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The Day Disney died by Will Dabbs

I can tell you from personal experience that doing Disneyworld from the back of a pickup truck
while wearing worn-out cutoff blue jeans was a rocking time.

I’m nominally on my fifth career. An optimist would say I’m a Renaissance Man. My wife might counter that I seldom stick with anything. Regardless, I have been blessed to see the world from a variety of different perspectives.

Things are pretty sweet now. I’m a busy physician, and this writing gig keeps inexplicably chugging along. I take my bride out for a date once a week and don’t fret unduly about how to pay for it. However, that was not always the case.

Disneyworld really is an amazing magical place. It is also just crazy expensive. Wikipedia photo by Jedi94.

I studied mechanical engineering originally, so I had to go back to college for a year to complete my prerequisites before applying to medical school. We didn’t have a whole lot back then. In fact, we actually made it five years with three kids and no paycheck. That we remained fed, clothed, and sane throughout stands in glorious testimony to my wife’s extraordinary tolerance, patience, discipline, and character.

I got out of the Army because I was deployed all the time. After eight years of that, a frenetic two semesters’ worth of biology and organic chemistry, and then that first legendarily ghastly year of medical school, it was time for a well-earned respite.

You actually get three months off between the first and second years of med school. As that is the last serious free time you will see until you are either 65 or dead, it behooves you to take advantage of it. Back in 1999, we borrowed my parents’ gigantic RV and struck out for Disney World.

Everything about Disneyworld is carefully curated to be the ultimate entertainment experience.
Disney promotional image.

The Most Magical Place on Earth

The motor home was big enough to warrant its own zip code, and it only cost me gas. We stayed cheaply at Disney’s Fort Wilderness campground and park-hopped through Pirates of the Caribbean, Star Tours, Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, and Kali River Rapids. We were broke as skunks, but we had each other. Though we have since taken bigger family excursions, that one was quite likely the best. The tragic bit, however, is that normal people cannot afford to do that today.

Disney’s prices have risen astronomically. I get it, everything everywhere is more expensive. Politicians have burned through money like drunken sailors. You pump that much economic stimulus into the economy, and eventually things get well and truly stimulated. That means inflation. However, Disney just seems to have taken that to the very next level.

Nowadays, it costs between $180 to $200 per person per day just to get in the gate. Park Hopper tickets, which let you jump from park to park, cost more. Lightning Lane Multi-Passes add around $380 for a 3-day trip for a family if you don’t want to spend your entire vacation standing in line. The grub is not bad, but it is priced like they were feeding the Queen of Sheba. RV sites at Fort Wilderness start at $119 per night if you bring your own motorhome. Cabins range from $550 to $880. Cheap rooms on the property are $285. The good stuff flirts with a grand.

Once you get your brood into the parks, bedded down, and fed, there are the souvenirs. They are also admittedly quite cool. A decent battery-powered Legacy Lightsaber at Galaxy’s Edge will set you back $200 to $450 … times how many kids do you have?

Mouse Philosophy

Disney World first opened in October 1971. My family went for the first time the following year. We pulled a travel trailer behind a pickup. My best friend and I slept in the back of the truck. We were just normal people of normal means, and we had an absolutely amazing time. That’s what old Walt wanted the place to be.

Nowadays, you really do have to be independently wealthy to put together a proper Disney junket. Each year, the place gets bigger and flashier. I freely admit to harboring a burning desire to explore Galaxy’s Edge and take a ride on the Avatar Flight of Passage.

However, as all of my kids are now grown and gone, I think I’ll just take that not insubstantial chunk of change and dump it on a trip to Europe to explore the old World War II battlefields instead. That same sum would also go a long way toward a decent car or a transferable machine gun.

Ruminations

I’m an unrepentant capitalist. The pursuit of money is what brought us such stuff as the smartphone, sub-$500 AR-15 rifles, silicone breast implants, and cutting-edge treatments for male pattern baldness. Were it not for unfettered capitalism, we’d all likely be crouched in some cave somewhere picking parasites off of each other. However, I do wish that normal people could still afford to take their kids to Disney World.

I have spent some time around rich folks. Folks of modest means are typically more gracious, more generous, and more loving. If you need examples, think Nancy Pelosi, Alec Baldwin, George Soros, and Robert DeNiro. They’re all rich, but who wants to go to Disney World with people like that?

It’s not going to change. I understand that. However, I do mourn the passing of affordable Disney. I can tell you from personal experience that doing Disney World from the back of a pickup truck while wearing worn-out cutoff blue jeans was a rocking time. Those were indeed the good old days.

