Pearl Harbor Day

Pearl Harbor Day

Today is the 67th anniversary of the Japanese navy’s horrible bombing of our U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor. Many people still shudder when they recall the "attacks that struck too close to home".

What a horrific day, one that " will live in infamy"

Looking at a correlation with today…

…a really bad economy

…millions unemployed

…fear of further attacks at home

…secure employment in the military

Such an eerie part of our history and it still shrouds us in intrigue and dark remembrances. Make no mistake about it, the main similarity between then and now…

…men and women of all origins and beliefs enlisting in the US military to protect our country from enemies, both foreign and domestic.

American Valor lifts a half-mast flag today in remembrance of the horrible day when so many of our family members and friends lost their lives in service to our country.

May God keep and bless those that went before us and may He strengthen those of us who remain to carry on the fight.

Pearl Harbor Military Tribute

Tribute to Pearl Harbor Survivors

The military has a saying, "salute the rank, not the man." But Ronnie Everitt and Newton Brooks, walking down a corridor of raised hands, haven’t worn rank in a long time.

Outside the Naval Diving and Salvage Training Center, Arnold High School’s Navy Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps salute the men – two of Bay County’s few remaining veterans of the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941.

Dec. 7, 2008, will mark 67 years since the attack and the United States’ entry into World War II. The sneak attack was the opening movement to four years of war; at the end of the three- hour battle almost 2,500 people had been killed and half that number wounded.

But as the era of the last true global conflict drifts further into the past, those who witnessed it must drift, too.

At one point, a Bay County lunch for Pearl Harbor survivors could draw nearly 30 people. With the Oct. 17 death of Burl Smith, the number is down to three.

"They’re coming on down," Everitt said. "But I plan to stay in there for the next 10 years so I can be 100. Once I get to 100 then I’ll be smiling and ready to go."

You can read the rest of the story here in the Panama City News Herald

 

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