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		<title>Those who Remember will Like conversation with an ole Timer :-)</title>
		<link>/blogentry/152798</link>
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		<description>eddessaknight's Blog: Those who Remember will Like conversation with an ole Timer :-)</description>
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			<title>Comment #4</title>
			<link>/blogentry/152798#c213817</link>
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			<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2020 05:20:59 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>eddessaknight</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>&#x3c;br /&#x3e;The thing that hurts us the most,  is to witness the Future and still deny the Past</p>]]></description>
			<category>eddessaknight</category>
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			<title>Comment #3</title>
			<link>/blogentry/152798#c213816</link>
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			<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2020 02:28:36 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>rcbbuckeye</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Great post. My dad was one of the lucky ones. He survived Pearl Harbor. He didn&#x27;t talk much about it, just one time he told me men all around him were killed by a bomb and he wasn&#x27;t. When I went to Hawaii a few years ago and visited the Arizona Memorial, it was then I really realized what they endured there. Not to mention the battles in the Pacific against the Japanese, and at the same time the battles in Europe against the Germans.</p>]]></description>
			<category>rcbbuckeye</category>
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			<title>Comment #2</title>
			<link>/blogentry/152798#c213814</link>
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			<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2020 02:09:08 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>grwurston</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Excellent post!!!</p>]]></description>
			<category>grwurston</category>
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			<title>Comment #1</title>
			<link>/blogentry/152798#c213813</link>
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			<pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2020 22:18:28 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>eddessaknight</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>This is so true......</p>]]></description>
			<category>eddessaknight</category>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Those who Remember will Like conversation with an ole Timer :-)</title>
			<link>/blogentry/152798</link>
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			<pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2020 22:15:41 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>eddessaknight</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>I talked to a man today.......<br /><br />I talked with a man today, an 80+-year-old man. I asked him if there was<br /><br />anything I can get him while this Coronavirus scare was gripping<br /><br />America.<br /><br />He simply smiled, looked away and said:<br /><br />Let me tell you what I need! I need to believe, at some point, this<br /><br />country my generation fought for... I need to believe this nation we<br /><br />handed safely to our children and their children...<br /><br />I need to know this generation will quit being a bunch of sissies...that<br /><br />they respect what they&#x27;ve been given...that they&#x27;ve earned what others<br /><br />sacrificed for.<br /><br />I wasn&#x27;t sure where the conversation was going or if it was going<br /><br />anywhere at all. So, I sat there, quietly observing.<br /><br />You know, I was a little boy during WWII. Those were scary days. We<br /><br />didn&#x27;t know if we were going to be speaking English, German or Japanese<br /><br />at the end of the war. There was no certainty, no guarantees like<br /><br />Americans enjoy today.<br /><br />And no home went without sacrifice or loss. Every house, up and down<br /><br />every street, had someone in harm&#x27;s way. Maybe their Daddy was a<br /><br />soldier, maybe their son was a sailor, maybe it was an uncle. Sometimes<br /><br />it was the whole family...fathers, sons, uncles...<br /><br />Having someone, you love, sent off to war...it wasn&#x27;t less frightening<br /><br />than it is today. It was scary as Hell. If anything, it was more<br /><br />frightening. We didn&#x27;t have battlefront news. We didn&#x27;t have email or<br /><br />cellphones. You sent them away and you hoped...you prayed. You may not<br /><br />hear from them for months, if ever. Sometimes a mother was getting her<br /><br />son&#x27;s letters the same day Dad was comforting her over their child&#x27;s<br /><br />death.<br /><br />And we sacrificed. You couldn&#x27;t buy things. Everything was rationed. You<br /><br />were only allowed so much milk per month, only so much bread, toilet<br /><br />paper. EVERYTHING was restricted for the war effort. And what you<br /><br />weren&#x27;t using, what you didn&#x27;t need, things you threw away, they were<br /><br />saved and sorted for the war effort. My generation was the original<br /><br />recycling movement in America.<br /><br />And we had viruses back then...serious viruses. Things like polio,<br /><br />measles, and such. It was nothing to walk to school and pass a house or<br /><br />two that was quarantined. We didn&#x27;t shut down our schools. We didn&#x27;t<br /><br />shut down our cities. We carried on, without masks, without hand<br /><br />sanitizer. And do you know what? We persevered. We overcame. We didn&#x27;t<br /><br />attack our President, we came together. We rallied around the flag for<br /><br />the war. Thick or thin, we were in it to win. And we would lose more<br /><br />boys in an hour of combat than we lose in entire wars today.<br /><br />He slowly looked away again. Maybe I saw a small tear in the corner of<br /><br />his eye. Then he continued:<br /><br />Today&#x27;s kids don&#x27;t know sacrifice. They think sacrifice is not having<br /><br />coverage on their phone while they freely drive across the country.<br /><br />Today&#x27;s kids are selfish and spoiled. In my generation, we looked out<br /><br />for our elders. We helped out with single moms whose husbands were<br /><br />either at war or dead from war. Today&#x27;s kids rush the store, buying<br /><br />everything they can...no concern for anyone but themselves. It&#x27;s<br /><br />shameful the way Americans behave these days. None of them deserve the<br /><br />sacrifices their granddads made.<br /><br />So, no I don&#x27;t need anything. I appreciate your offer but, I know I&#x27;ve<br /><br />been through worse things than this virus. But maybe I should be asking<br /><br />you, what can I do to help you? Do you have enough pop to get through<br /><br />this, enough steak? Will you be able to survive with 113 channels on<br /><br />your tv?<br /><br />I smiled, fighting back a tear of my own...now humbled by a man in his<br /><br />80&#x27;s. All I could do was thank him for the history lesson, leave my<br /><br />number for emergency and leave with my ego firmly tucked in my rear.<br /><br />I talked to a man today. A real man. An American man from an era long<br /><br />gone and forgotten. We will never understand the sacrifices. We will<br /><br />never fully earn their sacrifices. But we should work harder to learn<br /><br />about them..learn from them...to respect them.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="/blogentry/152798">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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			<category>eddessaknight</category>
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