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Spitfire and Messerschmidt by Gina Marie Wylie

Quasirandom 🚫

Boy, do I have mixed feelings about this. The version I read and reread when it was first posted on ASSM was deeply influentialβ€”I can find traces of it in almost every YA I've written, even the work-for-hire stuff under a house name. Sometimes it's just a small detail or two, sometimes (in some stories here on SOL) it's overt. Something about the story, about how it's told, I really connected with me.

That ASSM version, though, was unfinished, cutting off mid-episode. Many years later, the conclusion finally came out here on SOL. I've read it once. I was, um, disappointed. Not at how dark the ending gets, as it had long been clearly signaled that something bad was going down, but the new chapters are so deeply cynical in tone. I should reread it, but I haven't wanted to. Or felt up for it, given pandemic stresses.

The first part of the current SOL version is also disappointingβ€”it's been badly edited, as in paragraphs snipped out without spackling over the holes, so it's a jerky read with lots of sudden jars. I can sorta see why it was done, as the overall effect is to remove the sibling incest that incites the plot but is otherwise incidental to the story, but it made me cringe to see it done so badly. At least, that's what I saw in the first two chapters, after which my cringing was getting painful enough I had to stop. All of which reduces to, my recommended way to read the whole thing is look up the early chapters on ASSTR and the conclusion here.

Anyone else remember this story? Thoughts/grumps/disagreements?

bk69 🚫
Updated:

@Quasirandom

S&M was the story that made GMW turn combative with readers.

So many kept bitching at her to finish the story, she instituted a policy of halting work on it any time anyone asked. So there was a LONG delay between the original chapters and the completion.

For editing, I suspect on her site you might get a better edit?

But yeah, any disappointment with the ending is likely due to Gina getting sick of questions and forcing a ending that people wouldn't like, just to flip them off.

Also, S&M was, IIRC, the story that made Gina give up on sex scenes - she got tired of looking for spaces to shoehorn in something, and when she noticed she was writing placeholders (like [insert sex scene here]) and continuing to develop the plot rather than stop and write the scene, she decided to stop.

Replies:   Quasirandom  Torsian
Quasirandom 🚫
Updated:

@bk69

I honestly have sympathy with her there. I mean, my spouse and I delayed getting married because we were sick and tired of being asked when we were going to, and finally started answering "a year after the last time someone asks us." Reader expectations is one reason I'll never start posting a story I haven't finished.

And if sex scenes aren't giving you joy, don't write 'em. Advance the story with other means.

Replies:   solreader50
solreader50 🚫

@Quasirandom

And if sex scenes aren't giving you joy, don't write 'em. Advance the story with other means.

And the corollary, if sex scenes aren't giving you joy, don't read 'em. Advance the story with other means.

By this I mean that there are a number of stories out there (no names, no pack-drill) which have good to great plots but every second or third chapter repeats essentially the same sex scene. Now I like a sex scene as much as the next person, but too many can get in the way of a really good story, especially if they add nothing to the story. That's when the page down key comes in handy.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@solreader50

Now I like a sex scene as much as the next person, but too many can get in the way of a really good story, especially if they add nothing to the story.

I'll have to disagree somewhat here.

1. What's getting in the way isn't really the number of sex scenes in and of itself, it's the copy and past repetitiveness that gets in the way. A lack of imagination/creativity on the part of the author.

I would be willing to bet that if you took the same story and every sex scene was distinctly unique, you would have a very different experience of them even if they don't advance the larger plot.

2. There is nothing special in this regard about sex scenes. This can happen in no sex stories in any genre.

For example a particular author writes westerns. His westerns have a gun fight every third chapter and the gun fights have a copy and paste feel to them. How is that any different?

Replies:   Grey Wolf
Grey Wolf 🚫

@Dominions Son

For example a particular author writes westerns. His westerns have a gun fight every third chapter and the gun fights have a copy and paste feel to them. How is that any different?

I don't think it's different. The point, maybe, is that too much of anything spoils things. In the Western - is the point of it the gunfights? Or is there a bigger story? It's not just that 'here's another repetitive gunfight to slog through', it's 'why aren't we advancing the cattle rustling and mining subplots at all in this space?'.

