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Counterpoint: Anti-China rhetoric fuels anti-Asian hate We must make meeting shared challenges a centerpiece of our foreign policy to combat hate. By Nelsie Yang and Tobita Chow May 28, 2021 5:45pm Text size Copy shortlink: Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are increasingly targets for violence and hatred. This is the direct result of anti-Asian and anti-China rhetoric spread by former President Donald Trump, his allies and the media, to distract from their failures to confront COVID-19. John Rash s column A cold start to Biden-era China relations (March 27), which promotes a hard-line approach to China, unwittingly supports this and ignores our country s long history of anti-Asian sentiment. ....
Reply Two newly installed bronze statues honoring Malden veterans of the Korean and Vietnam Wars will be unveiled on Memorial Day. (Jenna Fisher/Patch) MALDEN, MA Memorial Day is a holiday that people in Malden and across America look forward to every year as the start of summer. But it also gives the country a chance to look back, as the final Monday in May is a day to remember all American lives lost during military service. Here are five things to know about the history of Memorial Day: Subscribe 1. It Was Originally Called Decoration Day: Remembering veterans who died while in military service in late May dates back to 1868, when Gen. John A. Logan called for a day of remembrance to honor the Northern lives lost amid battle during the Civil War that had ended just a few years earlier, according to History.com. Logan called it Decoration Day, which it was known as for several years. As time passed, more and more people called it Memorial Day, Hist ....
Itâs such an interesting time to be a child of the 40s, even the late 40s. Weâve lived through the Korean, the Cold and Vietnam Wars, polio, air raid drills for atomic and hydrogen bomb attacks, Sputnik, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the riots and political upheavals of the â60s, assassinations of political and civil rights leaders, the first moon landing, multiple stock market crashes, hyperinflation and recessions, economic collapses, 9/11, two Iraq wars, Afghanistan, and myriad other social, economic, and political disruptions including the Jan. 6, invasion of the Capitol of the United States. Because education was seen as the key to growth for us and our country, many of us went on for multiple degrees, worked hard, studied hard, and did everything we could to provide the best possible lives for our children and now their children. ....
Photograph by Emily J. Davis One letter was written by a Black soldier fighting for the Union Army to the woman who had enslaved his daughter. Another, written by a Confederate soldier, was pulled off the soldier’s dead body. A sailor, trapped aboard a ship, dashed off a note as Japanese planes were bombing Pearl Harbor. A prisoner of war during World War II scrawled a message on the back of a family photo, shortly before his death. An army sergeant who had pilfered Adolf Hitler’s personal stationery, emblazoned with a swastika, crossed out the name at the top, inserted his own, and penned a letter to his family. ....
Malden news briefs Korean, Vietnam War memorials to be unveiled on Memorial Day Two newly installed bronze statues that will honor Malden veterans of the Korean and Vietnam Wars will be unveiled Memorial Day, May 31. The two life-size bronze statues will be installed alongside the granite monuments that honor Malden’s Korean and Vietnam Fallen Heroes that were formerly located at Linden Delta. Face coverings are required and attendees are encouraged to stay socially distant. The event will take place from 6 to 8 p.m. and will feature a performance by a U.S. Marine Corps Band. The event will be live streamed on Comcast Channel 22, Verizon Channel 26, or MATV’s YouTube channel. ....