In Memoriam
As another Memorial Day approaches many Americans look on it as just another day off of work or school when they can sit around and barbecue hamburgers and drink soft drinks and beer. Yet, to those of us who are veterans know the true meaning of the holiday. Memorial Day was originally called Decoration Day and was established in 1868 to honor the memory of members of the American military who have died defending the United States of America. Its first official observance was on May 30, 1868 when flowers were placed on the graves of soldiers, both Union and Confederate who died in the Civil War. It was later expanded to include all of the Americans who died in the wars fought by this country to preserve our freedom and it became an official Federal Holiday in 1971.
On this 2010 Memorial Day I want everyone to look at some staggering figures about our American heroes. Beginning with the American Revolution, a total of 43,362,376 men and women have served in the U.S Military during all of the wars we have fought including the current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Of these, 655,231 were killed in battle while another 540,254 have died during their service due to other causes. That is a total of 1,195,485 Americans who have died in wartime while wearing the uniform of our country. In addition, 1,468,196 have been wounded. There are currently approximately 24,000,000 military veterans still alive in our nation.
So who were these people, who as someone pointed out, wrote a blank check to their country laying their lives on the line for poor pay and often deplorable living conditions. They were and still are, our fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, and friends and neighbors. They fought and they died at places that the history books often mention in passing, it they are mentioned at all. Places like Saratoga and Yorktown where our freedom was secured, and battlefields like Gettysburg and Fredericksburg, where many brave Americans died fighting each other. Then there are the battlefields of World War I like Belleau Wood where U.S. Marines fought valiantly and suffered heavy casualties to stop the German advance, and the fights during World War II on the beaches of Normandy and Iwo Jima that opened the door for American victories in Europe and the Pacific. The ink was barely dry on the Japanese surrender document when thousands of Americans were sent to battle the communists in the Korean War.
Turn next to the Vietnam War where over 55,000 Americans died yet never lost a battle. However, though the actions of the politicians in Washington D.C. the war itself was ultimately lost and the history books blame it on the military. Yet, it was the Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, and Airmen who fought that war were often ignored or even spat upon when they returned home. It was not until recently that their contribution to the freedom of our nation was acknowledged. To them, I can only say “Welcome Home.” Well done my brothers and sisters in arms.
Since then our valiant heroes have fought and died in Grenada, Panama, Operation Desert Storm and the current wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. However, liberal politicians and members of the left wing news media continue to attack them for doing the job of defending freedom. Our troops in Afghanistan and Iraq are subjected to Rules of Engagement by the current administration that severely limits their ability to protect themselves and our way of life. This is being done under the banner of “political correctness.”
There is no such thing as a “politically correct” war. When the lives of Americans are threatened and our very existence hangs in the balance there is only one way to fight, and that is to win. Our men and women in our military know this, and despite the restrictions imposed upon them by politicians who have never served in the military and know nothing about the sacrifices required, our troops continue to do their duty to us and our nation. On this Memorial Day we must honor them and all those who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our country. They were and are the best of us. If we allow them to be forgotten then we inevitably lose our own identity as a free people and “the government of the people, by the people, for the people,” will indeed “perish from the earth.”
I will ask this of each person who reads this. Enjoy your Memorial Day, but make a special effort to contact someone, whether a family member, a friend, or even a stranger, who you know has served in the military or is currently serving. Just tell them “Thank you for your service to our country”. You have no idea how much that will mean to them. Also take a moment to honor those we have lost, either by visiting the grave of a veteran, or just saying a brief prayer. They will hear you and they will know that their sacrifices were not made in vain.
Michael Connelly
U.S. Army Veteran
Comments
Very well done. I could not have said it any better. Let the truth be known and for all the right reasons.
These young men and women who are out there fighting for our country, know exactly why they are there. We thank you, pray for you and hope you will come home as we are very proud. God Bless America.
It just so happens that for my age group I was plugged in between the Korea and Vietnam eras - the so called Cold War. I'm proud of my contribution but feel the real heroes are those who have given in a time of serious peril. It is my belief that anyone who wants to be a citizen of this country should have to pay for it by giving time in service to America - if it is worth having, it is worth fighting for.
MICHAEL, I CONTINUE TO BE IMPRESSED WITH YOUR
WRITING AND YOU AS A PERSON. MEMORIAL DAY HAS LOST MUCH OF IT'S LUSTER WITH OUR LAST THREE PRESIDENTS. CLINTON, A DRAFT DODGER, BUSH
WHO SERVED, BARELY, AND FINALLY HUSSEIN WHO WOULD PROBABLY SERVE AS AN AL QAIDA GRUNT.
