Paul Krumrei wrote:
I guess since I am an ex-Air Force guy, maybe I don't understand why we would want to save a ship of that size?
Spoken like a true "Zoomie" (don't worry, beside being Navy I'm former USAF aswell.

)
Granted it is not practical to save everyship although I'm sure every sailor would like to see them save and displayed.
Why? Because a ship is more than a tin can surrounded by water. It's a combat platform, it's place where you perform your duties and it's your home. Everyone aboard is part of coheasive team and is dependent on the next guy to do his job otherwise the machine can breakdown(doesn't normally get to that point. Usually the loose "Cog" gets straighten out by the other "Cogs" if you get my meaning) Besides knowing your job you have to be familiar with the jobs of others. If the ship catches on fire, you don't wait for the fire dept. to show up and put it out. You are the fire teams. The ship above all is your home and you take care of it. And like anything you take care of, you develope a sentimental attachment. That is why most times squids will refer to them as "her" and so on. Especially when you lose shipmates. It's not like it happened while deployed at a FBO, it happens all the time right where you work and live. One day they are there laughing and doing their job, and the next your cleaning out their bunk and locker. There is a bonding that occurs on ships. (some don't bond and they normally get weeded out. We call them "Dirt Bags" and "Skaters")
Yes a ship is potenially a valueable resource of materials. But from my understanding it's not likely that you'll see Capital ships scrapped anymore. The costs to scrapping companies are prohibitive. And they will not be sold to firms outside the US. For me, I would much rather see them slip beneathe the waves and slowly return to the Earth that birthed their raw material. There is something poetic about about a Warship that protected the oceans and seas being laid to rest in them.
Shay
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Semper Fortis