_In  Memoriam_ 
(http://www.michaelconnelly.viviti.com/entries/general/in-memoriam) 
 

 
As another Memorial  Day approaches many Americans look on it as just 
another day off of work or  school when they can sit around and barbecue 
hamburgers and drink soft drinks  and beer. Yet, to those of us who are 
veterans 
know the true meaning of the  holiday. Memorial Day was originally called 
Decoration Day and was established  in 1868 to honor the memory of members of 
the 
American military who have died  defending the United States of America. 
Its first official observance was on May  30, 1868 when flowers were placed on 
the graves of soldiers, both Union and  Confederate who died in the Civil 
War. It was later expanded to include all of  the Americans who died in the 
wars fought by this country to preserve our  freedom and it became an 
official Federal Holiday in 1971. 
On this  2010 Memorial Day I want everyone to look at some staggering 
figures about our  American heroes. Beginning with the American Revolution, a 
total of 43,362,376  men and women have served in the U.S. Military during all 
of the wars we have  fought including the current wars in Iraq and 
Afghanistan. Of these, 655,231  were killed in battle while another 540,254 
have died 
during their service due  to other causes. That is a total of 1,195,485 
Americans who have died in wartime  while wearing the uniform of our country. 
In addition, 1,468,196 have been  wounded. There are currently approximately 
24,000,000 military veterans still  alive in our nation.  
So who  were these people, who as someone pointed out, wrote a blank check 
to their  country laying their lives on the line for poor pay and often 
deplorable living  conditions. They were and still are, our fathers and 
mothers, 
sons and  daughters, and friends and neighbors. They fought and they died 
at places that  the history books often mention in passing, it they are 
mentioned at all. Places  like Saratoga and Yorktown where our freedom was 
secured, and battlefields like  Gettysburg and Fredericksburg, where many brave 
Americans died fighting each  other. Then there are the battlefields of World 
War I like Belleau Wood where  U.S. Marines fought valiantly and suffered 
heavy casualties to stop the German  advance, and the fights during World War 
II on the beaches of Normandy and Iwo  Jima that opened the door for 
American victories in Europe and the Pacific. The  ink was barely dry on the 
Japanese surrender document when thousands of  Americans were sent to battle 
the 
communists in the Korean War. 
Turn next  to the Vietnam War where over 55,000 Americans died yet never 
lost a battle.  However, though the actions of the politicians in Washington 
D.C. the war itself  was ultimately lost and the history books blame it on 
the military. Yet, it was  the Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, and Airmen who 
fought that war were often  ignored or even spat upon when they returned home. 
It was not until recently  that their contribution to the freedom of our 
nation was acknowledged. To them,  I can only say “Welcome Home.” Well done my 
brothers and sisters in arms. 
Since then  our valiant heroes have fought and died in Grenada, Panama, 
Operation Desert  Storm and the current wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. However, 
liberal politicians  and members of the left wing news media continue to 
attack them for doing the  job of defending freedom. Our troops in Afghanistan 
and Iraq are subjected to  Rules of Engagement by the current administration 
that severely limits their  ability to protect themselves and our way of 
life. This is being done under the  banner of “political correctness.”  
There is  no such thing as a “politically correct” war. When the lives of 
Americans are  threatened and our very existence hangs in the balance there 
is only one way to  fight, and that is to win. Our men and women in our 
military know this, and  despite the restrictions imposed upon them by 
politicians who have never served  in the military and know nothing about the 
sacrifices required, our troops  continue to do their duty to us and our 
nation. On 
this Memorial Day we must  honor them and all those who have made the 
ultimate sacrifice for our country.  They were and are the best of us. If we 
allow them to be forgotten then we  inevitably lose our own identity as a free 
people and “the government of the  people, by the people, for the people,” 
will indeed “perish from the earth.” 
I will ask  this of each person who reads this. Enjoy your Memorial Day, 
but make a special  effort to contact someone, whether a family member, a 
friend, or even a  stranger, who you know has served in the military or is 
currently serving. Just  tell them “Thank you for your service to our country”. 
You have no idea how much  that will mean to them. Also take a moment to 
honor those we have lost, either  by visiting the grave of a veteran, or just 
saying a brief prayer. They will  hear you and they will know that their 
sacrifices were not made in vain.   
Michael Connelly 
U.S. Army Veteran 
Posted May 23, 2010 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
_www.michaelconnelly.viviti.com_ (http://www.michaelconnelly.viviti.com/) 

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