named sunny uh i saw him get
blown back by uh 30 cow and i just assumed he was dead but then you didn't see anything
well this they kept firing and we got we got orders uh they're screaming hold your fire hold your
fire because if we open fire we're going to hit our own guys they're out in the middle of this graveyard
So, and they're on our side of these mounds trying to hide from all the fire.
And you really couldn't see them.
It's starting to get dark.
It's, and now it's getting late, and it starts raining.
And monsoon rain.
It was a brutal rainstorm starts coming in, but then it eases up.
And now these guys, they open up again, and there's just a ton of fire.
I mean, we're talking, I don't know, you know, a battalion's worth of AK-47s.
And these guys, they, they, they, they.
liked opening up full auto.
You know, they didn't have any fire discipline.
You know, I mean, Marines didn't do that.
If you opened up on full auto, somebody's going to smack you.
So, you know, you only did that.
You didn't have infinite ammo, you know.
But anyway, but these guys, these crazy NVA, they were just everything.
Lead, tracers.
They even threw a couple of satchel charges out in the middle of this graveyard.
So I don't know what they were, their plans were long range, but they were clearly
going to blow stuff up.
But yeah, and here's eight or nine Marines, ten Marines out there in the middle of all this.
So it was horrible, and we keep, we want to open fire and we can't.
I ran down and I ran out in the graveyard and I got on top of one of the mounds so I could shoot over them, you know, without hitting our guys.
And I, you know, I knocked out a 30.
I killed that gun team.
And you knew you killed them because they're traced, their green trace.
went straight up in the sky for a while.
And then I hit another one.
I turned on the next machine gun because you had to knock them out first,
which is what, and everybody, they shot my boots out from under me.
So I was knocked down, and my A-gunner at the time,
he was from Indiana.
He ran out there to grab my boots and dragged me behind the grave mount.
And so, you know, another heroic thing, you know, because it was crazy.
There was so much lead flying.
And then we started taking M79 rounds, blooper rounds, and we know they're not Marines.
They had killed some Marines and took their bloopers, you know, but they were firing out of us from the right flank.
Well, anyway, they, he pulls me and drags me.
We get back back to the tree line.
And, but because everybody tried to shoot me,
Most of the squad was able to get out.
And so this went on, though.
This kept going on.
So it went on all night where this fight's going on all night.
And they start calling in their mortars down.
And we can see the mortar flashes.
But the lieutenant moves the whole company around to the left flank.
And we're behind Rice Petty Dikes.
And we see the muscle flashes of mortar rounds.
Just, you know, I can see the.
And I can see the flashes and I can see the guys.
I can see the NBA soldiers dropping into mortars from the flash.
You can see them standing.
And they're back there in the trees behind us.
There was an old hooch back there that we had originally blown up.
It's where I killed one machine gun team.
Anyway, he wouldn't let me open fire on these guys.
We were trying to not let them know where we were because they were pinpointing our old
position with mortars, just blowing the crap out of it.
So the lieutenant was holding our fire until we got some artillery called in or I don't know what his plans were.
But the rain, the monsoon rain got so heavy that we were literally, you could drown behind these rice patties.
The big dikes were down in the mud, but the water was filling up.
That's how much rain came in.
And so we had finally, in the middle of this mess, we see a guy running.
out of the graveyard towards us. Not where our old position was, but towards us. And I start to
kill it. I mean, I'm going to blow him away. And I see a flash of a mortar going off, and I see his
helmet. It's an American helmet. We had to scream, hold your fire, hold your fire. Nobody shoots him.
And he stands out. He was, whew! And I ran out, tackled him, dragged you back. It was Pat McCrary.
Wow.
The one, yeah, the one who got the Purple Heart License tag, the hard way. Well, anyway, it was Pat
McCrary, and he had stayed out there with Sunny, the one that I thought was for sure dead.
So he comes in and he goes, Sunny's still out there, Sunny's still out there.
And so Gunny Mack, he comes out because, all right, you've got to take us back to him,
but we're going to go get him.
So I went out with him, and we crawled out in the graveyard to try to find Sunny.
And then everybody realizes
Unumstock's not here too
So we got two at least two Marines still out there
So and Corporal Hewtson went out with us too
So we're crawling back into this mess
And we couldn't find him
He wasn't where he'd been left
And because Pat knew exactly where he left him
I mean, you know, he knew exactly where he was
Wasn't there anymore
Well, we didn't know it at the time
but the gook machine gunners came out and dragged him back, dragged his body back up in front of
their gun so that they were waiting for us to come and get him.
And so they, and he said, he thought he was, the next morning, we sweep through, battles over.
And now we've got artillery coming.
We sweep through, though, fixed bayonets.
It's just, you know, and I got no bayonet on that 60-bath.
So we sweep across, sweep with bayonets fixed, and they've deed him out.
So we, but we ended up running into him again later.
But they, we find, we find Sonny, and I assume he's dead.
And we roll him over, and his eyes are swollen shut, you know, like, it looks like a raccoon.
And his eyes suddenly just pop open.
And he goes, oh, my God, you guys won't believe what happened to me last night.
And he starts telling us a crazy tale.
And he had, the gooks had come out, and they came down at him with like a K-bar.
And he thought they were just going to kill him.
They were going to finish him off.
And they cut off his web gear, cut off all of his gear, and took it.
And then they dragged him up in front of the gun and left him.
And he said, I almost drowned.
I was doing everything not to drown because the water was.
rising. It was so much rain. And he lived. That guy lived. He went on to become a Virginia
state senator. Chan went to see him. He actually went to see the guy in Virginia. He still lives
here. Not that many, maybe a couple of years back. So, so Chan went to see him and he's still
alive and well. And he lived through that night. But here's a guy with all these bullet holes who
lives and not very far away was Zundupstock.
He didn't have, we couldn't find a wound on him.
Now later, years later, they told me they did, they found a little shrapnel hole,
but they said that didn't kill him, you know.
But he, at the time, the Corman and Chan, who's way more in a Corman.
He was also handy for that stuff.
He was like a doctor.
They said that, yeah, they, he died.
heart failure. He literally died of heart failure.
Damn.
Didn't have to be out there. Could have gone home.
Shit. Wow.
Yeah.
It's a hell of a night.
Yeah.
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What was your favorite Bible verse while you're over there? Did you have one? Yeah. Well,
I'm afraid it's changed over the years for this reason. My Bible
verse now is Psalm 121. I lift up my eyes to the mountains from where comes my help. My help comes from the
Lord who made heaven and earth. And I know the whole verse, but that's the part that is a big deal
to me. That's a huge deal to me. That took me 14 years to write about it because I didn't know what
God wanted me to do with this, but it was a miracle.
And the story behind it is, you know, I mean, some people would want to put me in a funny farm,
but Christians will hear it and go, yeah, that sounds like God, you know, but it was,
should I tell you? Can I tell you about it? Or should.
Of course.
I was writing a book called Gunners Glory, this one.
And it's about machine gunners, World War II, Korea, Vietnam.
Incredible machine guns.
some great Marines.
And some of the men I ran into were just amazing.
And one, it started off, I ran into a guy named Ted Elliston.
And there was a picture of Ted in this thing.
Ted died a few years back, but Ted was, there's a picture of him carrying an old water-cooled 30 on horseback.
That's what an old saltie was.
He was in the Fifth Marines.
He was a Nicaragua era.
They knew the war was going to start.
He hits Guadalcanal.
His whole story's amazing.
But through Ted, and Ted ran out of ammo on Guadalcanal, ran out of everything.
And had nothing.
A Jap came out of the bush, and it was him and a Jap soldier.
He had nothing.
but a hunting knife.
He didn't even have a K-bar.
His dad had given him a hunting knife,
and he had to kill his chap with a hunting knife.
He still slept with that hunting knife by his bed,
and I still sleep with a K-bar.
Still to this day.
To this day.
There's one by my bed,
there's one on my desk,
and a 45.
I still, yeah, I still do.
But, you know, when this crap happens
in the middle of the night,
I don't sleep good without it, you know.
When I take trips like this and you can't bring a weapon on the plane and stuff,
I don't like that.
I know.
I'm still, I bet you do.
And I, I mean, I'm old, but I could still surprise some people with hand-to-hand combat.
And, you know, I'm not dead yet.
But, yeah, I don't like not being able to go to sleep with something beside me.
Especially now I don't hear good.
somebody can sneak up on you.
And this kind of stuff, you know, I mean,
you don't get over it.
You know, I'll be that way.
And neither did Ted.
Ted was 84.
He slept with his K-bar.
And it was all because of this moment on Guadalcanal
where it was no grenades,
no pistol ammo,
no machine gun ammo,
nothing left.
Yeah, amazing men.
And I got to tell you how I met him,
but him leading me to another
guy. I met him at Hasselm's bookstores where I had my book signings for all my books. It used to be
the oldest bookstore in the southeast in St. Pete, Florida. And fabulous old bookstore. And they,
the guys who ran it told me one time, they knew I was starting this book. And they said,
you know, Johnny, you need to meet Ted. You need to meet Ted. And I said, who's Ted? He says,
Ted, machine gunner, Guadalcanal, Fifth Marines.
He says, you need to meet Ted.
And so I said, I got to meet him. Let's do it.
And so they contact, they said, yeah, he'll meet with you.
They gave me his address.
And they said, look, when you meet him, you're going to notice his right hand is a real mess.
You know, 84-year-old skin.
Mine's getting like that.
but you'll notice his hand is kind of purple and beat up.
And he said, ask him to tell you the story behind that.
And I'm going, oh, I think I'm liking this guy already.
And they said, oh, no, we got to tell you.
He saw a girl.
He thought this guy was roughen up a girl on Central Avenue
in this kind of seedy part of Central Avenue.
And Ted was walking down the street.
He's coming to Hazel's bookstore.
And he thought this guy was being ungentlemanly to this lady.
And he did.
I guess the guy missed a slapter or something.
I don't know what he did.
But Ted goes up to him and says something to him.
The guy mouthed off.
Ted goes, boom, knocked him out, laid him out in the middle of Central Avenue.
Out cold.
Ted had been a boxer and a fighter.
And he was still a big guy, 84, but, you know, still a great big guy.
You wouldn't want to get hit by him.
And this guy found that out.
He dropped a dude at 84?
Yeah, yeah.
He knocked a guy out.
No, I'm telling you, these old Marines, these old Marines, these old China hands and some of these crazy guys from Korea.
And I got some stories.
You wouldn't believe some of these guys.
I mean, they're absolute nut cases.
I just love them.
Got to research at Francis Hugh Colleen, as Irish as the day is born.
played the bagpipes in the face of the Chinese,
the first Chinese human wave assault at Sudogne.
They told him to he was ordered to.
And they shot the bagpipes through his throat.
When he told me his story, he had throat cancer for that.
And he had to write his story to me.
If you read these letters from this old Irishman,
you'll cry laughing.
It's just so beautiful.
He's one of my books, too.
But he's in no better way to die.
I put a lot of stuff about him.
But anyway, in this one, Ted tells me about, yeah, you know, Mitch Page was, he was in the seventh Marines, but he was, he was at Canal 2, and I'm going, Mitchell Page.
Guado, Melo of Honor, and he goes, yeah, I think he did. Yeah, I think he did. Yeah, I think he did. Yeah, I didn't got to Melo Honor, you know, and he was just another guy to him. And he, yeah, he goes, yeah, you know, you need to talk to Mitch. So anyway, I got, I got Ted's story. I get a hold of Mitchell Page.
the short version is this
I see you got a GI Joe
doll up there
Mitchell Page is the Marine
that Hasbro Toys
made the GI Joe doll
in honor of
because of what he did on Guadalcanal
and what he did on Guadalcanal is a little crazy
there was one
big hit where
they caught Japanese barges
unloading troops
and the Japs didn't think
that the Marines would leave
the ridge
Edson's Ridge on Guadalcanal.