Which, looping back to sex scenes, is the point. If the story isn't a 'sex story' -- i.e. it's about sex, too much time spent on sex scenes is crowding out the rest of the story. In the western, if the story isn't about a gunfighter and his/her gunfights, they're crowding out the rest of the story.

It wouldn't really matter if they were distinctly unique. If they're not the point, they're still not the point, no matter how well done.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Grey Wolf

Which, looping back to sex scenes, is the point. If the story isn't a 'sex story' -- i.e. it's about sex, too much time spent on sex scenes is crowding out the rest of the story.

There is a great deal more to a complete well-rounded story than just the plot.

Sorry, but in my opinion, the plot, the whole plot, and nothing but the plot makes for trash stories.

Replies:   bk69  Grey Wolf
bk69 🚫

@Dominions Son

Sorry, but in my opinion, the plot, the whole plot, and nothing but the plot makes for trash stories.

True, but you aren't going to be getting a lot of character development in those sex scenes either.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@bk69

but you aren't going to be getting a lot of character development in those sex scenes either.

One of the crucial parts of character building is the relationships that exist between characters. There's a lot of that in a good sex scene.

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater 🚫

@Switch Blayde

There's a lot of that in a good sex scene.

which are extremely rare in SoL stories.

Replies:   PotomacBob
PotomacBob 🚫

@Ernest Bywater

Ernest Bywater
3/10/2021, 2:12:33 AM

@Switch Blayde

There's a lot of that in a good sex scene.

which are extremely rare in SoL stories.

Those comments would be really useful if you could point us to a sex scene on SOL that you think is well done.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@PotomacBob

Those comments would be really useful if you could point us to a sex scene on SOL that you think is well done.

I don't think it would be apparent if just the sex scene was posted. When you're talking about character relationships, it's what leads up to the sex as well as the sex itself, and often what happens after the sex.

Ernest Bywater 🚫

@PotomacBob

Those comments would be really useful if you could point us to a sex scene on SOL that you think is well done.

Due to the Gestapo issue I had and the current court orders arising from it meaning I can't view any stories with sex scenes until the court order runs out in some months time, I can't right now. I also doubt I'll be interested in digging this up when I can do so.

However, while some of the sex scenes in my early works with sex scenes, some of the scenes in the later stories of mine would fill the bill as I'd improved in that regards with practice. Finding Home is the first story that comes to mind for you to read.

https://storiesonline.net/s/66183/finding-home

Grey Wolf 🚫

@Dominions Son

the plot, the whole plot, and nothing but the plot makes for trash stories

Completely agree. Character development obviously matters. And I support 'fluff' - optional detail that adds to the world.

But, whether it's the gunfights or sex scenes or whatever, a repetitive scene isn't advancing the story, isn't advancing characterization, and isn't really adding interesting 'fluff'.

The point really is where to draw the line between what's 'repetitive' and what isn't, and what's 'too much' and what's not. That's where the nuances come in. One person's boring and repetitive might be another's happy place; one person's 'too much' might be another's 'just right' (and yet another's 'way too much').

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Grey Wolf

But, whether it's the gunfights or sex scenes or whatever, a repetitive scene isn't advancing the story, isn't advancing characterization, and isn't really adding interesting 'fluff'.

But if each of those scenes are distinctly unique I don't think it's fair to call them repetitive no matter how many such scenes there are.

I also think your idea that such scenes categorically can't advance characterization no matter how well written is just bullshit.

Replies:   Grey Wolf
Grey Wolf 🚫
Updated:

@Dominions Son

We have diverged here to the point where you're saying things I agree with as if I disagreed with them.

His westerns have a gun fight every third chapter and the gun fights have a copy and paste feel to them.

This was the premise for 'repetitive'. It's explicitly not 'distinctly unique'. I agree - if they're distinctly unique, it'd be unfair to call them repetitive and they might well serve an important role.

In another thread I wrote:

[...] about sex scenes. The sex is important because it's another important character interaction, not because it's hot people getting it on. I don't find sex scenes interesting to write, or read, when they're between people who have an established relationship unless something new and different and interesting is happening, either physically or emotionally or on whatever level.

So, I think we're having an agreement here. The point I was trying to make is that copy-and-paste repetitive content doesn't advance plot or characterization regardless of whether it's sex or gunfighting or anything else. The key is the 'copy-and-paste' nature, not what the content involves.

