Let
us pause in our holiday preparations to recall the lightning strike by the
Japanese navy on Pearl Harbor, what Franklin D. Roosevelt called “a dastardly
attack” 75 years ago today. His speech is worth a watch and listen:
Every
year, fewer and fewer frail
old men make the pilgrimage back there to honor their comrades lost on that
day. Two thousand, four hundred and three dead that day, 1177 of them on the USS Arizona. If you look closely at
these old ones, you can see the 20-year-olds of 75 years ago, who were shocked
out of their Sunday morning somnolence by the dastardly attack. Who grabbed
cannon, machine guns and rifles in a desperate attempt to defend against the
fighters and bombers that filled the skies over Oahu.
And
you should look very closely indeed. There are 20-year-old men and women across
the country and in outposts around the world who are standing watch in our
behalf. Will they be coming back to some place of mass sacrifice in 50, 60 and
70 years because of policies set in place over the next few years?
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