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Idaho Sharpshooter
12-07-2012, 03:52 AM
did someone forget, or do we not acknowledge December 7th on this website?

Rich

yotatrd4x4
12-07-2012, 04:36 AM
I say that day should never be forgotten I have been there and it is humbling to say the least. May all those men and women never be forgotten.

Wal'
12-07-2012, 06:56 AM
Wont ever be forgotton down here either...........well at least this current generation, can't say what our kids will remember though...............but then its up to us to make sure the memory's are held close.

farmallcrew
12-07-2012, 12:28 PM
<--- this fella never forgets and flies a "POW MIA" and "Don't tread on me" flag along with Old Glory!!!

wolf3006
12-07-2012, 12:57 PM
Down here in Dixie we never forget!

sundog
12-07-2012, 01:13 PM
An Army buddy's Dad was on the West Virginia. What a thrill getting to hear a first hand account of someone who was right there when it went down. He's been gone a number of years now, and my buddy died during one of our many deployments. Heroes both.

I've had the honor of visiting several times, and Punch Bowl. I know that I will never forget. What my parent's generation did is beyond ordinary.

popper
12-07-2012, 04:35 PM
I didn't forget,m 12/7, 9/11, USS Cole, Marine barracks, etc. Nor will I. I won't forget who responded and who didn't either.

gbrown
12-07-2012, 04:59 PM
It's sad to see people not realize the importance of the day. One guy in a place was asking the date. I thought, Really?? He was about 60. On the other hand, a guy in his 20's was mad because the flags at his place of work were not flown at half mast. It means something to some, nothing to some. I turn the corner almost daily and see a former Marine sitting in front of his house. He won the Silver Star on Iwo Jima. I'll always think of him, my father and my uncles on this day, for sure.

GabbyM
12-07-2012, 06:53 PM
In remembrance of: Ernie Sims, Windsor Illinois.
Fought at the battle of Pearl harbor. From a 5” gun turret on his destroyer. Tied up three abreast at a dock with no steam on the ship. Lacking electric power to aim gun batteries four men hand cranked azimuth and elevation by command over telephone headset. Japanese dive bomber was coming in for a kill. Gunner called out commands to place the POA in the bombers path then fired his do or die shot within the split second the plane passed through his mark. That big 5” contact fused shell hit the Zero dead on reducing the enemy plane to pieces Ernie described as no larger than a quarter. Ernie was total deaf in one ear. As an earlier dive bomber had narrowly missed his ship as he was running across deck. Concussion blew out his ear drum on that side. His ship went on to fight and win through the entire war. He and one other shipmate departed the ship shortly after wars end. He was suffering from malaria. Ship was sunk with all hands aboard in the typhoon that struck our fleet.

Those men walked through the valley of death and feared no evil.

Wis. Tom
12-07-2012, 07:04 PM
My father just got done telling me that it was on a Sunday, and he stayed home from church, to do the milking, while Grandpa and Grandma went. When they got home, and turned on the radio for the afternoon. He then told of the men around here, that survived, and some that didn't.

DCP
12-07-2012, 07:06 PM
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.


For our tomorrow
They gave their today

Smitty's Retired
12-07-2012, 07:12 PM
I feel this date will always live in the memories of men who love this country. I have an uncle who joined the Navy the following January and served through WW-II. My Grandfather was not in the military, but moved his family down to Mobile Alabama to work as a machinist at the shipyards through the war years. As long as we keep these memories alive and pass them on, maybe the revisionist will not be able to rewrite history to the point it is forgotten.

DCP
12-08-2012, 09:26 AM
Looks like it almost forgotten here less than 200 views and 5% response almost as bad as the real world!

These aren't my words but I certainly agree

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.

Studying history is necessary to avoid repeating past mistakes. This
saying comes from the writings of George Santayana, a Spanish-born
American author of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries."

It means don't regard the subject of History lightly, as being purely academic. It has great practical value in the lessons that can be learned which can be used to make wise decisions in the present.

Human nature has remained more or less constant throughout the centuries and many of the issues we face today are at least similar in some respects to the problems of the past. By taking note of the bad decisions persons made in the past by following natural human inclinations, we can avoid the temptation to make a similar bad decision today if faced with a similar situation. But, if we forget the lesson of the past, we will most likely follow the same natural human inclination and make the same mistake as persons did in the past.




It's sad to see people not realize the importance of the day. One guy in a place was asking the date. I thought, Really?? He was about 60. On the other hand, a guy in his 20's was mad because the flags at his place of work were not flown at half mast. It means something to some, nothing to some. I turn the corner almost daily and see a former Marine sitting in front of his house. He won the Silver Star on Iwo Jima. I'll always think of him, my father and my uncles on this day, for sure.

jaysouth
12-08-2012, 09:50 AM
My uncle was on the Arizona. His was declared MIA and his remains presumably are interred in the wreck. The family very stoicly accepted the news. However, it got worse the next few months. They learned that another son died on the Bataan Pennsula, missing in action, no details available. No survivor has ever come forward who knew any details or the date of his death.