The video explores the search for comfort in a war zone in Poland and reflects on the Vietnam War's complexities.
[32:22-33:07]
In Poland, the main character seeks comfort in a war zone and reflects on the limited availability of marijuana.
when we got to poland, that was what immediately i was asking: can we get you know, i've never been in a war zone. i know i'm going to want to have at least a indica, uh, but uh, we did hook up and uh, and all. but they, the hookup was this guy. you know we called him kid rock, but he brings like little like chewed gum size, uh, uh, nugget, a weed, and there was 2 of us. the camera guy smoked and it's like: oh, this will, this will last for a minute, and then he takes it and he puts it in with tobacco and makes a joint and it's like: now you just ruined it. But yeah, there was very little weed, And maybe in a war zone you want to keep your head about you. I don't know.
[33:07-34:08]
The discussion shifts to the Vietnam War, debating its outcomes, the meaning of victory, and the focus on body counts.
Vietnam was full of weed. Yeah, Okay, we lost Vietnam, Didn't we lose that war? Right, Not really, WWII, we won. No, really, we lost Vietnam. You know how we lost Vietnam. We claimed we won, ......... And we have to. uh, well, not by the measure that they. uh, that's a whole other thing. but but they changed the way. we we um measure winning or losing. they were going by body count. but if you go by body count, i think we killed fifty million people to like four hundred thousand on the other side. so i think we, if you go by that measure, we won that war. usually, Yeah, but war usually isn't about body counts, It's about achieving objectives. And that war was all about body counts. That was the main objective. was body counts. Anyway, enough of that. It was about dominoes. I remember the newspaper headlines. The whole thing was about dominoes. okay, And our best domino players versus their best domino players, and we lost. Yeah.