A few chance incidents of apparent clumsiness gave Ford an unjustified reputation for being a klutz. It made good material for Saturday Night Live's writers, though.Ironically, Ford was one of our most athletic presidents. Played center for Michigan, was recruited by Packers and Lions, but went Navy instead.
Had Nixon faced criminal proceedings after his resignation, what would have been the outcome? Months more of residual baggage from the Watergate affair, and Tricky Dick would have served a couple of years in a minimum-security facility. Maybe.Historians believe he pardoned Nixon from good motives, though cynical citizens (rightfully so) smelled a rat.
From a pure, ivory-tower ethical point of view, maybe Ford's pardon of Nixon was the wrong thing to do. But, in the overall scheme of things, it was probably best for the country.
And now, back to our regularly scheduled topic in progress . . .
Do you mean ugly-scary or badass-scary? Some of those LCS designs look pretty cool....Yet look at the Littoral Combat Ship protos for a scary example of what might warrant an "important" name today.
Mainly "stooping to a new low" scary, I think. It will be quite a while before the Navy will start considering these midgets its capital assets, or even start valuing them over the bluewater destroyers.
Although admittedly the carriers were considered a step down from fleet oilers when they were first introduced - and the first big ones only got "proud" names because they were battle cruiser conversions. The first USN flattop with a true heritage name would appear to be the Yorktown; the name Ranger was mostly assigned to vessels of lesser import before CV-4 got it. Many of the carrier names got "big" thanks to the exploits of the carriers themselves...
Air power at sea? It’s just a fad. Real naval battles are fought with big ships firing big guns at each other!. . . Although admittedly the carriers were considered a step down from fleet oilers when they were first introduced - and the first big ones only got "proud" names because they were battle cruiser conversions.
Air power at sea? It’s just a fad. Real naval battles are fought with big ships firing big guns at each other!![]()
I stand corrected on the relative reputation of the early carrier namesakes. Thank you!
It's an interesting development nevertheless that quite a few of these "big" names went to "motor yachts" and "gunboats" at the turn of the century, before reaching the carriers - now that should be considered a step down. (Or was the mere presence of a modern powerplant aboard a source of great prestige, even for small vessels?)
But horrendously expensive. The fast carrier evolved to win fleet vs fleet battles, but was capable -- and yes impressive -- enough to become the go-to response for many an international crisis. Understandable in the days of Cold War defense budgets, perhaps, but much more questionable now.
Even more so as the demise of the long-range carrier bomber forces the flattop to get closer to the action, often into restricted searoom that negates her speed advantages. With the increasing capabilities of diesel/AIP subs and good old fashioned mining, such scenarios are a potential nightmare that raise serious cost/benefit questions.
There were certainly some who thought that way, but institutional resistance to naval air in the inter-war years has been somewhat exaggerated. As carriers were integrated into the annual fleet exercises in the '30s, all but the most closed-minded admirals realized that the navy couldn't afford to ignore air power. Aviation became a way to "go places" in the navy and was represented at the highest levels. By the time it entered WW2, the USN had the most thoroughly integrated and stable air force of any navy in the world.
We do have helicopter carriers that will handle the F-35C VSTOL in the future. and that's what the Royal Navy is going for with it's new Queen Elizabeth carriers under construction.
It all depends whether you’re standing on the flight deck or trying to land on it! Don’t carrier pilots say that every landing is essentially a controlled crash?. . . Watch the miniseries "Carrier". It's on Netflix. A filmcrew went on deployment onboard Nimitz to the Persian Gulf. It's amazing how something as huge as Nimitz can seem so cramped and small.
It all depends whether you’re standing on the flight deck or trying to land on it! Don’t carrier pilots say that every landing is essentially a controlled crash?. . . Watch the miniseries "Carrier". It's on Netflix. A filmcrew went on deployment onboard Nimitz to the Persian Gulf. It's amazing how something as huge as Nimitz can seem so cramped and small.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.