Memorial Day
Today we honor our fallen. Those who, one way or another, paid the price in lives cut short to serve in the military.
Even in these last few decades where few of the conflicts we've mired ourselves in were just or in the national interest - at a minimum to the scope we've taken to the field - insofar as we still have actual teeth, the military has served the vital role of being the stick to talk-diplomacy's carrot. You don't get a bully to stop with letters to the editor or asking for the manager.
In that role, in dusty fields, tropical jungles, and high mountain passes, they spent their lives so that others may live. I fervently hope, despite decades bleeding out the strength of the armed forces, stupid rules of engagement with no bearing on reality, stupid logistics and doctrine that prevent us from fighting the enemy we actually face, and social engineering of the armed forces by elevating the issue of the week over fighting capability, that reality weeds out the unfit, for the alternatives are worse.
Incidentally, the 28th of May is the anniversary of Audie Murphy's death in 1971. The Sabaton song about him lifts many of it's lyrics from his poem:
The Crosses Grow on Anzio
Oh, gather 'round me, comrades
And listen while I weep;
Of a war, a war, a war...
where hell is six feet deep.Along the shore, the cannons roar.
Oh how can a soldier sleep?
The going's slow on Anzio
And hell is six feet deep.Praise be to God for this captured sod
That's rich where blood does seep;
With yours and mine, like butchered swine;
And hell is six feet deep.That death does wait
There's no debate;
No triumph will we reap
The crosses grow on Anzio,
Where hell is six feet deep.- Audie Murphy
I'll leave you with a set of links to relevant songs by Sabaton, and one video.
A history timeline / calendar of all events Sabaton wrote songs about is here.
The Devil Dogs and the battle of Belleau Wood.
The battle of Itter Castle.
The Lost Battalion.
The story of Audie Murphy.
The battle of Midway.
The 101st Airborne nad the battle of Bastogne.
The Purple Heart.