Posted on 06/06/2023 12:37:52 PM PDT by buckalfa
Every day, memories of World War II—its sights and sounds, its terrors and triumphs—disappear. Yielding to the inalterable process of aging, the men and women who fought and won the great conflict are now in their 90s or older. They are dying quickly—according to US Department of Veterans Affairs statistics, 167,284 of the 16 million Americans who served in World War II are alive in 2022.
(Excerpt) Read more at nationalww2museum.org ...
While the article is a sales pitch for donations, it does contain some stark statistics.
For those who still can, I urge you to reach out to anyone of that generation who contributed to the cause. Make record of what you learn so that generation's collective wisdom is not lost to the future.
Yes,they’re just about gone.
Both of grandfathers were WW2 combat vets. The last one passed in ‘18 at 97 yes old. I’m glad they’re not here to see our total descent into faggotry and Marxism.
When I was a kid (mid-1960s) I went to see a doctor. I always was the talkative type, so I asked him where he went to college.
Doctor: I went to the University of Pittsburgh. That was after my time in the army.
Me: My father was also in WW II.
Doctor: I was in WW I.
A mere 80 years ago. Some folks have ZERO friggin’ clue about how blessed we are because of the sacrifice made by so many. 😳🙏
Next on the list are the baby boomers. We are next. Once we’re all gone America will cease to exist. God still has a small remnant in America…those that earnestly believe God protected this nation because HE was the center of America’s beating heart. We are the ones that are holding back demonic powers that our land has never ever seen before…but once we’re gone that wall of protection disintegrates. ….it’s coming. Pray 🙏🏻for your children and grandchildren 😢
When I was a kid, maybe 12, I came to know an old man across the street named John. He was a scary looking guy who was actually quite kind. He fought in WWI. Taught me about the 40 and 8 train cars. 40 men or 8 horses.
I don’t remember much of our conversations except that they were interesting.
I’ve had the honor of knowing some WWII vets who had very interesting experiences. One was UDT who swam into Normandy the night before the attack to plant munitions to clear the beaches, then swam back to the ship.
Another was a B-24 pilot.
I had a great uncle who earned the Silver Star. I don’t know what for. He was an officer on a bomber buried somewhere in France.
Another Great uncle was a member of a destroyer crew. He’s still alive. I think he was at the tail end of the war and didn’t see much if any action.
I had a friend who wanted to go but as a skilled machinist, he was required to remain stateside to build the mighty war machine.
I very briefly met a man who was in the OSS.
Ever one who participated was a hero.
All three of my uncles served in WWII. All have since passed away. My dad wanted to serve, but kept flunking the physical due to a duodinal ulcer. He was a scoutmaster, and he set the scouts to work selling $70,000 in war bonds, planting victory gardens, and collecting materials needed in the war effort, such as scrap metals, etc.
He passed away in 1995.
“..I’m glad they’re not here to see our total descent into faggotry and Marxism....”
Yep. My wife and I were just talking about that very thing earlier this morning.
My dad was a USMC BAR rifleman that was in the first wave to hit the beach of Okinawa. He passed a few years back at 89 years old.
He’d have an outright fit over what’s happening in our country right now.
> Next on the list are the baby boomers. We are next. Once we’re all gone America will cease to exist. <
You are not exaggerating there. We are the last generation to understand what free speech is all about. We are also the last generation able to resist relentless media and government propaganda.
Sure, there will be rebels in the years ahead. But by and large, most young folks will go along to get along. Any questioning of the PC culture will brand you as a bigot and a hater. You might even get cancelled. Nobody wants that. Better to keep quiet.
My dad was in a Jap concentration camp with my grandmother, grandfather and uncle in the interior of China because they were Belgian living in China when the Japanese invaded. He was there three years. Starving. Saw people beaten to death as a ten year old kid.
My Dad was in the Philippines. He was awarded a bronze star for going behind enemy lines with another soldier and retrieving a downed piper cub.
One uncle was on Iwo Jima.
Another uncle was wounded at Guadalcanal. Both came home intact.
RIP DAD, Uncle Dino, and Uncle Mike.
A long, long time ago I worked security for a major university. An old Italian janitor worked in one of the buildings I patrolled.
He was a little old guy, and he spoke broken English. No one paid much attention to him. After all, fancy university professors didn’t have the time to talk to lowly janitors!
Well, I made time to talk to him. Eventually he opened up to me. Turns out that he was a WW II vet. But not on our side. He was a member of a Waffen SS unit that was raised in Italy. He did not surrender when Italy surrendered. He stuck with the Germans, and fought in the Battle of Berlin.
I don’t think I would have wanted to meet him when he was a young man.
My mom passed 13 months later in 2016 at age 82.
My uncle (WW2 US Army, survived the Bataan death march, Philippines) passed at age 92.
The Baby boomers are NOT next……no way .
……
A friend of my parents was in the marines. He was part of the marine detail at the US embassy in Hong Kong. He should have had diplomatic immunity but signatures were lacking on documents necessary to prove it. He was in various Japanese POW camps from December 8, 1941 to the end of the war.
I am sure his stories and your dad’s are quite similar.
The war effort could not have succeeded without service on the home front. Your father's efforts should be commended and remembered.
It was the loss of those professors. He could have been an important source for a book or scholary paper. Some assistant professor who befriended could have been famous or at least received tenure!
not to mention Pearl Harbor, the TET offensive, the assassination of JFK and RFK.....
and, they are not teaching any of that in the schools....
But they will still be on the voting rolls
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