I'm not at all anti-sex scene (other writers in the same thread were). My point is that - like other things in the story - unless what you're writing is about sex, the point of sex scenes is to advance the story/characters/etc.

Torsian 🚫

@bk69

I wondered if that was the case. The version posted here did get a revision to make the ending coherent. The ending definitely had a F***-you reader vibe.

Dinsdale 🚫

@Quasirandom

The original version was not the best story I've ever read, not even the best story of hers I've ever read.
When the "new version" came out it took me a year two to get around to reading it, and then I really wished I had not bothered.
If I start reading a completed multi-chapter story, I tend to download it and then read it locally. In the case of a rewrite, after having loathed one a few years ago - I'd replaced my original downloaded copy with the new version - I'll rename the original "v1" or something. With this story I renamed the new version "v2" and recovered the old version.
There were several problems with the plot in v1 but v2 made them much worse, or maybe I should reread v1 and see if it was not worse than I thought. Life's too short yada yada yada.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@Quasirandom

Thoughts/grumps/disagreements?

Grump, but not on the story. I never read the story or anything by GMW.

The grump goes way back to an author forum. My comment had to do with the second Iraq war. I thought it was a stupid thing to do because it was nice to have Iran and Iraq enemies.

She called me every name in the book, and probably made up some. So at that point, in my mind she didn't exist. I wouldn't be surprised if she was in the crowd storming the Capital.

Quasirandom 🚫

@Switch Blayde

And that would be a perfect example of why I am often leery of knowing more about authors whose work I like, despite most of my friends being in the industry. Ouch.

Ernest Bywater 🚫

@Switch Blayde

I never read the story or anything by GMW.

Ditto. On the advice of an editor I started posting some of Caz's and my stories to her story site. However, she insisted on certain changes being amde or she wouldn't post them. I pointed out the items she wanted changed weren't against the site rules, and all I got back was a very long response that, when abusive words were removed, said "Do as I say or get lost." My response was to tell her to cancel the story posts and the account. As far as I know nothing by Cazna nor me are on that site. If they are they should be removed.

Replies:   Radagast
Radagast 🚫

@Ernest Bywater

Ouch. My site, my rules is something I completely accept. I've been a forum moderator and the First Amendment doesn't apply on private property. That said, consistency of rules and even handed treatment of all is needed if you want a wider group of contributors and the audience they bring.
I wonder what her monthly box wine and cat litter bill totals.

bk69 🚫

@Radagast

You probably have the wrong impression.

Gina was always pretty reasonable, but... she dealt with enough asshats that she decided patience was a character defect, and didn't give anyone more than half a chance.

She was/is also pretty stuck in her ways. And given that both her and Ernest are control freaks, and that it was her site - well, some things are inevitable.

Now, though, I don't know about the wine - she's had some neurological issues the last few years, apparently...

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater 🚫

@bk69

Ernest are control freaks, and that it was her site - well, some things are inevitable.

I don't mind changing things to suit the rules, but when you suit the rules as listed then have new rules applied without any prior advice of their existence and then get abused by for asking why. Well, inconsistency and abuse from a what seems to be a nutcase means I don't want to stay there, and I didn't.

Ernest Bywater 🚫

@Radagast

My site, my rules is something I completely accept. I've been a forum moderator and the First Amendment doesn't apply on private property. That said, consistency of rules and even handed treatment of all is needed if you want a wider group of contributors and the audience they bring.

That's exactly how I felt. I abided by the rules set, then got hit by rules never listed. Not being able to tell, in advance, what was and wasn't acceptable made me decide not to even try.

Dominions Son 🚫

@Radagast

. My site, my rules is something I completely accept.

Sure, but if you're going to add a "rules subject to change without notice" disclaimer to that, don't expect a lot of people to be willing to use your site.

Mushroom 🚫

@Quasirandom

GMW has a long and interesting history as a writer.

Many of us remember her early on from "Kate and Lyn", 25 years ago. A story that started great, then seemed to just drag on and on, and ultimately just fizzled out with no real conclusion.

And I remember her response, which at one point was along the lines of she would just write a last chapter where everybody dies and that would be the end of it.

