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  • rossi

    Master
    Rating - 94.7%
    17   1   1
    Joined
    Mar 4, 2015
    Messages
    2,084
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    113
    Location
    Pensacola Fl
    Men like this guy are becoming rare. 2 years of Military Service minimum should be a requirement for all citizens, and those "WANTING TO BE CITIZENS".
    The skinny boy jeans, wuss mentality has to be reversed in the U.S. How many "Male's" in our current population would have been "Willing and Able" to land on Omaha Beach in 1944?

    Thank God for "The Greatest Generation" who knew the score, and went into Battle!

    Again, Thank God they didn't have to deal with the "WOKE BS" of today.........
     

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    MarkJ

    Expert
    GCGF Supporter
    Rating - 0%
    0   0   0
    Joined
    Feb 21, 2023
    Messages
    103
    Points
    43
    Location
    Baldwin County
    My Dad was wounded on the Beach at Normandy, I'm going to brag on him a little bit now...

    Of the 16 million men who served in World War 2 as of 2021 only 240,329 are still alive, last year that number went to 167,284 . My Dad was one of those that served...

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    My Dad made the cover of Newsweek when World War 2 ended and he had just re-enlisted. He had forged his birth certificate so he could join the army in 1939. He fought and survived the Battle of the Bulge, Invasion of Normandy, as well as campaigns in North Africa, Sicily and others in the European Theater.

    He received three purple hearts, two bronze stars a silver star and the Czechoslovakians equivalent of the Medal of Honor (He and 50 US soldiers rescued a handful of Czech political prisoners from a German POW camp, 12 soldiers made it back alive and all received this medal, the only US soldiers to do so during the war).

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    I was able to send him back to Germany and France about 9 years ago, he had not been overseas since the war and he needed the closure.


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    He found some names here that he remembered.

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    He was in the Big Red One;

    No Mission Too Difficult, No Sacrifice Too Great, Duty First...

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    A local Frenchman expressing his gratitude for my Dad's sacrifices, bought him lunch and tossed down a few cold ones with him, he couldn't speak English and my Dad doesn't speak French and it didn't matter after the introduction was made by an interpreter. They just laughed and drank together for a few hours.

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    During the landing at Normandy a mortar hit my Dad in the back blowing up his back pack and lodging about 11 pieces of shrapnel in and around his spine, several of which remained there his entire life. It should have blown him to bits but he survived, fortunately it wasn't the first or last time he experienced a miracle during the war.

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    He made it to the age of 91, fathered five children all of whom were fortunate enough to be able to see him in the days before he went on ahead. We miss you Dad...
     
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