They thought they'd stay there and hunker down and try to protect the airfield.
And the Marines, some crazy Marines said,
no, let's go get, let's go out and find them in the jungle.
They went out and they saw them offloading, off barges,
getting into position, I mean, alignment and marching down the beach
where they were going to attack, you know, the Edson's Ridge eventually.
And Ted, they say he could have had, there could have been 600,
Japs killed in this shootout because they had them totally in the open.
And the Marines had dug it on the beach.
They were coming down there.
They said dug it on the beach with water-cooled 30s and the Mahoney gun, which a lot of these old guys were gunsmiths.
Sean, they rigged up a 30-calibur water-cooled to fire.
They said, now this is from them.
They said somewhere between 900 and 1,200 rounds a minute.
Whoa.
Different springs.
They, you know, they were gunsmiths.
They really, they had.
These old Marines were, that was their life.
They, you know, they were, they were real, real tough guys.
Well, this guy named Mahoney had done all this work on these guns before the Jaffs bomb Pearl Harbor.
And they knew it was coming.
And he had them prepared.
Well, these were Mahoney guns.
So that Mahoney gun place is significant in this whole miracle that I was leading up to.
But, so I interview Mitchell Page.
and I
more than once
but my final interview with him
he was on his deathbed
and his wife
Marilyn wouldn't
she wouldn't let anybody talk to him
because he was
he was going down
he was dying and everybody knew it
and
and she let me
she
you know
because I was a Marine gunner
and she knew I was
I was writing this story about him
and so I
she let me interview him. Well, on his deathbed, he told me this story. Now, he had told it to the Gideons
years before, and the Gideons actually put on a little pamphlet about it, but I'd never heard about it.
But Edson's Ridge was a ridge that defended the airfield, Henderson Field.
If we lost Guadalcanal, they say Australia would have fallen.
Guadalcanal was that important at that point in the war.
And a lot of people think, you know, America was dominating the war and nothing to be further from the truth at that point.
You know, we were in major trouble.
Midway, you know, had done a lot, but we never won a ground battle against these guys.
And they were building this, this, they built this Henderson Field on Guadalcanal, and they were going to be able to bomb Australia, and it was for taking Australia.
And they were going to, they would have taken Australia.
We didn't have enough to stop them at that time.
because they were already in
the little islands moving up to Australia
so the Marines had to hold Guadalcanal.
It was really life and death.
I've read old experts that said
that they think the Japs could have made it all the way
past California, maybe as far as Chicago.
I've actually heard, led this stuff.
Yeah, old history accounts.
Have we not stopped them at Guaddo Canal?
So it was critical.
and unless you study history
you know it's just another battle but
it was freaking critical and
so all that was
keeping the Japs off Henderson Field
was this one
this ridge line
and on the other side of the ridge line is the
airfield on this side of the ridge line
is all jungle
deep
thick jungle
the Japs were your tremendous jungle
fighters and they
were coming out of the
coming out of the
of the jungle and hit Nedson's ridge.
And at one point, in a mass attack,
they had almost swamped the ridge.
The Marines had run out of ammo.
They were just getting clobbered.
And we couldn't get any more.
The Jap Navy had sunk a bunch of the U.S. Navy out there.
That's something else.
A lot of people don't study, don't realize.
We lost a bunch of naval ships.
and our Navy couldn't help us on Guadalcanal
because a lot of them got sunk.
Some big, big battles.
I think it was Savo Island or something like that.
Anyway, some big gun, I mean, naval battles out there
where the Navy took some huge losses, a lot of men.
Maybe more men died there than only Guadalcanal.
I don't even know.
So at that point, we were going to lose Guadalcanal.
At one point, a tipping point in this battle for the ridge,
the Marines had the Mahoney guns
and even the Japs could tell by the fire
the rate of fire you could tell by the sound of it
that wasn't a normal water
watercool 30 that thing you know
it sounds like it would be like well it's like the first time
I heard Puff the Magic Dragon
when he fired those mini guns
there wasn't a machine gun sound it was that
well I don't I'm imagining it must have sounded
you know somewhat similar
because it didn't sound like so the Japanese
knew these guns were bad news, and they were on the receiving end of it. But at one point,
every single Marine machine gunner had been killed or wounded and knocked out. All the guns,
all the machine guns were out of action. There was one machine gun down at one end of the ridge
that could cover the whole ridge. If the Japanese got to that gun before Mitchell Page got to that gun,
they could turn that Mahoney gun on the ridge.
They would control the ridge.
They would have won the battle of Guadalcanal.
This is what he told me.
Other guys have told me that.
I trust him.
So at that point,
Mitchell Page is in a race to get to that Mahoney gun.
He sees it.
A Jap soldier sees it.
The Jap has a Nambu, 30-round clip.
The Nambu machine gun.
It's got a 30-round clip, banana clip.
The Japs carrying it trying to race to that Mahoney machine gun.
Mitch gets there first, kicks the dead Marines out of the way and off the gun,
because they were draped all over the gun.
Gun's still in action.
It hadn't been blown up or anything.
He gets behind the gun.
He leans forward to chamber around.
You know, the old 30s, you had to put some weight in that.
And he's going to lean forward to chamber around and open fire on this Jap before it's between him and the Jap.
the Japanese soldier
drops to the ground
point-bank range
this is what Mitch says
point-blank range
you know
10-20 yards
I mean point-blank range
drops to the ground
opens up with his nambu
Mitch
this is what he told me on his deathbed
I absolutely believe him
now I really believe him
now that God's done
something similar to me
as he goes to lean forward
and chamber around he said
I was frozen in place.
He said, I could not move front, back, sideways.
He said, I couldn't do anything.
And he said, but Johnny, I felt at total peace.
I wasn't scared.
I knew this guy was going to put 30 rounds through my temple.
I wasn't scared.
I couldn't do anything about it.
And for some reason, I had absolute peace.
It was not, I was, it's like a tractor beam, you know, like a Star Wars guy.
He couldn't do anything.
And he said, the Jap opens fire.
He got burned from here down to here with 30 rounds going under his chin and all down here.
Didn't get hit.
Had he been able to lean forward and chamber the round, he was dead.
But as soon as he fired his last round, he said, I was released.
He said, totally released.
Boom, fell forward, chambered around, killed the Jap soldier.
The battle's still going on, but not in this sector.
Another part of the ridge, but he turns the Mahoney gun now on the Japs.
They're in retreat now.
They've beat them back a little bit.
Later, he had to then lead a bayonet charge to drive the last ones off into the jungle again.
But he goes at when the shooting is stopped, it's still dark.
I mean, your fliers are going up.
But he goes over and he said, I got behind that Nambu, kicked the Japs soldier down the hill,
and he says, got behind that Nambu and looked.
He said, there's no way he could possibly miss me with 30 rounds.
And he goes, God, how could this possibly happen?
I mean, how could this possibly happen?
You had to freeze me, you know, he's talking to God.
Well, as he's doing this, he's pleading with God.
He had his little finger, had been almost severed in the bandette fight.
So he's bleeding all over the place.
So he notices it.
He goes, gets his pack and tries to get his first aid kit out to wrap up this hand.
And he said, as soon as I picked it up, my Bible just fell out.
He had a, like, I don't know if it was a Gideon.
I guess it was a Gideon, but he had a little Bible.
He said, it fell out.
And it fell open.
And I'd been asking, God, how?
How could this possibly happen?
You know, tell me you how.
And it falls open to a page.
He said there wasn't any wind, but the pages blew open to a certain page.
And he said, he said, one passage lights up.
He said, it was like gold.
And it would look bigger than all the other letters on the page.
It was big and bright.
It showed so bright.
He said, it scared the crap out of me because it was giving away my position.
So there was still japs out there, and this was like a light.
And he reads it.
Proverbs 3-5
Trust in the Lord with all your heart
And do not lean on your own understanding
In all your ways acknowledge him
And he will lead your path
That was the verse his mother sent him to war with
That was her favorite verse
Later
Yeah but his favorite verse
Yeah I know
So he said I didn't even tell the other guys
He said if I'd have told him this
they would have thought I had shell shock
because it wasn't combat fatigue
you know it was shell shock
he said they would have thought I had shell shock
and you know they would have thought I was nuts
they wouldn't have believed it
so he said I didn't even tell the guys this
I didn't tell anybody until years later
and he did tell the Gideons this
and so
his favorite verse though
is also Psalm 121
I lift my eyes to the mountains
from whence cometh my help
my help comes from the Lord who made heaven and earth
that was his favorite verse
and that part of
that part of this story
I mean flash forward
Mitchell Page died
soon after my interview with him
and soon after he told me this
all about this and
I go forward about three years
well I was working on another book and I
you know I finish a book I never look at it again
because if I do I hate it and I want to rewrite it
so I don't even
look at him again. And that book was put away. And I mean, I admired the heck out of Mitchell Page.
Like I said, every time I see a G.I. Joe doll, you know, that's Mitchell Page. He got some ribbon for that, too.
G.I. Joe, he's a Marine. But that's, anyway. So, oh, he caught some crap over that. But anyway, so he,
years later, I was going through a rough ride. It was soon.
somewhere near when all this crap happened at the big red thing.
And I was, you know, I don't like to call it.
I don't like PTSD.
I don't like the term.
So I didn't mind when it said I had combat fatigue.
I don't know.
Maybe it's just me.
Maybe I'm old.
But I didn't mind that term.
You can say that.
This PTSD thing, I don't like this lump, you know, rape cases and car wrecks and everybody, you know, into a PTSD file.
And I don't think it's the same.
And I don't like it.
So I didn't mind that, but PTSD.
So I guess I was, you know, they said I had 100%.
And I guess I did.
So I was going through a tough span.
We have a Bible study at my house all the time.
We'd have a taekwondo at my school.
And then at taekwondo and judo school.
And afterwards, on certain days, we'd have a Bible study class.
And so we do it at my house.
Everybody go to my house and we do it.
And I was just having a rough time.
I was just, you know, and my pastor came.
He came to the Bible study.
And I talked to him.
After everybody left, I told him the situation.
I said, hey, you know, not sleeping good.
You know, a lot of remembering stuff, not forgiving myself for stuff.
he said, I'm doing a study on time alone with the Lord.
He goes, Johnny, it's changed, Phil, Phil Ingleman, it's his name, Phil and Sue Engelman.
He said, Johnny is changing Phil, it's changing me and Sue's life, cutting everything off
and just spending time alone with the Lord.
He said, you need to go spend time.
When was the last time you spent time alone with the Lord is what he asked me?
And I said, not since I was a little kid, back.
in the mountains or West Virginia, I'd go up on a hill, you know, but I said, not since I was a little
kid. And he goes, that's what you need. So you need to go spend time alone with the Lord.
And I said, well, what does that mean to you? Well, I didn't really know either. And I said,
I turned to Nancy and I said, Nancy, let's go get a mountain cabin or something somewhere.
And he goes, no, no, no, Johnny, not with Nancy.
Just you.
Take your Bible.
Go spend time alone with the Lord.
Nobody else.
Not your family, not your kids.
Go spend time alone.
And I said, gosh, you know, one of my senior students had moved away.
He was a Taekwondo master, and he'd moved to North Carolina.
He's a professor at Montreat College.
Brilliant guy, you know, really brilliant.
and a strong Christian.
And he, I called Tony up and I said,
Tony, here's what Phil told me, I'd like to try it.