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Shifty Powers: The Gun Guy from “Band of Brothers” By Massad Ayoob

Editor’s Note: Today’s article is about Sgt. Darrell Powers, a World War II hero who served with the 101st Airborne Division. Nicknamed “Shifty”, Powers saw action in the American airborne landings in Normandy, Operation Market Garden and the Battle of the Bulge. Powers was more than “just” a soldier — he was also a gun guy. Ayoob shares the full story here.

Stephen Ambrose’s 1992 book “Band of Brothers” was said to have done as much as Tom Hanks’ 1998 movie “Saving Private Ryan” to remind later American generations of the heroism of our servicemen’s sacrifices for freedom in World War II.

Sgt. Darrell Shifty Powers
With his M1 Garand rifle, Darrell “Shifty” Powers photographed in his paratrooper uniform circa August 1944. Image: U.S. Army

The book was based on the recollections of individual paratroopers of the 101st Airborne Division of the U.S. Army, known as the “Screaming Eagles,” and particularly Easy Company. Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg made it into a compelling HBO TV series that debuted in 2001. America felt it got to know those brave soldiers.

One of them was Sergeant Darrell “Shifty” Powers. His nickname didn’t carry the word’s usual meaning: he earned it in high school for his fast moves on the basketball court. Tall and athletic, he was also one of us: a “gun guy.” He was a hunter, a marksman and, in later life, an outspoken Second Amendment advocate and a daily concealed carrier for whom shooting was a beloved hobby until his passing at age 86.

A Hunter’s Eye

Powers was born and grew up in the hollows of rural Virginia, spending as much time as he could hunting on a mountain on his family’s property. He shot his first squirrel when he was a little boy. His father taught him to be alert to his surroundings in all ways: a subtle sound, an unexpected silence, and more. It was a skill that would save his life and other lives in combat.

Band of Brothers book
The “Band of Brothers” book by Stephen E. Abrose and the HBO series of the same name are largely responsible for introducing Shifty Powers to the public.

In “Band of Brothers” Ambrose wrote of the day, December 29, 1944, when Easy Company was fighting its way out of the Battle of the Bulge, and Shifty noticed a distant tree that hadn’t been there the day before. Based on his observation, the Americans recognized a newly installed and camouflaged German artillery battery and called in American artillery on it, eliminating the threat.

The Guns of Shifty Powers

In his authorized biography by Marcus Brotherton, “Shifty’s War”, Powers mentioned that as a paratrooper he was issued a 1911 .45 auto with a shoulder holster and wore ten eight-round en-bloc clips of .30-06 on his belt to feed his M1 Garand. Shifty said, “Lot of guys used the carbine, you know, and some guys used Thompsons, but I always liked the M1 Garand best.”

It was a preference that remained throughout his life, even into his eighties when he was suffering macular degeneration and being treated for cancer. He told Brotherton, “Those treatments made me real weak. I liked to get out on the deck and shoot my rifle, you know. Nobody lived very close around our house, so it was okay. I couldn’t see to hit a target very well anymore, but I knew where they were. I didn’t hit them all the time, but I’d fire the gun and smell the smoke, so I’d enjoy that.”

M1 Garand
The primary battle rifle of the U.S. Army during World War II was the M1 Garand. While many members of the 101st Airborne Division carried the M1 Carbine or M1928A1 SMG, Powers preferred the powerful Garand.

“My M1 was my favorite rifle, but it got hard to lift, you know, and I told (my wife) Dorothy, ‘You know, that doggone rifle has gotten fatter since the war.’ Ammunition for M1’s was hard to come by, but my friends would bring me clips. I had a .22 with a scope, which helped me see the targets, so I’d shoot that every so often. Then I had a Lugar (sic) that I’d shoot, and a .22 pistol that I’d like to shoot. As a last resort I had a BB gun, and I’d take that out on the deck.”

The M1 he used in combat was not entirely stock. Shifty had filed the sear to achieve what he called a hair trigger. It was the rifle he used for his most famous shot of the war. Alas, it didn’t follow him all the way through the war. Stephen Ambrose explains in “Band of Brothers,” “Shifty Powers got a new M1. That was a mixed blessing. He had been using one issued to him in the States. He loved that old rifle. ‘It seemed like I could just point it, and it would hit what I’d pointed it at. The best shooting rifle I ever owned. But every time we’d have an inspection, I’d get gigged because it had a pit in it, in the barrel. You can’t get those pits out of those barrels, you know…’ He got tired of being gigged, turned it in and got a new M1. ‘And I declare, I couldn’t hit a barn with that rifle. Awful’est shooting thing there ever was.’”

“Shifty’s Shot”

That famous shot happened in January of 1945. Fighting their way out of the Battle of the Bulge, Shifty’s unit found themselves in the strategically placed town of Foy in Belgium. (Factoid: while Yanks pronounce that town’s name like it sounds, rhyming with “toy,” those who live there reportedly pronounce it “Fwah.”)

