this thread just turned into a **** show, instead of honoring the brave soldiers that started the liberation of Europe
this thread just turned into a **** show, instead of honoring the brave soldiers that started the liberation of Europe
The best people remember soldiers every day and not just a few days a year.
Looking at how the country is intentionally being broken down, people should worry more about larger present realities and not just the calendar one-offs. I wonder how many June ^ guys would be happy seeing 300,000+ strangers a month allowed over a dissolved border and young children are being mutilated while the military. schools etc are made into a freak shows. The country is being wrecked and its probably too late as the kooks and weirdos push from WWIII. Not many actually in the military are happy and its better to remember them more
Do it somewhere else!
"I like people who weren't captured."The best people remember soldiers every day and not just a few days a year.
Looking at how the country is intentionally being broken down, people should worry more about larger present realities and not just the calendar one-offs. I wonder how many June ^ guys would be happy seeing 300,000+ strangers a month allowed over a dissolved border and young children are being mutilated while the military. schools etc are made into a freak shows. The country is being wrecked and its probably too late as the kooks and weirdos push from WWIII. Not many actually in the military are happy and its better to remember them more
What soldier would ever say such a thing ?"I like people who weren't captured."
Yes, the disrespect shown by some who clumsily divert attention by shoehorning in their political opinions is not a good look …this thread just turned into a **** show, instead of honoring the brave soldiers that started the liberation of Europe
Just finished Stephen Ambrose's book on D-Day. A great read but I would recommend that you familiarize yourself with the maps in the book before reading.
Locations can get confusing.
Something that is not mentioned much is that many of the German troops at Normandy that day were not Germans. Many were Czechs, Ukrainians, Russian and Poles that were coerced to join the German army. The Germans would put these guys in pillboxes with a couple of German NCOs who would make them fight at gunpoint. There is a brief scene in Saving Private Ryan were two "Germans" try to tell the US troops that they were Czechs.
they were the ones that fought against the D-Day attack that was the beginning of Europe gaining freedom from their fascist Nazi oppressors.At the same time, there were volunteers from all of the occupied countries who believed in the fascist cause and joined enthusiastically. When the war was over many no doubt tried to claim they were coerced.
Agree with others to not bring it into this thread pleaseThe best people remember soldiers every day and not just a few days a year.
Looking at how the country is intentionally being broken down, people should worry more about larger present realities and not just the calendar one-offs. I wonder how many June ^ guys would be happy seeing 300,000+ strangers a month allowed over a dissolved border and young children are being mutilated while the military. schools etc are made into a freak shows. The country is being wrecked and its probably too late as the kooks and weirdos push from WWIII. Not many actually in the military are happy and its better to remember them more
My Uncle was in St. Lo also, definitely walked on some of the same dirt your dad did. Thanks for sharing.My father would occasionally talk about sustaining a 'minor' wound when hit by a sniper's round entering St. Lo; hearing German spoken while being on night patrols, and being in a jeep with an officer and nco while trying to scout enemy positions when a German 88 blew the jeep off the ground killing one, and injuring my father and the other man. My father was able to get the other man and himself to safety away from view of the German spotter. his injuries sent him back to England where he stayed until he was discharged. He landed on Omaha Beach on D-Day, but never talked about it so I figured it must have been late when he landed. Year 2000 comes around and I' reading Ambrose's book mentioned above by Colbert, and just about drop the book when I see may father's group being the fourth or fifth wave to land on Omaha. I asked him about writing his memoir of the day, and ,he said "son, I've spent my whole life trying to forget that day". I asked about Saving Private Ryan, and he felt the movie did a fairly good job capturing the events on Omaha, but that no movie could capture the intensity and duration of what transpired. As an adjunct, my mother was ith the WAVES working with the women who broke the Japanese Codes, She had taken a secrecy oath, and she died never saying how it had been done. My father's older brother was a tank commander in the Battle of the Bulge and never talked about it. In the end, just three 'ordinary' Americans who like so many others rose the occasion.
This is so true. I finally made it to Normandy last November and the people could not have been nicer and more respectful. I was amazed to see so many American flags flying side by side with the French flag on many of the private residences.Any member of my family that's been there say that the closer you get to the Normandy beaches the friendlier the people are.