I am pretty sure she left erotica decades ago, and can't remember the last "new" thing I read from her.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 🚫

@Mushroom

I am pretty sure she left erotica decades ago, and can't remember the last "new" thing I read from her.

As I recall, it was during writing S&M that she got tired of erotica. Which was sad, because she also abandoned Laura Alban Hunt.

Amusingly, she was able to pull a Hitchcock with her story Hannah Sawyer - readers 'remembered' really hot lesbian scenes she never actually wrote in the story, and it won a Golden Clit.

As I understand it, most of what she's publishing now is abandoned works - she hasn't finished anything, apparently, since her stroke... so she's dusting off old unfinished works to have something to post.

richardshagrin 🚫

@Quasirandom

the last "new" thing

Her site, Beyond the Far Horizon, still has comments and stories by her posted nearly weekly, on Sundays about 5 pm. Not always, illness and age have affected her ability to finish some of the stories she posts at least on time every week. But she is alive and writing. You are correct, she doesn't want to write erotica.

red61544 🚫

@Quasirandom

I reread the entire story when she finished it. My first reaction was that she was pissed off at how many people were demanding that she finish the story. But the more I thought about it, the more I came to the conclusion that the ending was too real for me! I think we all want the characters to whom we relate to live happily ever after. The "happily ever afters" are few and far between in real life. Before you bitch about an author leaving a story unfinished, remember that every unfinished story could end: "The next day, he left the house to catch his bus a little late. Since he was in a hurry, he never saw the out-of-control car that was bearing down on him until it was too late."

awnlee jawking 🚫

@red61544

Since he was in a hurry, he never saw the out-of-control car that was bearing down on him until it was too late.

Funny, we've just had a thread decrying the overuse of automotive accidents as a plot device.

How about: Since he was in a hurry, he didn't notice Claudine's errant Lego brick until his bare foot landed squarely on it. Recoiling in agony, he slipped and hit his head on the toilet bowl. Knocked unconscious, he drowned in three inches of water.

AJ

Switch Blayde 🚫

@red61544

every unfinished story could end: "The next day, he left the house to catch his bus a little late. Since he was in a hurry, he never saw the out-of-control car that was bearing down on him until it was too late."

Or that could be the beginning of a DoOver story.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 🚫

@Switch Blayde

I think more a Time Loop story. DoOvers typically involve a temporal displacement that's more significant, sometimes with a Body Swap element.

Mushroom 🚫

@red61544

I think we all want the characters to whom we relate to live happily ever after. The "happily ever afters" are few and far between in real life.

Which was one of the things I set up purposefully once I had to get rid of the first girlfriend in "Country Boy". I decided to make it closer to real life, where a lot of the relationships just did not work out, for various reasons. Not that there was anything wrong with either of them, they just realized that things were not working out, or would never progress past a certain point.

bk69 🚫

@red61544

The "happily ever afters" are few and far between in real life.

I think that's precisely why they're desired in fiction - because while we know we (as readers) won't have that, at least the characters we've invested in can.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom 🚫

@bk69

I think that's precisely why they're desired in fiction - because while we know we (as readers) won't have that, at least the characters we've invested in can.

Of course, then you have the other end of the bar.

Most of the Brother's Grimm stories were really dark. And I myself have a series I created that are the same way. Don't dare read any of them, if you are looking for the "happy ending".

In the original Rapunzel, she gets knocked up, and the Prince is thrown out of the tower and blinded. Rapunzel gives birth to twins, and lives her life in a remote shack in poverty as he wanders as a beggar.

Almost the same with Sleeping Beauty. She is raped as she sleeps, and wakes up when her new twins are nursing. In Cinderella, she is horribly mistreated, and her step-sisters mutilate themselves to try and wear the shoe. In the end they are blinded, and the mother is forced to wear hot iron boots and dance until she dies.

Most people have no idea how sanitized the "Disneyfied" versions of fairy tales are. Anybody who read the original Hunchback would know that for sure.

Me, I have a fascination with dark tales, such as those, or even TV shows like The Twilight Zone. Where such simple phrases as "Time enough, at last!" or "It's a cookbook!" can still cause some to shudder.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Mushroom

Most of the Brother's Grimm stories were really dark.

The Brother's Grimm were the first to put many of those stories on paper and publish them, but for the most part the stories themselves are much older.

