View Full Version : Thank you, Vets!
Captn Wilhelm
11-11-10, 11:04 AM
It seems that there are a lot of vets around here sos seems like a great place to say THANK YOU! Thank you for all you've done, what you continue to do and all the sacrifices you've made. It is appreciated. :rock:
http://img210.imageshack.us/img210/8153/49955781.png
Takeda Shingen
11-11-10, 11:05 AM
Thank you, veterans. Our liberty is but the fruit of your efforts.
SteamWake
11-11-10, 11:51 AM
S!
:salute:
Weiss Pinguin
11-11-10, 12:15 PM
A big thank you to our vets :salute:
GoldenRivet
11-11-10, 12:17 PM
:salute:
AVGWarhawk
11-11-10, 12:20 PM
:salute:
krashkart
11-11-10, 12:30 PM
Thanks vets.
frau kaleun
11-11-10, 12:30 PM
:salute:
nikimcbee
11-11-10, 01:16 PM
:salute::salute:off to the pt boat.
SteamWake
11-11-10, 02:54 PM
Thanks indeed for the inconcevable sacrifice some have made.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/10/AR2010111008002.html
the_tyrant
11-11-10, 04:22 PM
Thank you!
:salute::salute:
Thanks :salute: and you are welcome :woot:
:salute: From the other side of the pond to those brave men and women of the US Armed Forces.
Platapus
11-11-10, 06:10 PM
You are welcome and thank you for remembering us.
It was and still is an honour to serve my country as I am sure it is a honour for our other vets here. :salute:
But it is nice to hear thanks from the citizens... it was not always like that (as I am sure many here remember). :yep:
Ducimus
11-11-10, 08:10 PM
All i'm going to say, is my time in the service was both the best, and worst time of my life. It was that experience that has defined my character, and my person. I identify with, and carry it with me every day of my life. I'm filled with both pride, and regret.
While i have mentioned my service a few times on subsim, in real life, I rarely, if never mention it. In fact, if it were not for my Fiancee who insisted on displaying it, most of my "wall paper" would be tucked away in a cardboard box, in the back of the closet. Never to be mentioned, seen, or discussed. For while I am very proud of what i did, where i went, and the traditions i carried on and was apart of, I am humbled, and I keep my mouth shut. Because, while i did endure plenty of hardship; I still ended my service with all eyes, ears, fingers, toes, arms, legs, and feet i enlisted with - and I didn't come home in a box. Others, in both my time, and especially with today's generation of GI's, were not so lucky or fortunate. (The same can be said for every previous generation, throughout every conflict or war we have ever engaged in)
Platapus
11-11-10, 08:31 PM
All i'm going to say, is my time in the service was both the best, and worst time of my life. It was that experience that has defined my character, and my person. I identify with, and carry it with me every day of my life. I'm filled with both pride, and regret.
While i have mentioned my service a few times on subsim, in real life, I rarely, if never mention it. In fact, if it were not for my Fiancee who insisted on displaying it, most of my "wall paper" would be tucked away in a cardboard box, in the back of the closet. Never to be mentioned, seen, or discussed. For while I am very proud of what i did, where i went, and the traditions i carried on and was apart of, I am humbled, and I keep my mouth shut. Because, while i did endure plenty of hardship; I still ended my service with all eyes, ears, fingers, toes, arms, legs, and feet i enlisted with - and I didn't come home in a box. Others, in both my time, and especially with today's generation of GI's, were not so lucky or fortunate.
The Frau does not understand why I keep all that crap buried away in the bottom of a closet. Glad I am not the only one experiencing this.
Unfortunately, in my job I can't keep my military experience hidden as it is an important part of my job. But off duty, I never mention it unless I am telling one of my famous almost interesting war stories - you know the stories where I had to storm the machine-gun nests, up hill both ways, in the snow, in July.. no shoes.. had to share the gun.. but I was thankful... :D
I remember working with this guy, he is dead now, but he would only briefly acknowledge "being in the military". I found out from his close friends that he was a Marine in the Korean Conflict and that he had a Navy Cross, Silver Star, and a Purple Heart with multiple devices. He may have had a DSM. But anyway he had a chest full of medals and ones that actually mean something, not like the crap I had to wear. :nope:
He and his squad, charged and captured/destroyed a five tank enemy attack! If you made a movie about it, people would say it was fiction.
And he never talked about it. He would talk your head off about everything else, but he never talked about his military service or his heroic acts. I guess he did not need to. That's one criteria for a hero in my book.
I feel good thinking about him on Veteran's Day. When you remember the dead, they live, if only for a moment. :salute:
Captn Wilhelm
11-12-10, 01:50 PM
I work in corporate law and deal a lot with the agent orange(and all the other colors)/dioxin/pcb litigation. I would just like to say that what the VA and our very own government is doing to you all just sickens me every single day, and has for about 7 years of working in regard to it. And now all the issues coming from vets of the gulf wars are being ignored as well it seems, back logs of people waiting for help.. So much is just so wrong.
If there are any blue/brown water vets from the vietnam era, I do feel for and sympathize with you all. God bless.
kiwi_2005
11-12-10, 03:30 PM
My uncle Charlie Brunt who served in the Vietnam war as a grunt for the kiwis. :salute: Hes always got some good yarns to tell about the war when he visits us.
Jimbuna
11-12-10, 04:43 PM
~SALUTE~
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