Veterans Day 11/11/2016

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
It may sound corny, but the thanks makes up for some of the extreme (compared to a civilian salary) financial sacrifice that has been made by many service members over many years.
We didn't do it for the money.
No, but increasingly you're doing it for Boeing, Lockheed Martin and General Electric's money.

As a fellow American citizen, I'm not okay with the blood of our servicemen being spilled in the name of war profiteering.

The war with the least casualties is the one that's never fought.
 
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qwizoking

Well-Known Member
War doesn't earn the same respect it did once

If it ever did




But thanks great whatever that fought in civil revolutionary war

We quit fighting after them
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
War doesn't earn the same respect it did once

If it ever did




But thanks great whatever that fought in civil revolutionary war

We quit fighting after them
The thanks are for the sacrifices of the soldier not the venal political motivation of the war machine. Soldiers are still bleeding and dying in exactly the same way they did since man first picked up a stick to stand in front of his family saying, "No harm will come to them tonight."
 

qwizoking

Well-Known Member
I would expect an apology keeping said war machine going .

Or perhaps cutting off a leg for a fake balloon animal deserves something other than thanks







But that's just me
The not high yet me at that
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
No, but increasingly you're doing it for Boeing, Lockheed Martin and General Electric's money.

As a fellow American citizen, I'm not okay with the blood of our servicemen bring spilled in the name of war profiteering.

The war with the least casualties is the one that's never fought.
And then again the various military branches of this country do far more than just go overseas to fight meaningless (to some) wars.

rt_typhoon_relief_supplies_ll_131111_16x9_992.jpg 6-disaster-response.jpg
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
And then again the various military branches of this country do far more than just go overseas to fight meaningless (to some) wars.

View attachment 3828183 View attachment 3828184
I'm ALL FOR using our military assets for humanitarian missions! Best thing we can do with an aircraft carrier is air drop supplies to disaster victims! Doing such things also makes us lots of friends, unlike drone strikes.

You'll notice I never said we didn't need our military. Let's just make damned sure that we only use them when we must, not merely when we can.

I think that those who would stand on the floor of the House and Senate and tell us to send troops to this or that hot spot would be expected to take up arms and lead them into the fight. We'd have a lot fewer wars that way- and those we must fight would not be ignored.
 

tangerinegreen555

Well-Known Member
This was my dad's discharge uniform from 1945. He signed up a few days after Pearl Harbor.
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I found this in the pockets today. I had never checked them before. He also gave me several medals to play with when I was a little kid. Long gone, I wish he hadn't done that now. Loved it back then though.
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Also found this. I was from a memorial service from 1949 for a local friend of Dad's who died on March 12, 1944 overseas.
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Dad was in the Army. He was in the south Pacific theater and carried this lighter with him through the war. I posted it once before, but today it is worthy of reposting. Dad traveled and/or fought through Australia, the Phillipines, New Guinea, Goodenough Is., Leyte, Mindoro and Luzon.
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Dad was a tick under 6' tall and 185 lbs. most of his life. He was discharged weighing 137 lbs. 4 years of war and a bout with malaria will do that. He didn't like to talk about it much, but would tell me stories of the horror of war.
He once told me of a bitter 48 hour battle against Japanese ground troops. The Allies pounded a heavily dug in strategic Japanese position. He said they literally shelled that position for 2 days without sleep. The guys were given what he called, 'pep pills' to stay awake. After return fire ceased for several hours a monsoon hit. It caused flash flooding and then...dead Japanese bodies started floating and were washed over a hill like a waterfall by the flood. It was at that point they knew they won the battle, 2 days after it started.

His favorite stories were of meeting friends from home half way around the globe in Australia where the troops got occasional R&R. He ran into over a dozen different local friends over there and always loved that.

Dad lived from 1918 to 2004.
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
This was my dad's discharge uniform from 1945. He signed up a few days after Pearl Harbor.
View attachment 3828397
I found this in the pockets today. I had never checked them before. He also gave me several medals to play with when I was a little kid. Long gone, I wish he hadn't done that now. Loved it back then though.
View attachment 3828400
Also found this. I was from a memorial service from 1949 for a local friend of Dad's who died on March 12, 1944 overseas.
View attachment 3828406

Dad was in the Army. He was in the south Pacific theater and carried this lighter with him through the war. I posted it once before, but today it is worthy of reposting. Dad traveled and/or fought through Australia, the Phillipines, New Guinea, Goodenough Is., Leyte, Mindoro and Luzon.
View attachment 3828410 View attachment 3828411

Dad was a tick under 6' tall and 185 lbs. most of his life. He was discharged weighing 137 lbs. 4 years of war and a bout with malaria will do that. He didn't like to talk about it much, but would tell me stories of the horror of war.
He once told me of a bitter 48 hour battle against Japanese ground troops. The Allies pounded a heavily dug in strategic Japanese position. He said they literally shelled that position for 2 days without sleep. The guys were given what he called, 'pep pills' to stay awake. After return fire ceased for several hours a monsoon hit. It caused flash flooding and then...dead Japanese bodies started floating and were washed over a hill like a waterfall by the flood. It was at that point they knew they won the battle, 2 days after it started.

His favorite stories were of meeting friends from home half way around the globe in Australia where the troops got occasional R&R. He ran into over a dozen different local friends over there and always loved that.

Dad lived from 1918 to 2004.
Very touching Tangerine, thank you for sharing that. My Uncle Tony was USMC in New Guinea I wonder if they ever crossed paths. I had his machete for the longest time.
 
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