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#1 | |
Medic
![]() Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Chicago
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Here is an excerpt with a link at the bottom, way too long to quote the whole thing here.
Quote:
http://www.uboatarchive.net/LuethLecture.htm |
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#2 |
Stowaway
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I read the whole thing, very good read even if he was Nazi, (which it didnt talk too much about) but the idea of being connected and caring about your men seems like the absolute right way to go as a Kaulen, the more they trust and respect you, the more efficient things would work. And the fact that he taught even basic seamen different things (navigation and such) or let them see different sights (whales, thunder storms, sinkings) only helps his cause, heck I bet if one of his officers went down (which I think there was part where a petty officer did and he did the same) he could almost confidently replace them with a Seaman.
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#3 | |||
The Old Man
![]() Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Warszawa, Polska
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Just read it. The man I see through (or between) these lines of text is a very demanding, dominative character. I'm almost sure I wouldn't go along well with him, I get fed up fast with such types - I understand my duty and how I perform it is under constant detailed control of superiors, but where it comes to my private life (or just private parts) I'm not letting any officer close to it. He won't tell me if I should visit brothels or not, if I should spend my hard earned money on vodka, or send it to family. "Sir, go realize your idea of perfect state of total control somewhere else, Captain Sir." Oh dear, I hate being paternalised so much, and this guy even wanted to decide which music is too hard for me to understand... One doesn't join the Navy to be raised by officers, people enlist to be soldiers, not kids. And under Luth "Everyone had to sing", "everybody had to tell the story over the loud-speaker", "Everyone had to compose"...
Two excerpts were striking to me. One reminded me once more how repugnant and abominable the Nazi ideology was, and how I despise all it stood for. Frankly speaking, when reading this I had - yet again - this short flash of doubt if I should play a NAZI Germany character/soldier, even in a simulator. Short one though - I had had this conversation with myself earlier already and conclusions were drawn. ![]() Quote:
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Overall the text is fascinating as a historical document and a testimony of a submariner that had spent a large part of his life submerged - invaluable. With all his attention to details it reads very smoothly (although as for a lecture it's much too chaotic and without plan - I'm more used to highly qualified lecturers than such amateurs). Here, an interesting excerpt: Quote:
If you're too lazy to read all of it, at least read the last 2 pages - these contain very good examples of what might go wrong when on a sub. And... just anything could. Thanks for the link, it was an experience to read that. ![]()
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Long, hard, wet and full of seamen. My precious. SH3+GWX+OLC — sunk x4, retired x2; SH5+TDW — still exploring My SH5 mods: EQuaTool - Elite Quality Map Tools, Patrol Routine Scripts, No Logo Intro Menu_Animation, Less Annoying Stopwatch Links: SH5 mods I use, FileFront, Manual plotting how-to |
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#4 | |
Stowaway
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Id have to disagree with the dominative character, in essence all he seemed to be doing was looking out for the well being of his men, and lets be honest most people if not all if they have a boss that they realize cares about what they think people are more motivated to put their selfish bull**** (excuse the language) aside and be more than willing to lay their life down for their fellow crew members who thanks to their captain they all know and have a deeper understanding of.
I think of it as team building activities, the more you get your men to work with eachother and have fun together and develop a more personal relationship, the easier they will function as a single unit. I know this just from when I played football, our coach was a big guy into being part of our lives and getting us to be a close team. As such during my 4 years at the HS playing for them, no we never went to state, but we were a determined team with the same goal and understood what needed to be done. In a game of emotion we were never the team to break because we worked with eachother so well. yes he seems dominative, but as a captain you need to command a certain respect, but on the side (even though being a Nazi) he understood that if he cared about his men, they would care too, (like the part where he talked about treating his seamen like they werent pure trash and actually mattered) this makes sense because in essense, theyre part of a functioning unit, and without them, his U-boat is just a worthless piece of submergeable boat in the Atlantic. Quote:
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#5 | |
Medic
![]() Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Chicago
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#6 |
Rear Admiral
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Say what you will about his political/social views - and those are pretty well-documented, and not pretty to say the least - everything I've read about him seems to indicate that his crews loved him and that his concern for them did not end when their service together did.
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#7 |
Sparky
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A great read, and a good leader.
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