While I'm sure a lot of folks think that putting the body in a Hefty bag and tossing it over the side might be appropriate, it would also potentially incite a continuation or rise in more anti US sentiment.
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While I'm sure a lot of folks think that putting the body in a Hefty bag and tossing it over the side might be appropriate, it would also potentially incite a continuation or rise in more anti US sentiment.
I sometimes find irreverent humor helpful -- anyone similarly inclined might enjoy what The Onion has to say on this topic.
I guess I can put myself in the irreverent category. That was hysterical.
That was funny. Now how am I going to get that visual outta my head?
Thanks for the funny, Pam!
Just had another thought on the burial-at-sea thing.
Before it was an honor, it was a necessity. If a sailor died at sea in the old days, they didn't necessarily have a way to preserve or transport the body for a land burial, especially if there were concerns about illness spreading on board.
Mutineers could be put to death for their actions and therefore also buried at sea. Don't know what the policy would have been for saying words or prayers for their souls, but I think in general they got prayers at the very least. Honors was a different matter. It was a very different time.
For some a burial at sea might be viewed as an honor but for others it might be agonizing to not know the final resting place of a loved one. Any maritime historians know more about this?
But they do have a memorial in the Bay Area where many of the passengers were headed that day or from. :o
RIP passengers and crew of Flight 93.
http://www.flight93memorialsfb.com/