Can you think you can find me a cabin or something in North Carolina?
Or just, you know, go be alone, something out in the mountains, something out in the hills.
He goes, that's really weird.
He tells me these people, he's a doctor from Duke,
and they own like a little mountain getaway.
and they asked Tony and Jane, his wife,
to take care of it while they were gone,
and they'd rent it out and stuff once in a while.
And he says, you know, they're asking us to take care of this place.
And that's unbelievable.
You can go there.
And, well, how much is it?
I don't have much money.
And he said, no, no, it's free.
We're taking care of it.
They won't care of it.
So I said, I'm on my way.
So I hop a plane, go to Asheville, take a ride out to Black Mountain, North Carolina.
He sends me out to it.
It's Montreat, North Carolina, right outside of Black Mountain.
And so I rent this little, I don't rent it.
I stay in this cabin.
I mean, it was pretty rugged.
It was pretty rugged cabin.
This was, I mean, there were spider webs.
You know, they have like keeping this place up a whole lot.
But it was perfect.
It's just what I needed.
and but I haven't been out in the woods alone since nom really and I once again I didn't have my
I didn't have my 45 I didn't have a pistol I didn't have a K bar and uh you know out the wood
woods sounds so I it started I started feeling a little antsy and I um called Nancy and I
tell my daughter calls she's all freaking out my daughter Bonnie Kaye
she calls and what are you doing dad i don't know if that's healthy for you what are you doing out there
she's already come to me and said is is PTSD catching dad because i'm worried i'm catching it
i said oh god honey i hope not so she she knows she knows the story of her dad and uh but here i am
out to mountains called dancy up and i said you know i've been here at a night or two now
And I said, I keep hearing noises outside the cabin.
And I'm not getting anything done.
You know, I'm not, I'm just uncomfortable.
I'm kind of always watching my flanks.
You know, six, nobody there.
You know, I don't have a perimeter.
I don't feel good out here without a perimeter.
And so I said, so, yeah, I set up some pungy pits.
So I set up some pungy pits around this cabin.
But just two-by-fours with nails, six-penny nails, you know, sticking up.
And so they'll yelp.
I'll know somebody's here and, you know, have some kind of defense ready.
And it made me feel a little better.
What I found out later, it was bears.
Bears were banging stuff around that cabin.
And I didn't know.
I mean, you know.
But I'm still, finally, the third day, I'm out on the port.
having a cup of coffee, doing my Bible study, you're going to read my Bible, and feeling, okay, feeling better.
You know, now I can really spend some time alone with the Lord and not be thinking about anything else.
Well, then the guy who owns the house, he shows up.
He's going to do repairs on the place.
And now I'm going, oh, God.
So he's got saws.
He's got hammers and saucers.
And I go, oh, my God.
I call up Nancy, and I said, Nancy, I, I'm going.
See, I can't believe it.
This is a total failure.
And she goes, Johnny, just take a walk and cool off.
Just take a walk.
You need to just take a walk.
That's it.
I'll take a walk.
So I took off walking from down the hill, from this cabin, through Montreat, up this mountain road.
I don't know.
It's a few miles.
And I just kept walking until I came to a trail.
It's a gray-beard mountain.
It's a hiking trail.
Now, this was back in 2004, I think.
And it wasn't as build up then.
You know, it was really out there a little bit.
So anyway, this mountain trail, nobody's there.
A storm's rolling in.
There's all these warnings.
You know, bring cell phone, bring this, bring water,
watch out for bears, et cetera, et cetera.
Of course, I'm in shorts and a T-shirt.
I just took off walking.
And I didn't even bring my cell phone.
I'm just going to hike.
So I started hiking up this trail, and I went and went, I don't know, a couple thousand feet up.
It's, I think it's like 4,800 feet to the top.
And I'm just hiking.
Well, I had knee surgery not long before that.
I shouldn't be doing this.
But I don't care.
You know, at that point, I don't care.
I'm just, I need to walk.
I need to hike.
I reach a mountain stream, and there's a big rock out in the middle.
And I go out and I jump over and get on this big rock, a stream's going by,
me, you know. I mean, it was beautiful. It's, you know, perfect postcard. There's nobody out there.
I mean, because storms, you know, it's thundering like it's going to rain and, you know, it looks terrible.
And so nobody's there but me. Nobody, nobody's hiking that trail or anything like that.
And I get on the rock and I say a prayer and I ask the Lord, what am I doing here, Father?
come out to a mountain and I've never been in my life.
I mean, what's the point?
I'm not, I don't feel like I'm getting any better.
I feel, you know, still can I ante?
I mean, I don't see any point to this.
There's got to be a reason you'd send me out here, you know, and I'm talking to it.
I'm talking to the Lord.
And then, you know, I start praying and I, and I, it hits me.
What's God's favorite trait?
It's humility.
That's his favorite trait.
He loved Moses.
I know you by name, he told Moses.
When Moses wanted to see him, he said, I know you by name, I will show mercy and compassion
on you, and I will let my goodness go before you, you know, because Moses, like a little kid,
wanted to see God, he wanted to see him.
And it's in Exodus 33.
So, anyway, but I'm on this rock, praying this, and I realized Moses was called the most
Humble man on earth by God.
About the best compliment any human being can get.
And he used Moses, wouldn't you say?
I mean, a pretty big way.
And so I said, humility.
Here I am.
I'm hiking a 4,500 foot mountain.
I just had knee surgery a couple of weeks back.
This is stupid.
This isn't humble.
You know, you're being a jerk.
And I need to learn humility.
I, that's what this is about.
And I said, okay, Lord, I get it, you know.
And I felt like, okay, I got it.
That's like, all this, this whole trip to North Carolina, da-da-da, you know, buying airplane tickets I couldn't afford.
Here's the reason.
And so I start back down that mountain.
And I, I'd gone down 500 feet away from the big rock in the middle of the stream and, I don't know, maybe more.
And it's downhill is harder than going uphill, you know, for if your knees kind of screwed up.
And, you know, I was, I'm having to take these steps and land on the good foot, trying to take pressure off the knee.
And I'm going down and, you know, go over a tree branch, gives you a little step on the trail.
You've been on it.
And I, I, at one point, I, I go to step and I, I was frozen.
I could, I couldn't go anywhere.
Now, I've never, I've told this in a church, but I've never even told this in my church.
I've never talked about this because I know what it sounds like.
And I, you know, and I wouldn't blame anybody for thinking this guy, he does have combat fatigue.
You know, he's a total fruitcake.
I wouldn't blame anybody for that.
And I've hesitated.
I've hesitated to, I've never told him about it.
You know, this was 2004 it happened.
August 26th.
And I've never told anybody
except, you know, my personal friends.
And of course, I told them right after,
I went home and told the Bible study and told them what happened.
But I couldn't move.
I was just,
just like there was no more stepping.
I was just, but
I was like sitting in a park.
I mean, it wasn't uncomfortable.
I was just, you know, just hanging.
And just kind of hanging mid-step almost.
I mean, I wasn't going anywhere, front, back, sideways.
And I didn't even have, I don't even know what I thought.
People have asked me, what did you think?
I don't think I was able to think.
I just, I mean, I just.
Frozen in time almost.
I didn't know what.
My mind froze the law with the rest of me, I guess.
I don't know.
I just stood there, just hung there, mid-step.
Well, then I was released.
How long? I don't know how long I was here. I mean, I have no idea. Could have been two seconds. Could have been 20 seconds. I don't even know. But I was released and I fombed. Now I'm running downhill. I mean, I fell downhill a little bit, took those steps and stopped, jumped around thinking first thought, something had to have held me. There's something behind me. There's nothing there. There's nothing anywhere.
It's just dead silent.
I'm out in the woods alone.
Nobody, black clouds rolling over.
There's nobody out there, man.
And I realized, this is God.
This is Jesus Christ here, man.
So I fell to my knees.
I just fell to my knees.
I said, what do you want for me, God?
And I don't even know if I said that.
I wrote it down, so I can show you sometime.
But anyway, I said,
I just fell to my knees.
And I think I was, you.
What do you want for me, God did?
And in an audible voice, an audible voice, if it was inside my head, it sure didn't sound like it.
It sounded like a voice talking to me.
And it said, Johnny, get out.
Johnny, I want you to walk a little further with me.
If you got a Bible, I'll swear to it.
I believe you.
Yeah.
And I got up.
I couldn't say anything.
I mean, I was so overwhelmed.
I'd think back at that moment, and I go,
God, I wish I could have asked some questions.
I wish I could have said,
tell me how much you love me or something, God.
You know, something.
Yeah, let me hear something good here.
You know, I couldn't say.
I just said, I said, yes, Lord.
And I got up, and I started back up that mountain.
I would have walked, I would have gone to
Canada. I mean, I was just going to go until he stopped me. And I went back up that mountain.
I reached that big rock in the middle of the storm and made it over that, jumped to the other side.
The trail kept on up. I kept going on up. I've taken my kids there. I'm taking my grandkids
to this same spot in about three weeks. We're going, I'm taking my son and my daughter,
I've never seen it either. My wife, we've been back.
two or three times, and she could tell you her feelings about this.
It was, but anyway, I go, keep going, and I'm, I mean, I'm not thinking.
I'm just, I'm going to go until God stops it.
I would have kept going until I fainted.
But I finally, I come to this big boulder on the side of the trail.
There's a big old boulder.
You know, as big as the bottom half of that,
whole bar set there, big.
And somebody has put a big round plaque embedded in the boulder.
And now, I've never been, I've never been there in my life.
I've never been in this place in my life.
Never been to Black Mountain in my life.
So if you, you know, somebody's thinking you knew it was there or something.
Never been this, never been on this mountain in my life.
I've never been to Black Mountain North Carolina in my life.
Montreat, never.
Here's this plaque, and the plaque says,
I lift my eyes to the mountains.
From where does my help come from?
My help comes from the Lord who made heaven and earth.
I knew.
That's what he was leading me to.
I didn't walk any further.
I fell down and worshipped.
Yeah, pretty amazing.
Then I
When this was over
I went back down off that mountain
You talk about a spring in your step
I went down off that mountain
Feeling like okay there's two things going on here
I really have gone over the edge and I am crazy
But I've got us even if I am
I had to tell Nancy and the kids
So I get back to that cabin
Find my phone
Call them up tell them the whole thing
I don't know if you know she thought
my husband's gone crazy, you know.
I don't know what she thought.
Then I get my car and I drive into town and through Black Mountain,
through Montreid, through Black Mountain,
and to where my buddy, Tony Horning, lives.
And he's on his front porch.
And I come out and I'm telling him the whole stuff.
And I mean, I'm a motor mouth.
Tony, my God, you won't believe what happened to me?
And I start telling him all this.
Well, a friend from our church in St. Petersburg had just,
just happened in on Tony and was on the front porch with him.
So now his name's Gary Ripple, and he's the leader of music in our church.
So now I'm telling these two guys who both went to my old church, I'm telling them what happened.
And I don't know what they thought, but Tony told me you look like Moses who'd seen the burning bush, man.
Your face was red.
You were flushed beyond flushed.
He says, yeah, I could tell something really dramatic happen to you, whether it was that or not,
whether I believed it or not.
But he believed me.
He's a close friend, so he would believe it.
A stranger would think, you're out of your freaking mind.
And I don't even, like I said, I wouldn't blame him.
I don't know if I'd believe a guy telling me this story.
But anyway, so I go home.
Now, I can't wait to get home and tell Dancy and the kids.
And the Bible study about this, but the more I think about it, I'm going, how am I going to tell them about it?
this. Am I even supposed to share this? Is it supposed to be something just between me and God?
