[ EPU Foyer ] [ Lab and Grill ] [ Bonus Theater!! ] [ Rhetorical Questions ] [ CSRANTronix ] [ GNDN ] [ Subterranean Vault ] [ Discussion Forum ] [ Gun of the Week ]

Eyrie Productions, Unlimited

Subject: "D plus 27,394"     Previous Topic | Next Topic
Printer-friendly copy    
Conferences General Topic #1592
Reading Topic #1592
Gryphonadmin
Charter Member
23361 posts
Jun-06-19, 11:50 AM (EDT)
Click to EMail Gryphon Click to send private message to Gryphon Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
"D plus 27,394"
 
   LAST EDITED ON Jun-06-19 AT 12:07 PM (EDT)
 
[Originally written for the June 8, 2004 issue of the Katahdin Times newspaper, the issue published nearest to the 60th anniversary of D-Day.]

Come with me for a minute.

It's late in the evening of Monday, June 5, 1944. You're a young American, 18, 19, 20 years old. You're in England, maybe by choice, probably not.

You're a sailor in the Navy, on a destroyer, a battleship, a cruiser—crossing a few miles of pitching sea toward a rendezvous with destiny. All around you is the greatest fleet ever assembled. Anywhere. Ever. It'd be a magnificent sight if you could see it, but of course you can't. All the ships are running blacked out. Don't you know there's a war on?

You're a soldier in the Army, packed aboard a landing ship with what seems like all your gear and half of somebody else's. It's raining like hell, been raining for weeks, been raining since you got to England. You're soaked, you're cold, you're seasick.

You're a paratrooper, checking your equipment for the hundredth time, wondering if there's anything more you can possibly bring that might give you the edge, waiting for your officers to tell you it's time to climb into the planes you'll be jumping out of in a few hours. You've jumped before—you had to do it five times just to earn those boots on your feet and those wings on your chest—but this time will be diffferent. This time you'll be falling toward people who want to kill you.

You're an airman, maybe a fighter pilot, maybe a member of a bomber crew. Flying over Hitler's Fortress Europe is nothing new for you, but the mission you're gearing up for now IS different. You're not going to Berlin or Regensburg or Schweinfurt in the morning. You're just going across the Channel to knock on the fortress door... hard.

You're a Coast Guardsman at the helm of a landing craft, risking your neck for the war effort just like all these guys from the more famous services. Most members of later generations won't even realize you were here. They'll assume the Coast Guard was back home, patrolling U.S. territorial waters for U-boats and living the good life on shore. They won't remember you and the hundreds of your brothers, some of whom got blown out of the water trying to get the men to the beach, until some better-informed person reminds them.

Maybe you're not an American at all. Maybe you're an Englishman, heading back across the Channel, itching to get a piece of Jerry and get some of your own back for the humiliation of Dunkirk. Maybe you're a Canadian, or an Australian, or a New Zealander, ready to fight for King and Empire. Maybe you're a Frenchman, or a Pole, or a Czech, hungry for an even more personal revenge against the men who took away your country earlier in the decade.

Whoever you are, you have a piece of paper in your pocket, and written on it are the words of the one man who controls more military force than any other single commander in history—a man who knows that his name is at the bottom of the sheet, but at the end of the day, it's your shoulders on which the fate of the world rests.

It says:

Good luck, soldier.

In the morning, you and your buddies are going to save the world.

And sixty years later, the people living in the future you bled to secure will still be thanking you for it.

I am no longer quite so certain of the last line now that the number in it should be seventy-five; over the past few years, western civilization seems to be engaged in a diligent and concerted effort to forget the lessons of the Second World War. I couldn't let the occasion pass by without dusting this piece off one more time, though. There are so few of them left nowadays.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top

  Subject     Author     Message Date     ID  
  RE: D plus 27,394 MoonEyes Jun-08-19 1
  D plus 28,854 Gryphonadmin Jun-06-23 2
     RE: D plus 28,854 Verbena Jun-06-23 3
  RE: D plus 29,219 Gryphonadmin Jun-06-24 4
  RE: D plus 27,394 DaPatman89 Jun-11-24 5
  RE: D plus 27,394 Mephronmoderator Jun-06-25 6
     RE: D plus 27,394 Verbena Jun-07-25 7
     RE: D plus 27,394 SliderDaFeral Oct-01-25 8

Conferences | Topics | Previous Topic | Next Topic
MoonEyes
Member since Jun-29-03
1184 posts
Jun-08-19, 04:16 AM (EDT)
Click to EMail MoonEyes Click to send private message to MoonEyes Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list Click to send message via ICQ  
1. "RE: D plus 27,394"
In response to message #0
 
   In a way, I think that it deserves to be put out there even more, now, what with exactly that the world seems so intent on forgetting it.

