Tom Brokaw's Sacrifices During The World War II Generation

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“Between 70 and 85 percent, depending on the State, People willingly put their lives at risk to save the life of someone unknown to them.” Congressional Record, V. 148, PT. 13. Within The Greatest Generation, Tom Brokaw talks about the “sacrifices” made by the men and women of the “World War II generation”. Although some people, like Brokaw, find these actions as born into and the praised sacrifices unique to this generation of Americans today. He feels that that generation will be remembered through the sacrifice of them when they “went from cap and gown directly into uniform.” In also previous generation during the Great Depression, early 1920’s and late 1930’s, people lived through daily challenges as well as preparing for the lives of other …show more content…

With the Great Depression and its generation an entire nation suffered during the great depression, and still managed to hold their lives together. This is a harsh reality and amongst the people suffering were young children in the ages between 10-18 all trying to find jobs in order to support their family. It is sad and heartbreaking to hear the stories of people who lived through this dark, grim period of time. Rural and all kinds of places in America were all suffering the same way. Everyone was facing great challenges in the daily American life and hope wasn’t coming any clearer. The people living through the Great Depression’s toughest challenge was finding a job to help provide for their families survive the harsh demands of the business world. Industrial companies were in decline and the stock market crashed. Their struggles only persisted and hope for new opportunities were …show more content…

These were some of the “challenges” the men and women lauded in this period of contemporary generation. But even the individuals living through the Great Depression had to fight their own war at home with their daily struggles that ruined their liberties. Brokaw even thought of the World War II’s men and women as ordinary yet extraordinary by having unique sacrifices to this generation of Americans. But even those who lived through the Depression were just as normal as the people Brokaw referred to during World War II and the people living through the Great Depression had unique sacrifices of their own, such as children giving up their education by going to work in factories but there overcoming and handling of such big nation wide issues make them just as great, in fact it made them greater because none of the people Brokaw mentioned had the same determination to survive in such poor economic statuses. By overcoming their daily problems in poverty the families living during the Great Depression stretched every dollar they had as well as having self-indulgence and self-gratification by immediate acquisition of

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