A MUSLIM IN DISGUISE WHO APPEALS TO THE GIVE
ME GENERATION. IF GIVEN A CHOICE, I WILL NEVER VOTE FOR A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE WHO HAS
NOT SERVED IN THE MILITARY. THAT ,OF COURSE,
IS NOT THE BE ALL AND END ALL WITH POLITICIANS LIKE KERRY AND MURTHA. THANK GOD
FOR THE SWIFT BOAT SAILORS COMING FORWARD.
AMERICA IS IN REAL TROUBLE IF WE CAN'T FIND BETTER CANDIDATES. I THINK THAT THERE SHOULD
BE SOME SORT OF TEST TO PASS BEFORE VOTING.
OUR CONGRESS IS A JOKE THAT IS DEAF TO THEIR CONSTITUENTS AND NEED TO BE FIRED. ALL OF
THEM. IT IS VERY DIFFICULT TO BE PROUD OF VERY MUCH THESE DAYS, BUT OUR MILITARY IS A
GLOWING BRIGHT SPOT. LET'S DO SOMETHING NICE ON MEMORIAL DAY. IF YOU WILL GOOGLE "FREE CARDS TO THE MILITARY," THERE ARE MANY
CHOICES TO PICK FROM. I KNOW WHEN I SERVED, ANY LETTER FROM HOME WAS SPECIAL. GO AHEAD
AND MAKE SOME GI's DAY.
I grow so weary of people casting dispersions on President Bush's service with the TANG. At that time, (the height of the Cold War) that airgroup was closely integrated with SACETO, and at ANY moment could be called up. He wasn't just any kind of pilot, he was rated to fly the F104 Starfighter, a high-performance interceptor whose pilot's expected lifespans were measured in minutes (12 was the last estimate I've seen)!
Recently, a paper was de-classified (through the FOIA) that showed in 1969, Russia consulted with our government asking "permission" to use nuclear weapons against the Chinese. People just don't realize how much the two communist "allies" actually despised each other. Nixon (who normalized relations w/ComChin three years later) asked them to take a less violent approach to their border disputes.
Can you imagine how much safer it would have been in the streets of Saigon (with the REMF Al Gore) than in the cockpit of an interceptor if "the balloon had gone up"?
But that was 40 years ago.
I agree with the author that we CANNOT minimize the sacrifices that our soldiers and their families have made, and are now making for our country. My own family has defended the Republic since we declared independence from The United Kingdom. While I wasn't allowed to serve (bad vision), pretty much all of my aunts, uncles, and cousins have been in the Armed Forces.
I grow so weary of people casting dispersions on President Bush's service with the TANG. At that time, (the height of the Cold War) that airgroup was closely integrated with SACETO, and at ANY moment could be called up. He wasn't just any kind of pilot, he was rated to fly the F104 Starfighter, a high-performance interceptor whose pilot's expected lifespans were measured in minutes (12 was the last estimate I've seen)!
Recently, a paper was de-classified (through the FOIA) that showed in 1969, Russia consulted with our government asking "permission" to use nuclear weapons against the Chinese. People just don't realize how much the two communist "allies" actually despised each other. Nixon (who normalized relations w/ComChin three years later) asked them to take a less violent approach to their border disputes.
Can you imagine how much safer it would have been in the streets of Saigon (with the REMF Al Gore) than in the cockpit of an interceptor if "the balloon had gone up"?
But that was 40 years ago.
I agree with the author that we CANNOT minimize the sacrifices that our soldiers and their families have made, and are now making for our country. My own family has defended the Republic since we declared independence from The United Kingdom. While I wasn't allowed to serve (bad vision), pretty much all of my aunts, uncles, and cousins have been in the Armed Forces.
My husband was in the South Pacific on a LCT in USS LCT Group Forty Flotilla fourteen.\, U.S. Navel Base Peleliu for 24 months. He is 87 years old and says he is on top of the grass. He was in the hospital over a month 2 months after he returned from service with high fevers and on Penicillin, Streptomycin. He has had so much surgery and we never went to the Va. His doctor who had returned from Europe told him he could go to the VA but he told him he would rather for him to treat him. He is a Bionic man. We Thank You for your service.
Greatings, ЎGracias! Ahora me irй en este blog cada dнa!
Have a nice day
Doggy
