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Command Post What is this?
Posted on May 25, 2014
CPT Aaron Kletzing
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LCDR Volunteer Docent Team Leader
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Many of those who are not counted among those fallen in battle actually died after they were discharged from the service. Veterans living thousands of miles away from the battle and possibly suffering years after they returned home. The Vietnam Veterans had Agent Orange. The veterans of missions in the Gulf Wars and later Iraq-Afghanistan Campaigns in the Middle East produced many post-war trauma victims who died from mental illness and traumatic brain injuries, some of those deaths were tragically self-inflicted. Some died because of disabilities that were never properly diagnosed because the VA was too busy or unable to properly handle their claim. Memorial Day in America is a day for them too. The families of those veterans deserve gold stars.
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1st Lt Padre Dave Poedel
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Thank you! Well done, indeed. God bless you as you transition out, a process that has taken me my lifetime so far…..
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SFC Company First Sergeant
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Memorial day is that and more. Me personally, I look at the day to remember and honor the sacrifices of my fellow brothers and sisters in arms over 6000 and counting. We the lucky ones who served with them in all conflicts have a duty to honor their ultimate sacrifice. As the word memorial emplies. Bottom Line remember them and never forget the cause for which they served and died: Freedom for the oppressed and the defense of this nation.
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SSG Assistant Team Leader
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Edited >1 y ago
With all due respect, the meaning of Memorial Day is NOT to remember or thank the living.

"The price for this freedom at times has been high, but we have never been unwilling to pay that price." -President Ronald Reagan

Memorial Day stands as a testament of the National consciousness to never forget the lives represented by the enormous number of white marble markers that line and fill the military cemeteries across our nation and abroad.

Reflect instead on our brothers and sisters in arms that have given all. Do not give in to the 'slow fade' that is caused by the commercial fast food world of today.

Gettysburg, Belleau Wood, Bataan, the beaches of Normandy, the Argonne Forest, Guadalcanal,the cane fields of the Phillipines, the 38th parallel, the rice paddies of Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq and untold other places our servicemen and women died and in many cases remain missing.

Sacrifice without remembrance is meaningless. Never forget.

Veterans Day is for thanking the living.
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COL Bowman Olds
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After spending several hours at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall ceremony on Memorial Day, I would expand the statement "3 Things Veterans Think About On Memorial Day" to all those impacted by what they see on The Wall. As I watched mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, wives, and husbands react to the names of their loved ones on The Wall, the momentoes, photos, and letters left behind, one is struck by the magnitude of their loss. They too need our unending support in whatever form or fashion we can provide.
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SGT Ronald Audas
SGT Ronald Audas
>1 y
If you have never visited the "Wall",if any way possible do it.Hopefully,you will find no names of loved ones,buy the inspiration is incredible.I defy you to remain Macho in the presents of all these Hero`s that gave all.
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SGT Michelle Griffin-Franks
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Thanks for sharing your story I am a Very Proud Female veteran I've traveled the world I know what is too server overseas I lived as a female soldier in Germany from the young age 19-24 I'm proud to be an American
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CPL Ramon L. Marrero
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Thank you Sir!
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