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As apposite as this tale of Boy Scouts and firearms training might be, it's purely a fabrication and not an excerpt from a real interview. It began circulating on the Internet in 1999 as a quote attributed to an LTG Reinwald of the U.S. Army, it reappeared in 2001 attributed to Marine Corps General Reinwald, and it came back in 2007 in a version featuring Australian general Peter Cosgrove. When this item initially appeared in 1999, the U.S. Army denied that there was a Lieutenant General Reinwald among their ranks and chalked the whole thing up as a hoax. (Which is as logic dictated all along: if an armed forces spokesperson gave voice to a sexist remark likening a female interviewer to a prostitute in a public interview, that officer would soon be called upon to make a very public apology as well as face charges within ranks for conduct unbecoming.) National Public Radio had this to say about the matter: Those who support gun rights and believe responsible gun ownership begins with teaching young people the right way to handle firearms at an early age have a great fondness for this story. As well they should, because this anecdote illustrates in a humorous way the difference between having the ability to do something and allowing that ability to dictate one's life choices. The General Reinwald story existed in joke form as far back as October 1997, when it appeared on a number of web pages in the following form: Notice the differences that have taken place between the two tellings: If there's still any doubt someone took a joke set in Wales and changed details to Americanize it, look to the Reinwald version given in the example. Although the term adventure holiday is common in Britain, it's an unlikely term for an American general to use. (Looks like whoever altered the text missed that one.) No anecdote is so good that it cannot be improved upon, and that appears to be what happened here. To give the story its proper oomph, having the telling remark issue from a mere youth club leader wouldn't do. But make the man with the snappy comeback a Lieutenant General in the U.S. Army, and the story becomes ever so much more tellable. The key element of the Reinwald legend has appeared in other tales. Observe the form it took in this gender-switched version collected in 2000, which was presented as a joke and not as an event that actually happened:
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