3 sailors from Pearl Harbor identified
Posted on 05. Sep, 2008 by Rob Belatucadros in Real History, Rob Belatucadros, Top Stories
PORTLAND, Ore. – Two-thirds of a century ago, Kathleen Wyman drove her brother to California to join the Navy. From there, he shipped out to the USS Oklahoma at Pearl Harbor.
He never came home.
Ensign Eldon Wyman was 24 when he died in the Japanese attack of Dec. 7, 1941. Along with hundreds of others, he was buried in mass graves, officially listed as unknowns.
But Thursday, the Pentagon announced that the remains of Eldon Wyman and two other sailors had been identified, and their remains would be returned to their families.



An attack some alege was unprovoked. This may or may not be true. Point is it was allowed to happen. It was known in advance but the puppet in charge at the time did nothing to stop it. Just like in 67′ when the isrealis attacked a US ship with no “guns” on it.
And many people died for nothing,really. At the time it may or may not have made a difference in the loss of life, that is if the president let the Admirals and Generals, in the area know they were going to be attacked. “He” knew but did nothing.
remember pearl harbor and lets never forgive those gooks.
The Japanese did just what Roosevelt wanted them to do.
after pearl harbor we were right to kill the dinks. but our uniforms should have had a swatstika in the center of the american flag