These pics of the greatest Mazzone in Oriole history should hook you.
Read More...Reader Bruce Menard recently clued me in regarding a chapter from fairly recent MLB history that I hadn’t been aware of. It involves a guy named Jay Mazzone, who worked as a batboy for the Orioles in the late 1960s. The unusual thing about Mazzone is that he’d lost his hands when he was two years old after his snow suit caught on fire, so he used metal hooks in lieu of fingers. This certainly made him an unusual sight on ...
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1. Kiko SakataSomeone seems a little unclear about who is honored on Memorial Day.
What are the specific rules? Do they just have to be Americans?
Can we honor confederate soldiers? American Indians? Federal agents killed in our wars on personal freedoms?
Can I honor an immigrant who served , or is he still a dirty foreigner?
From Wikipedia:
It's too late!
No supper for you!
That's a long story. Though it's thoroughly federalized now, for a long time Memorial Day (as "Decoration Day") was observed exclusively in the North (I believe that it originally commemorates the surrender of the last Confederate units in May of 1865). There are parallel Confederate Memorial Days – in Tennessee, at least, it's observed on the 3rd of June. I attended Confederate Memorial Day events at the Shiloh battlefield in 2005; it's still a pretty solemn holiday. But naturally, with so many Southern veterans and war dead from subsequent wars, there isn't a sense any more that the federal Memorial Day is a "Yankee" holiday.
You can honor whomoever you choose. American servicemen died to give you that right, even if you choose to take advantage of that right by being a flippant a-hole.
I suspect you know very well what the holiday is set up to collectively honor, but you go right back to making it about you.
Thanks. I'm glad I wasn't honoring the memories of the men and women who served in the Canadian and British armed services during WWI and WWII, that would have been embarrassing.
I suspect you know that many of the enemy combatants we've killed were serving their countries with the same noble intent as our men and woman served ours. A little quote from Hermann Goering might be pertinent.
I say this as a life-long republican. I understand the honor we owe our fallen soldiers, who died to protect the liberties that we hold dear (and enables this very conversation). But I'm not so xenophobic to ignore the fact that many a foreign soldier, whether manipulated by evil Nazi's or not, died with the same intent.
Even a japanese boy pitching phenom who had been inculcated to hate America and agreed to serve his country with the incorrect idea that it was facing destruction by evil gajin, and gave his life in doing so (and if he lived, likely would have grown to appreciate and respect america, like many japanese who survived the war). So if someone wants to remember him on memorial day I don't think that act sullys the memory of our heros, I think it shows a deeper appreciation of the horrors of war, and in summation, I'm not the one who started the snark.
I think that's unquestionably true, and your point about not firing the first snark bullet as well. (I took your tone as you apparently took his.)
Is it really a point that needs to be made, though? On Father's Day, everyone does something silly for their father. I think most of them know that their father is not objectively the world's best dad (TM) and that, at some level, everybody has or had one. The intent and practice of the holiday is, however, to celebrate yours. Unless someone feels the need to go around shouting "Bruce Jenner is better than your dad! You live in a trailer!" on Father's Day, I don't know why they would feel the need to make a point on Memorial Day that the heroes we set a day aside to honor aren't the only heroes. First of all- no ####. Second of all - so what?
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