Main Menu

Who died protecting it

Started by IRON MAN, May 31, 2021, 08:24:56 AM

Previous topic Next topic

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

IRON MAN

Our flag flies because of the last breath of each soldier who died protecting it. The tombstone should not read casualties. It should read fatalities or died.

BIGSHCLUNK

 :unitedstates:   I have a cousin on the "wall"   :unitedstates:  Salute to them all !  :unitedstates:

Cuda Cody



JS29


Racer57

My Uncle received the Legion of Merit for his actions on Guadalcanal. He took these pictures.

anlauto

 :yessir: :andyangel:  :worship: to all those that have served.

I'm surprised less lives were lost in the first two wars combined, then in the last war listed... :thinking: sad really that so many lives are still being lost  :andyangel:
I've taught you everything you know....but I haven't taught you everything I know....
Check out my web site ....  Alan Gallant Automotive Restoration

7E-Bodies

My great uncle. KIA WWI, 11 OCT 1918, France, age 25. A farm kid from our hometown of Nokomis, IL.
More than a "long weekend" indeed. Irish immigrants don't forget the cost. Ever.
1970 Challenger R/T Numbers Matching 440 Auto in F8 Quad Green


Racer57

Quote from: anlauto on May 31, 2021, 02:02:00 PM
:yessir: :andyangel:  :worship: to all those that have served.

I'm surprised less lives were lost in the first two wars combined, then in the last war listed... :thinking: sad really that so many lives are still being lost  :andyangel:

I'm not sure what you mean ? You think more US Soldiers lives were lost in current war than WW1 and WW2 combined ?

1 Wild R/T

Quote from: Racer57 on May 31, 2021, 07:34:26 PM
Quote from: anlauto on May 31, 2021, 02:02:00 PM
:yessir: :andyangel:  :worship: to all those that have served.

I'm surprised less lives were lost in the first two wars combined, then in the last war listed... :thinking: sad really that so many lives are still being lost  :andyangel:

I'm not sure what you mean ? You think more US Soldiers lives were lost in current war than WW1 and WW2 combined ?

I think he's referring to the revolutionary war & the war of 1812.....    Sorry, muskets aren't the same as bolt action or semi automatic rifles....  And how many died in those conflicts that didn't get recorded...

Consider Vietnam was about ten years & more than 58K soldiers were killed... Our involvement in the Middle East is hovering close to 20 years  & a little over 7000 soldiers killed... Sure any deaths are a tragedy but honestly the safety of our troops as improved dramatically... 

HP2

I also read that as the first two wars, not the two world wars.

anlauto

Sorry to mislead anyone....I did mean the first two wars listed on that list (revolutionary war & the war of 1812), I would have thought a lot more people would have lost their lives during those wars, then the most recent on going war (sorry...peace keeping effort) in the middle east. :yessir:

I'm not a History buff at all, and I think that is the first time I've noticed a list like that put together, that's all.

One life lost is one too many  :andyangel:
I've taught you everything you know....but I haven't taught you everything I know....
Check out my web site ....  Alan Gallant Automotive Restoration


7E-Bodies

No offense taken @anlauto
I sensed your point.
1970 Challenger R/T Numbers Matching 440 Auto in F8 Quad Green

b5cuda

You're right about lower mortality rates, we get better at saving life with each war.  Maybe the only silver lining.  On my last deployment (2014) I was the hospital chaplain at Kandahar Airfield in Afghanistan.  We had a 99% survival rate.  If you arrived with a pulse, you probably left with a pulse.  Pretty amazing!

JS29

It started out as decoration day after the civil war.  :alan2cents:

HP2

The large bore, low velocity wounds created by our first couple of centuries of warfare where often not immediately fatal but created so much surrounding tissue damage that the medical technology of the day could not easily deal with such catastrophic damage and the resulting infections. It wasn't until the Crimean War of the 1850s and Florence Nightingale's recognition of sanitary efforts to improve field medicine that battlefield triage actually began to improve. This didn't become standard training for medical teams until the 1880-90s around most of the globe.

Modern high velocity, small bore weapons, while still devastatingly deadly, also  tend to create very high wound rates, which tend to take additional combatants out of the fight to deal with wounded comrades. Which is also why I agree with Iron Man that the tombstone shown in the OP should read deaths and not casualties.