Today is the 82nd anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor.
FDR said that this was a day that would live in infamy. He was right (there are very few things I agree with him on and that is one of them).
Biden made an official proclamation on it yesterday, I think. Not sure what exactly he proclaimed since it was made a National Pearl Harbor Day in 1994. I did not read the whole statement from the White House in detail, but at least he did not claim that he was there to witness it in person. I half expectee him to get confused which side is which and claim he was piloting a Japanese plane. When that does not happen, I call it a win.
History seems to spiral into homicidal insanity with alarming regularity. There are many parallels between the world of the 1930s and the world we live in today. Then again, all the "connect the dots" people find parallels everywhere they look as long as they feed into their conspiracies.
Still, when America projects an image of weakness and suicidal stupidity, the world tends to go mad. We are likely in that state at the moment.
I was chatting with a veteran a few days ago (Vietnam war veteran) and he flat out said that the America we live in is not the America he fought for. That was a sobering statement uttered by a serious man.
One of the problems we are facing as a society seems to be complete disregard of history. We do not teach it to our children. What passes for history these days is a projection of a woke fantasy world onto years past.
I sometimes wonder if the unholy alliance between the woke Left and the Islamist fanaticism stems from both erasing history every chance they get. Both of these suicidal cultures are fully bent on destroying every bit of history that does not agree with their world view and on declaring fatwa on everyone who has the slightest disagreement.
Those who do not know history are doomed to repeat it.
On rare occasions we do try to study history, it becomes a rather impersonal endeavor. The further into the past we go, the more impersonal it becomes.
WWII is eighty year behind us. That means those who fought in it would be around 100 years old. About half dozen US servicemen who survived Pearl Harbor are still alive. About 120,000 Americans who served during WWI are still alive. They are dying at a rate of around 130 per day. Very soon, there will be none left.
If you know one of them and they are willing to talk, go have a conversation. That will make it personal.
History is not always supposed to be academic and/or political.
History is not there to be molded into supporting whatever we want to believe in.
History is not there to be re-litigate in the courtroom of modern day public opinion.
History just is... It is interesting. It is educational. It is intellectually stimulating.
It is also there to help us avoid recreating the bloodbaths of the past.