Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Napalm Sticks to Kids" in English language version.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link){{citation}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link).{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link).{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)Marching chants induce recruits to sever ties with a civilian past and to embrace, however reluctantly, a martial future. In wartime, these recruits adopt the persona of frontline soldiers, though they may never see combat; in peacetime, they chant of their predecessors. While some Vietnam cadence calls reflect conventional attitudes about training and combat, others draw the grotesque picture of the enemy as helpless civilian child. [sic]
The 'First Television War' was also documented in over 5,000 songs. From protest to patriotism, popular music reveals the complexity of America's two-decade long [sic] experience struggling against communism in Vietnam.
Marching chants induce recruits to sever ties with a civilian past and to embrace, however reluctantly, a martial future. In wartime, these recruits adopt the persona of frontline soldiers, though they may never see combat; in peacetime, they chant of their predecessors. While some Vietnam cadence calls reflect conventional attitudes about training and combat, others draw the grotesque picture of the enemy as helpless civilian child. [sic]
The 'First Television War' was also documented in over 5,000 songs. From protest to patriotism, popular music reveals the complexity of America's two-decade long [sic] experience struggling against communism in Vietnam.
The 'First Television War' was also documented in over 5,000 songs. From protest to patriotism, popular music reveals the complexity of America's two-decade long [sic] experience struggling against communism in Vietnam.
Marching chants induce recruits to sever ties with a civilian past and to embrace, however reluctantly, a martial future. In wartime, these recruits adopt the persona of frontline soldiers, though they may never see combat; in peacetime, they chant of their predecessors. While some Vietnam cadence calls reflect conventional attitudes about training and combat, others draw the grotesque picture of the enemy as helpless civilian child. [sic]