...!
Stoke Mandeville, Esq & The Victorian Ballsmiths
"Nobody Want Verdigris-Covered Balls!"


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Gryphonadmin
Charter Member
23361 posts
Jun-06-23, 09:09 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Gryphon Click to send private message to Gryphon Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
2. "D plus 28,854"
In response to message #0
 
   In one year this piece will itself be 20 years old, which is... startling.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Verbena
Charter Member
1157 posts
Jun-06-23, 11:03 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Verbena Click to send private message to Verbena Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
3. "RE: D plus 28,854"
In response to message #2
 
   >In one year this piece will itself be 20 years old, which is...
>startling.

A sobering thought. But I can assure you that I, and most of the people I know, have not forgotten.

I'm glad you mentioned this, though. It reminded me to read the article again. Thank you for writing it.


------
Authors of our fates
Orchestrate our fall from grace
Poorest players on the stage
Our defiance drives us straight to the edge


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Gryphonadmin
Charter Member
23361 posts
Jun-06-24, 10:08 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Gryphon Click to send private message to Gryphon Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
4. "RE: D plus 29,219"
In response to message #0
 
   Today is (or was, since it's been over for hours now in the part of the world where it happened) the eightieth anniversary of the Normandy landings. It won't be too much longer now before the Second World War passes from living memory. Few who were there at the time had much faith that the world could go anywhere near this long without another one--which, depending on how you look at it, speaks well of the judgment of succeeding generations, or is an ominous reminder that something is overdue, like the millions of Neapolitans living in the shadow of Vesuvius.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
DaPatman89
Member since May-2-12
105 posts
Jun-11-24, 05:39 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail DaPatman89 Click to send private message to DaPatman89 Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
5. "RE: D plus 27,394"
In response to message #0
 
   >I am no longer quite so certain of the last line now that the number
>in it should be seventy-five; over the past few years, western
>civilization seems to be engaged in a diligent and concerted effort to
>forget the lessons of the Second World War.

I went on holiday to Krakow with my family last week, and we actually visited Auschwitz on the anniversary of D-Day itself. While it would be wrong to say I enjoyed it, I'm certainly glad I went, and would recommend that anyone with the means/capability to do so ought to make the effort to visit it themselves at some point in their life. The reason I mention it here is that afterwards, my dad and I had a conversation about how multiple current world conflicts are examples of exactly this.

It's a sobering thought.

---

"Things in life aren't always quite what they seem,
There's more than one given angle to any one given scene.
So bear that in mind next time you try to intervene
On any one given angle on any one given scene."
Angles - dan le sac vs. Scroobius Pip


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Mephronmoderator
Charter Member
1979 posts
Jun-06-25, 12:28 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Mephron Click to send private message to Mephron Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
6. "RE: D plus 27,394"
In response to message #0
 
   81 years ago today.

--
Jen Dantes - Darth Mephron
Haberdasher to Androids, Dark Lady of Sith Tech Support.
"This may not be a good idea, but it's the only one I have."


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Verbena
Charter Member
1157 posts
Jun-07-25, 10:34 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Verbena Click to send private message to Verbena Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
7. "RE: D plus 27,394"
In response to message #6
 
   >81 years ago today.

Some of us still remember. And are still just as grateful.


------
Authors of our fates
Orchestrate our fall from grace
Poorest players on the stage
Our defiance drives us straight to the edge


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
SliderDaFeral
Member since Feb-15-10
74 posts
Oct-01-25, 11:49 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail SliderDaFeral Click to send private message to SliderDaFeral Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
8. "RE: D plus 27,394"
In response to message #6
 
   >81 years ago today.

I know I remember. And there's another quote of Eisenhower's that seems more poignant today...

“Get it all on record now - get the films - get the witnesses - because somewhere down the road of history some bastard will get up and say that this never happened.”

Slider Da Feral (NYAR!)


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top

Conferences | Topics | Previous Topic | Next Topic

[ YUM ] [ BIG ] [ ??!? ] [ RANT ] [ GNDN ] [ STORE ] [ FORUM ] GOTW ] [ VAULT ]

version 3.3 © 2001
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited
Benjamin D. Hutchins
E P U (Colour)