What does Memorial Day mean?
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Thread: What does Memorial Day mean?

  1. #1
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    What does Memorial Day mean?

    I would like to say thank you to our military for making my country safe and to our forefathers for the sacrifice they made to forum this country.:ernae: >>>>
    <CENTER>Memorial Day! What Does It Mean?

    by S. Brian Willson
    May 29, 2000


    <TABLE width="80%"><TBODY><TR><TD>"Our moral integrity and political wisdom require that we study the past so as to prevent its indignities from recurring."

    --Klemens von Klemperer, Professor at Smith College,
    Northampton, Mass., April 1985


    </TD></TR><TR><TD>"Whoever fears to look his own past in the face must necessarily fear what is to come."

    --Vaclav Havel, Czechoslovak President, 1990

    </TD></TR><TR><TD>"American historylessness is the desiccation of any sense of communal responsibility for the initiatives undertaken in our name. We exist outside history and outside the present world as well, in a kind of eerie detachment."

    --Lawrence Weschler, 1987

    </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></CENTER>
    Memorial Day: The beginning of the commercial days of summer while planning holiday travel, or a time for reflection about why so many soldiers (and civilians alike), have given their lives in war? Years after returning from Vietnam, I wondered why more than 58,000 of my peers gave their lives in Southeast Asia, while killing more than 5 million Asians? Had these short-statured people living in ancient cultures 8,000 miles from our homes possessing virtually no military technology ever really threatened us? Were all those lives taken in vain?
    Over the course of our history, about 1,145,000 U.S. mostly men have died after being ordered into battle. In the twentieth Century, it is believed that more than 100 million human beings, the majority civilians, have died in wars. And the wars continue!
    When Civil War widows first decorated graves for their dead husbands in May 1866 it was considered a solemn moment. Well into the Twentieth Century, Memorial Day remained a special moment for reflection on the extraordinary number of human lives our country's wars have permanently stolen from our families and communities. However, as the Century continued with ever more wars, it seems that it has become just another three day weekend to partake in holiday travel and the begining of summer shopping. Perhaps we have sunk into the dangerous comforts of denial and avoidance.
    It has become increasingly obvious that our own civilization has become a spoiled rotten nation without a moral rudder. Historically it was built on theft of Indigenous land at gunpoint, stolen labor of kidnapped Africans, and on hundreds of illegal and unconstitutional military adventures expanding our original territory while seeking cheap foreign resources, labor and markets. We continue to have nearly a half million troops stationed at nearly 400 major installations in thirty five foreign countries with the most powerful air and naval forces to boot. We have covertly intervened thousands of times destabilizing dozens of countries while murdering millions of innocent people. We possess more nuclear, conventional, chemical, biological and other weapons of mass destruction, than the rest of the world combined. To the horror of the world we refused to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.
    Our political plutocracy continues to be sold to the biggest bribers. Dramatic disparity of wealth and income separates the Haves from the Have-Nots. With but 4.5 percent of the world's population, we consume nearly half the world's resources while correspondingly spewing out the same percentage of the world's pollution. From this extraordinarily consumptive western lifestyle, we are creating an ecologically mortal disaster. And as the 75% of the "Third World" are involuntarily squeezed with but 15% of the world's resources, we send in the marines to secure "stability" when the poor revolt from their misery.
    We spend more on military arms annually, (about $275 billion) than the rest of the U.N. Security Council combined. We control over fifty percent of the world's arms market (more than the next 14 arms exporting nations combined) and provide military arms and training to 160 of the world's 190 nations. It seems we strive to outdistance our own shadow in terms of military preparedness in a world with no other superpower. We are seriously pursuing a $60 billion missile defense shield that most experts conclude won't work, though it will likely provoke a new arms race. The U.S. Space Command intends to militarily control space despite prohibitions by the 1967 Outer Space Treaty.
    This is sheer madness! All this incredible security preparedness in order to maintain our selfish, disproportionate global privilege, even at the expense of the livability of our Earth, and of equal justice for all. Ironically, U.S. obsession with security has become, by far, the most dangerous threat to both our own and the world's future! As we decorate the graves on Memorial Day of those who fell in battle, I hope we have the courage to ask, why they fell!? Further, I pray that as we come to understand the history of lies and fabricated pretexts that our political leaders fed us to rationalize their wars, we will rise up to give birth to a genuine people's democracy based on justice, honesty and respect for all life.
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  2. #2
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    Wednesday my wife and I went to the various cemetaries. We left flags at her Fathers grave and also her Brothers.
    Her Father served in WWII in France in the AEF as a Sergent. He also served in WWII as a Major in the Army.
    Her Brother was badly wounded in the Battle for Hurtgen Forest when a mortar shell landed between his legs. They managed to save his legs but was badly crippled as a result. Two men that we still remember with honor.
    What surprised us is the lack of flags and the number of people going to the cemetaries. It's gone down a lot. The only explanation is that the people of my generation are slowly dying off.
    The younger people have too much to do than to spend there time remembering and honoring their forebears.
    Would you like to ride in my big green tractor?.

