fighting allies like you guys. we are just fighting for, as my brother said, democracy fighting for, as my brother said, democracy and our choice, so we have made democracy and our choice, so we have made the democracy and our choice, so we have made the choice where you grain want to go made the choice where you grain want to go. terrible events happened in the past to go. terrible events happened in the past six days, horrible events, horrible the past six days, horrible events, horrible. civilians, men and women dying horrible. civilians, men and women dying and horrible. civilians, men and women dying. and actually i am proud of our men dying. and actually i am proud of our men and women they are ready to defend our men and women they are ready to defend the our men and women they are ready to defend the country for their future, for the defend the country for their future, for the future of their children. it is actually for the future of their children.
quantities, so many men dying, that you couldn t take it any more. you became angry with them, that there would be so much killing and so much death. i don t think we have any idea in our society today what a war like that really is like. but the men who are on that stage today, they do. quickly, christopher, you mentioned your father-in-law, that he is a veteran of this war and you visiting with him. what was his experience like when he made that visit with you? well, i think it was tremendously painful for him. he was he had enlisted in the army before the outbreak of the war, before the united states entered the war. and he was in every campaign you could think of in this hemisphere. he was in the invasion of north africa, he was in the invasion of italy. d. day, he was in battle of the bulge. the most emotional moment was not here, but at a cemetery much like this near belgium where we