Exercise or Operation Tiger
Oh I think you are absolutely correct. Real-life war images (rather than cool movies) take a lot of the "romance" out of wanting to go volunteer to fight for your country.griff17matt said:Not to diminish anything you said here, but I think they were also privy to a bit of ignorance or naivete about what war ACTUALLY is. How unglamorous it actually is. How horrific it actually is. And we've all grown up seeing what they and those that came after them went through and the effect it had on them and their lives post-war. I think that has also shaped what we think we would actually do as well. I'd love to think I'd answer the call to serve, if necessary, but that doesn't mean I'd want my son or stepsons to have to face that.Packchem91 said:100%. But then, that generation did not have the "life of luxury" we have today, and were/are shaped completely differently.packgrad said:
When men were men. On my best day I'm not sure I could ever be as brave as they were.
Two, and I know you know this, they grew up with a much bigger love for what the country stood for than the average American does today -- and that is inclusive of all of us, not just those we disagree with. And it sure helps to have that to volunteer to go jump out of a plane behind enemy lines or get into one of those boarding ships to crash the beaches of Normandy or the ones in the far Pacific.
I've seen the documentaries, and I still can't put myself in that place.
I'm not sure we *can* have another greatest generation simply because they opened our eyes to the horrors they endured. And the greatest travesty that could befall them is for us to become apathetic to the sacrifices they made once the reality they had to face was realized. They ****ing did it anyway. Badasses, every single one of them.
I always wanted to be fluent in French like my mother. Most language learning software out there doesn't deliver IMO and I say that because I've tried a few including some of the better known names out there. I'm now using Glossika which is pricy and not for the easily bored but with daily use, seems to be making me comfortable with a basic and reasonably deep command of the French and Italian I've been studying. I'd recommend it for us oldsters whose brains aren't that flexible anymore.Civilized said:PackMom said:
Don't really know how he used them. He was in MI. I know there were Japanese, Korean, French, Russian - including writing the Cyrillic characters. I can't remember what else but at one point we had counted seven. Some he was more fluent than others. When I broke my wrist, he wrote on my cast in Russian but never told me what it said. When he got older - and this feels so weird because I'm older now than he was when he died - he decided to learn Greek and Hebrew for Bible study.
He was an amazing man and taken from us far too young.
I haven't been able to become fluent in a single other language, much less six or seven. Incredible.
Thanks again for sharing such a great story about a wonderful Dad.
Oldsouljer said:I always wanted to be fluent in French like my mother. Most language learning software out there doesn't deliver IMO and I say that because I've tried a few including some of the better known names out there. I'm now using Glossika which is pricy and not for the easily bored but with daily use, seems to be making me comfortable with a basic and reasonably deep command of the French and Italian I've been studying. I'd recommend it for us oldsters whose brains aren't that flexible anymore.Civilized said:PackMom said:
Don't really know how he used them. He was in MI. I know there were Japanese, Korean, French, Russian - including writing the Cyrillic characters. I can't remember what else but at one point we had counted seven. Some he was more fluent than others. When I broke my wrist, he wrote on my cast in Russian but never told me what it said. When he got older - and this feels so weird because I'm older now than he was when he died - he decided to learn Greek and Hebrew for Bible study.
He was an amazing man and taken from us far too young.
I haven't been able to become fluent in a single other language, much less six or seven. Incredible.
Thanks again for sharing such a great story about a wonderful Dad.
That boys face make me get very emotional...Wolfer79 said:Injured American assault troops after D-Day landings, today 1944: pic.twitter.com/Bw7fZHyZol
— Michael Beschloss (@BeschlossDC) June 8, 2021
2 May 1944: Leonard Dawe, who complied #crossword puzzles for the Britain’s The Daily Telegraph #newspaper, includes code names for the D-Day invasion a month before the invasion. The words were Utah, Omaha, #Overlord, Mulberry and Neptune. #WWII #WW2 #ad https://t.co/cMal5felrI pic.twitter.com/oqhYqOBFUr
— Today In History (@URDailyHistory) May 2, 2022
On this day 78 years ago, 156,000 soldiers landed in Normandy to liberate France during WWII.
— Goodable (@Goodable) June 6, 2022
Every year, French soldiers take sand from Omaha Beach and rub it onto the gravestones to give the letters a gold coloring.
