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border0 alt width171 height200 December 7, 1941, A date that will
live infamy is a fading memory for those alive at the time and most
certainly for those born since that day. For most Americans I
suspect it is just a date they may have read about in a high school
history book or seen dramatized in documentaries or films.It was,
if you are still trying to recall its significance, the day the
Empire of Japan attacked the U.S. fleet in Pearl Harbor. It was the
date that Franklin Delano Roosevelt referred to in his speech to
Congress calling for a Declaration of War against, not only Japan,
but the Nazi regime and its Axis partner, Italy. It was the date
when the term World War took on a whole new meaning beyond the WWI
trenches in France.In Hawaii, when I rode out to visit the USS
Arizona memorial in Pearl Harbor, the thing I noticed was that I
was sharing the ferry with dozens of Japanese tourists. It had
never occurred to me that it was, of course, part of their history
as well. I recall their pausing before the wall with the names of
the sailors still entombed below to offer prayers for them. That is
what peace is all about.The clich is that those who do not learn
the lessons of history are doomed to repeat them. It is a clich
because it is true.To be a child in America from 1941 to 1945 was
to know that America was at war. If you did not know exactly what
that meant, you understood it was important. For me, it was the
memory of trains filled with young men in uniform as I and my
Mother made the trip to visit my grandparents who lived on the
drowsy Shrewsbury River in Monmouth County, New Jersey. Years later
I would be one of those young men leaving Fort Dix in uniform.From
the end of World War II until 1991 the Cold War continued as the
United States and its allies stood firm against the Soviet Union.
We extended our protection in the Pacific to Taiwan, waged hot war
in Korea and Vietnam, and waited until communist China concluded
that capitalism was a good idea, as least in terms of building a
viable economy, if not in terms of human rights.To grow up during
World War II was to know that there was absolute evil in the world,
the likes of which would be revealed in the Nuremberg trials and
similar military trials for the leaders of Japans military solution
to problems that have since yielded to the pursuit of profit.
Today, it is in part Japans and Chinas purchase of our treasury
bonds that helps prop up our profligate government.There is,
however, still absolute evil in the world. On 911, another sneak
attack reminded America of that fact. The evil is called Islamism
or Islamofascism and all who support it either openly or covertly,
eagerly or passively. It is a fever loose in the world that will
kill a lot of people before it is destroyed. Neither communism,
fascism, nor have dictators disappeared.The good news is that,
since the end of World War II in the lifetimes of many Americans
and others, democracy has been gaining in nations around the world.
Winston Churchill, of course, said it best. It has been said that
democracy is the worst form of government except all the others
that have been tried.I suspect that few Americans living today have
any idea of the significance of December 7, 1941. It literally
changed the world and catapulted America from a Depression wracked
nation into its current superpower status.It also produced one of
the alltime worst ideas, the United Nations.Generations since those
times live with the legacies of December 7, 1941. We need to
rededicate ourselves to its best ideas freedom, justice, tolerance,
democracy, and human rights that individual nations pledge
themselves to honor and uphold.c Alan Caruba, 2010
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