Digital Detox or Memorial Day? – Thank a Vet Please


Digital Detox or Memorial Day?

Besides these folks looking pretty plastic in the picture below, I’ll say NO to Digital Detox and YES to thanking a Vet. Still in all, the point is “Look Up” from the phone and know what’s going on this weekend.


Martha MacCallum proposes a Memorial Day ‘digital detox’ | America’s Newsroom | Fox News http://fxn.ws/1tuZesF



MEMORIAL DAY – Yesterday and Today

The Civil War claimed more lives than any conflict in U.S. history, requiring the establishment of the country’s first national cemeteries. By the late 1860s Americans in various towns and cities had begun holding springtime tributes to these countless fallen soldiers, decorating their graves with flowers and reciting prayers.

Memorial Day is a US federal holiday wherein the men and women who died while serving in the United States Armed Forces are remembered. The holiday, which is celebrated every year on the final Monday of May, was formerly known as Decoration Day and originated after the American Civil War to commemorate the Union and Confederate soldiers who died in the Civil War.

“Each year on Memorial Day a national moment of remembrance takes place at 3:00 p.m. local time.”


On the first Decoration Day, General James Garfield made a speech at Arlington National Cemetery, and 5,000 participants decorated the graves of the 20,000 Union and Confederate soldiers buried there. Many Northern states held similar commemorative events and reprised the tradition in subsequent years; by 1890 each one had made Decoration Day an official state holiday. Many Southern states, on the other hand, continued to honor their dead on separate days until after World War I.

MEMORIAL DAY HISTORY

Memorial Day, as Decoration Day gradually came to be known, originally honored only those lost while fighting in the Civil War. But during World War I the United States found itself embroiled in another major conflict, and the holiday evolved to commemorate American military personnel who died in all wars.

For decades, Memorial Day continued to be observed on May 30, the date Logan had selected for the first Decoration Day. But in 1968 Congress passed the Uniform Monday Holiday Act, which established Memorial Day as the last Monday in May in order to create a three-day weekend for federal employees; the change went into effect in 1971. The same law also declared Memorial Day a federal holiday.

Ships arrive in New York City for Fleet Week 2014 – USS Cole



Memorial History – Video style

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