Pearl Harbor: The Turning Point of History

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“Tora! Tora! Tora!,” sounds Japanese pilot Mitsuo Fuchida to the 182 other planes in the massive formation at approximately 7:53 a.m., December 7th, 1941. Suddenly chaos reigns over the Hawian Islands, in and around the naval base known as Pearl Harbor; the outcome: 2402 Americans killed, over 1100 injured, as well as 21 ships of the United States Pacific Fleet being destroyed or damaged. The toll to the Japanese opposition, 29 planes. This single battle would become the one of the most brilliant tactical strokes in military history, crippling America’s warfighting ability for several months on end. Despite this, America rose once again from the ashes with a new image, a new goal, as a new nation. This is why the events of that fateful day must never be forgotten- from the fires of that battle and the cries of Americans something spectacular occurred, true unity was found in the face of external aggression, a unity which ultimately chartered a new destiny for America. In the wake of that most devastating surprise attack, America experienced something that had been seldom experienced, a sense of national unity and identity. When Franklin D. Roosevelt appeared to America and forever imbedded “December 7th, 1941- a date which will live in infamy,” into the minds of millions of Americans, the tears wept were not of any one race, creed, or religion; instead they were tears of a single nation, wept over the bodies of thousands of young American sailors, airmen, and soldiers. Eye’s still clouded by tears of sorrow, many Americans even went so far as to condone the imprisonment of neighbors with Japanese ancestry; this group, however, would not be content to sit idly by and silently consent to this misguided treatment. Rather, many of th... ... middle of paper ... ...itizens until America intervened. “Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom, must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it,” remarked famed writer Thomas Paine, a concept that has been adopted following the Pearl Harbor attack, altering history forevermore. “The present is the living sum-total of the whole past,” wrote Thomas Carlyle in Characteristics; Pearl Harbor is perhaps the most influential single moment in the recent history of the world, the wheels set in motion by that single attack changed the face of the world order, setting humanity on it’s current course. In America alone it gave the people two things rarely ever experienced before, a true sense of national identity and a new path to follow. With all that has been set in motion, it remains imperative that society not forget the event that brought it about: the battle of Pearl Harbor.

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