The reason they are so dark is that for the most part, they were originally cautionary tales meant for adults in an age when everyone believed in magic and the supernatural.

They only got turned into children's stories when it became unfashionable for adults to believe in magic.

And the stories have been slowly sanitized over the centuries as views on what is appropriate for childrent have changed.

Replies:   richardshagrin  joyR
richardshagrin 🚫

@Dominions Son

Brother's Grimm stories

Maybe that is why they are grim? So grim, it takes mm to make them Grimm enough.

If I wrote them they would be Grin. Shagrin.

joyR 🚫

@Dominions Son

The reason they are so dark is that for the most part, they were originally cautionary tales meant for adults in an age when everyone believed in magic and the supernatural.

Are you sure they were meant for adults? Also, bear in mind that 'adult' in those days was reached at a far younger age.

A cautionary tale is pointless if learned after the situation arises. It is only our supposedly more 'enlightened' age that places arbitrary age limits.

Has anyone ever actually explained the US limits that allow a young adult to fight for his/her country, but not legally buy a drink upon (hopefully) returning home?

Dominions Son 🚫

@joyR

Are you sure they were meant for adults?

Lots of sex and violence in the original stories, and no happily ever after.

Some of those stories go back to the early iron age or farther.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 🚫

@Dominions Son

Lots of sex and violence in the original stories,

And 'children' back then weren't coddled or kept ignorant of either of those, so what's your point? Tell kids story that scares them off sex, or from doing multiple stupid things... sounds like a winning strategy for parents.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@bk69

And 'children' back then weren't coddled or kept ignorant of either of those, so what's your point?

While the stories might not have been concealed for children, back when all adults accepted the existence of magic and the supernatural as a fact, those stores would not have been viewed as exclusively for children.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 🚫

@Dominions Son

Maybe not exclusively. The story would be made entertaining for adults, while still serving as instruction for children.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@bk69

Maybe not exclusively.

That's the point, after it became socially unacceptable for adults to believe in magic they came to be seen as exclusively children's stories.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 🚫

@Dominions Son

You implied (or seemed to imply) they were exclusively for adults, earlier.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@bk69

You implied (or seemed to imply) they were exclusively for adults, earlier.

Yes, possibly a poor choice of wording on my part.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@joyR

Has anyone ever actually explained the US limits that allow a young adult to fight for his/her country, but not legally buy a drink upon (hopefully) returning home?

Well, back when we had the draft, the age was 18 for both. Since then, we've gone all volunteer for the military, and the franchise age is also 18. But the Federal government tied highway funds to the drinking age and raised the minimum age to 21 to purchase alcohol.

Quite frankly, there's a hell of a lot of 18 year olds that I wouldn't trust to buy alcohol OR to vote responsibly. But if they HAVE signed up and volunteered for the military and do serve, then chances are they're going to be able to purchase alcohol simply by showing up in uniform.

Just because you COULD do something doesn't mean you're entitled to anything special if you DON'T do something.

According to the US Census Bureau, there are approximately 12.7 million in the 18-20 year old range.

According to the best DOD estimates I can find, there are approximately 1.3 million TOTAL US Active Duty military, with approximately 800,000 National Guard and Reserves, giving a TOTAL of 2.1 million in the military. The actual number of 18-20 year olds actually serving on active duty or in the reserve is approximately 250,000.

That means you've got 12.7 million kids that primarily binge drink, since just because you can't legally buy alcohol doesn't mean you can't get it, and less than 2% of the total that actually HAVE volunteered to fight for his/her country.

Dominions Son 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

Quite frankly, there's a hell of a lot of 18 year olds that I wouldn't trust to buy alcohol OR to vote responsibly.

There are 80 year olds I wouldn't trust with that.

But if they HAVE signed up and volunteered for the military and do serve, then chances are they're going to be able to purchase alcohol simply by showing up in uniform.

Outside of facilities that are part of a military base, any bar, restaurant or store that sold alcohol to an 18-20 year old soldier would be risking their liquor license, even if they were in uniform.

Replies:   bk69  bk69  Mushroom  StarFleet Carl
bk69 🚫

@Dominions Son

Outside of facilities that are part of a military base, any bar, restaurant or store that sold alcohol to an 18-20 year old soldier would be risking their liquor license, even if they were in uniform.

