Doomed to repeat what you never learned

Two days ago we marked the 80th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor which ushered the United States into World War II, which you remember was the war after “The War to End all Wars.” Or maybe not. I was speaking with a friend that day (the day two days ago, not 80 years ago) and happened to mention I was watching a documentary on the Pearl Harbor of before the attack. The response I got was, “Oh, I’m not into that stuff. I guess I’ve never been interested. In school we didn’t talk about anything that happened before 1960.” This is not a young person saying this. I wanted to say back, “Uh, YOU happened before 1960.” Instead, I thought I’d take all of you on a little history lesson. Just in case.

On Sunday, December 7, 1941, the Japanese Imperial Navy launched 350 carrier-based aircraft and conducted an air strike on the U. S. naval base at Pearl Harbor outside Honolulu, and at Navy and Army Air Corps airfields at Kaneohe, Hickam, Ewa, Bellows and Wheeler. More than 2,400 Americans were killed and over 1,100 wounded. Twenty-one ships of the Pacific Fleet had been sunk or damaged, and 75 percent of the planes at the surrounding airfields were damaged or destroyed.

Many people think the attacks on Hawaii were the closest that ever came to mainland USA but in fact, there were four other Japanese attacks and one German incursion onto American soil. Japanese submarines launched missile attacks on the Ellwood Oil Field outside Santa Barbara, California and on Fort Stevens, Oregon, both with minimal damage. Oregon was also the site of aerial bombing when the wooded area at Brookings, Oregon was targeted with incendiary bombs, again inflicting little damage. In 1944 and 1945, the Japanese launched high altitude balloons carried across the Pacific at 30,000 feet on the jet stream. Bombs were timed to drop three days after launching with the hopes they would be over some city or wooded area that would be set on fire by the fallen devices. Over 9,000 such balloons were launched but less than 350 made it across the Pacific, some remarkably as far east as Michigan. The only fatalities were a woman and five children in Oregon. (Oregon had it rough.) Their deaths are considered the only combat casualties to occur on U.S. soil excluding territories during World War II. The largest German incursion onto American soil occurred when two 4 man teams of Nazi saboteurs landed, one in New York and one in Florida, with orders to attack transport hubs, power plants and industrial facilities. No attacks were ever confirmed to this group before they were captured and tried for espionage. In addition to these attacks on American soil, at least 10 ships were sunk by the German navy operating in American waters.

So, that’s enough battle history. If you can’t grasp the pain inflicted on the thousands of people in the then Territory of Hawaii including 68 civilian deaths and the six casualties in Oregon, you can assume it was worse than vaccinated.

Those Americans lucky enough to not be among the 16 million and some sent to war, were subject to terrific life changes. Virtually everyone worked, and almost all work targeted the war effort. Between 1942 and 1945, less than 150 new cars were sold in the United States. No new tires were available so if you were fortunate to have a car and some gas ration coupons and could go anywhere but were then unfortunate enough to have a flat tire, you weren’t going anywhere. But if you did go anywhere, you went there at a national speed limit of 35mph. In addition to gasoline, fuel oil, coal, firewood, butter, sugar, meat, milk (canned milk), shoes, nylon, and silk were among products rationed to be diverted to the military. War also disrupted trade, limiting the availability of some products, and controlling prices of other. To satisfy the war metal needs, basements, backyards, and attics were stripped of old cars, bed frames, and kitchen utensils.

Maybe you want to take a minute and re-read that paragraph in between complaining that you can’t find ANYTHING you’re looking for this Christmas and that it is taking SOOOOOO long to get the little you can find.

