Thank you
posted on 06/06/2009
I read this, and I just have to put it here, speaks for itself. So I'd like to thank the men and women of our armed forces :
(I'll link to the article in a little bit.)
June 6, 1944
—Russ from Winterset
You know what I did this morning? Maybe it would be better if I told you what I didn't do this morning.
I didn't have to spend over 12 hours on a transport ship in choppy
water, then clamber down a cargo net into a plywood landing craft, all
while carrying up to 100 pounds of gear on my back. Then, I didn't ride
through the rough surf in that little plywood target, only to have the
steel ramp (the only part of the little plywood boat that was even
remotely bullet-resistant) flop down and drop me into the cold ocean
water in front of a beach filled with steel obstacles, mines, flying
bullets & exploding artillery rounds.
I didn't fly over enemy occupied territory at 1000 feet in a C47
cargo plane and then jump out of the plane into the teeth of enemy
anti-aircraft fire. I didn't have to worry about my bright white silk
parachute making me a good target for troops on the ground who wanted
to use me for target practice, and after I landed, I didn't have to
worry about engaging a vastly superior force with only the gear I
carried with me (providing that said gear wasn't ripped off by the
turbulence I encountered exiting the plane) with whoever I could gather
together from the other troops dropped behind enemy lines the same as I
was.
I didn't march into a plywood glider (PLYWOOD, as we've already
established, is NOT very resistant to gunfire and explosions) and sit
quietly while I was towed into anti-aircraft fire, only to be released
and experience a controlled crash into trees, buildings or apparently
open fields that were booby trapped with wooden poles and steel cables
by the enemy.
I wasn't asked to take my place in a McGyvered together amphibious
tank, where I would most likely be swamped by the waves and sink to the
bottom of the English Channel like....well, like a tank rigged for
amphibious operations with lumber and canvas. And if I DID happen to
get to the beach, I would have been the prime target of every enemy
artillery piece for miles around.
I wasn't asked to sit in a command bunker deep beneath London
looking at casualty projections that predicted that we would lose 60%
of the airborne troops committed to this battle and a good chunk of the
troops storming the beaches, and I also didn't prepare a letter taking
full blame for the possible disaster in order to protect my political
leaders.
You know what? Now that I've told you what I DIDN'T do this
morning, what I actually DID seems pretty freakin' trivial. Veterans of
the Normandy landing are becoming scarce now that we're sixty-five
years down the road from that horrible day, but if you know one of
them, make sure to thank them on this day. And don't limit yourself to
D-Day vets - whether it was Normandy, Okinawa, the Chosin Reservoir,
the Tet Offensive, Grenada, Panama, Mogadishu, Fallujah, or just some
godforsaken mountain road at the ass-end of Afghanistan, EVERYONE who
served this country in uniform deserves a hearty handshake and our
everlasting gratitude on this day.
And those veterans who never saw a shot fired in anger? Thank them
too. As John Wayne once said in his last movie role, "It's not about
being the fastest gun: Its about being WILLING." Everyone who wore the
uniform was willing to "go see the elephant", and that willingness sets
them apart from the rest of us.
God help any nation that cannot produce men and women like them. Remember that on this day.