Assuming they're stationed in the US.

bk69 🚫

@Dominions Son

to vote responsibly.

There are 80 year olds I wouldn't trust with that.

Hell, I wouldn't trust anyone under thirty with that. Or anyone over thirty without a brain.

Mushroom 🚫

@Dominions Son

Outside of facilities that are part of a military base, any bar, restaurant or store that sold alcohol to an 18-20 year old soldier would be risking their liquor license, even if they were in uniform.

Actually, that depends on the base.

Having been in the military for decades, I have seen this come and go and change many times.

When I first joined (1983), The age on base was 18. And there was also an active club system that were very popular. Every base had them, some had 6 or more clubs.

But then during the Clinton Administration, things changed. The drinking age was raised to 21, and because the club system was seen by some as "promoting drinking", most of them were closed down. Which I always though was a bad move, as now instead of walking there from the barracks, if you wanted a drink you had to drive somewhere.

In the last 20 years, it has bounced around a lot. On some bases it is 18, others 21. But as most of the clubs are gone, the base bowling alley has replaced that function. And because of a lot of drinking incidents over a decade ago, most training bases returned the age limit to 21.

Me, I have long said that they should return the clubs on all bases. If nothing else, because then you had at least some supervision when drinking. Have too much, and expect 2 of your buddies to walk you back to the barracks and leave your car in the parking lot. Make an ass of yourself, then odds are your Sergeant would be there and you would get talked to the next day about drinking responsibly.

Not able to drink responsibly, and expect to be banned from the club and have nowhere to drink at all.

I know that at my first duty station, we went over 2 years without a drunk driving incident. Today, most units can not go a month without one. But back then, if "drunk stumbling with your buddies 300 yards to the barracks" was a crime, many would have been guilty of it.

In the 1980's, you could not miss the clubs on base. Camp Lejeune had at least 6 of them that I was aware of on Mainside, and at least a dozen more on the various subcamps. An "All Ranks" club that anybody could go into, and various other ones broken up by rank. And we all watched out for each other.

I was never a heavy drinker, but on 2 occasions I had way too much, and had buddies walk me home. It was simply what we did for each other.

Replies:   Grey Wolf
Grey Wolf 🚫

@Mushroom

Which I always though was a bad move, as now instead of walking there from the barracks, if you wanted a drink you had to drive somewhere.

This is true for civilians as well. When I was in graduate school, the police made a big point of raiding the bars near campus, doing sting operations, etc to curtain service to 18- to 20-year-olds. It worked; bars got paranoid about checking IDs.

Drinking didn't go down, though. People went to 'townie' bars or got a 21-year-old friend to buy for them at a store. Drinking and driving went up; so did binge drinking in apartments and dorms.

I'd much rather have people drinking in places which will cut them off when they're blasted, and from which they can stagger home, then have people drink themselves to death (literally, in a few case) in their residences or risk everyone else's lives driving to and from bars they couldn't walk to.

Of course, my attitudes may be colored by having been legal at 18, illegal at 18 1/2, legal at 19, illegal at 19 1/2, then legal at 21. Or by always looking older than I was, so that, even at 18 1/2, I was the one buying alcohol at the grocery story because no one ever carded me (the first time I was ever carded I was 23, and it was a result of the aforementioned sting operations which led to anyone shy of 50 or so being carded).

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

any bar, restaurant or store that sold alcohol to an 18-20 year old soldier would be risking their liquor license, even if they were in uniform.

Things may have changed, but when I was in, if you went in uniform into any VFW or American Legion, half the time you didn't even HAVE to buy your drink, because someone would buy them for you.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

Things may have changed, but when I was in, if you went in uniform into any VFW or American Legion, half the time you didn't even HAVE to buy your drink, because someone would buy them for you.

AFIK, VFW or American Legion posts still need local liquor licenses to serve alcohol. And if they do, and they get caught serving someone under 21, they could lose said liquor license. That they were serving a uniformed member of the military will matter not at all to the cops or the local licensing agency.

Were you still in when the Feds coerced the states into raising the drinking age to 21?

Replies:   Mushroom  StarFleet Carl
Mushroom 🚫

@Dominions Son

AFIK, VFW or American Legion posts still need local liquor licenses to serve alcohol. And if they do, and they get caught serving someone under 21, they could lose said liquor license. That they were serving a uniformed member of the military will matter not at all to the cops or the local licensing agency.

