Let Us Pray
Apparently, we should not be overly upset about the casualties in Iraq because there haven’t been as many as in World War II.
One of Instapundit’s readers says:
About 2,500 young men from the Allied nations died on June 6, 1944. 12,000 Americans died in three months’ fighting for Okinawa. While some members of the press (Fox included) might consider themselves honoring the fallen by referring to 12 heroes as “heavy casualties,” they in fact have done a disservice to the concept of sacrifice and a nation’s endurance of it in war. Andrew Sullivan asked us to pray for the Marines in Fallujah; I think we ought to start a prayer with “Dear Lord, please lead members of the press to a doggoned history book. Or Google.”
“Dear Lord, please lead Instapundit’s readers to the chapter on WWII in which it says that Germany declared war on the US, overran most of Europe and invaded Russia and may they read the part where it shows the US was attacked by Japan. After that perhaps they could be led to Google to find out how many casualties were suffered over all in WWII in countries from one end of the globe to the other. May you then remind them that the war we fought then was one of survival, not one of choice based upon lies, bad information and optimistic scenarios — and that the lesson of that war was that wars of aggression would never again be sanctioned by the civilized world. Until now.
Finally, Dear Lord, may you hand them each an apple and an orange and explain to them the difference. Amen.”