Through propaganda and sheer ignorance the Vietnamese were seen as savages or animals. This perception is expressed in the documentary Hearts and Minds when being interviewed the United States Army General, William Westmoreland, stated that “the Oriental doesn 't put the same high price on life as does the Westerner. Life is cheap in the Orient” (Davis, The Things They Carried). I find this statement to be the most ignorant and bigoted statement made by a man of high government power about the Vietnam War. In my opinion one of the goals of Hearts and Minds was not only to show the atrocities of the war, but more specifically to show the Vietnamese as human beings similar to you and me, and not savage animals. The movie allows us visualize the vicious atrocities happening all across Vietnam. Hearts and Minds puts a face to the civilians whose loved ones were killed and home were burned down. It was eye opening for me when I heard that “three out of four patients seeking treatment in a Vietnamese hospital afterward for burns from napalm, or jellied gasoline, were village women” (Zinn, 468). The Vietnam War was supposed to be a war against communism and for freedom, yet a majority of the people that were physically harmed or killed were non-communist
Through propaganda and sheer ignorance the Vietnamese were seen as savages or animals. This perception is expressed in the documentary Hearts and Minds when being interviewed the United States Army General, William Westmoreland, stated that “the Oriental doesn 't put the same high price on life as does the Westerner. Life is cheap in the Orient” (Davis, The Things They Carried). I find this statement to be the most ignorant and bigoted statement made by a man of high government power about the Vietnam War. In my opinion one of the goals of Hearts and Minds was not only to show the atrocities of the war, but more specifically to show the Vietnamese as human beings similar to you and me, and not savage animals. The movie allows us visualize the vicious atrocities happening all across Vietnam. Hearts and Minds puts a face to the civilians whose loved ones were killed and home were burned down. It was eye opening for me when I heard that “three out of four patients seeking treatment in a Vietnamese hospital afterward for burns from napalm, or jellied gasoline, were village women” (Zinn, 468). The Vietnam War was supposed to be a war against communism and for freedom, yet a majority of the people that were physically harmed or killed were non-communist