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tk421 said:For some reason, I remember June 6th, 1944 more than December 7th, 1941.
Always a good day to find <span style="font-style: italic">The Longest Day</span> in your DVD collection and put it on, despite the movie's inaccuracies.
I always try to "remember" (in my case acknowledge, since I don't know any vets nor was I there) every day, because eventually the Greatest Generation will all pass away, like the final WW1 vet did recently. I believe the last soldier to die from WW1 was an Australian last year, and a British nurse this year.
Basil said:Sad that this day isn't remembered by more. For example, Google always has some way of commemorating dates that they think are significant. No such remembrance for June 6th at www.Google.com today. Not that I have much use for Google anyway, but still.
tk421 said:They don't usually do military events. Might offend Neo-Nazis, or Pacifists, or someone...
tk421 said:One idea I've always had is that a car company should name their cars after famous battles, like the Lexington, the <span style="font-weight: bold">Concord</span>, the Ticonderoga. Or use the name for famous ships for a luxury line. How cool would it be to pull up in an Enterprise?
Basil said:tk421 said:One idea I've always had is that a car company should name their cars after famous battles, like the Lexington, the <span style="font-weight: bold">Concord</span>, the Ticonderoga. Or use the name for famous ships for a luxury line. How cool would it be to pull up in an Enterprise?
You mean like this:
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Mickey Richaud said:Basil said:tk421 said:One idea I've always had is that a car company should name their cars after famous battles, like the Lexington, the <span style="font-weight: bold">Concord</span>, the Ticonderoga. Or use the name for famous ships for a luxury line. How cool would it be to pull up in an Enterprise?
You mean like this:
![]()
And this (different spelling, though - Concorde):