The Prognosticator
on October 7, 2025
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In April 1967, a young U.S. Navy sailor named Doug Hegdahl was blown overboard from the USS Canberra in the Gulf of Tonkin. Just 20 years old and barely trained for war, he wasn’t captured in battle — he was fished from the sea by North Vietnamese fishermen, who quickly handed him over to the military.
They didn’t know what to make of him. He looked confused, polite, even a little slow. And soon, they gave him a nickname:
"The Incredibly Stupid One."
Doug played along. In fact, he leaned into it. He pretended he couldn’t read or write. He asked the guards to teach him how to spell his name. He acted like he didn’t understand questions. When they tried to interrogate him, he gave blank stares or mumbled. Sometimes he hummed a silly tune to himself:
“Old MacDonald had a farm, E-I-E-I-O...”
The Vietnamese thought he was harmless. They gave him light chores and let him wander parts of the prison where others couldn’t go. Doug, meanwhile, was watching. Listening. Remembering.
In the darkness of the Hanoi Hilton — the infamous POW prison — American prisoners were being tortured and isolated. Many couldn’t speak or write freely. But Doug, the “stupid one,” became their secret messenger.
With the help of other prisoners, especially a fellow POW named Joe Crecca, Doug began memorizing the names of every American held captive. Not just names — details: date of capture, rank, hometown, injuries, even secret codes.
To remember it all, Doug used the same tune he hummed to fool his captors.
“Old MacDonald” became his lifeline.
Each verse, a new prisoner.
Each chorus, another life remembered.
He sang it silently, over and over again in his head, turning pain into memory, and memory into power.
In 1969, the North Vietnamese decided to release a few prisoners as a propaganda gesture. Senior American officers initially refused to go — they didn’t want to give the enemy a public victory. But they saw something in Doug.
They told him: “You have to go. You know too much. The world needs to hear it.”
Doug Hegdahl walked out of that prison a free man, carrying in his mind the identities of 256 fellow Americans still trapped behind bars. Once safely home, he wrote down every name. Every detail. Perfectly.
He wasn’t stupid.
He was brilliant. Brave. And unforgettable.
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JimJimmyJames
To my knowledge, he was the only enlisted man from the US Navy to be taken prisoner during the 10 years of the War in Vietnam.
  • October 7, 2025