Same here. In fact, if you were not a member you could not even get into the VFW or American Legion. They only started to ease up on that in the 1990's as the WWII generation started dying off and there had been few eligible to join after Vietnam.

Myself, I would never go to either one in uniform. After boot camp leave, I almost never wore my uniform somewhere unless I had to.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

AFIK, VFW or American Legion posts still need local liquor licenses to serve alcohol. And if they do, and they get caught serving someone under 21, they could lose said liquor license. That they were serving a uniformed member of the military will matter not at all to the cops or the local licensing agency.

Were you still in when the Feds coerced the states into raising the drinking age to 21?

No, as far as for being in when the drinking age was raised to 21.

However, and this is the big one, in doing more research into the National Minimum Legal Drinking Age law, there are assorted loopholes and exceptions, where states hold primacy. Yep, 21 is the legal age to buy a drink, but the state can make exceptions.

For example, religious purposes, parental consent, medical reasons, educational purposes (seriously, you can't go to culinary school and not learn about wines without tasting them, right?) and private functions or private clubs.

VFW and American Legion posts fit the definition of private clubs.

Also, 31 of the 50 states allow family members to furnish alcohol to underage members of their own family, 29 states (not the same list) have family exemptions, meaning you can't necessarily furnish them alcohol, but they can drink at your family party, and 14 of the 50 allow minor consumption with no restrictions.

Purchasing as a minor at a private event / private club is allowed in 31 (again, slightly different list) states. One example I found was that in Texas, if you're a minor and you're with your parents in a restaurant or bar, and your parent permits it, you can buy alcohol.

Ernest Bywater 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

That means you've got 12.7 million kids that primarily binge drink,

Carl, I've not gone looking for the stats about the issue, but there are many countries where the drinking alcohol age is 18, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia are just a few. What you may want to dig out the stats for, if you can find them, is the proportion of 18-21 year olds involved in alcohol related issues in those countries and compare them with the USA stats for the same issues.

Here in Australia we do have some binge drinkers, but they're the sort of people who do binge drinking regardless of age, so you'll find them still binge drinking when they're in their 50s etc. However, binge drinking in the 18-20 year old group isn't that high as a group.

Dominions Son 🚫

@Ernest Bywater

Carl, I've not gone looking for the stats about the issue, but there are many countries where the drinking alcohol age is 18, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia are just a few.

Do you know if there are countries that take an incremental approach? Beer and wine at age X and liquor (distilled spirits) at age Y where X is less than Y.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom 🚫

@Dominions Son

Do you know if there are countries that take an incremental approach? Beer and wine at age X and liquor (distilled spirits) at age Y where X is less than Y.

This used to be the case in Idaho.

You could but beer at 18, but for anything harder you had to be 21. Before the 1990's when the Feds forced them to change, they had some rather liberal laws.

Drivers license at 14, drinking at 18. But they also tied the responsibility in very closely. Get caught drinking and driving under 21, and you lost your license until you were 21. And the points for moving violations were almost double if you got a ticket under 18. The first moving violation infraction included a mandated drivers safety course.

And it was very effective, I always liked "carrot or stick" approaches like that. "We are going to give you some leeway. But if you violate that, you are getting slammed."

And even to this day 40 years later, everybody knows that if I have had a single drink, I am staying home for the rest of the night.

bk69 🚫

@Ernest Bywater

drinking alcohol age is 18, Canada

Incorrect.

Quebec, yes. Manitoba and Alberta were that as well. Ontario and BC went to 19. There's no national age for booze.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Ernest Bywater

compare them with the USA

Oh, there's almost no comparison. If you teach your kids right, and don't make a huge deal of it, then it's not that much of an issue. The United States is well behind the rest of the modern world in this issue.

ian_macf 🚫

@Ernest Bywater

there are many countries where the drinking alcohol age is 18, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia are just a few.

And, for those who want a complete list

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_drinking_age

Ian

richardshagrin 🚫

@Quasirandom

Class Six Rations

"Class Six Stores sell alcohol, and related items, such as mixers, soda, cigarettes, and drinking cups. Similar items are found at the POST or Base Exchange, but the primary function of Class Six Stores on military installations is alcohol sales."

