To: screaming eagle2
For some reason, to me, D-Day has always been the day I have observed as a remembrance for all of WWII. Even though my own father was in Naval Air Forces in the Pacific and had never been to Europe or served in any other theater, it is still the Normandy invasion that symbolizes the Allied cause and heroism more than anything else. This is not a denigration of any effort on any front during the way, just a personal sentiment.
It seems to me that the landing was the Epic of 20th Century. In a single action, years of planning, thousands of men, billions of dollars were hurled against the distilled evil of socialism - an effort unthinkable in any other government enterprise without the complicit goodwill and sacred agreement of free men and women everywhere. If there is anything I draw from this symbolic battle, it is that all government enterprises (NSDAP or today's misguided and diluted versions of similar philosophies) are doomed to failure without the wholehearted support and sacrifice of freedom loving peoples.
Sic Semper Tyrannis
5 posted on
06/06/2009 5:05:47 AM PDT by
WorkingClassFilth
(Palin/Bachman 2012: Conservative Viagra)
To: WorkingClassFilth
“...hurled against the distilled evil of socialism...”
Time to do it again - on our own shores?
To: WorkingClassFilth
Blessings on all the heroes who fought for freedom.
My brother in law passed away recently. He was a young 19 year old fighting in the Battle of the Bulge. Shot by a sniper he walked with a limp the rest of his 82 years.
8 posted on
06/06/2009 5:11:53 AM PDT by
Carley
(OBAMA IS A MALEVOLENT FORCE IN THE WORLD)
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