I don't, you know, I've got all these questions. Did it really happen? Am I really crazy?
But you ask, you don't know. And so I said, God, how do I know this really happened? And I'm asking
God that. I'm talking to it. As soon as I get home, I'm telling Nancy the story all over again.
I mean, I'm just getting out of the car from the airport, right? And I'm already telling her
to the whole story again. I've told her twice on the phone, and I'm telling her again.
And she's patiently listening to me. My wife is very flatlined, which is probably what I need.
But I'm telling the whole thing again, and I'm thinking, God, Nancy, where's the reaction, man?
You've got to see reaction here. And so she's going, I'm listening, I'm listening. And so she's
listening, but she's also going to the mailbox. And I'm thinking, and I yell at her.
What are you going to the mailbox for at a time like this?
I'm telling you the most important moment of my whole freaking life on planet Earth.
And I'm mad at her now.
What do you know?
And she pulls mail out of the mailbox and she pulls out the same.
She's looking at the mail.
And we got this pamphlet.
Now I've given to this missionary journey, missionary ventures, missionary ventures.
I've given money to this group over the years.
You know, they help missionaries.
And I've tried to support them over the years.
They've never, ever sent me anything.
It's one of the reasons I supported them.
They don't send out a bunch of mailings and crap, you know.
Never gotten anything from these guys.
Today, in my mailboxes, I'm telling Nancy for the third time and just got home,
here's a thing from Missionary Ventures.
Nancy goes, oh, we've never got anything from them before.
And she opens it up.
And on the first page, it says, my wife, Nancy, loves to shop.
And she goes, Johnny, this is weird.
And there's Psalm 121.
No way.
All right.
It gets weirder.
So now we have the Bible study.
I tell the guys in the Bible study this whole miracle.
You know, trying to, you know, getting ready for anyone who doesn't believe it, think, you know, knowing I'm going to sound crazy.
And already wondering if I'm supposed to say anything about it.
And so while I'm telling them the whole story, Chris Pagas, one.
One of Taekwondo instructors and other Taekwondo master has been with me for many years.
His dad was wounded in the head.
Oh, Iwo Jima.
And one of my books is based on his dad.
So he is listening.
He's a real studious guy.
And he's listening to this whole story.
And he goes, Johnny, if you got a copy of your last book here, the Gunner's Glory book?
And I said, yeah, yeah, I think I got one in the bedroom.
go. And he goes and gets it, you know, and I'm still continuing the story with the guys.
He said, he's opening a search, he goes, I knew it. He says, that Bible verse was in your last book.
It's in your last book. Psalm 121. And I go, what? I didn't know. I mean, you know, I've written the book three or four years ago. I, you don't, you know, I don't know.
And he goes, yeah, it's in your book. It was missing.
Mitchell Page's favorite Bible verse.
And I said, oh my God.
I mean, and I'm thinking, God, is there, is that the connection?
Because I'm thinking back, because I hadn't thought about Mitchell Page since he died.
I mean, you know, you don't think about those things.
I had thought about the fact that God froze him on Guadalcanal like he did and this
turning point of the war, you know, and I hadn't thought about any of that.
And ever since I wrote it.
And here I am.
Graham, going, oh my God, is there a connection?
And then the guy started talking.
A few seconds later, Chris is going through the book.
He goes, Johnny, here it is again.
Mitchell Page prayed that verse when they were being shelled by the Japanese ships.
And he thought they were going to die and they got blown up but not killed.
He said, he and that other guy prayed Psalm 121.
Look, it's on page 66.
gives me the book and I'm going, oh no.
And he says clearly, Mitch says clearly,
this was my favorite Bible verse,
and I depended on this verse.
The next day, now I've been asking God to confirm this,
so tell me I'm not crazy, God.
And the next day, I get a book in the mail.
And some guy, I don't know where he's, somewhere out west,
he'd written a book, and he was a huge fan
of my books. And he was asking me to endorse his book, write a little blurb, you know, on there.
And, you know, I mean, I was flattered why anybody would want to blurt from Johnny Clark.
You could go find somebody famous or something, you know. But he did. And he sent me this book,
and he wrote a nice letter, asked him me to do it. And so, you know, I didn't even look at it
at first. You know, I was still caught up in this miracle and what to make of it all. And then
Nancy said something, you know, aren't you even going to look at it? And I said, yeah,
I got a better look at it.
And I, you know, I looked at it and it was based on, it was a World War II.
It was about it's, it was about World War II.
That's all I remember.
And so I opened the first page, the first page, Psalm 121.
Nancy can confirm it, but the first page.
Then I went to church that Sunday.
What's a song we sing?
We sing a song based on Psalm 121.
I got to, I got to church that Sunday.
the hint. You know, I'm not the quickest guy out there, but if you hit me enough times, I can finally
get it. And I finally, I got the hint, man. And God was telling me, you might be crazy,
but you're not crazy on this. You, this really happened. And this is the first time in my life
I've ever told anybody that story. And I'm going to tell you right now, I fasted and prayed
about saying this story in front of a million people or whatever.
You know, I didn't take this lightly.
And I know they may even want to put me in a looney bin after this.
I've had something very similar happen.
I heard some of it.
Tell me.
Because I forgot a lot of it, and I heard some of it.
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It's a long story.
So I'll
I've told it a couple of times on here
So I'll say it
But yeah there was this was two three
Two or three years ago
And I can't say it was atheist or anything like that
But I just I paid zero attention to Christ
None
And this is like when all the
There's a lot of well there's always a lot of shit
You're on in the world
Right?
But the gender stuff with kids was really fucking with my head, really bad.
And a lot of the child predator shit, sex exploitation and stuff that had gone on in Afghanistan.
There was a lot of shit that was going on that really, it was right after the withdrawal, the Afghanistan withdrawal.
I totally get it, Sean.
And so it was in a pretty dark spot.
And went on a vacation with my wife to Sedona.
And I'm pretty emotionless other than anger.
You know, I don't show much happiness.
I don't show much sadness.
You'll know when I'm really fucking pissed off, but that's about it.
And for whatever reason, I had a complete breakdown on the flight there.
I was just fucking crying.
I didn't know why I was crying.
you know, I'm just like, the world is a fucking shit place.
I hate this place.
I don't even know if I...
I wasn't saying I was suicidal, but I'm saying I don't even want to fucking be in this world.
I don't feel like I belong in this world.
Yeah.
I don't like eight-year-olds getting their junk chopped off and changing sexes.
Like, I don't like all these pedophiles and...
That's satanic to tell itself.
It's like everywhere I looked.
I'm like, it's just darkness.
Well, especially doing all the...
what you do, you're hearing a lot of dark crap and you're hearing a lot of satanic crap.
Yeah.
And you're under attack because you're honoring God. I guarantee you you're under satanic attack.
I'm aware now. I wasn't at the time, but I'm aware now. And so we go this whole week,
it's a shit vacation. It's just fucking sucks. My best friends there with his wife.
I was supposed to be having a great time. I had met this other seal. And if I don't have a lot of
friends, I had met this other seal here in Franklin, who was a little.
a very successful businessman and our relationship was developing quickly because he didn't need
anything from me and I didn't need anything from him and we could just be with each other.
His friendship.
Yeah.
And that doesn't come around often, you know.
Seems like the older you get, the harder it is to find.
And I don't relate with very many people that haven't been to combat or don't run a business.
or, you know what I mean?
I just don't have a lot in common with a lot of people.
At least it seemed like that at the time.
So he had just died.
And so we go through this week and just more shit's happening,
more stuff, you know, I'm seeing, and smoking weed.
The last thing I saw was I saw this country music artist that came out,
who I respected, I thought, was a person of God.
and turns out she's like, well, I think that drag queen should be able to shake their dick in little kids' faces.
And I'm like, fuck you.
Like, I did not want to see that.
And totally it just threw me off course.
And then, which I was already off course.
So I tell my wife, I'm like, we got to go on a fucking, I have to go on a hike.
So I down and join as fast as I can.
We go on this hike.
This is embarrassing.
I was out there searching for something.
I had heard that Sedona has all this, these energy vortexes.
Yeah.
And, yeah, whatever, right?
Like, weird, whatever.
And I was into crystals.
I was looking at all kinds of shit, just trying to find some fucking peace.
Yeah.
And looking in all the wrong places, right?
So we hiked this fucking stupid crystal.
Most people have.
Yeah.
This mountain.
And I'm like, we're going to feel something.
We're going to take this fucking crystal up to this energy vortex.
and I'm going to feel something.
We get up there, I don't feel shit.
And I'm like, fuck this stupid crystal
and this dumb vortex.
And I'm like, let's just go home.
You know, the pot did not help at all.
We're hiking down this fucking mountain.
And like, I'm starting to have like this internal
conversation in my head.
And I'm like,
what the fuck is wrong with you, Sean?
Like, I'm like, all these kids that are getting mutilated, everybody seems to be for this shit,
except for me.
What, what?
Maybe I'm the fucked up one.
Maybe you're the fucked up one, Sean.
Maybe eight-year-old should be able to change sex and, you know, have their parents fucking throw the dress on the kid.
All this shit.
And I'm like, what are you worried about all these fucking pedophiles?
Maybe like, maybe you're the one that's fucked up, Sean.
Maybe you shouldn't be standing up.
Of course, you know now that's the whole thing.
I know.
But this, like I said, this is an internal battle.
Yeah.
Because I could not make sense of anything that I was seeing.
Nothing outside of my family unit made any fucking sense to me at all.
Yeah.
How can, like, how can politicians not be going after pedophiles?
How can this be, like, how is this even fucking real?
And so I started, like, my mind started, like I said, I'm having this internal battle.
Like, maybe, Sean, you're the fucked up one.
You shouldn't be standing up for kids.
you shouldn't be worried about fucking China.
You shouldn't be worried about people dressed in men in bikinis
and whatever they're wearing, like shaking their dick in front of your two-year-old's face.
That's totally normal, Sean.
Yeah.
What are you worried about?
Everybody, every mainstream media outlet, every fucking magazine, every movie, every fucking Hollywood thing.
Like, it's just all like, this is the way.
Yeah.
And I felt like I felt like I was the only one.
that was, like, saying anything about this shit.
You know, especially when I saw the fucking country music artist.
I was like, whoa, like, you're over here spouting Bible quotes and all this other shit.
Say something.
I know.
Fuck you, bitch.
Yeah, I've been disappointed in a dude.
Like, what the fuck?
Yeah.
Of course, then they got like some huge fucking TV show, of course.
They probably told her to say it.
And they're like, hey, say this.
And then reward you.
Yeah.
And she's, sure is shit.
She's like, fucking huge in TV again.
know you know i i think i even know who you're talking about yeah who cares i got really
agree about it doesn't fucking matter doesn't even fucking matter who it is because it's a nobody
yeah it's a fucking lying piece of shit anyways um so i'm coming down this mountain and i'm having
this internal battle and it felt like there towards the end of the hike when we got back to
the resort i'm like it it felt like it was a battle for my soul i really i swear to god that's how
how it felt. I hear you. I walk through this gate and you know, we have similar backgrounds.
You don't go to bed without a K bar and a 45 and I'm sure you're very aware. You probably don't
like sitting with your back to the door. You know what I mean? I'm the same way. I pay attention to
security and shit like that. And because of the show, a lot of the guys at this,
at this gate, these armed guards, they all listen to my show. Yeah. And they're all like,
you know, and so I'd interact with them.
and we'd been there all weeks.
And like I said, I pay attention.
I see these, I recognize them all.
You know what I mean?
When I'm coming through the, hey, what's up, Johnny?
How you doing?
