Hi ABD,
Thanks for reminding us of the sacrifices made on our behalf by millions of our forebears.
I'm a Brit. Lived in S England (Kent) during WW2. 10 years old in 1939. Experienced Battle of Britain. Planes crashed near us. A few bombs in our locality. Saw the first "Doodle Bugs" flying over. One or two V2 rockets exploded within a couple of miles. School lessons interrupted by many periods spent in air raid shelters. Was frightened. (Not as traumatic as having been a serving soldier, sailor or airman, but on the other hand I was a junior, supposedly more impressionable than an adult).
Nevertheless managed (like many others) to get to university (post WW2) and graduate as Mechanical Engineer and subsequently to pursue sataisfying, varied and successful carreer. Still, at age 74, my work is valued (and used) by the company for which I worked full-time, until 2 years ago.
Today, when I read about people needing stress counselling after being in the vicinity of a terrorist attack, I ask how the many thousands of those affected by WW2 managed to get on with their lives after exposure to many traumatic experiences without, what I am inclined to regard as. "psychiatric spin".
Are we becoming soft in rhe West?
Now I start to become controversial. In the West we customarily attribute the end of WW2 as a victory for democracy. IMHO, we are in danger ot forgetting that many, many, more Russians died in that conflict than those from the Western Allies. Perhaps Hitler's greatest mistake was to attack the USSR instead of invading the UK.
For me it's clear that Germany and her allies lost WW2. Who won? Not the West alone.
I am eternally thankful that the dictatorial regime that then ruled Russia has not prevailed over the long term. But I try not to forget the enornous sacrifices made by ordinary Russian citizens, who continue to suffer today from the policies of their Communist leaders.
Sorry for verbose reply.
Peace
ejc