I don't care about war between nations, long as I got my class six rations, on the dashboard of my car...(The original of the song talks about not caring if it rains or freezes, as long as I got my plastic Jesus.)

Far more than anyone wants:
"Lyrics
I don't care if it rains or freezes
Long as I've got my plastic Jesus
Ridin' on the dashboard of my car
Through my trials and tribulations
And my travels through the nation
With my plastic Jesus I'll go far
Ridin' down the thoroughfare
With a nose up in the air
A wreck may be ahead
But he don't mind
Trouble comin', he don't see
He just keeps his eye on me
And any other thing that lies behind
With my plastic Jesus
Goodbye and I'll go far
I said with my plastic Jesus
Sitting on the dashboard of my car
When I'm in a traffic jam
He don't care if I say "damn"
I can let all my curses roll
'Cause Jesus Plastico doesn't hear
'Cause he has a plastic ear
The man who invented plastic
Saved my soul
With my plastic Jesus
I said, goodbye and I'll go far
I said with my plastic Jesus
Sittin' on the dashboard of my car, oh yeah
An if I weave around at night
Policemen think I'm very tight
They never find my bottle
Though they ask
'Cause plastic Jesus shelters me
For his head comes off, you see
He's hollow and I use him like a flask
Whoa oh oh
Save me
I don't care if it's dark or scary
Long as I got magnetic Mary
Ridin' on the dashboard of my car
I feel that I'm protected amply
I've got the love of the whole damn family
Ridin' on the dashboard of my car
With my plastic Jesus
I said goodbye and I'll go far
And I said with my plastic Jesus
I said sittin' on the dashboard of my car, whoa oh
I said, with my plastic Jesus (when I'm goin' fornicatin')
(I've got my ceramic Satan)
Help me, Jesus (sittin' on the dashboard of my car)
With my plastic Jesus (women know I'm on the level)
(Thanks to the wide-eyed stoneware devil)
Sneerin' from the dashboard of my car
Source: LyricFind
Songwriters: Ed Rush / George Cromarty
Plastic Jesus lyrics Β© Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC"

Tamalain 🚫

@Quasirandom

Gina had a stroke a few years back, so that slowed her way down. She did continue writing, but man, if you mentioned Spitfire, get ready to duck, and for heavens sake, don't call it S&M.

Replies:   Dinsdale
Dinsdale 🚫

@Tamalain

but man, if you mentioned Spitfire, get ready to duck

That information is incomplete - she added several chapters to that story later, and posted the entire thing to her site. This was almost four years ago.
The updated chapters (or the entire story if she re-edited it) also made it to this site a few months later.
Speaking strictly for myself, I preferred the original and unfinished version. This is just having read the additional chapters a year or two ago.

Replies:   Tamalain
Tamalain 🚫

@Dinsdale

I have the finished version. It is lacking a bit. The Stroke was well over ten years ago as I recall it. Strokes tend to make life hard, even on writers when you can't hit the correct keys when you want to. Back then, mentioning Spitfire was a non no on her site.

scalinghammer 🚫

@Quasirandom

I se S&M is being posted to Beyond the Far Horizon again. It does not appear to be the same as the one here on SOL

Replies:   Dinsdale
Dinsdale 🚫

@scalinghammer

The one here on SOL was deleted a couple of weeks ago.

Replies:   ian_macf
ian_macf 🚫
Updated:

@Dinsdale

On BTFH, Gina said she did not want the version she is currently posting to appear on SOL.

Ian

tg_smith64 🚫

@Quasirandom

I believe that at least part of the reason a lot of folks find the newer edit and chapters clashing relates to the long period (years) between the first chapters and the finish. We all change with time and experience, so it as if a completely different person, with completely beliefs and views wrote the ending. Does anybody know of other stories that started posting and finished after after a hiatus years later? I don't mean ongoing stories that posted regularly for years. It would be interesting to see how the ageing and changes that life forces on us are reflected in that writing.

Replies:   Dinsdale
Dinsdale 🚫

@tg_smith64

There was a thread on that here - probably around a year ago, something along the lines of the most time elapsed between a story starting and being finished. Can't remember if soap operas were included.
Stultus finished a few of his long-abandoned stories a few months ago but I can't remember any changes in style.

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