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Guest Article / Commentary / Editorial
From SupportOurTroops.Org
By Martin Boire, CEO
It’s the 4th of July weekend! Let’s all go out and celebrate our liberty, and while we do let’s each take note that it’s the troops who gained it for us in the American Revolution and protect it for us today.
So let’s celebrate the 4th of July by honoring the troops.
In fact, many say the red in our flag stands for the blood it takes to have our freedom, to rebuff the dark forces always trying to take it from us.
The Russian butchery in Ukraine, and the Chinese chaff attacks on unarmed allied patrol planes in the South China Sea, show a storm is coming and make clear the never-ending price of being free.
Over 90% of we Americans have never served in the uniformed military. As CEO of SupportOurTroops.Org, I am one of them, representative of the rest. And on behalf of all of us whom the troops protect, I thank them.
Just like George Washington and the Continental Army, our neighbors even today enlist, deploy, and leave their families at home to go around the world to many different places to look out for our liberties, livelihoods, and businesses.
To my fellow civilians I posit the following question: Your neighbor leaves his family to go off and protect your family; morally what should you do for his family? For her family?
Do we leave them to it alone? Of course not. We’re Americans. And so no matter where the troops are ordered to go, good Americans always stick up for the folks who stick up for them.
What, then, should we do for him, for her? Why, we step up for them the way they have stepped up for all of us of course. That’s what Americans do. We show them what we are made of. We show them we’re with them. That we’re worth protecting. That we are willing to stand with them who stand for us. Isn’t it time to show them how much we all care?
As CEO of Support Our Troops® I see daily the needs of the troops and their stalwart families. And I daily witness the outpouring wonder of American individuals and groups who have such affection and appreciation for their troops.
We should all work to make the troops as proud of us as we are of them. Individual citizens are doing remarkable things for them all across this country. Major companies should do a great deal more, since they prosper within the domestic tranquility secured by the troops. Each of us can answer this call to excellence in the way we best can.
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Naval Station Norfolk, VA. (June 15, 2022). At the start of the Revolutionary War, America had just 27 ships to confront a modern British Navy with over 270 ships and thousands of sailors with combat experience.
Talk about David taking on Goliath!
The colonists did have one advantage; they had a large maritime population with many merchant seamen willing to convert to combat sailors when their nation needed them. One such sailor was Scottish-born John Paul Jones who, as captain of the Ranger, terrorized the east coast of Britain and the Irish Sea, capturing numerous enemy vessels before arriving in France a hero. Unsatisfied, in 1779 Jones took command of the Bonhomme Richard and accompanied by four ships, took part in one of the most famous sea battles in history. Jones and his tiny fleet came upon the British warships Serapis and Countess of Scarborough, engaging the better armed vessels in a three-hour gun battle. Early in the encounter, Jones answered an enemy demand for surrender with the memorable words, “I have not yet begun to fight”.
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Lackland Air Force Base, TX. (June 15, 2022). A soldier in the Continental Army could scarcely conceive of today’s military. Men in flying machines fighting wars in the skies would be beyond their comprehension.
They do, however, have one thing in common with the young men and women who volunteer to serve today, an insatiable thirst for freedom.
As in all wars, America turns to the “flower of our youth”, the brave young people who willingly volunteer to protect our nation, even if it means sacrificing their own lives. In the Revolutionary War, the Continental Army under George Washington adopted guerilla tactics that befuddled the British, who were often overconfident in battle. The British marveled at the ferocity of the American defenders and quickly realized they had underestimated the “warrior spirit” of America’s youth.
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Gowan Field, Boise, IA. (June 5, 2022) Historians are quick to credit the politicians and generals who run wars while often neglecting the troops fighting in the trenches, sacrificing their all for the cause. In 1776, America faced a determined foe that had many advantages over the fledgling American Army.
The British soldier was highly trained, led by experienced officers, and was well-supplied with food and ammunition. Backed by a population three times that of the colonies, the British Army had the money and technology to overwhelm the meager resources of America.
Although vastly outnumbered and ill-equipped, the Americans had one advantage the English didn’t, a ferocious zeal for freedom. British morale was low, especially among hired mercenaries, and many felt they were fighting their fellow citizens. The rebels, on the other hand, were fighting on home ground, backed by thousands of sympathizers, while the British were unfamiliar with the land or its people and totally dependent upon supplies shipped from thousands of miles away.
Read more: “CITIZEN SOLDIERS” WON OUR INDEPENDENCE THEY ARE ON DUTY TODAY
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Normandy, France. (June 22, 2022) America almost didn’t make it.
When the American Colonists declared independence from Great Britain, they started a war whose outcome was far from certain. In fact, the odds heavily favored the British as America’s army in 1776 was a hodgepodge of citizen soldiers thrust together under the direst conditions.
America had picked a fight with an enemy that was superior in numbers, experience, training, and equipment. At the time, Britain had the largest navy in the world and the funding for a long-term war. America, by contrast, had a weak central government with little money to battle the enormous and well supplied British Army. America depended on patriotic volunteers to carry the day.
Constantly outnumbered, George Washington’s Continental Army of 20,000 volunteers was short on equipment, lacked formal military training, and constantly struggled just to feed itself. British General William Howe’s 32,000-man expeditionary force, by comparison, was well armed, highly trained, and well-supplied.
Were it not for the willingness of ordinary citizens to sacrifice their blood and treasure, the United States would not exist.
Today, America continues to rely on patriotic volunteers to fill the ranks of our armed forces and, as we gather with friends and family this 4th of July, we should honor their sacrifice and dedication to our nation’s freedom.
In this photo by Specialist Vincent Levelev, World War II veterans attend the Eternal Heroes Memorial in Normandy, France, to honor fallen paratroopers who liberated the town of Ravenoville in June 1944. Veterans and representatives of veterans who could not be there received “challenge coins” during the event.
Read more: AMERICA ALMOST DIDN’T HAPPEN… DECLARING INDEPENDENCE WAS A GAMBLE.
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Dog lovers everywhere wince at the thought of a working dog being euthanized when they become unfit for military duty. It would be an even bigger crime to end the lives of these loyal creatures after years of faithful service.
Thankfully, that doesn’t happen.
In 2000, Congress passed Robby’s Law, legislation that allows retiring military working dogs to be adopted by their former handlers or civilians. Before being placed in homes, adoptees must pass a behavior assessment and the new owner must pledge that the dog will not be used in working service again.
Read more: THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE… WHAT HAPPENS TO MILITARY DOGS WHEN THEY RETIRE?