So spoke President FDR to Congress on December 8, 1941. The "date" was the day before, December 7, 1941. So what does this have to do with racing? Plenty actually if you go through the rolls of our esteemed pioneers in this sport and find the names of those who fought in the war either in Europe, North Africa or the Pacific Theaters. Although there was stock car racing BEFORE the war, as is so often documented on the Tuesday night radio show here by our own Cody Dinsmore, what happened to the sport AFTER the war was largely due to the never give up attitudes of the individuals who pioneered the sport. The same never give up attitudes that prevent us from pledging allegence to the flag of the rising sun or saluting the maniac from Germany.
But, I want to point out that the "Date that will live in infamy" if fading in the pages of history. I heard a news reporter, young guy, on the early news this morning, tell how the "Japanese JETS" blazed from the sky to attack Pearl Harbor. There were no Jets then. That report was followed by an interview with a 91 year old Pearl Harbor survivor who actually choked up as he said this will be THE LAST YEAR that the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association will meet in Pearl Harbor on this date. There are few remaining survivors, but as that man pointed out, the history books in our schools now devote less than a half page to the attack and half of that half page is a picture of the U.S.S. Arizona just before she sank. The vet was with a teenager at the Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor and the kid had absolutely NO IDEA of why that monument was there.
I was not around on December 7, 1941, but my father, then a 19 year old in upstate New York, joined the U.S. Army the next day which brought him to Ft. Jackson, SC (then Camp Jackson) for basic training where he met my mother, a local Columbia girl, and they married before he left to fight in the Pacific from September, 1942, until the end of the war.
So, folks, as this day unfolds before us, along about 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time today, remember that it was 70 years ago then that the Japs dove from the skies in a "deliberate attack upon the air and naval forces of the United States" and our country was at war. Remember all the men and women who fought to preserve our freedom and those who continue that fight today. Truly, December 7, 1941, should live in infamy and in the memories of all Americans who treasure our freedom.
God Bless America.
--
What a change! It's been awhile since I've checked in and I'm quite surprised. It may take me awhile to figure it our but first look it's really great.
updated by @tim-leeming: 12/05/16 04:02:57PM