To bring this back to sniping: Wasn't Carlos Hathcock the fellow that had a sniper duel and actually put his round through his opponent's scope and into his eye, like we see in movies all the time now?
Yes. He also had an actual bounty placed on his head by the Viet Cong ($25k, I want to say?). Two awesome things came of it: (1) he stalked and killed every VC sniper sent after him, in true badass fashion. (2) Quite a few of the Marines he served with began wearing white feathers in their caps, his signature look (and why the VC gave him the name "White Feather"), in a real-life
I Am Spartacus, No I Am moment.
What impresses me more about Gunnery Sergeant Hatcock isn''t even his sniping, though (the United States has three men that I can think of with higher confirmed kill counts, in fact)...it was everything else about him. He stopped actively sniping in the field because he burned the
hell out of himself (while on leave!) rushing to pull seven injured Marines out of a burning vehicle. He insisted on continuing to serve despite being more than qualified for a medical discharge, and dedicated himself to instructing at the USMC Scout Sniper school (often while visibly weeping blood through his cracking, peeling, burn scars). When his health declined later in life due to the burn damage and multiple sclerosis ganging up on him, he only reluctantly left the service (and even then he took up shark fishing as a casual hobby, because everyone knows shark fishing isn't physically demanding or anything, right?). He was just a real life man whose story reads like fiction.
He's an undeniable hero in my book, and not for his shooting. "I like shooting, and I love hunting. But I never did enjoy killing anybody," he once said. It was
the rest of the man that impresses the hell out of me, not his ability to pull a trigger.
...and...uhh...*shuffles feet a little*...
yeah. So, anyways. Sorry for rambling a bit -- but learning remarkable individual stories like this is how I got into doing what I do, in real life. History's awesome (in the classic sense of the word, awe-inspiring) when you give it a chance.