You know, last night we're there walking through the gate.
There's this old man, Vietnam, a Air Force guy, don't hold it against him.
And he starts trying to talk to me.
And I'm like, man, I've never seen this guy before.
and I'm not in the mood to talk.
I sure shit don't want to talk about my fucking podcast or anything like that.
And so I'm nice and polite, but I'm giving body language.
Like, I just don't want to talk right now.
So, you know, I refuse to like square up to them and actually have a conversation.
I'm like, oh, nice to meet you.
You know, I'm walking away, looking at him over my shoulder.
Of course, my wife stops, talks to him.
And I'm like, fuck.
So I turn around.
I score up to him and he looks at me and he read my mind from front to back.
I had not vocalized any of this shit, nothing.
And he goes, he's like, all these kids you're worried about, he's like, that's not your battle, man.
That is not your battle.
And all the shit you're worried about with China and that that's not your battle either.
And all this stuff, you know, and I, after like, after the first thing, it was after,
He said all this stuff that's going on with kids right now is not your battle.
Wow.
And then my mind went blank.
I just caught like little glimpses because I was like, how the fuck does this guy know?
I'm talking to, like, what is happening?
He's inside my fucking head right now.
And it scared this shit out of me.
And whatever, we wrap up.
He's quit talking.
There's only maybe, I don't know, 30s.
Kind of like you.
I don't know how much fucking time has passed.
I'm freaking out.
I'm like, why the fuck are you in my head?
And how are you in my head?
And we're walking, so we're walking away and I look at my wife and I said, holy shit,
I think that's fucking God, like talking to me.
And she looked at me and she goes, yeah, no shit, Sean.
She's like, God's always been around you.
You just don't make time to let them in.
Oh.
And I was like, beautiful.
What's going on?
So keeps getting weirder, just like here.
I know.
I'm remembering some of it, but I forgot.
So my best friend in the world was this guy gave a Cardi.
And he was a seal.
We contracted together at CIA.
We did a lot of shit down in Columbia off, you know, not working,
having a lot of doing a lot of debauch of shit down there.
Anyways, Gabe succumbed to addiction.
He had some really bad addictions when he left the agency.
And I talked him into leaving, and I wanted to help him.
I mean, I was all fucked up, too.
Anyways, whatever.
I was helping him get over his addiction.
He didn't wind up making it.
But Gabe was always known as a protector.
He was a hockey player and enforcer on the hockey team.
showed up to the SEAL teams
Baddest motherfucker in every one of his
platoons. Everybody knew
if you're in trouble, Gabe's going to fucking be there
to bail you out one way or another.
You know, went to the agency's reputation,
followed them there. Everybody knew it.
And anyways, we get to this resort all week.
There's this guy identical.
like identical same jaw lines same build Gabe was jacked this guy's jacked
like same brow line everything like could have been like not identical but could have been as
identical twin and I like the first thing when we did when we saw when we roll up to the resort
I'm like that guy looks like fucking Gabe he even fucking walks like Gabe and I'm in a vulnerable
spot everywhere we go throughout this week this fucking guy is around we go out in town this dude's out
in town we go on a hike he's coming back from a hike we're at the pool he's at the fucking pool
and katie and i both are like this shit's weird you know and my buddy dan had just died
so i'm katie's like that's Gabe he's here you're in a weird spot you're in a vulnerable spot right now
She's been telling me this shit all week.
I'm like, yeah, whatever.
So we go from the gate.
It's like maybe a one-minute walk to this bungalow we're staying in,
which is like a duplex.
And we go in to open our door, unlock the door,
and this fucking guy winds up being the...
He's staying across the way from us.
And I'm like,
what the fuck?
fucking guys and he's in the other half of the building.
Like, there's only two rooms here.
What's the coincidence of that?
Yeah, yeah.
Plus him being everywhere we're at.
Wow.
And Katie looks at me again and she's like, I fucking told you.
She doesn't cuss.
I told you.
We get in the room.
I'd have another meltdown.
I'm like, what?
What's happening?
What the fuck is going on?
You know, I thought, like, I thought, this.
God is like, what is happening?
What's going on?
You know, and I'm getting emotional.
Again, I might have said, I don't really show much emotion.
And so we talk it out and she's like, how can you keep saying you can't believe it?
It's happening right in front of you.
I'm like, I can't believe this is happening.
She's like, what do you mean you can't believe it?
It's right in front of your face, Sean.
Yeah.
My phone dings in the middle of this.
And so we wrap up the conversation.
I go look at my phone to see who texted me.
And it's Dan Cirillo's daughter, who's my friend that just died,
who doesn't have my number, must have dug it out of her dad's phone.
And I could read it to you, but I'll summarize it.
It basically says, hey, Sean, I walked into my dad's gun room for the first time since he'd
passed and the whole room came alive. And he grabbed me and said that I should reach out to you
because you would become his new best friend. And he wants you to know that he loves you just the
way that you are. And I was like, man, what is happening? Yeah. Three things. Then I get home and I'm all
I'm obviously like, okay, holy shit.
Like, God is real.
I've been looking for answers in all the wrong places.
So I call this guy up who's been a huge inspiration and a bit of a mentor.
My spiritual journey, his name's Eddie Penny.
And he came on and gave, he's a, he's a C-L-2 development group guy
and shared his testimony.
with me on the show and I was it was so powerful I said this has to this has to be like we're releasing
this on Christmas ever since that day probably for a year every single person that has come on my show
has brought up their faith in Jesus Christ just like you did like that well I didn't know that was
going to happen that you were going to bring this up and any like full one of the most powerful
podcasts I've ever done, if not the most powerful one. It obviously made a very serious impression
on me. Isn't it fun when God starts working in your life? I mean, it's just fun to go,
he's real. So I call him up and I'm talking to him like at midnight. Like I start a campfire at my
house and I'm like, Eddie, I got to talk to you about some shit. And he's like, what is?
you know, start talking to him, telling them what I just told you.
And he goes, Sean, he goes, a lot of people have been praying for this to happen.
And that freaked me out.
I'm like, what, what do you mean people are praying that like, what?
Like, this sounds like conversations that are happening behind my back that you guys have plans for me that I don't know about.
And he's like, I just want you to know that.
And then he starts talking to me about guardian angels.
shit like that. I'm like, all right, spiritual warfare and all these things. I'm super tuned into it.
So then I go to work the next day and after the campfire, remember midnight, I have a meeting at noon
with my IT guy who's like a super devout Catholic. And I grew up Catholic, but I don't, like I said,
at this point in time, I'm pretty sure if I step foot in church, I'm probably going to,
disintegrate.
But so I think we're going to talk about IT shit.
And he starts telling me, he doesn't even know anything yet.
And he starts telling me about guardian angels for whatever reason.
Wow.
And how, you know, they knew you before you were ever even born and they're with you and they're assigned to you and da-da-da-da.
And that meeting happened at noon.
So then I take a late lunch.
drive back home i want to have lunch with my wife and kid and um on the way back to work i tell katie
about all this shit i'm driving back to work and my odometer like the mileage left to empty 444 miles
look at the clock it's 444 in the afternoon four hours and 44 minutes after my meeting with guardian
my meeting with Adam, my old IT guy, about Guardian Angels, who I had just talked to Eddie Penny
about Guardian Angels. I call up one of my guys here, and I say, just so I don't forget, I said,
hey, Google the meeting of 444. I'm on my way back. Get back to the office. He's standing there.
He opens up Google. Doesn't have any idea what I'm talking about. You can Google this shit yourself.
444 means your guardian angels want you to know that they're watching out for you.
Oh.
Well, I want a high five.
Yeah, no.
Come on.
Come on.
It's just wonderful.
And it's fun to know he's real, you know.
He's real.
I mean, he's invested in you.
And he knows you by name.
That one's all through the Bible.
He knows every hair on your head.
He knows your name.
He knows the day the second you're going to die.
I knew the day and the second you were born.
So, you know, worrying about I've had so many close calls.
I mean, even in civilian life, I had a Roman candle jumping out of planes.
I had a Roman candle, didn't know it.
Because I thought I was going slow.
I was going to die.
And it opened by itself.
It just suddenly, before I hit the ground, it went,
and I shot up, saved again.
You remember that character in the old cartoons, Pistol Pied?
Where they shoot bullet holes all around the guy's head.
Well, I mean, I should be dead so many times.
Guardian Angels are real.
I'm convinced of it.
But I walked into an ambush, and we got, they opened up, machine guns opened up on us.
And I went to hit the dirt, but it was pitch black.
We're out in the jungle, you know, I don't know where I am.
And I hit a bank, an embankment.
And I just hit this embankment, knock my helmet off, and I'm just up against the embankment.
And everybody's shooting at me.
And I got burned from all the phosphorescent tips on the tracer rounds.
It burned me.
It burned all down my neck.
It went down to my shirt.
It burned all around my, burn my face, my nose.
Wow.
Never got a scratch.
I never got, didn't get a scratch.
I mean, I have countless examples of that exact same thing.
I mean, that door hinge, there's a frame door hinge right there.
That's from a guy that was at Delta, his name's,
Kyle Morgan.
And he did, he was in Mali, Africa, huge terrorist attack at the Radisson Blue.
This was supposed to be like a booze cruise for him.
Like he had seen a lot of shit.
Delta's like, hey, go do this liaison mission and fucking Molly.
And I don't know.
Have a good time.
Yeah.
Sleep with some State Department bitches or so, I don't know.
You know.
just take a break.
And so he's down there, having a good time,
whatever, doing his liaison gig.
Al-Shabaab hits his hotel.
He responds with two other guys.
They bitch out.
He's super descriptive account.
I mean, he talks about he enters the Radisson Blue.
First thing he sees his fucking dead bodies in an elevator shaft
and the elevator doors are open and closing.
You know, there's fires all over the fucking place.
There's terrorists running around, killing fucking people.
And he's a one man.
He's one man in a fucking hotel, a massive hotel, like going door to door,
saving people from burning to death, saving, like, pulling people out of their hotel room.
All by himself.
I can't remember how long it was, like 12 hours or 16 hours of some shit.
He's doing this.
Everybody else is a fucking pussy to include, like, the head of state, you know, that's there.
he's fucking eating cheese balls out of his belly button
because he's a fucking pussy, you know?
I mean, you know the types.
And the feds.
And so at the very end of this shit,
he corners these Al-Shabaab guys at the top of a stir-well.
He clears up a stairwell.
I guess he can't say he cornered him.
They're shooting down at him, damn near point-blank.
And the fucking went all around his body.
And then he throws up a concussion grenade, discombobulates him, runs up, you know, finishes him off, rips the door off the wall.
And that's the door hinge that was holding the fucking door.
Wow.
But, I mean, it's, you know, it's, and he, same thing.
Yeah, he credits Christ.
Yeah.
You know, lots of guy, Eddie Penny, he's got another, he's got, the guy was just telling you about this kind of a spiritual mentor for me or, or, he's got similar situation where, I mean, it's just like.
where I can't remember exactly what I have like a voice told him, like, don't fucking move.
And then the building gets leveled.
I mean, it's just time and time and time again.
Yeah, you're not going to die until God says so.
He knows the exact second.
He knows.
And there's some confidence to take in that.
That Bible verse that Proverbs 3, 5, and 6, it's, you know, trust in the Lord with all your heart.
Do not lean on your own understanding.
when I can do that, when I try to figure out, you know, I go through that China, worrying about China,
I'm worrying, worry, worry, worry, you know, and fret not thyself.
We're told, don't do it to yourself.
Be anxious for nothing.
He tells us all through scripture, quit doing it because it's a waste of energy, you know,
that he's in charge, you know, trust in the Lord with all your heart, and he will direct your path.