They do this for all 9,386 American soldiers buried there. pic.twitter.com/gE03p3yUlM
1 May 1944: The original day Operation Overlord, aka D-Day, the allied invasion of Normandy, was to take place. The date was set at the Tehran Conference in Iran among Chruchill, Roosevelt and Stalin in Aug, 1943. D-Day occurs on June 6, 1944. #OTD #ad https://t.co/3u28vuJM18 pic.twitter.com/rw3UAMuzpf
— Today In History (@URDailyHistory) May 1, 2023
2 May 1944: Leonard #Dawe, who complied #crossword puzzles for the Britain’s The Daily Telegraph #newspaper, includes code names for the D-Day invasion a month before the invasion. The words were Utah, Omaha, #Overlord, Mulberry and Neptune. #WWII #WW2 #ad https://t.co/cMal5eXipI pic.twitter.com/ruRRDOb0of
— Today In History (@URDailyHistory) May 2, 2023
On May 6, 1944, one month to the day before D-Day, Lt. Albert Lanker of the 31st Photo Reconnaissance Squadron flew his F-5 Lightning fast and low over a beach on the Normandy coast. His job was to photograph the beach obstructions for the planners of the invasion. pic.twitter.com/qgXDNERI8M
— National Air and Space Museum (@airandspace) May 7, 2023
Five days before D-Day, American Rangers poised on British landing craft, Weymouth, England, today 1944: pic.twitter.com/RqCaq8iWCn
— Michael Beschloss (@BeschlossDC) June 1, 2023
[#DDay79 - 1944-2023]
— Marc Laurenceau (@MarcLaurenceau) June 5, 2023
🇬🇧🇺🇸 The plan for Operation Overlord comprised several successive phases. The first of these was codenamed "Neptune": a combined assault (airborne and amphibious) to establish a solid bridgehead in enemy territory.
1/5 pic.twitter.com/4iSCfFT8M1
Neptune was designed to reach a front linking Granville, Vire, Condé and Cabourg after 17 days of fighting.
— Marc Laurenceau (@MarcLaurenceau) June 5, 2023
To meet their logistical needs, the Allies had to seize port cities. So, once Operation Neptune had been completed, they had to break through to Brittany.
2/5 pic.twitter.com/T2y7uGZ9PU
Brest and Lorient harbors had to be under control 50 days after landing, and Nantes in 60 days. At the same time, they had to reach the Seine river (90 days after the initial assault).
— Marc Laurenceau (@MarcLaurenceau) June 5, 2023
3/5 pic.twitter.com/D963lfI86R
The final phase of Operation Overlord consisted of advancing along the Channel coast towards the Ruhr, successively relying on the port cities liberated en route to support their troops.
— Marc Laurenceau (@MarcLaurenceau) June 5, 2023
4/5 pic.twitter.com/Jx5LybPxMW
Control of the Ruhr industrial region, Germany's main military-industrial complex, is one of the key actions to hasten the collapse of the Reich.
— Marc Laurenceau (@MarcLaurenceau) June 5, 2023
5/5
Marc Laurenceauhttps://t.co/svIGLggd4C#DDay #WW2 #History #Overlord #Neptune
IWM/NARA pic.twitter.com/uXTL3H4Ka7
[#DDay79 - 1944-2023] Operation Neptune
— Marc Laurenceau (@MarcLaurenceau) June 5, 2023
🇬🇧🇺🇸 Three then four landing beaches were initially identified in Calvados to establish the bridgehead: they were located between the rivers Orne and Vire (coded "Omaha", "Gold", "Juno" and "Sword"). pic.twitter.com/JcqrozB6PK
The need for a deep-water port to provide part of the armies' supplies prompted the Allies to establish a fifth landing beach ("Utah") in December 1943, directly in the Cotentin peninsula, theoretically enabling them to take Cherbourg eight days after the initial assault. pic.twitter.com/oIsqHeViHS
— Marc Laurenceau (@MarcLaurenceau) June 5, 2023
11 infantry divisions, 3 airborne divisions and reinforcements were needed to take the bridgehead. On the ground on D-Day, the ratio of forces was more than 2 to 1 for the Allies. With air and naval power, it reached 4 to 1.
— Marc Laurenceau (@MarcLaurenceau) June 5, 2023
Marc Laurenceauhttps://t.co/svIGLggd4C #DDay
NARA pic.twitter.com/CgG694LWDx
Catholic chaplain worships with Americans imminently destined to fight on D-Day at Omaha Beach, this week 1944: #NARA pic.twitter.com/r6896tXsPG
— Michael Beschloss (@BeschlossDC) June 5, 2023
On this day 78 years ago, 156,000 soldiers landed in Normandy to liberate France during WWII.
— Goodable (@Goodable) June 6, 2022
Every year, French soldiers take sand from Omaha Beach and rub it onto the gravestones to give the letters a gold coloring.
They do this for all 9,386 American soldiers buried there. pic.twitter.com/gE03p3yUlM
6 June 1944: The D-Day landings during World War II begin. Some 155,000 Allied troops land on beaches in Normandy, France. The code name for the exercise was Operation #Overlord. #WWII #WW2 #history #HistoryMatters #DDay #OperationOverlord #OTD #ad https://t.co/EtMB9atRH0 pic.twitter.com/Twdzk1QO6J
— Today In History (@URDailyHistory) June 6, 2023