All we have to do is vote.
Today, commemorating D-Day, President Biden said, “To surrender to bullies, to bow down to dictators is simply unthinkable. Were we to do that, it means we would be forgetting what happened here on these hallowed beaches.”
All we have to do is vote.
Flying home from Boston last weekend, Delta made an announcement at our gate before boarding. They told us there would be two gentlemen on our flight who had fought on D-Day and whom they were flying over for the commemoration. The gate agents passed out French flags and American flags and asked us to wave them and clap when the two men were wheeled to the gate.
And then something amazing happened. Everyone at the gate stood up and lined the path to the gate. People smiled and chatted with each other, estimating what the two men’s ages must be now if they fought on D-Day and talking about how much they appreciated their service. Moms explained to their children what was happening and what it meant as the children waved the flags. It was an odd moment in present day America, a moment where no one cared about politics or party, just about being united as Americans in a singular and very unexpected moment.
I miss that America. It’s what we’re all working to regain in the coming election. It’s what we mean when we talk about keeping the Republic.
Two amazing men. It was a real honor to get to shake their hands. They and their generation fought so that we would have the ability to vote. Let’s remind people we must not squander it.
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Review the nonpartisan League of Women Voters list of ten things you can do to get ready to vote.
Reread this column on the importance of sharing what you know with younger voters. It’s all in the algorithm!
Friday is the second anniversary of Civil Discourse. Let’s celebrate by getting ready to vote.
If you aren’t already, I hope you’ll consider becoming a subscriber or giving the gift of Civil Discourse to friends as we prepare for the election. Thank you for being here—for reading along, commenting on the forums, and caring about the Republic that we are all a part of.
We’re in this together,
Joyce
The D-Day commemoration had a special resonance for me (as I'm sure it did for thousands of American families and families of our allies). My uncle was one of the "volunteered" medics with the 82nd Airborne (307th Airborne Medical Company) who landed by glider behind the Pathfinders on Utah Beach, before the main body of troops arrived by sea. The first in a family tradition of combat medics. The Germans expected them and had planted telephone poles in landing fields just beyond the beach. They were designed to tear the wings off the gliders and they succeeded, but Uncle Al survived to initially minister to the wounded paratroopers of the 82nd and the 101st who also arrived by glider and made the famous night jump shortly after midnight on June 6. Unfortunately, he fell victim to a sniper's bullet less than a year later. It shouldn't have happened to a guy wearing a large red cross on his uniform but a lot of things happen that shouldn't in a war. He lies in the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial in Colleville-sur-Mer, Normandy with more than 9,000 of his fellow unsung heroes. My telling this story is not so much to honor Al and the 4,000+ allied troops who died on D-Day 80 years ago and the tens of thousands more killed in the ensuing Battle of Normandy, but to point out that our fight to be able to continue to form a "more perfect union" --- it will always be aspirational --- is every bit as important in the context of the present rise of authoritarianism, as it was in combating it then. Courage my friends. The same courage mustered up by a frightened 19-year-old in the belly of a fragile wooden glider flying into the unknown.
Been crying off and on since 0645 when I turned in the live feed on C-SPAN.
My son is there with the Navy Leap Frog team re-enacting the parachute drops onto the ground and onto the beaches of France. ❤️🇺🇸💙🇫🇷❤️