I mean, it's always a battle because, I mean, guys like you and me, you know, we believe in doing things and getting it done.
You know, go.
And we're contingency planners.
Yeah, right.
What if this happens, then we're doing this?
What if that goes to shit, then we're doing this?
It goes, you know.
I don't think there's anything wrong with that.
I just think as God's kids, we got to be careful where we put too much faith.
and our own, trust not in our own understanding.
And, you know, don't lean on your own understanding.
When I have any conflict and my own thinking about Israel, about China, about whatever it is,
I can go back to the word now, and this is something that I think Christians have this huge advantage over the world
where we can kind of take the pressure off ourselves.
Even in this, I ran thing right now.
I know that in Ezekiel 38, 39, I know the Bible says clearly it gives us the play by play.
Have you ever read that?
Do you know that what I'm talking about?
It gives us the play by play of a final big shootout and who the players are.
Iran will become allies with Russia, Libya, Turkey, Ukraine, and Iraq.
and Arab peoples.
It's in Ezekiel 38.
They will come against Israel.
Israel will stand alone.
They're going to have no allies.
And I, so they're going to come against Israel.
Israel will have no allies.
And in this big future shootout,
and I'm sure, you know, you have Lee Strobel on here,
and you got guys who know this 10 times better than I do.
But in my own little studies of the Bible, you know, it gives me this.
I know we're not going to knock off Iran.
I know we're not.
Don't get me wrong.
I think we're going to decimate them
and maybe knock them down a couple of pegs
and they're not going to be a problem for a little bit.
And I think that's, I'm all for it.
But I know we don't get rid of them
because Scripture says they're going to be around.
They're going to come against Israel with Russia,
with Turkey, with Ukraine, with Libya.
And anyway, I know that's got to happen.
It's prophecy.
It's got to happen.
Every prophecy, it comes true.
All of them.
So this is going to happen.
And I know it's going to happen.
So every time I find myself, you know, getting a little upset about this, you know, why aren't we doing this?
Why don't we take Harg Island?
You know, I'm thinking that way.
I'm thinking militarily.
I'm thinking like a Marine.
I know I'm wasting energy because the Lord has this all planned out.
This is going to happen.
Everything's going to happen with or without Johnny Clark.
although I know I should pray for it.
I know I'm commanded to pray about it.
But I know that in the end, Israel's going to stand alone.
And I mean, you can see it happening.
The whole world will basically abandon little Israel.
It's Bible prophecy.
And when Iran and Russia and all these nations, they're going to be destroyed,
they're going to die on the mountains of Israel.
They're going to get destroyed.
and it even talks about the coastlands of Russia, you know, fire falling on the coast.
They're going to get no more Russia, no more Russian army.
That's going to be gone.
Iran's going to be gone.
But we ain't going to do it.
God's going to do it.
But even in that, two-thirds of the Jews are going to get killed.
So God's going to save that third, but they're going to know they were saved by God, not the USA.
That's the way I understand it, too.
I think a little differently on you than the Iran war.
Yeah.
But I mean, but the way that I interpret that is that, I mean, the Jews did kill Jesus.
And they've always turned their back on God.
And the way that I understand this is that God is going to allow them to be fucking decimated.
And they're going, he is going to unveil all of the fucking corruption that is going on inside of Israel.
And then when Christ comes back, the remaining Jews,
will accept Jesus Christ
and they will go to heaven.
And that's the way I understand.
I don't think Israel is a fucking good guy in this.
That's it.
Oh, I don't whether, no, I don't think there are necessarily a good guy.
I know they're the chosen people.
I know that I know.
Where are the chosen people?
I know that God is going to,
God's going to take care of these things.
Not, not us, not any human force
that the Lord's going to take care of it.
And yeah, they are, the remaining Jews that survive this are going to come to Christ.
They're going to realize Jesus Christ was the Messiah.
They're going to come to that decision.
But in the meantime, nothing's going to stop this stuff from happening.
You know, nothing.
My worrying about it, nothing's going to stop it.
It's got to happen.
It's Bible prophecy.
Let me tell you about guns up, the miracle with guns up.
Okay.
Okay.
It's getting published.
I told you, like, you know, at first I was an angry mess.
And I was working as a mailman and teaching martial arts at University of South Florida at night.
And so I was working two jobs doing okay.
It's like, that's just, I mean, could you imagine how many people if they knew what the fucking mailman was capable?
So, well, I was really blessed, Sean.
I mean, you know, in Okinawa, by accident, I trained with Grandmaster Shimabuku,
a really famous old Okinawan.
I didn't know he was.
He was just another Okinawan to me, but I was ordered out in theville.
We had a lieutenant ahead of his time.
He ordered guys with certain wounds to go into theville and take martial arts from this little Okinawant guy.
And it ends up being Grandmaster Shimabuku.
He was an amazing character.
Then I come home.
I can't find a decent Okinawans.
school and I switch over to Taekwondo and I I mean by accident my old neighbor was teaching he was a
language expert for the army in the in Thai Thailand he met and trained with Grandmaster Park in
Thailand because the king of Thailand asked him to come there and train the Thai people
Taekwondo so this Donkun Park that became my grandmaster that I trained with for the last 50 years
he end up being the Olympic coach, the 1992 Olympic coach.
He's in the Korean Hall of Fame.
He was just voted by the nation of Korea as the greatest Korean master in Korean history.
He had over 280 fights and never lost.
He's an amazing little guy.
I really, really admire him.
And now my wife just showed me a thing of him.
He's washing people's feet as a missionary in Guatemala, I think.
It's Guatemala.
Yeah, he's, you know, I just love this guy.
And we've been together forever.
We had some adventures.
But, yeah.
So anyway, I lucked out and getting to train with some great men.
And I'm just another student.
But I lost both those jobs when my back went out on me.
And I heard that back.
We were coming in on a hot LZ.
the machine guns the last one off the chopper
you know when the old
C.H.
The 46s, you know, with the back ramp
47.
Little round holds.
Probably 46s is back down.
You run off the back ramp.
Well, you know, they hover and guys run off the little back ramp.
The front of it hovers because we were under fire.
And so all the guys got off.
And me and Chan are the last two
trying to get to that ramp.
And the pilot got killed.
and the chopper went out of control,
and the co-pilot got control of it,
but we're swirling like this,
throwing us all over the place inside the chopper.
And I got all that gear, you know, 25-pound M-60 and on and on.
So Chan got off.
Now, I don't know how high up in the air,
but he finally gains control of the thing.
And I know I've got to get with the guys.
And I don't even know how high up I run off that ramp.
I landed like an anchor, but I hit mushy, swampy stuff and stanked down deep into it and didn't die.
Another time, I should have died.
And everybody's shooting at me and they can't get me out of the mud.
Anyway, I came out of it fine, but that back was never quite the same.
And it finally went.
And when it went, now I had to find a way to make living.
And that's when Nancy said, you need to write some of your stuff.
stories from, you know, Vietnam and fight the liberal media who are lying about what the guys
did over there and you get so angry about it. You can't, you can't beat everybody up. You got to,
you know, fight back a smart way and set the record straight. Yeah, and that's what I tried to do.
But that book was rejected by every publisher from New York to California for four years.
I told you how I learned how I wrote it. I kept taking the same writing class.
over and over and over.
Well, my writing professors at St. Pete College thought it was the best warbook.
They ever read.
They were sure it's going to get published here, and they'd give me all these people to send it to.
Rejected by everybody.
I mean, you couldn't, there was very few publishers that I hadn't sent it to.
I don't know if there's any.
And so about four years into this, Nancy and I started a Bible study class at my pastor's house,
and we'd have these memory verses at the end, you know, and you pray for everybody's needs.
there's people fighting cancer,
people out of work and da-da-da-da-da.
And Nancy one time she goes,
I want prayer for Johnny's book to get published.
Well, I've got all these four-letter words in this book.
I mean, I wrote it to be nonfiction.
I didn't know how I could write the dialogue
of Marines in combat without all the words we used.
And so I did.
Well, you know, now I want my kids
to know the truth, but I didn't want my kids to hear all that or read that language.
I just didn't want them.
And I still realizing, you know, I don't feel comfortable.
And the Holy Spirit was really convicted me.
And so, anyway, one of the Bible verses that sent me over the edge was, for those who honor God,
God will honor.
And those who despise the Lord will be held in little esteem.
Well, for those who honor God, God will honor.
That hit me.
That really hit me.
And you know how you have one verse that just kind of really gets you?
That one got me.
Convict him he so bad.
I finally go to my pastor.
I said, hey, I'm wanting to crawl in a hole every time the prayer group prays for my book to get published yet.
If nobody's read it, none of these people have read this thing.
And so I gave it to him.
I said, read it.
And he did.
His thing's really vivid and, you know, it's got a lot.
And da-da-da.
And I said, well,
well, should I rewrite it, take all the words out.
He goes, ah, no, that's between you and God.
I'm not touching that one.
So I go to my writing professors.
They go, Johnny, if you rewrite guns up, it's going to sound like howdy duty joins the Marine Corps.
You can't.
Everybody knows Marines don't talk like.
You know, they're going to use the F word all the time.
They're going to do.
And so I said, well, I can't, I can't stand it.
It's not getting published anyway.
It's gone nowhere in over four years.
I can't pray about it anymore because I'm so convicted.
I'm going to do it.
So I sat down, took six months.
I took all the language out of the book, rewrote the thing.
But it's the same war, same stories.
I just took the language out.
And what I discovered is it made me a better writer.
You know, it's easy to describe anger with a quick four-letter word.
This probably would have been twice as long.
With all those words.
Well, maybe, maybe.
So I took all language out, and the day I finished that rewrite, Nancy and I got a bottle of champagne, popped a champagne and said, Nancy, anchors off my back.
I pray about the book getting published without.
I'm done with it.
And the next morning, I get a call from Soldier of Fortune magazine.
And they said, oh, is this Mr. Clark?
da-da-da-da-da-da-da. We've got this story you sent us and we want to publish it.
I had never had anything published. So I said, what story? I never sent you a story.
And they go, yeah, you know, you sent us a story, didn't you? About Troy Bridge, da-da-da-da-da.
Out of a book called Guns Up. And I said, well, yeah, that's why I wrote that. And then he says, he goes, I said, well, wait a minute.
When did I send you this? And he goes, let me see.
Oh, he sent it to us four years ago.
And I go, what?
Why are you just now finding it?
He goes, I don't know.
It just turned up in our slush pile.
Two days later, Eagle Magazine calls.
It's the exact same story.
Whoa.
And I say the exact same thing.
Why now?
Why, four years late?
And he goes, oh, I can't answer that.
It just turned up in our slush pile.
Then American Legion magazine calls.
Holy cow.
It's the exact same.
story and there was a fourth one. Okay, go ahead and tell me luck, baloney. I had honored God
and now God was honoring me. So I sent the book out again. And I started to send out the
publishers again. Within one month, this book that had been rejected by every publisher in New York,
North Carolina, California, everywhere I could find a publisher. Within one month, nine publishers
now wanted the book. And the one that bought it was random.
House, biggest publisher in the world. Now they want this book. So I get a phone call from Pam Strickler
and head of, she was the senior editor at Random House at Ballantyne Books. And she goes, she says,
I will listen to Mr. Clark. We know, we love this book. We want this book. And I said, well,
I'm thrilled, but I said, why now? I mean, why do you want it now? And she says, what do you mean?
And I said, well, I had wallpaper.
This is something the writing teachers told me to do to keep up your spirits.
My writing office, once we had our second kid, I knocked a hole in our roof of our two-bedroom, one-bath house.