Still, most Americans were lucky during World War II. The daily bombing felt by England happened thousands of miles away, the mass executions of Italian and French resistance fighters were farther still. At least three million Chinese were enslaved to work for the Japanese during the war. Never forget the six million Jews who were victims of the Nazis. Also never forget the other casualties of the planned annihilation of “inferiors.” It’s been estimated as many as 17 million civilians died either as a result of Nazi ideological policies. In addition to the 6 million Jews killed during the Holocaust and an additional 6 million ethnic Poles and other Slavs, and Roma were killed in death camps or by mass shootings, and so also were homosexuals, religious, and other minorities similarly dispatched. On the other side of the world, almost 200,000 Japanese civilians were killed at Hiroshima and Nagasaki with at least as many injured. It has been estimated that of the 75 million who were killed in battle during World War II, 40 million were civilians. I said most American civilians were lucky. Not all. About 100,000 Japanese, and about 14,000 German and Italian citizens were interned by the U.S. In case you are wondering, Canada, our “nice” neighbors to the north, had a similar program.

Remember these numbers the next time you want to complain your rights are being trampled when you’re asked to wear a mask or get a shot.

So that’s enough for the non-battle history of WWII. And I even got my couple digs in. Wow, I wonder what kind of world we might be living in if they did talk about some of the history that happened before 1960. Maybe I wouldn’t have to dig so deep.

Sorry it couldn’t have been a happier post so close to Christmas. I guess 80 years ago those people on Oahu thought the same thing. Let’s try to remember these things on days other than remembrance days. Please? Thank you.

(sorry, no cute picture today either)

Plan, Check, Do

  In the very nearly eight years that I’ve been sharing my sometimes questionable mind with you I’ve rarely brought up religion. Maybe a half-dozen times and then probably just at Christmas or Easter not that I’m only Christmas or Easter religious, but it’s not a topic I often speak or write about. Today there seems no escaping it, not that it needs escaped from of course.
   Unless you live in a world devoid of internet access and by virtue of you reading this we know that’s not true, or unless you have been out of the country this week and even then you probably still reached back with that internet access that we know you have, you’ve gotten to read about the newest controversy, that is how dare Ellen DeGeneres sit next to President George W. Bush and at a baseball game, a social event even, of all places.
   If you should happen to be scrolling through the archives here you know we’re approaching the one-year anniversary of the mass murders at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, the deadliest such event at any religious setting.
NoExceptions
   I’m sure you’re now asking yourself what do these two events have to do with each other? Less than a year ago people were posting all over social media how we have to love one another, respect one another, live in harmony with each other. In the past few days some of those same people had commented how could someone like Ellen socialize with someone like George W. knowing his past and their differences? And they did it with less than loving, respectful, or harmonious words. Ellen’s initial response to the comments that you don’t have to agree with someone to like him or her or even to be civil to that person or group of people was met with even more outrage. And then a post or two later whether on Twitter or Facebook or in the comments section to a news article, those same people we’re counting the ways they were going to commemorate the Tree of Life tragedy with love and respect, and in the spirit that we are all the same and belong together.
IMG_20191010_195519
   It takes so much more than words whether spoken, printed, or typed and sent into the interwebs. It’s the action that matters. No matter if you are agreeing, disagreeing, clarifying, or condemning, some true action is needed if you’re expecting change. Or even love and respect.
   I probably would have just read all of the posts, become frustrated at the consistent contradictory reactions of people, then had a second cup of coffee and let it be forgotten before the day’s end. But then that’s where religion snuck in. It was right there in front of me in today’s Gospel, “…ask and you will receive; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be open to you.” (Luke 11:9) These three are interconnected, not independent. It doesn’t stop at ask.
   If you’re having trouble thinking theologically, consider the business maxim, “plan, check, do.” Ask is step one, it’s the plan. What do we want? Do we want to live in harmony? Do we want to punish somebody for past offenses? Do we want to love our neighbor? The second step you seek, or checking the plan. How do we get what we want? How much do we need to be happy? How severe should the punishment be? Can we get away with just liking our neighbor? And then you have to act on it. You have to knock on the door and announce how you will do your plan. Sometimes that plan means you have to change, you have to be more in tune with others, you have to love more. It’s not always going to be the other person who has to adjust to be in harmony with you. In fact, more often than not the one doing the work will be you.
   So whether it’s being civil to someone, loving your neighbor, or rethinking past times when you’ve been less than those, now is probably a good time to plan, check, and do.
cropped-ltn1.png