Jfruser, can you point me to a reference where it says that the U.S. lost more soldiers in WWII than Germany? I looked it up on Wiki and it says the U.S. lost 416,800 vs. the German's loss of 5,533,000.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II_casualtiesWhy do you say we had to throw more bodies into the mill when we lost so few comparatively (Roughly 7.5% of their losses)?
You just lost me on that. Don't get me wrong, I don't necessarily disagree with the main point that you were making about technology. However, even though Germany had more advanced technology, it certainly seemed as though the U.S. made much better use of what tech we did have.
For example. Look at the effect the M1 Garand had as a simple infantry weapon. The simple fact that it was a semi-automatic made it a great force multiplier against the German bolt-action K98 Mausers. And speaking of ground breaking technology, the BAR was available for service during WWI as a light machine gun, but was held back from the field because we were afraid the enemy might get their hands on one and advance their weapon technology to the same level.
And if I remember correctly we started using aircraft mounted RADAR during WWII. U.S. warships also used RADAR against the Japanese ships at night while the Japs were sailing blind. And we used it effectively.
We also developed and employed the first explosive rounds that were able to sense when metal was near to explode. Remember the Marianas Turkey Shoot? That was the first battle which the rounds were employed to obviously devestating effect. I was looking for an online reference to this but I actually got the information from watching a History Channel documentary on the battle. So take that into consideration.
My point is that you can have the greatest, fastest, smartest, doodad that anyone has ever seen. But if you cannot make effective use of the design due to the inability to reproduce it on a largely applicable scale...it is never going to make a difference in the field. So where does that leave you?
Food for thought.