SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2016
This Sunday in America…
… at the Church of The Compassionate Conservative, Beloved Whistleblower Publisher, the Right-Wing Reverend Charles Foster Kane was asking his Political Parishioners to ask God’s help for America to Remember Important Events In Our Past during the next 40 days of Dishonesty and Division remaining throughout the Dark Ages of Obama’s Second Term, unless the First Black President in History is impeached.
Each December on National Wreaths Across America Day, the mission to Remember, Honor and Teach is carried out by coordinating wreath-laying ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery, as well as over 1,100 additional locations in all 50 U.S. states, at sea, and abroad.
REMEMBER: From the Remembrance Trees dedicated to our lost servicemen and women, to the WAA Museum at our headquarters in Maine, Wreaths Across America connects with the families and friends of fallen servicemen and women, to keep their memories alive all year long.
HONOR: Each day of the year is an opportunity to show our respect in the year-round mission to honor those who serve and sacrifice. Every wreath placed becomes a catalyst for bringing together different generations of Americans in one mission of remembrance and appreciation.
TEACH: The annual convoy from Maine to Arlington National Cemetery stops at many schools along the way, introducing young people to veterans and our mission to honor them—it is just one of the many ways we strive to teach children the value of freedom.
On December 17, 2016, Wreaths Across America will be at Arlington National Cemetery to Remember and Honor our veterans through the laying of Remembrance wreaths on the graves of our country’s fallen heroes and the act of saying the name of each and every veteran aloud.
“When we lay wreaths on veterans’ graves, we say their names,” explains Karen Worcester, Executive Director of Wreaths Across America. “We encourage every volunteer who places a wreath on a veteran’s grave to say that veteran’s name aloud and take a moment to thank them for their service to our country. It’s a small act that goes a long way toward keeping the memory of our veterans alive. We are not here to ‘decorate graves.” We’re here to remember not their deaths, but their lives.
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Last year, tens of thousands of volunteers began showing up. By 9 a.m., crowds lined Memorial Drive where they could watch the 20 semi-trucks carrying the wreaths pull in. Within three hours, the wreaths — brought to Virginia from Maine — were unloaded and placed on every tombstone within the cemetery. The final wreath placement was at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
Now That’s What The Blower Calls “Rememberance.”