And I built a conning tower on top.
It was basically a conning tower.
A little stairs going up to it.
Real thrill with Nancy.
Did a lot for our living room.
But that was my writing room.
Well, I wallpapered my writing room with richard.
rejection notices.
Are you serious?
I'm serious.
The whole wallpaper.
I had rejections from everybody.
And I had grown to know.
I could tell when somebody actually read it or when it was just a stamp, you know, no thanks.
She, I had hers there.
And I said, Pam Strickler?
And she goes, yes.
And I said, I have your rejection letter right here.
And I said, you actually read this thing.
I can tell.
And I read it to her.
And she goes, oh, I did read that book.
I remember.
And I said, well, that was just a year ago.
So why do you want it now?
Why do you think it's so great now?
I said, is it because I took all the cuss words out?
And she said, you mean there's no profanity in this book?
And I said, no.
And she goes, Mr. Clark, that's incredible.
All my readers have read this book and loved it.
She said, all my junior editors have read this book.
I've read this book.
no one at Random House
recognized that there's no profanity in that book
and I said no none
and she goes that's incredible
she goes we've never heard of a Vietnam War book
without the profanity
I said well yeah
so we have now and she goes
she said gosh well we
we want this book and I said
it's yours it's great
you're the biggest publisher in the world please
and she says
but you're going to have to work with us some
I figured it rewrites.
I don't know.
I said, well, sure.
And she goes, look,
no one's going to believe
a Vietnam War book without profanity.
She goes, we're going to need you to put
some profanity back in this book.
So I said,
oh, Satan,
you are so good.
I don't publish anything for my whole
life. Now I've got the biggest publisher
in the world.
If I will put the cuss words
back in.
And I said, yeah, you know, temptation.
You turned them down?
Oh, you bet.
No way.
Are you kidding after all?
I told her, two chances, Pam, slim and none.
It never happened.
And she goes, well, okay.
And she called me back a little bit later.
They bought it anyway.
It's now been in print for 42 years.
It's been published in Lithuania.
I get email from Lithuanian soldiers.
One in particular stands out, but this Lithuanian soldier sends me an email saying that all his unit of reading this book.
And he goes, Mr. Clark, I just had to tell you that we think this is the greatest war book that God ever wrote.
Whoa.
Wow. I was, I mean, come on.
I don't even feel like I had anything to do with this book.
Honestly, I feel like this is, you know, it's been on auto.
pilot with God from day one, but I don't, the book's a miracle. It just, it's a miracle. It just
keeps going and going, 42 years. And now, you know, I mean, crazy things, the stories that come out of it.
I just, I could go on forever, but crazy stories. We had a kid named Frank Burris, he,
a great kid. He died. And we got hit. He died. But he died. But he didn't.
He didn't die right away. He stayed, we stayed with him all night. We didn't even know how bad he was hit. He had some wounds we couldn't see. It's black. And Corman didn't find him. But patched the ones he found. But he carried a picture of his little red-headed daughter. He had a baby he'd never seen. And Frank Burris was from St. Pete. He went to the same high school as my wife. I never knew him.
Wow.
Wow.
But he had this baby picture.
He carried in his helmet because he had to put it in your lining of your helmet to keep it dry.
The long story short is this.
That picture always stayed up here, you know, and he had never seen that baby.
He wanted to go home so bad.
He went to see his baby.
Well, he died that night.
We couldn't get him out of that.
Next day, the 101st cab or the first cab or the 101st airborne, I forgot.
But an Army unit.
The sky's dark.
with choppers bringing them a noon meal.
We can't get a medevac.
And bitter, you know, I mean, this is during Vietnam, we only got hand-me-downs.
And you know the story behind that.
The Marine Corps had to stay.
We're going to be defunct.
Truman was going to get rid of the Marine Corps.
And the only way we stayed Marine Corps was to prove we could keep a Marine in the field
for a third the cost of the Army.
And that's how the Marines stayed.
the Marine Guards.
Yeah, he was
great stories about that
that these old
these old Chinahan's,
little Chinahan Marines
told me
incredible stories, man,
these guys were a hoot.
But, yeah, so
Frank Burr said,
I wrote that story in there,
but I didn't have Frank's real name.
I forgot what I called him.
But I didn't know anybody,
we didn't know each other's names, you know.
But I knew him.
I mean,
knew him like I know you, but I didn't know his name.
But anyway, he, 30 years later, maybe more, maybe 35 years later,
I hear from this girl.
And she sends me a picture.
She gets my email, and then she gets my address.
And she sent me an email, I contact her back.
I think my dad died in Nam with you.
And it's Frank Burris.
It's baby red.
That's what we called her, baby red, because she had bushy red here.
She had that same picture, and she sent me a blow up of it.
And it was, she had discovered how her dad died reading that book.
But it just, it doesn't stop.
I mean, it goes on and on and on.
I mean, the stories that God churns up out of this.
And it gave her some peace.
Her mom told me, you know, that she needed it so bad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, anyway, the books, the book's a flat-out miracle.
That's amazing.
Yeah, it is.
It's a miracle.
I don't have much to do with it.
I just sit back and marvel.
Pretty cool.
Wow.
I mean, that had to just hit like a ton of bricks.
I'm sorry, what?
I mean, just to be connected with her.
Oh, yeah.
I know.
Yeah.
Family members, you know, that.
Frank Boris's brother is contacted me and I, you know, he didn't know how he died and
yeah, yeah.
How'd you meet your wife?
A blind date.
A blind date?
Yeah, yeah, a blind date.
I was that nom vet that they were a little concerned about.
And so they didn't.
Yeah, it was her best friend and a guy that I went to high school with came over, you know,
they're trying to set me up, you know, maybe spending too much time alone.
They thought, you know, and da-da-da-da-da.
Well, they'd come over and they've, her best friend had taken, had stolen her license to show me her picture.
Just said, well, I took one look at this license.
And I go, yeah, no thanks.
We'll skip this one.
And she, they go, no, no, no.
She's really beautiful.
And I, I think, yeah, thanks anyway.
No, no, she's hot.
And now Terry, the guy is telling me, no, no, I wouldn't, I wouldn't lead you
well, she's, and because she lives right around the corner down here, you know,
just about a block and a half away from you.
And I said, well, where?
I mean, all around the corner.
And I said, she's got black hair, da-da-da-da-da, you know.
I said, wait a minute.
Does she have a little brown Toyota?
And she goes, yeah.
And I said, does she wash her car in a bikini out front sometimes?
And they go, well, I guess so.
And I go, okay, let's go on that blind date.
So we go to a blind date.
I win a free pass.
Did you ask her when she's going to wash her car next?
I was quickly dirtying up her car.
So we go to the old beach theater, which a real old theater out on SAP Beach, and we go and get buy popcorn, you know, our first blind date.
And in the popcorn, we won a free pass to a second movie.
So we had an immediate second date.
And yeah, yeah, the rest is history.
You know, we just celebrated our 49th wedding anniversary.
Congratulations.
Yeah, thanks.
Yeah.
Wow.
That's old.
49 years.
49 years.
Man, that's amazing.
Yeah, five grandkids.
You know, how did that happen?
Beautiful.
Yeah, it is.
They make life so much fun.
They really keep you young.
The grandkids.
And now I'm teaching them a little bit of martial arts, you know, some just, you know, simple takedowns and chokeouts.
Simple takedowns and chokeouts.
I want my, I want my, I got one, I got one little granddaughter that, yeah, I think I can teach her how to kill people.
She's a, she's got potential.
Now they all do.
They're all, they're just great kids.
I mean, they already know Bible verses, you know, that just, you know, I wish I had that much
scriptural knowledge when I was a little kid.
Me too.
I really do.
I mean, it pays off the rest of your life, you know.
They can, these tough questions come up or tough times.
God tell, he's got a whole instruction manual if you just read it.
Yeah.
Well, Johnny, we're wrapping up the interview.
All right, brother.
But I've got a hot question here for you.
Oh, boy.
You ready?
Yeah.
You were 18 years old when you got to Vietnam.
A Marine M60 machine gunner with fifth Marines.
Machine gunners had a 10, excuse me, machine gunners had a 7 to 10 second life expectancy once a firefight started.
You were the number one target on the battlefield because every enemy soldier wanted to silence that gun first.
walk me through your combat loadout and be as descriptive as you can for the viewer
and tell me if your loadout ever changed throughout your time in Vietnam.
Wow, that's a good question.
I don't know if I could answer it properly.
I can tell you this, 20-round burst, if you wanted to stay alive.
I, sometimes you couldn't.
Sometimes you had to lay on the trigger.
and I think
if you were so concerned about the other guys
you know I mean
I mean the machine gun was really critical
to a grunt platoon
you had to have the gun
I mean you could keep the enemy heads down
duck and lead
you could do something to allow your
grunts to stay alive
I did fire it a couple of times
so much that
there were a couple of times where
you could see the rounds going through the barrel of the M60.
Literally, you could see it.
It would go red hot, and then you knew you were in trouble and see the Marine Corps, we didn't have any spare barrels.
That's another reason.
Holy shit.
You guys weren't brown with spare barrels?
My whole time, I never had a spare barrel.
So, you know, if you had to, you'd pee on that barrel and, you know, just to get the temperature down and make that, you pour your canteens on it, anything to keep it from, because if it melted, and now you've got a four.
45 in a K bar, you know, and now you...
So, but a couple of times, yeah, fired until it would go red-hot,
and then when it went white-hot, at white-hot,
you literally could see the, you know, the round,
not every round, but you'd see rounds going through that barrel.
You could actually see round.
And now it's red or white-hot.
It's like having a light on you in the middle of a night battle.
A lightsaber.
Yeah, yeah.
Now you've got a big spotlight on you.
Did you ever blow a barrel out?
I, oh, I pulled barrels out, yeah.
I mean, like, where the round comes out the side.
Did you ever have that happen to?
No, that never happened to me.
But I could see where it could happen, but it didn't happen to me.
But I did burn out a barrel at one time.
And, you know, and then we had to steal a barrel off from a gunner
a chopper. He didn't want to give it up. And Sam, the bloomer man, convinced him.
How many rounds would you? We need that barrel more than you do. Yeah. Oh, shit. You're firing from way up there.
We're eye to eye. Give us the barrel. Anyway, so yeah, I burned out a barrel. I might have burned out a
couple. How many rounds would you carry? I've carried 400 myself and sometimes more,
but 400 was usual.
So you're supposed to have ammo humpers.
Well, that's why you have a five-man team, but I didn't have a five-man team.
It was just me.
And sometimes me and Chan, but sometimes Chan had to take over another gun, and now you're all alone.
Or they give you a grunt to try to help.
But, yeah, you're supposed to have five-man team, and all of them carry 400 rounds each.
So the grunts had to carry, you know, I mean, the grunts, they didn't like it.
Yeah, you got enough weight of their own.
but now they're having to carry machine gun ammo.
So, you know, everybody looks like a Mexican bandit,
but everybody's carrying a few hundred rounds,
and they hated it until we hit the crown.
They need it.
Yeah, and then, but they were always happy to run,
throw these hundred round belts.
Hey, Clark here!
They're throwing those belts at me.
Get this weight off me, man.
So, yeah, but, yeah, I think,
you couldn't waste ammo
and I don't know, the lowdown,
I'm not sure if that answers it, but
you had to keep that gun clean.
You know, in the jungle, boy,
if you didn't keep that gas cylinder, spit-shined,
it's going to jam.
And if it jammed, you know,
you, I mean, you'd catch crap from, you know,
your sergeants and so forth.
But worse than that, you know,
Marines are going to die if that thing jammed.
