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Please Do This at 3 p.m. Today

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Manward Financial Digest
 

How to Properly Observe Memorial Day

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Andy Snyder

Andy Snyder
Founder

Today is a special day.

You already know that, though. Schools, banks, businesses and, of course, the government are shut down.

They're celebrating what many folks consider the unofficial start of summer.

But we're not celebrating... at least not in the way most folks are.

On a day like today, there's not a whole lot worth celebrating. But there's plenty to remember.

We ask that you join us.

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Few folks know it - national spirit isn't all that celebrated these days - but at 3 p.m. local time on Memorial Day, the country is asked to pause and observe a National Moment of Remembrance.

During this time, we're asked to stop what we're doing and take just a moment to remember the many honorable men and women who gave their lives in the name of country.

Step outside at 3:00. Find a quiet spot. And ponder the force, the dedication and the steady stream of heroism that it takes to keep evil at bay.

Listen quietly enough, and you may even hear the train whistle of engineers across the land giving a traditional, unified blast as they speed across the land of the free.

And if you're brave enough, you can put names to the faces we will honor this afternoon by clicking here.

As we celebrate our Liberty, those are the heroes we must thank.

The Truth Behind This Weekend

You see, most Americans may think of Memorial Day as a time to head to the beach, hop in the pool or fire up the barbecue. But that was never the intent.

As fans of Liberty, it's important we know and share the truth.

This holiday, of course, wasn't always known as Memorial Day.

Originally, it was observed on May 30 and was dubbed Decoration Day.

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It wasn't until 1971, when Congress declared it a national holiday and moved the celebration to the last Monday in May - forever ensuring American vacationers an economy-boosting three-day weekend - that it became what we now know as Memorial Day.

Although modern "traditions" have skewed the holiday into a day of parties and picnics, it wasn't always so happy.

The tribute got its start shortly after the Civil War.

Sure, America had seen her share of battles and wars prior to the "Great Rebellion," but none were as bloody or of as broad a scale as the Civil War.

The battles up and down the East Coast marked the first time in the life of our then-85-year-old nation that nearly all local cemeteries became filled with the fresh graves of the sons and fathers, brothers and uncles who died fighting.

It was a moving sight for war heroes like Gen. John Logan, who ordered so many of those men to pick up their guns and fight until their deaths.

He knew they must be honored.

So in 1868, he made the following proclamation:

The 30th of May, 1868, is designated for the purpose of strewing with flowers, or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village and hamlet churchyard in the land.

 

Imagine the scene that first year.

The flowers dotting the countryside on that late-spring day must have been gorgeous... and inescapable.

Some 620,000 men had been carried to their graves over the course of the war.

And although the gray smoke that choked so many battlefields had wafted away three years earlier, the pain of the war remained intense.

The only things left to wash the blood from the fields were the tears of the millions of widows, daughters and mothers left behind.

Logan and his fellow survivors had plenty of graves to decorate.

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In Remembrance

Today, though, the number of heroes who died for our country is far greater than even the brave general could have envisioned - more than 1.3 million.

But the duty to honor those men and women seems to have waned.

Today at 3:00, most folks won't be bending over to place a wreath on a headstone. They'll be reaching down to grab another beer out of the cooler.

Celebrate all you want. Take no shame in it.

But please remember not what we're celebrating... but whom.

The beauty of our nation shines every other day of the year. Today, the beauty should be glowing from atop the graves of our heroes.

We'll wrap up with some words from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, from his poem "Decoration Day."

Your silent tents of green
We deck with fragrant flowers;
Yours has the suffering been,
The memory shall be ours.

 

Happy Decoration Day. Let the memories live on.

Be well,

Andy

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Andy Snyder | Founder

Andy Snyder is the founder of Manward Press, the nation's premier source of unfiltered, unorthodox views on money and what it means for a free society. An American author, investor and serial entrepreneur, Andy cut his teeth at an esteemed financial firm with nearly $100 billion in assets under management. He's been a keynote speaker and panelist at events all over the world, from four-star ballrooms to Capitol hearing rooms.

 

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