A fellow member of the Band of Brothers, Carwood Lipton, told the story this way: “One of the men in the 3rd platoon of E Company, 506th had excellent eyesight, and he was also an outstanding marksman with a rifle. He was Darrell C. ‘Shifty’ Powers, a tall part-Indian, from Clinchco, Virginia.”

“Shifty’s marksmanship paid off for us on January 13 when E company received orders to attack and clear the town of Foy. We moved around to the south of the town and attacked to the north into it. The Germans defended it strongly, and we had a number of men hit. At one point, several of us, including Shifty, Popeye Wynn (Shifty’s closest buddy), Bob Mann, R.B. Smith, and I were pinned down by a sniper that we just couldn’t locate. R. B. Smith caught a bullet in the leg. Then Shifty yelled, ‘I see ‘im.’ And there was a rifle shot. We weren’t pinned down any more so we continued the attack.”

“When things had cleared up later that day I went back to see where that sniper had been. When I found him, Popeye had already found him. We stood there looking down at the dead German and at the bullet hole centered in the middle of his forehead. Popeye looked over at me and said, ‘You know, it just doesn’t pay to be shootin’ at Shifty when he’s got a rifle.’”

The buildings the German and Shifty each fired from still stand. One researcher later determined the distance to be 66 meters.

Shifty's War book
“Shifty’s War” is the authorized biography of Darrell Powers. It contains details of Powers war service that “Band of Brothers” did not.

Powers’ own memory of shooting a sniper in Foy differs somewhat. From the “Shifty’s War” book:

“More shots rang out. I glanced up then down again. The other man along the side of the building froze. The sniper kept firing. Our other guy didn’t stand a chance unless we could get that sniper. I ducked up again to get a bead on where the sniper fired from. He was about sixty feet away, shooting from around the corner of a brick building. I ducked down again and propped my M1 up on the window ledge. Seven rounds were left in my clip. I didn’t have time to properly aim. I fired from instinct, seeing in my mind the corner of that building where I guessed the German’s head to be. Blam. Blam. Blam. Blam. The dust flew off the brick at the corner of the building. I fired all seven rounds. No sound came from where the German sniper was. Our man found his feet again and checked the other man on the ground. The first man was dead. But the other was just fine. ‘Okay,’ I said with a nod. I thought maybe I saved that man’s life. It felt good.”

In the heat of infantry combat, when a soldier fires at an enemy and sees him go down, he will often never know whether his target was killed, wounded, or merely ducked. In his later years, writes Brotherton, “Shifty told his son-in-law, Seldon Johnson, that he had killed the specific number of eight men during the war. The specific line Seldon remembers was, ‘I know I killed eight men. It could have been more, but I don’t know for sure. People think they know what killing’s like, but they don’t.’”

Ironic Injury

Powers’ keen observation skills and superb marksmanship helped to make him one of the few men in the unit to get from D-Day almost all the way through the campaign without sustaining a single wound. The day came when he won a lottery to be sent home, and missing his family greatly, he used his prize.

Beyond Band of Brothers book by Major Dick Winters
“Beyond Band of Brothers” is the collection of war memoirs by Maj. Dick Winters, who commander Easy Company, 506th PIR.

He was in a truck taking him and other soldiers back from the front lines when a drunk driver crashed into the vehicle, killing one trooper and sidelining Shifty with a smashed pelvis and other severe injuries that left him hospitalized for almost a year.

A Vet of the Greatest Generation on 2A

Like many WWII vets, Darrell Powers returned home a staunch advocate of the right to keep and bear arms. While stationed in England prior to the D-Day invasion he had been horrified to see Brits drilling with picks and shovels to fight heavily armed German infantry should they invade, because so few of them privately owned firearms. (Indeed, Americans donated many of their personal guns for use by the British home guard.)

Says his biographer Marcus Brotherton, “Shifty recounted orally on several occasions his memory of seeing the people in Aldbourne practice defending themselves with only garden implements. During some of his public talks after the war, he made a strong case for maintaining the legality of privatized gun ownership in the United States. This issue was about the only time he ever made a public political statement. Shifty believed that citizens had a right to own guns to defend themselves … .”

The battle-hardened vet practiced what he preached when he came home, not only keeping but bearing arms. Shifty told Brotherton that he always carried a .25 auto on his ankle, just in case.

Cancer did what the Nazis could not and took Sergeant Darrell Powers in 2009 at the age of 86. Like so many of The Greatest Generation, this American hero left a legacy of the value of skill at arms and the importance of fighting for freedom.