I talked to a man today

jinxx4ever

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  • Sep 26, 2013
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    Full Discloser: This is not mine, I saw this from a friends post and it moved me so much that I wanted to share it with everyone I could reach.
    I talked to a man today
    I talked with a man today, an 80+ year old man. I asked him if there was anything I can get him while this Coronavirus scare was gripping America.
    He simply smiled, looked away and said:
    "Let me tell you what I need! I need to believe, at some point, this country my generation fought for... I need to believe this nation we handed safely to our children and their children...
    I need to know this generation will quit being a bunch of sissies...that they respect what they've been given...that they've earned what others sacrificed for."
    I wasn't sure where the conversation was going or if it was going anywhere at all. So, I sat there, quietly observing.
    "You know, I was a little boy during WWII. Those were scary days. We didn't know if we were going to be speaking English, German or Japanese at the end of the war. There was no certainty, no guarantees like Americans enjoy today.
    And no home went without sacrifice or loss. Every house, up and down every street, had someone in harm's way. Maybe their Daddy was a soldier, maybe their son was a sailor, maybe it was an uncle. Sometimes it was the whole damn family...fathers, sons, uncles...
    Having someone, you love, sent off to war...it wasn't less frightening than it is today. It was scary as Hell. If anything, it was more frightening. We didn't have battle front news. We didn't have email or cellphones. You sent them away and you hoped...you prayed. You may not hear from them for months, if ever. Sometimes a mother was getting her son's letters the same day Dad was comforting her over their child's death.
    And we sacrificed. You couldn't buy things. Everything was rationed. You were only allowed so much milk per month, only so much bread, toilet paper. EVERYTHING was restricted for the war effort. And what you weren't using, what you didn't need, things you threw away, they were saved and sorted for the war effort. My generation was the original recycling movement in America.
    And we had viruses back then...serious viruses. Things like polio, measles, and such. It was nothing to walk to school and pass a house or two that was quarantined. We didn't shut down our schools. We didn't shut down our cities. We carried on, without masks, without hand sanitizer. And do you know what? We persevered. We overcame. We didn't attack our President, we came together. We rallied around the flag for the war. Thick or thin, we were in it to win. And we would lose more boys in an hour of combat than we lose in entire wars today."
    He slowly looked away again. Maybe I saw a small tear in the corner of his eye. Then he continued:
    "Today's kids don't know sacrifice. They think a sacrifice is not having coverage on their phone while they freely drive across the country. Today's kids are selfish and spoiled. In my generation, we looked out for our elders. We helped out with single moms who's husbands were either at war or dead from war. Today's kids rush the store, buying everything they can...no concern for anyone but themselves. It's shameful the way Americans behave these days. None of them deserve the sacrifices their granddads made.
    So, no I don't need anything. I appreciate your offer but, I know I've been through worse things than this virus. But maybe I should be asking you, what can I do to help you? Do you have enough pop to get through this, enough steak? Will you be able to survive with 113 channels on your tv?"
    I smiled, fighting back a tear of my own...now humbled by a man in his 80's. All I could do was thank him for the history lesson, leave my number for emergency and leave with my ego firmly tucked in my rear.
    I talked to a man today. A real man. An American man from an era long gone and forgotten. We will never understand the sacrifices. We will never fully earn their sacrifices. But we should work harder to learn about them..learn from them...to respect them.



    8
     
    Unfortunately we don't make Men like that anymore except for a few exceptions who still pick up a rifle to stand a post. Our society was selfless back in the day which produced armies of Men. Progressive ideology slowly began overtime which removed the virtues from our society. Liberalism was instituted in our education system which produced our present society which as you see couldn't hold a match to past societies . Our world of Knights and Warriors were vanquished by liberalism with the indoctrination of people feminizing their sons creating our third gender backed by our legal system.
     
    Ive been saying similar things. Im gen X. My generation and newer hasn't known sacrifice. We've only known relative peace and prosperity. I believe that my generation will do better during this than the newer ones because we grew up in times that were much different. I remember only having 3 or 4 TV channels. Only the "cities" had "cable". We had no cell phones or satellite dishes.

    I was helping my Dad in our garden to put food on the table and not because it the "Green" thing to do. We raised chickens, pigs, cows and rabbits for food. We've not known what its like to not have shelves at the grocery store loaded every day.

    I have the means to put food on my table. Hunting, fishing, gardening will provide what I need if necessary. I will look out for neighbors and mine. I also have everything I need to defend what I work for.

    These are trying times but we need to work together. Help each other and this will pass.
     
    I missed the big one, being born in '46.

    To some degree, I think that the namby-pamby whiney BS crowd we have today is largely a product of worried parents of us Boomers trying to establish a world where those horrors and atrocities could never happen again. They wrapped us in cocoons of care and safety, robbing us of the first-person fears and mandates to solve our own problems on our own. When our turn came, like the dutiful parents that we all are; we carried it to the most illogical extreme, because we knew no better.

    Womb to tomb; safe at any price.

    Like Franklin said about those who would trade freedom in exchange for momentary safety deserving neither, and that line from Pogo, "We have met the enemy, and he is us...".

    The fiction and the conjecture have become our own stark fact.

    But the time when such behavior may have had some relevance is long, long past. Only the nightmare remains.

    I'd like to think that this crossroad we have met, at the corner of Covid-19 and the rise of domestic socialism will prompt an abrupt right turn back onto the rails the founders had in mind.

    Is that too much to ask?

    Damned well better not be, I say. Time for the Bitch Slapping to begin, I say.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    'Fraid they'll sic the King's Men on you?

    It's like that joke about indebtedness.

    If you owe the bank $500,000; the bank owns you. If you owe the bank $500,000,000,000; you own the bank.

    If ten stand up and say, "NAY!", they have a problem. If ten million stand up and say, "NAY!!!", maybe not so much...

    BTW, how many Veterans are there still alive in our USA?

    Answer:

    There are 18.2 million veterans in the United States, according to the most recent statistics from the US Census.

    quote-we-have-met-the-enemy-and-have-learned-nothing-more-about-him-i-have-however-learned-robert-leckie-65-74-02.jpg


    Greg
     
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