So really had to be careful about cleaning that thing.
And that wasn't easy.
I mean, the jungle was everything.
It rotted everything.
I mean, I would come in sometimes with all my clothes would have been ripped apart.
Really half naked.
We would come in, walk into ANWO combat base, and we'd have Vietnamese laughing at us.
It's serious.
This truly happened.
We're walking in.
You know, I got the 60 over my shoulder.
We're humping in.
and I had to cut the whole part of my trousers out because I had dysentery.
So, you know, you don't stop and go to the bathroom.
You just drain while you walk.
Well, a few weeks out in the jungle or more, you know, your clothes are totally shredded.
So we walked into Anwa a couple of times and, you know, half naked some of us.
And, yeah, and toothbrush, couldn't use my toothbrush.
We had to use it to clean the gas silhoues.
on the 60. Yeah. So when you did brush your teeth, you were brushing with oil, gun oil. And you had to use the right kind of gun oil. You had to be careful there. Sometimes the Marines gave us gun oil that it just wasn't the best. It would be no good in the rain and the humidity sometimes. You know, it wasn't. So there was, usually the Army had good gun oil. When's the last time you fired an M60?
Okay, I hadn't fired an M60 since 1968 last night in NOM.
And a bunch of Marines from Iraq and Afghanistan, young Marines, all machine gunners.
They've read the books.
You know, they're in machine gun school, they're told to read them.
So they contacted me and they flew me to Pennsylvania and wanted me to show me to
shoot an M-60 machine gun again, and they brought a Marine Corps cameraman.
It was a combat cameraman to come out there and get pictures of it.
And so, as you know, like, I don't know, 20 to 30 of these young guys, you know, young Marines, all gunners.
You know, they were all, most of them were all gunners.
And so I did.
You know, I was excited about it, but I haven't fired a 60s since 19-16.
That's 50 years or so, you know.
So, you know, I don't know what am I going to embarrass myself or what.
They got it all ready for me, you know, taught me a little bit.
It started coming back with some of the ins and outs.
And then...
Like riding a bike, huh?
Yeah, yeah, it came back.
It came back.
But, you know, I had forgotten, you know, just...
And so anyway, I was ready.
And so we started finding it.
They had...
It's probably 150 yards away.
I mean, when you look at the little video, you can blow it up and you'll see that's a truck
and a car down there
and an old washing machine
and I think that's about it, but
it's out on a farm in Pennsylvania
and it's down in like a little valley
so that the rounds won't,
you know,
they've got sort of something for it to hit if you
blow it.
So anyway, I open fire on this thing
and loved it,
but I couldn't see where my rounds were landing
because they didn't want to use tracer rounds.
They were afraid it might start a forest fire or something.
So I finally
said, you know, after a little bit, like, hey, guys, I can't see where my rounds are landing.
I, you know, I know if I'm hitting the target or not. I don't like that. And so, so,
this one young Marine goes, I got this, sir. And he comes out a little jar of, is it tannerite?
Is that what it's called? Yeah. Yeah. A little jar of tannerite. It had a red label on it.
And, you know, it's just a little jar. I mean, tiny, like a jar of pickles. And he, he runs out there, you know,
and it's a pretty good distance. He runs out.
there with this jar and he puts it on on top of this washing machine and it runs back and he goes
you'll know if you hit that sir you know and i go well okay you know and and you know i mean 76 year old
eyes here and i'm going god i think i see a little red dot and i did i could see the little red dot that was on
that it was a label and i say okay let's go and i you know so i go to i go to shoot and they're all going
no sir sir you'll never hit that shooting from the hip you got to go on the bipot uh you need a scope to
hit that you know the new machine guns have scopes and done it you know and i said yeah i know i i don't like
that i don't like scopes i said you know i need to i need to feel it see it and uh they said well
sir it's just a waste of ammo and well let me try it so i haven't fired one in 50 years and uh
I opened about maybe a 20-round burst.
And it blew up.
And it blew up.
Holy shit.
The washing machine, the whole lid up, blew it.
Boom.
And that's what you see in the video is me going,
Yeah.
Nice.
So after that, all these young gunners, I mean, they were blown away.
They were cheering me.
They were cheering me.
You know, it was really.
Anyways, about that scope, ladies.
One of those, you know, one of those old men movement moments, you know,
where you show the young guys
you still got it, but, you know,
it was fun. It was fun for the moment.
But so all the young machine gutters,
they all,
they got to do this now.
And they had like three M60s out there.
So, I mean, these are crazy Marines.
They had a mini gun on the back of a truck.
I'm not making that up.
Crazy guys.
You know, I love these guys.
That's some gangster shit right there.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Anyway, so they all tried it with the M60.
And all of them tried it from the hip.
You know, because they ran out with another jar of tannirate.
And nobody could do it.
And they kept trying.
Then they started shooting from the bipot, you know, down on the ground and aiming at it.
And nobody could hit it.
Damn, that's awesome.
And so finally, some freaking jarhead with a sniper scope, it shot it with a sniper, you know, sniper rifle.
Right on.
He blew it up.
But, yeah, so it was one of those fun moments where you get slaps on the back from young guys, which felt good.
That's cool, bad.
Yeah, they enjoyed it too.
They got a kick out of it.
Still have the same K-bar?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I still got a K-bar.
That's fucking cool.
Same one?
Oh, no, no.
Not same one.
No, they took everything from me.
Oh, yeah.
I had an SKS that I tagged.
You know, if you, if he killed an NVA with a single-shot weapon,
if you had the chance, if you could, you could tag it, you know, send it back to the rear on the, you know, chopper bringing in food or something.
And they were supposed to put it away for you.
So when you went back to the States, you could take single-shot weapons home.
And, yeah, some Pogue in the rear stole my SKS.
No figure.
Yeah.
But I got one.
I got an SKS now.
It's pretty cool.
It's just got the big bayonet.
I got one, too.
At SKS?
Yeah.
Oh, sweet.
I'll pull it out here.
With the bayonet?
Yep.
Oh, okay.
And a 45.
Oh, yeah.
Cold 45.
Oh, 45.
Although the truth is, the one time I had to pull that 45 out, ran out of ammo or something.
I don't know.
Who knows why.
And it was rusted so bad.
It wouldn't work.
Well, I took care of the machine gun, but, you know, kind of ignored that 45.
because I didn't plan on ever using that.
Yeah.
What do you think of 9-mill?
Oh, I like them.
Yeah.
I mean, I like, yeah.
Do you have a 9-mill?
Yeah, I think I do.
I got a 9-mill, but...
What is it?
I think I've got an old...
I mean, it's not a military.
It's a civilian 9-millimeter.
I think I got an old barretta.
Oh, right on.
I think it's a barretta.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure it's a barretta.
Well, I got you another present.
Oh, God.
silencer? That's right. I tried to get to a machine gun, but I just, I couldn't get the paperwork
done in time. So, oh gosh, man. I got a buddy over at Sig. His name's Jason. He's got a soft spot
for Vietnam vets, just like the rest of us. Oh, Jason. Thanks, buddy. So that is a 9mm Cig Sauer
P-365 macro with a SIG flashlight, the brand new optics line. So it's got a red dot on there.
A sig-suppressor from silencer shop.
A silencer.
A silencer shop is awesome.
They do super easy to get the silencers from them.
Are you allowed to have silencers?
You're in luck.
You live in Florida.
So silencer shop's going to ship you a brand new can or suppressor down to Florida for you.
And you'll be able to put that on that weapon right there.
They'll take care of all the paperwork.
The other thing I love about silencer shop is they,
They stand up for gun rights for us.
Gun enthusiasts.
So they're fucking awesome company.
Sig is amazing.
God, that's great, man.
That thing, I mean, we're talking some fucking pews.
Oh, don't spend...
17 rounds in the magazine plus one in the pipe.
Oh, 17 rounds?
17 rounds.
Oh, man.
Oh, my son's going to be trying to steal this from me.
Don't let him.
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
Gosh, this is beautiful.
Man, thanks.
Well, maybe you can sleep with that thing now.
Done.
Yeah, I did.
Done.
Nancy won't even know when I've shot somebody.
Right on.
She can still sleep, and I'll wake her up the next day and tell her.
Oh, by the way.
Oh, gosh.
Thanks, man.
What a great gift.
You're welcome.
I feel cheap now giving it.
your books and a sweatshirt.
No.
You kidding?
I'm going to wear that shirt everywhere.
Oh, God.
But, um, all right.
One last question.
Yeah.
Do you think your buddy Chen would want to come on?
Do I what?
Do you think your buddy Chen would want to come on the show?
Oh.
I don't know.
He might.
I love to interview him.
He might.
I, uh, I'll talk to.
I tell you, I know some great men that probably would do it quicker, but Major Scott Husing,
do you know him?
No.
He wrote Echo in Ramadi.
And he's, he went from, as a Lance corporal, he read Guns Up, and now as a retired major, and he came to see me
and guns up was huge with him and all the guys.
I think it was in, I know he was in Rommadi, of course,
but I think he was in Iraq or the first Gulf War before that.
I'm not even sure.
Wherever he read Guns Up, they handed out Guns Up,
and they would tear it in sections for a squad to share it.
And so he's, now he's, you know, in his 50s,
and he shows up at my front door, and I didn't know this guy.
And he goes, my name is Major Scott.
Husing, and I've wanted to meet you ever since I was a Lance Corporal and got to know him real good
with the Fort Marines.
And this book, Echo and Ramadi, you'd probably relate to that a lot more than Nam stuff.
But yeah, anyway, yeah, he's one.
I will, I'll talk to Chan.
Perfect.
See what he says.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
God, this is, this has been so, I've been so excited about this.
Me too.
I've been, and I've been way too anxious.
I had to pray, you know, be anxious for nothing, probably a hundred times.
Just, I had to chill out a little bit.
I was so excited about it.
Well, ever since, it started when Jocko came on your show and suggested me.
And I, all my friends sent me,
Jocko told Sean Ryan to have you on, da-da-da-da, you know, and I'm, I mean, from that moment,
I've been nervous.
Chaco's an awesome dude, man.
I'm excited, but, you know.
So are you.
Yeah.
Thank you for coming.
I love this thing.
You haven't even shot it yet.
I don't know.
I love it.
Ah, you're going to love it.
Oh, yeah.
It's not raining out there.
We can crack a couple rounds off.
Oh, let's do.
All right.
All right.
You want to end this with a prayer?
I do.
How about you leading?
Okay.
I better put my weapon down.
I don't know if God appreciates that.
Father God, we come before you, Lord, to give thanks.
I want to thank you with all my heart for taking care of me through all this and getting me,
just getting me on this podcast.
I don't believe in accidents, and I know Sean doesn't either, Lord.
We want to give you thanks for a good.
a million and one blessings. Thank you, Lord, for the calling you've put on his life. Thank you for using
him in such a mighty way and giving him this voice that's reaching so many people and given him
the courage to stand up for Christ. That's not easy in this world, Lord. It's really hard sometimes.
Father, keep encouraging, Sean, with that kind of courage. And don't let any of Satan's attention.
attacks, and we know there's going to be some. There's always Satan's attacks, especially when a
Christian's doing something. If a Christian's on the sideline doing nothing, Satan leaves him alone.
But when you got a man like Sean who's stepping up and stepping out front, he's walking point, God,
and that's hard to do down here, and you know it. So bless him, bless this show, bless his family.
and we just want to give you all the thanks and the praise in Jesus' name. Amen.
Amen.
Thank you, brother.
Yeah, Phil.
Johnny?
Yeah.
It was an honor.
Oh.
Thanks, Sam.
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