It reminds me of something I read in Hank Nuwer's "Broken Pledges" about General Douglas MacArthur. In 1901, while MacArthur was a cadet at West Point, he was called to give Congressional testimony about hazing there. A "plebe" had died the year before, and it was believed to be the result of hazing. It was alleged that MacArthur, who was the son of a general was the target of particularly bad hazing. In his testimony though, he denied that he had suffered any severe hazing and claimed that the hazers were all men who had previously left the United States Military Academy.
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