  3. #3
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    Thanks Mike for posting this.

    :USA-flag:

    My dad is at the Veterans cemetary here in Phoenix. He was a transfer pilot trained in many planes but never saw action and the war ended pretty soon for him.

    I salute the Veterans that paid great prices for us to have Freedom and Liberty!

    Viva le Liberty!

    (With Memorial day, I always think of that movie 'The Patriot' with Mel Gibson and also 'Saving Private Ryan'. Some horrible confrontations men face on the battle field).



    Bill
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  4. #4
    Thanks guys, from Europe. :ernae:

    Best wishes
    Steve P

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    Quote Originally Posted by Helldiver View Post
    The only explanation is that the people of my generation are slowly dying off.
    The younger people have too much to do than to spend there time remembering and honoring their forebears.

    I have a daughter whose eight, she goes to a public school here in North Orlando, her school is very active in celebtrating Memorial Day! I remember every year, her class would stay one hour to practice for the Memorial Day program, I wish I could upload pictures to show how active the school is....

    Every year, we go to a parade in Winter Park (Orlando), to watch the Memorial Day parade, we love it! We enjoy it year after year. I have pictures of me and my daughter watching the parade for 7 years now (this year will be her eighth)

    My Dad was also a Veteran, he is at the Veterans Memorial cemetery in the Philippines, since he passed away there, (my roots are from that country, sorry for too much information!) We love our men and women who died and some still alive defending our country!

    God bless America!

    Eli

    Chacha


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    I'll be taking my mother to the family Cemetery at Shady Grove to out a flag on my father's grave. I shall then go to Highland Cemetery and put flags on the graves of his brothers, Allison and Edward, both US Army in the ETO.

    Salute to those that gave their all.

    Caz

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    SOH-CM-2024 Craig Taylor's Avatar
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    I've lost more classmates than I would have cared to already, because I still consider myself "young" - especially with respect to some of the other honored members of the forum. I will remember them this weekend. Not to mention my father and grandfather, both USN.

    *edit* Thanks for bringing our focus back where it belongs.
    Craig "CB" Taylor
    Team AVSIM RTWR

  9. #9
    "...gather around their sacred remains and garland the passionless mounds above them with choicest flowers of springtime....let us in this solemn presence renew our pledges to aid and assist those whom they have left among us as sacred charges upon the Nation's gratitude,--the soldier's and sailor's widow and orphan." --General John Logan, General Order No. 11, 5 May 1868


    <EMBED height=344 type=application/x-shockwave-flash width=425 src=http://www.youtube.com/v/Wo3FbQjKEBs&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en& feature=player_embedded&fs=1 allowfullscreen="true">

    In Flanders Fields

    In Flanders fields the poppies blow
    Between the crosses, row on row
    That mark our place; and in the sky
    The larks, still bravely singing, fly
    Scarce heard amid the guns below.
    We are the Dead. Short days ago
    We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
    Loved and were loved, and now we lie
    In Flanders fields.
    Take up our quarrel with the foe:
    To you from failing hands we throw
    The torch; be yours to hold it high.
    If ye break faith with us who die
    We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
    In Flanders fields.


    The name of John McCrae (1872-1918) may seem out of place in the distinguished company of World War I poets, but he is remembered for what is probably the single best-known and popular poem from the war, "In Flanders Fields." He was a Canadian physician and fought on the Western Front in 1914, but was then transferred to the medical corps and assigned to a hospital in France. He died of pneumonia while on active duty in 1918. His volume of poetry, In Flanders Fields and Other Poems, was published in 1919.
    </EMBED></EMBED>

  10. #10
    As I recall, the flag protocol on Memorial Day is to start at half-staff. At high noon the 21 gun salute begins, one shot fired every minute. At 12:21 the final shot is fired, and the flag is raised to full staff. :USA-flag:

    Don't forget to fly those flags Monday!
    Regards,
    Robert

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