Unquestionably... That's why I said "share in the suffering of our troops as best we can". Not all of us can join the fight, but we can at least watch what is going on and see what out soldiers are experiencing... Even if it is only on Youtube. The alternative is that we have a civilian population that is completely clueless with regard to our soldiers' suffering and the realities of this conflict... Is there then any wonder our veterans are treated badly by people who have no clue?
Watching a battle on youtube will ONLY allow folks to see it. That is is the extent of "as best we can"
It's TV
Voyeurism
Entertainment, if you will. The American public, at large, will mindlessly change the channel the moment they get bored.
Watching the most detailed HD footage will NEVER convey what it is really like.
It can't let you experience...............
What 115 degree heat feels like on the soles of your feet through a pair of combat boots.
The feeling of sand in every tender part of your body and how raw it makes those parts.
The realization that sand actually has a "taste" and that different sand from different regions has it's own distinct flavor,
The involuntary tensing of muscles every time one hears the thump of a mortar round coming out of a tube and the silent prayer that every GI says, after hearing that same sound hoping that when that round finally lands, it's not the one that sends you home in a box.
What it is like to go on a treasure hunt for the body parts of someone you have spent 6+ months living, eating, sleeping, playing cards, and swapping fishing/hunting/girl chasing lies with, after his vehicle ran over an IED, or what it's like to hear him ask you to not let him die in some God-forsaken hell-hole, far away from the ones he loves while his life's blood ebbs out into the sand.
How gloriously relieving it is to mark another X on one's short-timer's calendar, and how WRONG it is to mark that X before the sun has set that day.
The exquisite and precious smell of a 3' x 3' plot of grass when one kneels down and buries one's face in it, while surrounded by a landscape that is as alien to most people as the surface of the moon, planted by a GI whose wife sent him the seeds from home.
Watching war through a camera lens will never allow one to to experience any of that. Not "as best as they can". Not at all.
Thinking that it could even remotely help one relate to the gamut of emotions that a GI experiences during a firefight is utterly ludicrous and downright insulting.
Most GI's could care less if the folks at home are "tuning in to the war channel"
Most would prefer that their OpSec, location, troop movements and/or tactics not be broadcasted to the world at-large so that their safety and security is not compromised, thank-you-very-much.
Most just want to make it back home so that they can resume their normal lives and see their family.
Most would be totally honored by a firm handshake, a slap on the back and a warm, heart-felt "Thank You", not "Hey, I saw the footage of your last battle and I know what you are going through". That is as silly as a man telling his wife that he knows what she went through during childbirth.
"For those who fought for it, freedom has a flavor the protected will never know."
Carry on.