WERE ALL VETERANS I cant believe that Im writing this at 1:00 in the morning of November 9, 1997! Veterans day is two days away. However, after I went to bed this evening my mind wouldnt shut down with the thoughts of Veterans day on Tuesday. You see, Veterans Day has become only a token day for many of us. Yes, I guess, were reminded that the banks are closed and that in Wednesdays newspapers well read about some sort of tribute being made on a local level at the local cemetery or local statue with a bunch of old geezers standing at attention in their VFW caps or some such. But what caused me to get out of bed tonight and turn on my computer was a bit of conflicting feelings that kept going through my head. First of all, I am indeed a veteran. Nonetheless, I didnt face actual combat. And I knew that there were members of the PD list who actually served in WWII. And, undoubtedly there are more veterans on the PD list who served in Korea and in Vietnam and in the Gulf War. And I wanted to give a hearty sincere salute to my fellow veterans who have also worn the uniform of our country in the defense of our country. But, more than that, what really kept me awake tonight was the realization that most of us have gone through our own agony of our wars. Those of us over 60 remember WWII as children and remember the confusion we faced what with Pearl Harbor and rationing and air raid drills and worrying about whether Daddy or Brother or Uncle would ever come back from the war. Some of them did and some of them didnt. And then came the 50s and the Korean Conflict. It was a different war, but there were still the same worries. And then Vietnam and then the Gulf war. And whether we served in uniform during those times or whether we stayed at home as housewives or whether we were flower children or whether we protested or whether we eventually suffered unspeakable nightmares over those times, we eventually ended up, in my opinion, as VETERANS of the wars! We all lived through the awful wars of the past--some more glorious than others--but, nonetheless, they were wars and we lived through them. Therefore, we are ALL VETERANS! And, as a footnote, I guess, we might be reminded about such feelings in our lives when we stand over the graves of our ancestors where there is a marker that they served in WWI or the Spanish-American War, or the Civil War, or the War of 1812 or the Revolutionary War or the French and Indian War. Yes, they wore their uniforms and so did I, but for the majority of us there were no uniforms. Nonetheless, it didnt take a uniform to let the world know that those who didnt wear one didnt suffer their own agonies of war. vee ==== PENNA-DUTCH Mailing List ==== We get too soon old and too late smart!