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[video=youtube;bEfVa738jFI]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEfVa738jFI[/video]
Plus one million, Monday 3PM one minute of reflectionThank you for posting this. In how sad most of the news and events around the USA and even rest of the World, we do still need to take care of remembering everyone, everywhere, that have served to protect Freedom.
Plus one million, Monday 3PM one minute of reflection
Richard
Very nice.[video=youtube;5MtdIO23MKM]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5MtdIO23MKM[/video]
RIP Brothers, greatest respect miss you all.
First Sergeant Luke Mercerdante, USMC, KIA Kandahar Province, 2008 (Remembering our last lunch together)
Sgt Maj RJ Cottle, USMC, KIA, Helmand Province, 2010 "Stay Frosty" never forgotten bro
L/CPL Nigel Olson, USMC, KIA, Helmand Province, 2010
L/Cpl Carlos Aragon, USMC, KIA, Helmand Province, 2010
SGM Larry Strickland, USA, KIA, Pentagon, 9/11/2001
and too many others it has been a long 12+ years for us
Think on them and too many others, Ramadi, Fallujah, Sangin, COP Payne, Fiddlers Green, PB Wolfpack and too many other battlefields most will never know about, they and we did our best. Honor them, I go to antiquity to honor our fallen brothers.
Memorial Day isn't about a barbecue and a good sale.
Pericles funeral oration
…that their deeds when weighed in the balance have been found equal to their fame! I believe that a death such as theirs has been the true measure of a man's worth; it may be the first revelation of his virtues, but is at any rate their final seal. For even those who come short in other ways may justly plead the valor with which they have fought for their country; they have blotted out the evil with the good, and have benefited the state more by their public services than they have injured her by their private actions. None of these men were enervated by wealth or hesitated to resign the pleasures of life; none of them put off the evil day in the hope, natural to poverty, that a man, though poor, may one day become rich. But, deeming that the punishment of their enemies was sweeter than any of these things, and that they could fall in no nobler cause, they determined at the hazard of their lives to be honorably avenged, and to leave the rest. They resigned to hope their unknown chance of happiness; but in the face of death they resolved to rely upon themselves alone. And when the moment came they were minded to resist and suffer, rather than to fly and save their lives; they ran away from the word of dishonor, but on the battlefield their feet stood fast, and in an instant, at the height of their fortune, they passed away from the scene, not of their fear, but of their glory.
"The Great War will live dilately in the minds of Americans for the next hundred years. I hope that when we do reverence to the memory of our brave boys who fell in France, we shall not forget their brothers in arms who wore the uniform of our allies. I believe that the national airs of France, Great Britain, Italy and Belgium should for all time to come be as familiar to us as our own Star Spangled Banner."
I had never heard of this, or seen coins on a headstone; now I will be mindful of it from this day forward. Thank you for sharing!